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Organizational Resilience | BSI and Cranfield School of Management

within the organization for the two separate strategies, and thirdly ‘contextual’

i.e. people make their own judgements about how to divide their time between

conflicting demands for alignment and adaptability (Gibson and Birkinshaw, 2004).

Contextual ambidexterity is achieved when people feel discipline, stretch, support,

and trust (Ghoshal and Bartlett, 1994). Leadership can exacerbate or ameliorate

the tensions in Organizational Resilience (Uhl-Bien, Marion and McKelvey, 2007).

Effective leadership can enable “reinforcing, virtuous cycles” (Lewis and Smith, 2014).

Leveraging these tensions by employing ‘both/and’ thinking (Farjoun, 2010) is a

critical aspect of Organizational Resilience.

Avoiding erosion

Numerous high profile failures in retail, manufacturing, energy production,

healthcare, public services and banking and other sectors have shown that failures

tend to occur when preventative control, mindful action, performance optimization

and adaptive innovation are eroded over time. Figure 5 shows the typical pattern of

a failure.

FLEXIBILITY

(Ideas, views,

actions)

PROGRESSIVE

(Achieving results)

ABILITY TO

ANTICIPATE,

PREPARE FOR, AND

RESPOND AND

ADAPT TO

INCREMENTAL

CHANGE AND

SUDDEN

DISRUPTIONS

DEFENSIVE

(Protecting results)

CONSISTENCY

(Goals, processes,

routines)

Organizational Resilience

is eroded

ADAPTIVE INNOVATION

Imagining and creating

MINDFUL ACTION

Noticing and responding

PREVENTATIVE CONTROL

Monitoring and complying

PERFORMANCE OPTIMIZATION

Improving and exploiting

Figure 5: The erosion of Organizational Resilience: sleepwalking into disaster

Performance optimization is eroded when organizations enjoy a long period of

success resulting in the dismissal of the possibility of future failure (Hollnagel et al.,

2006). A singular focus on short-term productivity gain has also proved detrimental

to medium-term mission and sustainable performance as the primary goal. Over

time organizations create the illusion that “failure can’t happen here” (Woods and

Cook, 2002).

Adaptive innovation is inhibited when the organization feels the threat of impending

crisis. Organizations tend to control expenditure and resources and focus on the

one thing they do well (e.g. their core product or service), known as a threat-rigidity

effect (Staw, Sanderlands and Dutton, 1981). By implication, the range of options

open to the organization narrows and it becomes progressively more difficult to

Key learning point:

Organizational Resilience

requires preventative

control, mindful action,

performance optimization

and adaptive innovation.

Paradoxical thinking helps

leaders shift beyond

‘either/or’ towards ‘both/

and’ outcomes.