1 / 22

ORGANIZATIONS AS FLUX AND TRANSFORMATION 28.2 2012

ORGANIZATIONS AS FLUX AND TRANSFORMATION 28.2 2012. Agenda: Organizations as flux and transformation Morgan ’ s method – instructions for the written exercise Forming of groups Assignment: Let us get started. UNFOLDING LOGICS OF CHANGE. How can we describe change?

senwe
Download Presentation

ORGANIZATIONS AS FLUX AND TRANSFORMATION 28.2 2012

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. ORGANIZATIONS AS FLUX AND TRANSFORMATION 28.2 2012 Agenda: Organizations as flux and transformation Morgan’s method – instructions for the written exercise Forming of groups Assignment: Let us get started

  2. UNFOLDING LOGICS OF CHANGE • How can we describe change? • Four theories, three inspired by the natural sciences, one by • social sciences (economy, history, sociology) • Autopoiesis • Chaos and complexity, attractors • Cybernetic ideas about logic of mutual causality • Dialectic thinking ( historical materialism)

  3. RETHINKING SCIENCE-INSPIRED METAPHORS • New insights criticize some of the basic assumptions in the • mechanical and organism/brain metaphors: • The possibility of an external viewpoint • A simple idea of causality • Passive adaptation • BUT still • focus on order, now ordering processes: From the idea of rule • governed processes to the idea of rule producing processes at • a dynamic system level – “Order out of chaos”

  4. AUTOPOIESIS ( MATURANA AND VARELA) • The idea of a closed ( biological) system which reproduces itself • through relations, marked by • autonomy (at the organizational level, not isolated) • circularity (maintain circular patterns of interaction) • self reference (interaction as a reflection and part of its own organization) • Each element simultaneously combines the maintenance of • itself with the maintenance of its environment • To discover the nature of a system you have to interact with it.

  5. AUTOPOIESIS • Reframes the brain metaphor: • Information processing systems approach (early AI, Herbert • Simon) , as if the brain is operating on representations of the • environment, recording and modifying it, is not a satisfying • description • The brain creates images of the environment and interact • with them as an extension of itself, relations with any • environment is internally determined.

  6. ENACTMENT AS ‘NARCISSISM’ • Methodological implications: • (Morgan turns to psychological • terms) • Organizations interact with projections of themselves • They have to develop a flexible identities in order to survive • Survival is about redrawing boundaries, embracing patterns of both organization and environ- • ment,’systemic interdependence’

  7. SHIFTING “ATTRACTORS”: The Logic of Chaos and Complexity • Complexity theory developed using • computer simulations as metaphors for • understanding what happens in nature: • Complex nonlinear systems are characterized by multiple systems of interaction, both ordered and chaotic. • Random disturbances can produce unpredictable events and relationships. • Coherent order emerges. • The butterfly effect

  8. METHODOLOGICAL IMPLICATIONS • Rethink the idea of organization as in hierarchy and control: Not top down, but ad hoc facilitation • The art of managing and changing ‘context’: How to reframe a problem so that it can be tackled in new ways • Small changes might have large effects: Search for ‘doable initiatives’ that can trigger a transition from one attractor to another (successful prototype) • Living with continuous transformation and emergence as a natural state of affairs: Boundary management, protect new experiments • Be open towards new metaphors

  9. loops not lines: Cybernetic ideas the logic of mutual causality • Cyberneticians (Magorah Maruyama • work with the idea of mutual • causality: not from A to B, but • A and B as co-defined, belonging to • the same system of circular relations, • Used as a method for modeling • phenomena in the social sciences, the • world economy, among others: • “Limits to Growth.”

  10. How systems engage in their own transformation • Positive feed back: • More becomes more, and less less: • Escalates patterns of system change • Negative feed back: • A change in a variable initiates • counteracting forces. Important in • accounting for stability. • Focus on Deviation-amplifying • processes, not only equilibrating (as • in early cybernetics)

  11. Methodological implications • What are the significant loops defining a system? • Are there principal subsystems that hang together? What are the connections, key patterns? • What are the generative forces that produce certain problems? • Can we find manageable initiatives that will change the generative pattern, (adding or removing certain feed backs loops ) • How can we learn to ‘nudge’ key aspects to create new contexts • Look at Exhibit 8.7 page 269.

  12. contradiction and crisis: The Logics of Dialectical change • The idea has a long history. • Yin & yang in Taoism (dark and • sunny side of a hill, the way) • Heraclitus (500BC) Plato: The • dialectical method is a dialogue • between two or more people • holding different points of view • about a subject, who wish to • establish the truth of the matter by • dialogue, with reasoned • arguments. ‘Socratic’ approach.

  13. Karl Marx (1818-1883) • Influenced by the German • philosopher Hegel, French • revolutionary and socialist politics, • and English economics. His life’s • work reflected his efforts to • explain the extra ordinary social • transformations that were • occurring at the time: • Industrialization, Capitalism, Urbanization, Democracy

  14. Dialectical method • Key features • It does not see a simple, one-way cause and effect among the various parts of the social world: Inherently relational, both within and across time – emphasis on history • Social values are not separable from social facts: Not only impossible, but undesirable • Concern with conflict and contradiction: Emphasizes ideas of social change (rather than stability) and how social entities exist in far from harmonious ways: Focus on key economic actors of his time

  15. Marx’s view on history • “Circumstances make men just as much as men make • circumstances.” - Marx and Engels (1845-1846) • “Men make their own history, but they do not make it • under circumstances chosen by themselves, but under • circumstances directly found, given and transmitted from the • past.” - Marx (1852)

  16. Human potential, the creative capacity of human beings: Activity • Consciousness is a characteristic of people and shaped out of • human action and interaction, a social product: • Allows humans to control activity in ways that animals cannot – the ‘means by which people appropriate objects from nature.’ • Provides a conceptual tie to notions of ‘work’ and ‘creativity’. Work relates to material production. Creativity to the ability of people to make unique products. • Activity involves the process of objectification, the production of objects. Affirms a ‘materialist’ orientation.

  17. Morgan’s dialectic principles • Friedrich Engels definition of a • “Dialectic of Nature” • The mutual struggle, unity of opposites • The negation of negation • The transformation of quantity to quality • Newer directions: Activity theory, Yrjö Engeström. The Laboratory of Comparative Human Cognition. Michael Cole, http://lchc.ucsd.edu/

  18. Methodological implications • Dialectics in management: • Think of primary contradiction ( profit/cost; use- / or exchange value) and consider secondary contradictions in the light of this • Paradoxes will necessarily flourish ( it is not either or, but innovate - avoid mistakes; decentralize – retain control; think long term – deliver results now; reduce staff - improve teamwork etc. • Which ones are most important? Find ways of creating contexts that can retain desirable qualities on both sides

  19. exercise on class • Imagine you are working in a • design team in an organization. • How would you describe your • activity and relations to users in • a flux/ transformation perspective? • Activity theory: watch the video on • youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4oG0ZvkhzCY

  20. THE CHALLENGE OF METAPHOR • Organizations are many things at once: Complex, • multifaceted, paradoxical - managing is not easy! • In the constant flow of new management theories/ • concepts people tend to sell the positive insights of a • metaphor while ignoring the limitations and distortions it • creates. • Ways of seeing are ways of not seeing at the same time. • There can be no “correct theory” for structuring everything • we do. • The point is to find appropriate ways of seeing , • understanding and shaping the situations with which we deal.

  21. METAPHORS CREATE WAYS OF SEEING • Various perspectives have a simultaneous presence, reality • cannot be reduced to one. • The manager’s dilemma: What you see depends on the • perspective you apply. In any given situation there are many • potential objectivities: Some perspectives might resonate with • the observed reality in powerful and evocative ways, others • not. • Seeing and reading is not neutral. It influences how we act. • Insights of different metaphors often support and reinforce • each other.

  22. Reading and shaping organizational life • To see, to understand, and to act go together • Diagnostic reading: • Apply the various metaphors in order to generate ideas and interesting approaches • Create a ‘storyline’ and implicitly a perspective and ‘a unit of analysis’ (a certain practice on an organization) Notice that Morgan’s example focuses on a controversy • Frame the analysis based on certain metaphors (dominant frame/supporting frames) Remember to describe the concepts you put to use in the analysis • Critical evaluation: The analysis and the result

More Related