People-centric Neural Networks: The Key to Managing Organizational Complexity
by Lukas Michel and Herb Nold

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Or Be Like the Borg Collective and eliminate viruses

 

Organizations around the globe in all sectors continue a trend of increasing size and complexity that began over 100 years ago with the business strategies of the likes of Carnegie and Rockefeller. New and emerging technologies for communication and data sharing have accelerated this process in recent decades. We view this process as a natural and inevitable occurrence due, if for no other reason, to simple economics. Expenses will rise through time in many ways that management cannot prevent no matter how much they try. Those pesky employees always seem to want and expect raises, healthcare expenses increase, rents go up every year according to contracts, governments seem to want a greater piece of the action, and the list goes on and on. If top line revenues remain constant and expenses increase due to any or all of these sources the squeeze point becomes the bottom line. These are simple economic realities which force executives to constantly look for ways to increase the top line and keep their jobs.

 

There are, of course, any number of ways to increase the top line some of which include expanding market share in current markets, expanding into new markets, and introducing new products or services using an almost endless list of strategies. This is inevitable yet many, if not most, executives continue running very large enterprises using management techniques and structures developed in an industrial age which is very different from the rapidly changing, complex, business environment of the 21st Century. Argyris and Schon pointed out that the management challenges in business where there is little or very slow change is very different from those in uncertain environments. We would suggest that it would be difficult today to identify ANY businesses not in uncertain environments. If increasing complexity is a natural and unavoidable condition and that uncertainty and rapid change influence virtually every organization then what do we know for sure?

 

What we do know is that we donā€™t know what opportunities or threats will emerge or what the best way to take advantages of opportunities or respond to threats will be. We also know that whatever course of action is decided the decision must be made quickly and execution must be swift and decisive. Additionally, because of the complexity of organizations effective decision-making by one, autocratic, individual is likely a formula for failure. We also know that the overwhelming body of knowledge within an organization exists in the minds and experiences of people, particularly knowledge workers [Link 1].

 

The Borg ā€“ Ultimate Knowledge Collective

 

The ā€œStar Trek, Next Generationā€ TV series introduced the ultimate evil, the Borg. The Borg society consisted of millions of individuals who were all connected mentally through a vast neural network so that the experiences of any single individual were immediately shared with the entire collective. The result was that with the power of millions of minds sensing then working on a problem, solutions were developed very quickly allowing the Borg to adapt rapidly to any threat that the intrepid crew of the Enterprise dreamed up. The ability to sense, evaluate, implement, and adapt to threats faster than our heroes made them nearly invincible. Ultimately, our heroes defeated the Borg by introducing a virus into their network disrupting their ability to sense individual experiences and apply the collective knowledge of millions of individuals to find solutions. We suggest that the most effective organizations manage complexity and uncertainty by accessing the collective knowledge of all individuals through social networks connecting a performance triangle of leadership, systems, and culture of the organization.

 

Viruses Disrupt the Performance Triangle

 

People, through collaboration, purpose, and relationships connect a performance triangle of leadership, systems, and culture and drive the organizations ability to effectively manage complex structures in rapidly changing situations. The triangle model [Link 2] emerged over a 10-year period from information gathered from over 100 business case studies involving organizations in different industries throughout the world. Statistical analysis of the results of a diagnostic survey conducted with 50 of these organizations between 2006 and 2011 established the validity of the performance triangle model and provided deep insights into the potential for dealing with the growing complexity of organizations and the barriers that keep employees from using and sharing their knowledge. The research indicated that viruses disrupt or inhibit that flow of knowledge among people that degrade the ability of the organization to sense what is happening and tap into the collective knowledge base. These viruses are insidious because they are typically unseen and undetected because they exist in the minds of individuals or groups of individuals on a mostly subconscious level. We have sat in countless meetings and observed the highest ranking individual dominate the idea pool while all others simple attend. In many organizations, we have listened closely to talk in the hallway and other places, away from earshot, to see how people distrust management and each other therefore they are unwilling to share what they know. These would be two examples of organizational viruses but the list is endless and cannot be observed without looking and listening closely through an objective electron microscope. We all know that successful managers advance within an organization because they fit in and promote the values, beliefs, and assumptions of the organization that made it successful. These highly successful managers are unlikely to detect disruptive viruses because they are themselves infected. Some successful managers observe the outward signs of these viruses and a few are able to detect viruses but truly rare are those leaders who can remain objective enough to go further and actually do something to eliminate the viruses.

 

Get Rid of those Nasty Viruses

 

After years of stalling growth, the new CEO of high-tech firm diagnosed his performance triangle to discover that the organization had inadvertently introduced viruses. Well-intentioned but flawed leadership introduced formal routines and processes that had the effect of disrupting the flow of knowledge and essentially apply brakes to the companyā€™s growth. The systems formalities have names such as TQM, extensive process orientation, request an approval forms, and scorecards that required frequent updates. When organizations grow fast, most entrepreneurs install a leadership team and introduce professional tools and routines to cope with the growing complexity. However, much of these instruments added to the complexity with managers hiding behind processes rather than interact with people to collaborate and use their collective knowledge. ā€œWe follow rules rather than to communicate and interactā€ was the key realization from a diagnostic workshop with the new CEO. The cleanup was simple. He decided with his management team to rework their management system and retool the box with the perspective of (1) supporting the exchange of knowledge of their well-trained staff and (2) relating them to collaborate rather than to engage in well-intended but cumbersome routines. By simply detecting the viruses and cleaning up an infected bureaucracy, the organization returned to its growth path.

 

What happens if you donā€™t ā€“ deal with complexity by tapping into the vast reservoir of your employeeā€™s knowledge? As the CEO of a regional utility firm confirmed, viruses creep slowly into the operating system of your firm. Unwillingly and unknowingly, they divert your attention from what truly matters and use up time that is not available to tackle the real challenges. The call for help came on a Saturday morning from his office. The first visit revealed a desk with folders full of pending issues, a closed door to his office assistant, dead silence on the executive floor during prime hours, and decisions that always migrated to the top! The diagnostic confirmed our gut-feel: tight managerial performance routines, detailed Management by Objectives tools, stifling bureaucracy, and closed-door conversations prevented any free flow of knowledge, kept employees within tight boundaries, and prevented creativity. Combined with the ongoing deregulation of the industry, the CEO faced a managerial situation that required an instant fix ā€“ on behaviors and its guiding managerial systems.

 

Conclusion ā€“ Become Borg-like

 

So, one key to effectively navigating a complex organization that is constantly becoming more and more complex in an ever changing world of uncertainty is to become more Borg-like. Nurturing neural networks to facilitate the flow of knowledge throughout the organization comprised of many individuals becomes essential for effective sense-making and to get critical information to the right people at the right time. Successful 21st Century companies will develop structures very different from industrial age command and control designs that emphasize free flow of knowledge throughout the organization. Doing this, however, requires recognition of infecting viruses that block collaboration, blur common purpose, and destroy productive relationships among people that degrade effectiveness to managing complexity. Firms with Borg-like knowledge networks, free or with reduced viruses will survive and prosper while those that cannot will fail due to the weight of their own complexity and constant threats from an uncertain environment that, like Star Fleet, will never give up and will always find a new approach to try.

 

About the Authors

 

Dr. Herb Nold, Professor of Business Administration, Polk State College, Florida, USA. Winner of the Emerald Literati Network 2013 Award for Excellence for ā€˜Linking Knowledge Processes with Firm Performance: Organizational Cultureā€™ in Journal of Intellectual Capital and the 2013 International Award for Excellence for ā€˜Using Knowledge Processes to Improve Performance and Promote Changeā€™ in the International Journal of Knowledge Culture, and Change Management

 

 

Lukas Michel, MD of AgilityINsights l Sphere Advisors AG, Switzerland. Author of ā€œThe Performance Triangleā€ and diagnostic mentor to management teams worldwide.

 

[Link 1: Linking knowledge processes with firm performance: organizational culture. http://www.emeraldinsight.com/journals.htm?show=abstract&articleid=17010190 ]

[Link 2: The Performance Triangle: A Diagnostic Tool to Help Leaders Translate Knowledge into Action for Higher Agility: http://ijmoc.cgpublisher.com/product/pub.258/prod.16 ]

 

L. Michel, ā€œTHE PERFORMANCE TRIANGLE: Diagnostic Mentoring to Manage Organizations and People for Superior Performance in Turbulent Times, LID Publishing, London, September 2013.

 

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