What prevents us from dealing effectively with VUCA?

The business landscape has evolved into a VUCA world – marked by Volatility, Uncertainty, Complexity, and Ambiguity. What needs to change to adapt and thrive?

Coined by the US Army War College in 1987, this framework has become a cornerstone for understanding and addressing the challenges and opportunities organisations face today. Originating from Warren Bennis & Burt Nannus's groundbreaking work, "Leaders: Strategy for Taking Charge" (1985), the VUCA framework goes beyond describing challenges; it recognises the realm where new opportunities emerge within these very challenges.

In the VUCA domain traditional problem-solving paradigms fall short. In this complex realm, cause-and-effect relationships aren't easily calculated, demanding a departure from conventional analytical methods.

In fact, we are trained to operate through problem-solving paradigm, rooted in an analytical approach that assumes the existence of optimal solutions, calculable by experts. However, in the complex domain – that is, in the VUCA world we operate today – rather than solve problems, we are often confronted with dilemmas which may offer multiple choices and no easy solutions.

Strategic Leadership: The VUCA Opportunity

In "Get there early: Sensing the future to compete in the present," Professor Robert Johansen, former President and CEO of the Institute for the Future, provides insights on navigating each characteristic of the VUCA world:

Volatility calls for Vision

Instead of predicting the future, vision seeks to create it through intent. Focusing on clear intent opens new possibilities to “flex and adapt” to the emerging conditions.

Uncertainty calls for Understanding

Leaders, however facing pressures to act swiftly, must integrate the ability to “listen” to the environment without immediate judgment. This approach toward uncertainty aims to discover insights upon which to act, fostering trust and deep understanding.

Complexity calls for Clarity

Leaders in the face of complexity must provide clarity, even without control. Clear elements help people make sense of the situation and discover meaningful actions or find unexpected solutions.

Ambiguity calls for Agility

Ambiguity of the dilemmas may induce an analysis paralysis, especially in hierarchical structures in which decision making is concentrated and centralised, creating rigidity. This is why traditional hierarchies are giving way to more agile organisational structures, based on networks embedding distributed intelligence.

Embracing the BOTH/AND Approach

Agility is key in the VUCA world, necessitating a shift towards more adaptive paradigm of "probe-sense-respond." Indeed, the problem-solving approach assumes the existence of one winning solution, implying win-lose outcome, alternatively referred to as zero-sum game. Such thinking tends to look for the possible solutions through the “either/or” lens.

Instead, dilemmas present a new opportunity: it is often possible to come up with win-win solutions. These solutions require cooperative strategies to be deployed, adopting the “both/and” multiple-option thinking.

Strategic leadership thus involves embracing both clarity and complexity. Grounded in strategic intent, vision remains clear, while requiring organisations to gain agility in navigating the complex and unpredictable environment, to adapt and thrive.

Previous
Previous

Agile Organisation: Emergence of a New Organisational Form

Next
Next

Designing for Agility