Mike Burrows's Blog
October 10, 2025
In two senses, a wholehearted organisation is a high-intelligence organisation
[This post first published on LinkedIn here]
It’s about 6 months since Wholehearted [1] was published, and more than a year since the blog post Engage, Invite, Celebrate: Leading “wholeheartedly” for innovation [2]. As I begin my return from my enforced break, I’d like briefly to explain why a wholehearted organisation is in two ways a high-intelligence organisation.
First, and to recap: engage, invite, celebrate. Up and down a wholehearted organisation – at every scale of organisation and covering its key business domains (a moving target) – there are people who are:
Engaging on the right challengesInviting people into that process, andCelebrating their accomplishmentsThrough its development of the Deliberately Adaptive Organisation (a thoroughly modern take on the classic Viable System Model), the book expands on what those challenges might be and – more importantly – how they might be recognised, but here we are focusing not on that model but on those essential leadership behaviours.
Intelligence has multiple meanings, but two have particular relevance in an organisational context. There’s the organisation’s ability to capture information about itself and its business environment and get it to the right places. Then there’s the organisation’s ability to apply its knowledge and capabilities in the right ways and at the right times.
One person alone does not a wholehearted organisation make. One person – even the CEO – engaging, inviting, and celebrating creates neither the informational network nor the distributed capacity for decision making, innovation, and resilience that the organisation needs if it is to respond to challenges and opportunities on multiple and emerging fronts. The gamechanger is an organisational and appropriately complex response to that complexity – specifically to invite others to engage, invite, celebrate too, and with a density sufficient for the resulting scopes of activity to maintain relationships with its neighbours both at equivalent levels of scale and between scales. Through these relationships, information is diffused, strategies (plural) align, and actions (plentiful) coordinate.
To be clear, this is as much a lens on the organisation as it is an operating model, in fact more so. I’m not asking you to throw out what you have and roll out some pre-packaged Agile or Sociocratic framework, rather to see (and more powerfully, to help you to help others to see) where and how the organisation is failing to meet its challenges well, whether that’s indicative of some deep and longstanding organisational issue or simply a change of circumstances that needs some timely response. Either way, you probably won’t fix it on your own and indeed there may be no singular solution. But have enough people on a broad enough front 1) engaging with each challenge for the response to be rich enough and 2) engaging with each other sufficiently for that response to be coherent enough, then you maximise your chances to make meaningful progress.
How much is enough? How much is sufficient? It’s in the nature of complex (or if you prefer, adaptive) challenges that you won’t know until people engage actively with them. Responses will scope themselves soon enough!
[1] Mike Burrows, Wholehearted: Engaging with Complexity in the Deliberately Adaptive Organisation (2025)
[2] Engage, Invite, Celebrate: Leading “wholeheartedly” for innovation (July 2024)

September 30, 2025
Agendashift roundup, September 2025
I wasn’t sure if I would produce a roundup this month, but given the overwhelming response to my personal update last week, I had to! I did not feel able last week to respond individually to each of the many messages received, but let me take the opportunity now to say that they were all very much appreciated.
Some have asked if they could make a donation in Florence’s memory. To the benefit of Bluebell Wood Children’s Hospice, there is a page set up for that purpose:
Florence Ann BurrowsThey do great work and I can’t speak highly enough of them, but for something less local, you might also consider the Make-A-Wish Foundation (UK) or its equivalent in your country.
Work-wise, and in clarification to last week’s message, the online and Copenhagen-based trainings are off (leaving a couple of days free pre-Øredev in Copenhagen/Malmö if you have ideas about those), but the two India-based trainings remain very much on. This is what my events calendar looks like now:
5-7 November, Malmö, Sweden:Øredev 2025 30 November to 01 December, Pune, India:
Leading with Outcomes: Train-the-Trainer / Facilitator (TTT/F) – Pune 3-4 December, Bengaluru, India:
Leading in the Knowledge Economy (LIKE) – Bengaluru 5-6 December, Bengaluru, India:
Kanban India 2025
I can’t honestly say when I’ll add further public trainings, so you may want to give serious consideration to joining me in Pune or Bengaluru for TTT/F or LIKE (respectively). Even with travel from outside of India, they look pretty cost-effective, and there’s the conference too. You wouldn’t be the first to make that choice!
Under the current circumstances, there are no new posts or videos; check out the media page and recent roundups for pointers to what’s out there. There is some interesting activity happening behind the scenes in relation to the recent book, and if that matures, I’ll let you know. Meanwhile, there is the book itself of course:
Wholehearted: Engaging with Complexity in the Deliberately Adaptive Organisation (2025)Best regards,
Mike
agendashift.com/mike
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September 22, 2025
A short personal update
The time has come for me to share the sad but not entirely unexpected news that our daughter Florence passed away at Bluebell Wood Children’s Hospice a week ago today. Although it was indeed a very difficult summer, the combined efforts of Sheffield Children’s Hospital and the Make-A-Wish Foundation enabled us to enjoy a very special family weekend away together last month, and the two-week period we spent at the hospice was a peaceful and precious time for which we will always be grateful.
Work will take a back seat for the next few weeks, and we will be travelling in November. Accordingly, I am cancelling the online and Copenhagen LIKE trainings (though still attending Øredev), and the extent of my December trip to India is under review. Please accept my sincere apologies for any inconvenience; refunds for the two LIKE trainings will be issued this week.
Mike
August 29, 2025
Agendashift roundup, August 2025
Following the travails reported in last month’s abbreviated roundup and my mid-month update with better news, I should say that things are stable enough at home now. Despite another step change in Florence’s care needs, I (with Sharon’s full support) remain fully committed to my published autumn schedule below, the first event of which takes place next week.
Speaking engagements aside, let me point out that the Autumn LIKE cohort begins September 30th – just four weeks on Tuesday! The in-person version in Copenhagen/Malmö takes place on November 3rd and 4th, and there are two different trainings planned for two different cities in India in December.
3-4 September, Milton Keynes, UK:SysPrac25 11 September, online, 18:15 BST, 19:15 CEST, 1.15pm EDT:
Agile Northants: Introducing the Deliberately Adaptive Organisation with Mike Burrows 30 September to 18 November, online, cohort-based – 8 weekly sessions, 2 hours each:
Leading in the Knowledge Economy (LIKE) – Autumn 2025 cohort 3-4 November, Copenhagen, Denmark:
Leading in the Knowledge Economy (LIKE) – Copenhagen 5-7 November, Malmö, Sweden:
Øredev 2025 30 November to 01 December, Pune, India:
Leading with Outcomes: Train-the-Trainer / Facilitator (TTT/F) – Pune 3-4 December, Bengaluru, India:
Leading in the Knowledge Economy (LIKE) – Bengaluru 5-6 December, Bengaluru, India:
Kanban India 2025
In lieu of new content, I leave you with a selection of recent videos:
16 July 2025, video:Short (09:52): Verbing the nouns of business agility
linkedin.com09 July 2025, video:
Short (07:28): White paper: Everywhere all at once
linkedin.com05 July 2025, video:
Short (06:18): Engage with the organisation *as it actually is*
linkedin.com03 July 2025, video:
Short (05:52): Wholehearted, backwards
linkedin.com27 May 2025, video, webinar:
Webinar: Introducing the Deliberately Adaptive Organisation
Blackmetric #BAcommunity webinars05 May 2025, video, podcast:
Wholehearted Leadership in a Complex World
Rohit Gautam interviews Mike Burrows for the Curiosulus Chronicles podcast20 April 2025, video, podcast:
Viable Systems Model: Deliberately Adaptive Organizations
Laksh Raghavan interviews Mike Burrows for the Cyb3rSyn Labs Podcast08 April 2025, podcast (video, audio):
Beyond Structures: Building Deliberately Adaptive Organisations with Mike Burrows
Mike Jones interviews Mike Burrows for the Strategy Meets Reality Podcast
See the media page for more.
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August 12, 2025
Better news
I mentioned in an abbreviated July roundup that Sharon and I had already spend a couple of weeks with our daughter at Sheffield Children’s Hospital, with few more days still to go. Thank you to all who reached out! I’m pleased to report that Florence came home on Friday, three weeks to the day after admission. Now, and with the hospital’s full support, we have a previously-planned long weekend away coming up, facilitated by the wonderful Make-A-Wish Foundation who are kindly providing ambulance transport and some equipment. Things feel a lot less fraught than they did, but I don’t expect to make much progress on anything work-related before mid next week at the earliest. And that’s ok!
Meanwhile:
Another 5-star review for WholeheartedTraining starts up again at the end of SeptemberAlso a busy conference seasonAnother 5-star review for WholeheartedThis from Jasenka Rapajic:
Finally, a book that brings the experiential reality of tech and business to the forefront of leadership thinking. Wholehearted highlights the critical role of interdependencies between people, processes, and technology – key drivers of organisational outcomes often overlooked by mainstream leadership when faced with complexity.
What sets this book apart is Mike’s ability to expose the limitations of generic organisational models – and the technologies that support them – which fail to reflect the real-life complexity of specific organisations. It shows how such models often compress rich, lived experiences into narrow frameworks, stripping away their relevance and effectiveness.
This is a rare and valuable insight into the heart of business – one that supports the creation of adaptive organisations and leadership practices. It provides a practical foundation for fostering innovation that is aligned with the actual needs of the organisation.
The book doesn’t just address surface-level symptoms of dysfunction; it guides the reader toward understanding and resolving deeper, systemic issues. In doing so, it calls for a more sustainable and humane approach to business – especially relevant in the digital age, where adaptation to real-world complexity, service delivery, and tech support are becoming inseparably linked.
You’ll find Jasenka’s review on Amazon here. You can find Wholehearted: Engaging with Complexity in the Deliberately Adaptive Organisation (April 2025) in both print and Kindle editions on amazon.co.uk, amazon.com, amazon.de and other Amazon sites around the world. The e-book is also available on LeanPub, Kobo, Apple Books, and Google Play Books. Enjoy! Be like Jasenka! Leave a review!
Training starts up again at the end of SeptemberOnline, Copenhagen, Pune, and Bengaluru:
30 September to 18 November, online, cohort-based – 8 weekly sessions, 2 hours each:Leading in the Knowledge Economy (LIKE) – Autumn 2025 cohort 3-4 November, Copenhagen, Denmark:
Leading in the Knowledge Economy (LIKE) – Copenhagen 30 November to 01 December, Pune, India:
Leading with Outcomes: Train-the-Trainer / Facilitator (TTT/F) – Pune 3-4 December, Bengaluru, India:
Leading in the Knowledge Economy (LIKE) – Bengaluru
Book-wise, LIKE (online, Copenhagen, and Bengaluru) corresponds to Wholehearted – i.e. it is a deep dive into the Deliberately Adaptive Organisation. TTT/F (Pune) corresponds to Agendashift and Organizing Conversations, focusing on participatory, generative, and outcome-oriented change.
For the online and Copenhagen training, ping me if you need a discount code. All the usual reasons (gov, educational, non-profit, etc) apply, and the more the merrier.
Also a busy conference seasonBeginning in just three weeks:
3-4 September, Milton Keynes, UK:SysPrac25 11 September, online, 18:15 BST, 19:15 CEST, 1.15pm EDT:
Agile Northants: Introducing the Deliberately Adaptive Organisation with Mike Burrows 5-7 November, Malmö, Sweden:
Øredev 2025 5-6 December, Bengaluru, India:
Kanban India 2025

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July 31, 2025
An abbreviated Agendashift roundup, July 2025
Real life introduces big time! My wife and I have spent most of the past couple of weeks with our daughter at Sheffield Children’s Hospital, and we have a few more days to go yet. Consequently, for reasons both of opportunity and headspace, my output has been minimal of late. I did however manage this LinkedIn post today, and our media page includes at least one new video that I haven’t mentioned previously here. Most of the recent ones are of course Wholehearted-related.
The events calendar hasn’t changed much, but the autumn cohort beginning at the end of September seems not so far away now, and I’m keen to learn who’s interested in attending in Copenhagen/Malmö in November also. Here it is with all kinds of events together, speaking engagements included:
3-4 September, Milton Keynes, UK:SysPrac25 11 September, online, 18:15 BST, 19:15 CEST, 1.15pm EDT:
Agile Northants: Introducing the Deliberately Adaptive Organisation with Mike Burrows 30 September to 18 November, online, cohort-based – 8 weekly sessions, 2 hours each:
Leading in the Knowledge Economy (LIKE) – Autumn 2025 cohort 3-4 November, Copenhagen, Denmark:
Leading in the Knowledge Economy (LIKE) – Copenhagen 5-7 November, Malmö, Sweden:
Øredev 2025 30 November to 01 December, Pune, India:
Leading with Outcomes: Train-the-Trainer / Facilitator (TTT/F) – Pune 3-4 December, Bengaluru, India:
Leading in the Knowledge Economy (LIKE) – Bengaluru 5-6 December, Bengaluru, India:
Kanban India 2025
For the online and Europe-based training, ping me if you need a discount code. All the usual reasons (gov, educational, non-profit, etc) apply, and the more the merrier.
A post-Wholehearted version of my white paper, Everywhere all at onceAs previewed in last month’s roundup and announced this month, there is now a new version of the white paper, Everywhere all at once. Watch the short video and download your copy of the paper here:
Everywhere all at once: Introducing the Deliberately Adaptive OrganisationAs for the book, you can find Wholehearted: Engaging with Complexity in the Deliberately Adaptive Organisation (April 2025) in both print and Kindle editions on amazon.co.uk, amazon.com, amazon.de and other Amazon sites around the world. The e-book is also available on LeanPub, Kobo, Apple Books, and Google Play Books. Enjoy! Leave a review!
That’s all for now. Hoping that August will be considerably less fraught, but being the holidays for many, I expect that I’ll be keeping the next roundup light too. If you’ll be taking a break, enjoy!
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July 9, 2025
Everywhere all at once, 2025 edition
In 2023, I published two versions of my white paper Everywhere all at once. That was well before Wholehearted (2025), so it’s high time it was revised! Not having dared to look at it for quite a while, I was relieved to find that the old version had stood up pretty well; nevertheless, I have enjoyed realigning it with the book.
Over the summer (if not longer) I will be producing frequent short videos, so here’s a quick overview:
Content-wise, the video follows the white paper pretty closely, though in less depth:
A relational approachA model for every organisational scaleBetween scales: the space betweenOrganising at human scaleWhat lies beneath: ConstraintsNot your grandfather’s VSM / A model for the digital-age organisationGrab the white paper itself at agendashift.com/everywhere.
Whether you watch or read first, enjoy!
Cheers,
Mike
July 4, 2025
Three video shorts
Three videos, 5 or 6 minutes each:
Agendashift roundup, June 2025 Wholehearted, backwards Engage with the organisation *as it actually is*Enjoy! All published to LinkedIn, also on my YouTube channel. “Like and subscribe”, as they say!
June 27, 2025
Agendashift roundup, June 2025
In this edition:
Autumn programme: conferences, LIKE, and TTT/FConcluding the “Leadership as…” seriesA post-Wholehearted version of my white paper, Everywhere all at once1. Autumn Programme: conferences, LIKE, and TTT/FIn the form of my talk “Introducing the Deliberately Adaptive Organisation”, I will be taking my new book, Wholehearted: Engaging with Complexity in the Deliberately Adaptive Organisation to three quite different conferences:
SysPrac25 , the System Thinking Practitioners Conference, in Milton Keynes, UKThe big technology conference Øredev , in Malmö, Sweden Kanban India 2025 , in Bengaluru, India, to which I have been coming more years than I can remember!My trips to Scandinavia and India create some training opportunities – two LIKEs and a TTT/F:
3-4 November, Copenhagen, Denmark:Leading in the Knowledge Economy (LIKE) – Copenhagen 30 November to 01 December, Pune, India:
Leading with Outcomes: Train-the-Trainer / Facilitator (TTT/F) – Pune 3-4 December, Bengaluru, India:
Leading in the Knowledge Economy (LIKE) – Bengaluru
There are a couple of things to note about those. First, the Copenhagen one (which might join the conference on the Swedish side of the bridge in Malmö) needs a venue. Can you help? Would your organisation like to host it in return for free &/or discounted places or some other arrangement? It will be the first in-person training of its kind since the publication of Wholehearted, and it would be great to get at least a small quorum together sooner rather than later.
Second, the TTT/F in Pune (not in Bengaluru as in previous years) is the only public TTT/F planned for the remainder of the year. If you travel to India for this or for LIKE, you won’t be the first to have done so – it can be surprisingly cost-effective. And take in the conference while you’re there!
2. Concluding the “Leadership as…” seriesSeven articles inspired by Chapter 4 – the scaling chapter – of Wholehearted:
Leadership as structuring Leadership as translating Leadership as reconciling Leadership as connecting Leadership as inviting Leadership as representing Untangling the strands (Or: How not to scale, and a remedy)Those last two posts (which you can take in either order) bring the preceding five together nicely, so you might like to start with one of those.
It’s hard to say whether my experimental policy of publishing to LinkedIn first has made a significant difference, but I will stick with it for a bit longer. LinkedIn being what it is, reactions (likes etc) are great, but it’s comments that really bring posts to others’ attention. Tell us what you think!
3. A post-Wholehearted version of my white paper, Everywhere all at onceEarlier versions of my white paper Everywhere all at once: Introducing the Deliberately Adaptive Organisation, an accessible, situational, and complexity-aware presentation of the Viable System Model were released in June and December 2023. Even that later version preceded the publication of Wholehearted by well over a year, and I have now reworked it. I’ll release this new version next month under an amended title, but if you’d like to review it meanwhile, please don’t hesitate to get in touch.
As for the book, you can find Wholehearted: Engaging with Complexity in the Deliberately Adaptive Organisation (April 2025) in both print and Kindle editions on amazon.co.uk, amazon.com, amazon.de and other Amazon sites around the world. The e-book is also available on LeanPub, Kobo, Apple Books, and Google Play Books. Enjoy! Leave a review!

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June 26, 2025
Untangling the strands (Or: How not to scale, and a remedy)
This post concludes a series inspired by the fourth chapter of my new book, Wholehearted: Engaging with Complexity in the Deliberately Adaptive Organisation (April 2025). Building on the organisational model developed in the first three chapters, that fourth chapter, The Space Between, deals with scale-related challenges. The series so far (published first on LinkedIn):
Leadership as structuring Leadership as translating Leadership as reconciling Leadership as connecting Leadership as inviting Leadership as representing Untangling the strands (this post)Don’t worry if you haven’t read those preceding articles yet, you can save them for later.
Untangling the strandsIf I say that (for example) teams and teams-of-teams exist at different levels of scale, each of those preceding articles identifies 1) some aspect of the relationships that exist between levels of scale, 2) some corresponding leadership responsibility, and 3) some of the dysfunctions that may arise when that relationship isn’t working as it should. I call those relational aspects strands; although they can to some extent compensate for each other, any weaknesses will affect the strength of the relationship as a whole, and with organisational consequences.
It should be plain from this series that I believe in leadership. Also, it may be apparent that behind these articles is a model. I should mention however that in that model, the presence of a manager (or indeed any formal role) isn’t a requirement; what matters is what happens. For it to be maximally applicable – i.e. for this non-prescriptive model to describe as many styles of organisation as possible – it must be capable of accommodating (for example) the self-organising team. It’s a very good thing that it does, and for that and a host of other complexity-related reasons, it would be helpful if it could have something useful to say about organisations that are yet to establish themselves or that exist mostly in the realms of possibility, and regardless of whether the process of formation is directed top-down or emerges bottom-up.
In this model, the strands connect different aspects (traditionally called systems) that you can expect to find present in almost every organisational scope at any level of scale. I say “almost” because scope boundaries may need to be adjusted so that two conditions apply: 1) included in it must be people who identify with it, and 2) beyond planning or managing, it does materially impactful work. The first condition suggests that some of its energy is devoted to maintaining its identity, and the second is a reminder that a functioning organisational scope is more than its manager or leadership team. Ultimately, scopes in this model are defined by their work, not by who is in charge.
Presented in a slightly different order to that used previously, the numbered points below loosely describe for an organisational context the systems numbered 1-5 and 3* in Stafford Beer’s Viable System Model (VSM) [1]. The names in bold for the systems and their corresponding strands are mine, taken from Wholehearted and its core model, the Deliberately Adaptive Organisation. This is my complexity-friendly reconstruction of VSM as it applies to digital-age organisations – not necessarily technology-centric organisations but organisations in which the work of delivery, discovery, and renewal are deeply integrated in ways not envisaged when VSM was created.
The value-creating work, which as I have said, the presence and range of which helps to define an organisational scope. In a scale relationship, the work of the higher level scope is made up of the work of its lower-scopes (or slices thereof; we can’t afford to assume that scopes are nested in a strict hierarchy). As explored in the structuring article, not only does that imply some organisational structure, it’s important that this structure plays well with other structures, most notably that of the scope’s business environment (market segments, suppliers, competitors, etc), and of the wider organisation’s strategic commitments, both of which change.Coordinating between people or groups thereof and over the scope’s work and its shared resources, etc, lest chaos ensue. For scopes at each level of scale to be able to do that in their own language, some translating of progress, issues, performance, etc between levels of scale will be necessary. You can’t impose the language of the boardroom onto the team, or vice versa – certainly not in the general case, and rarely in practice either.Organising around current commitments and steering in the direction of goals. Here, the reconciling strand ensures that between and across scales, the commitments of related scopes remain coherent in the light of new information or changes to higher-level plans.Strategising, whereby the scope makes sure that it always has options, staying ahead of the game when the game may be changing. Run out of options, and it’s game over! Its corresponding strand, inviting/participating, ensures that the right people are in the room for these conversations.Self-governing, keeping operational and strategic activities in appropriate balance and acting as a filter on options that “just aren’t us” – at least until such time as self-identity is rightfully up for challenge, a pivot being in order, for example. The corresponding strand here is identifying/representing, which attends to wider coherence on identity-related matters such as purpose, values, and ethos. If a scope does value-creating work and you identify with it, it almost certainly has this system, the first one, and all the others in between, hence my two preconditions on scope boundaries.Finally, contextualising, making sure that operational and strategic decisions alike have the context they need – and the timely connecting of people between and across scales necessary for that to happen beyond the established routine. The issue here isn’t only the obvious one of what happens when context is lacking and bad decisions are made as a result, it’s that no formal structure or processes can eliminate the problem, making this an ongoing challenge.Why does any of that matter? Straightforwardly, if at some level of scale any of those systems aren’t working well, that’s a problem. More powerfully, if the relationships between systems aren’t working well, that’s a problem too, even if on their own terms, the systems involved seem well-designed. Relationships within a level of scale are beyond the scope of this article (see Part I of the book for that), but it’s true between scales too. How then do you understand the intricacies of those inter-scale relationships and any dysfunctions that may arise therein? One practical way is to approach them a strand at a time, which is what the abovementioned Chapter 4, The Space Between does.
How not to scale, and a remedyScaling an organisation is one of those problems for which the common and seemingly obvious answer (at least the one that is easiest to formalise, package up, and sell as an off-the-shelf solution) is the wrong one. You don’t just start with the organisation’s top-level strategy, turn it into a work breakdown structure (WBS) and a parallel hierarchy of objectives, allocate out the work (mapping those structures to the organisation structure), monitor the work, and adjust plans top-down as problems are encountered. Elegant as that may sound (and perhaps attractive to the control-hungry or those with centralising tendencies), the result will be that too many of the problems it will encounter will be dealt with by the wrong people at the at wrong level of organisation and at the wrong level of abstraction. It risks the combination of bad decision making and overwhelm – horrible enough, and with the potential for it to spiral into something worse.
Let me go further. The idea that an organisation’s response to scale-related challenges should be to roll out a process framework is absurd – a sledgehammer not to crack a nut but to make an omelette! Your approach should be not process-based but organisational. And participatory too (or more technically, dialogic and generative [2]):
Together, make sense of your issues (the model is your lens on the organisation here), and prioritise themFor the most important of those, and without limiting your solution options, articulate richly what “better” would be like – what stories you could tell “in the Ideal”, of relationships in “healthy and productive balance”, for exampleIdentify what stops those stories and what outcomes those obstacles impedeInvite solution ideas for the stories, obstacles, or outcomes that participants are most drawn toTest the best of those ideasMonitor progress, again in terms of outcomes – not only those that prompted solutions, but outcomes that indicate meaningful progress, outcomes that tell you when you’re winning, and outcomes that organise all the others – all of which may prompt more solution ideas as neededWork toward each affected (and self-governing) scope at every affected scale doing their own monitoring, steering, and strategising in their own language, the right people in the roomWhat more could you want of an organisational strategy? It’s engaging, highly testable, and doesn’t risk too much on monolithic solutions. It’s based on well-tested and complexity-aware theory, and on 21st-century practice. It puts governance and decision-making in all the right places. It helps you make progress on a broad front, so that you can meet your challenges well. Not a sledgehammer to make an omelette, but an organisational approach to organisational challenges.
The bookYou can find Wholehearted: Engaging with Complexity in the Deliberately Adaptive Organisation (April 2025) in both print and Kindle editions on amazon.co.uk, amazon.com, amazon.de and other Amazon sites around the world. The e-book is also available on LeanPub, Kobo, Apple Books, and Google Play Books. Enjoy!
Notes[1] The identification of system 3* (“three star”) in Stafford Beer’s The Heart of Enterprise (1979) broke the numbering system established in his earlier book, Brain of the Firm (1972). Or at least it seems to; it can instead be interpreted as system 3 trying to do the impossible, to be in two places at once. No wonder then that the context challenge never goes away! See Chapter 3 of Wholehearted, which for those most interested in the theory is also the chapter in which VSM and the Deliberately Adaptive Organisation are reconciled.
[2] See my 2024 book (a commission for the BMI series in Dialogic Organisation Development), Organizing Conversations: Preparing Groups to Take on Adaptive Challenges.
While we’re hereThere will be two (and possibly three) opportunities later in the year to explore these important issues with others. Already scheduled, one online and one in person in Bengaluru, India:
30 September to 18 November, online, cohort-based – 8 weekly sessions, 2 hours each: Leading in the Knowledge Economy (LIKE) – Autumn 2025 cohort 3-4 December, Bengaluru, India: Leading in the Knowledge Economy (LIKE)I’m also looking into the possibility of running another in-person training in Copenhagen or Malmö on November 3rd & 4th, ahead of the Øredev conference. If you might be interested in hosting that, please let me know. My flights are already booked – the only question is what I do those two days!