Steps Toward Systematic Thinking
Steps Toward Systematic Thinking
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Introduction
It is the task of the project manager to be aware of the larger environment in which her/his project is operating. One approach that helps the project manager achieve this insight is systems thinking. Being a systems thinker enables us to perceive the interplay of forces that surround and interact with us. Systems thinking asks us to go beyond our reactive mindset and our knee-jerk reactions to life. Now, just having a reactive mindset is not, in itself, a bad thing. For instance, if we dont react immediately to putting our hand on a stove burner that has been turned on, we are going to get burnt! We use this reactive mindset in many areas of life. A machine breaks down so we buy a new machine. Or sales drop so we launch a new ad campaign. This is called event-driven behavior, which in itself is not a bad thing. In contrast to this event-driven behavior, systems thinking calls us to see the world as patterns of behavior over time, using Peter Senges phrase1. For instance, there are patterns of machine breakdowns and there are patterns of buying cycles in which there are sales slumps. If we think about cycles, rather than events, we have a better chance to anticipate what is coming, rather than just reacting to it when it happens. However, if we look at the structure of the pattern of behavior (read the structure of the cycles we have just described) then we begin to see what creates the cycles that spawn the events. And once we see at this level, says Senge, we can take actions to change the structures that cause the cycles to happen.2 Attention at this level allows us to alter the source of the cycle rather than just deal with its symptoms, which are the events to which we normally respond. These structures of the patterns of behavior are called archetypes. They are fundamental patterns of the way things work. For example, one of these fundamental patterns is called escalation. An instance of escalation would be when one company gets ahead; other companies then feel the success of the first company as a threat. This leads to more aggressive behavior on the other companies part to reestablish their advantage. This behavior is seen as threatening by the first company and leads it to increase its aggressiveness. Each side uses aggressive behavior as a defensive response to the others aggression. The structure of this interaction however, is built on the belief that the welfare of one company is dependent on its relative advantage over the other. This assumption is never questioned, yet it is the true source of the problem, and the cause of the aggressive behavior. The above example of systems thinking demonstrates that these structures are not easy to see. Therefore the first step toward developing a facility for systems thinking is to make these patterns visible. One way is through the learning and use of methods that expose our own mental models, namely our own ways of seeing.
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Having this kind of courage requires several mental attitudes: 1. We have to be willing to examine our beliefs about the way the world works. 2. We have to be willing to entertain that these beliefs may be generalizations and that, as generalizations, they could be inaccurate or misleading. 3. We have to be able (or at least willing) to site the data on which our assumptions are based. This last point underscores our willingness to test our generalizations, which leads into inquiring into ones own as well as anothers actions. Practicing this type of awareness in order to raise the level of our own behavior to a higher level of consciousness is a discipline. I once took a course on Social Change. The professor discussed the dynamic of how perceptions become reality. According to the professor, any experience is taken in through the view of a previous perception. That perception is colored by an attitude which, when confirmed, becomes a belief. Eventually the belief will become a value, and when this happens, the process becomes reversed. Values will color beliefs which, in turn, will color attitudes, which, in turn, will color perceptions which, in turn, will color opinions which, in turn, will color experiences. This process can only be stopped by raising our level of consciousness so that we can be aware what we are doing.
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What is said
PM: How did the presentation go?
Bill: Well, I dont know. Its really too early to tell. Besides, were breaking new ground here. PM: Well, what do you think we should do? I believe that the issues you were raising are important.
He really is afraid to see the truth. If he only had more confidence, he could probably learn from a situation like this. I cant believe he doesnt realize how disastrous that presentation was to our moving ahead. Ive got to find some way to light a fire under the guy.
Bill: Im not so sure. Lets just wait and see what happens.
PM: You may be right, but I think we may need to do more than just that.
I have underlined the assumptions that the Project Manager is making. The last one underlined is the action planned by the Project Manager that is based on the assumptions. To the extent that these assumptions, on the left hand column, are unrecognized they will remain untested. And to the extent that they remain untested, they will keep learning from happening in a conflict situation. The way to overcome this is to share the information in the left hand column with the person with whom you are in potential conflict. You may find that the other person shares neither the data nor the view of the data that you have, but that is the beginning of true communication. What you are looking for is a path which will allow you both to learn.
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Truly practicing inquiry and advocacy means being willing to expose the limitations of your own thinking the willingness to be wrong. The leader must elicit the input of others as eagerly as she has shared her own position. This often takes considerable courage. However, nothing else will make it safe for others to do likewise. Were talking about being a leader.
Parting Thoughts
We see many changes that we need to make as being in our outer world and not in our inner world. The techniques for exposing our own mental models that we have just examined are telling us that the first step in the solution to any problem is to examine ourselves. The road to systems thinking down which the practice of learning our own mental models takes us is not an easy road. It requires new ways, new orientations in our thinking, and the death of old concepts. I recall the beginning line from a poem I learned in college by William H. Auden, We would rather be ruined than changed. Although the perceptual and cognitive shift into systems thinking may be a struggle for some of us, to others it is a wonder. They experience liberation. Systems thinking becomes a liberating tool, like looking through a microscope for the first time. Worlds that never existed before are there before their eyes. Whether systems thinking initially presents itself to us as a trial or triumph, the support of other people proves very useful. Teaming with others to accomplish this mental transformation that we have discussed is the topic for another paper. In the meantime, welcome to the road less traveled.
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Learn More
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References
1. Kim, Daniel H., Systems Archetypes 1 Diagnosing Systemic Issues and Designing High-Leverage Interventions, Pegasus Communications, Inc., 1992, p. 2 2. Kim, p. 2 3. Senge, Peter M., The Fifth Discipline The Art and Practice of the Learning Organization, Doubleday, 1990, p. 176 4. Senge, p.174 5. Senge, p.196 6. Senge, p.199
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