Can organisations change?

I ask myself often whether organisations can change – really change – at all. I recently spoke to an HR person of a big worldwide corporation, and her answer was a strong “yes”. I am not so sure. Or maybe I am confused.

As organisations are made of people (humans), would you have the change the people in order to change the organisation? Is there another way? Some people say “you can’t change people, but you can change their behaviour”. Are we fooling ourselves with such statements?

I am seduced by the Robert Fritz’ premise that structure drives behaviour. Or Leandro Herrero‘s thesis that behaviour drives culture. And Jean Russell’s “Cultivating Flows“.

Robert Fritz for managers

There are plenty of metaphors to illustrate the relationship between structure and behaviour. From race cars, the team and the driver, to heroes hacking their way through forests (My friend Leda Glyptis wrote this excellent piece on the oscillating patterns – “Acts” in her post – that innovation heroes have to go through).

I am starting to think about a metaphor based on architecture, and the notion of “patrimony” of a building, which has to do a lot with knowledge stored as inheritance material in physical objects (Thanks, Tom Laforge for the insight).

kanaal solos

Kanaal Site – Axel Vervoordt – Old malt factory - Wijnegem, Belgium

Ricardo_Bofill_Taller_de_Arquitectura_La_Catedral_Barcelona_Spain_1-1440x592

Ricardo Bofill – The Cathedral – Old cement factory – Barcelona, Spain

 

“Patrimony” is an interesting term. The Dutch word “Erfgoed” maybe captures it better. “Erf” means inheritance, value that can be transmitted across generations. “Goed” stand for “good”, both as 1) something tangible, an art-i-fact and 2) something good, of value/worth/wealth/culture/DNA to be carried forward.

Both sites above are a good illustration: Ricardo Bofill’s “La Fabrica” and Axel Vervoordt’s “Kanaal”.

The architects decided to respect the patrimony, strip it to its essence – its skeleton – and create new perspectives and flows. They did not decide for “disruption”, aka breaking down the building and creating something completely new. They combine old and new, they combine tradition/patrimony/erfgoed with new flows, new structures.

The structure is not only the brick and mortar building itself, but includes the whole site, the landscape, the empty spaces, the social contracts, the tacit and non-tacit agreements of flow.

The structure comes alive when people live in it, add furniture, decoration, color, organise their areas for work, for creativity, for reflection.

What is the skeleton structure of the building, what do we need to keep, where do we need to create new perspectives to cultivate new flows of water, traffic, connections?

The metaphor building/organisation – like any metaphor – works only to a certain extent.

Haidt happiness

What’s missing is what makes us human and our motivations. I am reading Jonathan Haidt’s “The Happiness Hypothesis: Finding Modern Truth in Ancient Wisdom”, and am struck by all the noise humans put on the system. Some salient wisdom:

  • “We are all hypocrites”
  • “The rider (ratio) is not in charge”
  • “The elephant (the unconscious) is not motivated by happiness but by prestige.
  • “Most stories/narratives are confabulated after the facts”

So back to my initial question: can organisations change? Maybe the better question is: what quality of change are we aiming for? Or the more critical question may be: why would people change?”

Fritz’ suggestion is that if you have the right structure, people will naturally change their behaviour and the flows of information.

What are your thoughts?

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I am in the business of cultivating high quality connections and flows to create immersive learning experiences and structural change. Check out: https://petervanproductions.com/

18 thoughts on “Can organisations change?

  1. For sure organizations can change. The question is: do they change from inside (by inner wisdom / intuition) or do they just adapt to what the market / the consultants want? (stupid adaptation)
    For me an organization change with every person who comes new or leave. Not every change is immediately visible, but who knows which small change has big influence in the future (referring to “dots” from Steve Jobs).
    I like your architecture metaphors and think about some changes in use of buildings / rooms (my loft was a potato storehouse 100 years ago…).
    Warm regards, Nadja

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  10. While reading through your post, I had the impression that the thinking behind it was still dominated by engineering metaphors. The mechanical view of the universe that flourished largely since the start of the industrial revolution. I have also been pondering about the question whether organisations can truly change. My attempts to help them achieving change had been mediocre in success. But then I came across a new thinking paradigm. Organisations as complex adaptive systems. Self-organising ecosystems of many different agents acting in unpredictable ways. It opens a new way of thinking about change. Away from managing change to letting change emerge. Instead of following a predefined path of change, follow an experimental approach based on carefully design safe-to-fail interventions. Intervention that have beneficial outcomes are further developed. The one that fail, are dampened. The whole journey then becomes a learning journey. Changes cannot be forced. But when interventions are well design, they can nudge the ecosystem into a nearby and feasible new self-organised stable state. And from there you start again and again and again until you reach a state that is better suited for the challenges the organisation is in. Dave Snowden from cognitive-edge has some interesting views on this.

    • Thank you for your generous feedback, Filip. I am also a strong believer of what you call “interventions”. Like your website. Keep it coming 😉

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