Показаны сообщения с ярлыком VUCA. Показать все сообщения
Показаны сообщения с ярлыком VUCA. Показать все сообщения

понедельник, 23 октября 2023 г.

20:20 Hindsight

 


Hindsight bias

‘Hindsight bias’ has been defined as believing that the onset of a past event was predictable and completely obvious, when actually, the outcome could not have been predicted. Politicians, media (and social media) commentators, and sometimes Counsel Assisting commissions of inquiry, all demonstrate a tendency to this form of cognitive distortion. Directors and managers are no less at risk of this.

Three levels of hindsight bias have been identified as follows:

  • Predictability – “I KNEW it would happen”
  • Inevitability – “IT HAD to happen”
  • Memory Distortion – “I SAID it would happen”


While understanding the risk of hindsight bias, non-profit directors and managers nonetheless have an obligation to reflect on past events in order to identify opportunities for improvement, or the need for new control measures to prevent an adverse event from occurring or recurring.

From my observations, directors have little difficulty looking at their historical development to gain insights which allow them to foresee an imagined future strategy. They can recognise that hindsight, insight and foresight are really three aspects of one activity. It is less common however, for directors to recognise that the same can be said of incident analysis as a source of insights about ways to improve future risk controls.

Systematic Cause Analysis

In a recent post, I explored a process of root cause analysis following a risk event, using a set of questions to determine what happened, the contributing factors and the basic or root cause of the incident or event.

A variation on that method is called the Barrier Based Systematic Cause Analysis Technique (BSCAT), illustrated below, which takes the analysis down to the level of preventive and mitigation controls to ask which of these failed and why. This process allows identification of missing or ineffective controls which, had they been well designed and applied appropriately, would have prevented the incident.

The recent NSW Ruby Princess Inquiry, the Victorian Hotel Quarantine Inquiry and the Federal Aged Care Royal Commission all offer topical insights into risk management failures. They also share certain common factors, including under-funding, poorly structured coordination structures and processes, and people at all levels being expected to respond effectively to a massively complex collection of challenges ‘on the fly’.

As we have seen during the pandemic, people involved in response roles across all sectors had no opportunity to catch their breath, and to do the kind of detailed planning which is a foundation for effective response coordination. Often, they were working extended hours, suffering stress and exhaustion, and yet they are still expected to make fault-free decisions.

In some ways, the accumulated impact of government decisions over some decades meant that the capacity to respond effectively simply wasn’t there. The system failed. Both conservative and progressive governments have played their part in that legacy over an extended period.

To the extent that incident analysis indulges the luxury of looking back with 20:20 hindsight, it may seem obvious now what steps and systems would have helped prevent each crisis. For those of us faced with responsibility for managing future risks, the precise nature of which we cannot know, the benefit of allocating time to incident analysis is that we gain insights into at least some of the types of issues we could be faced with. Those insights can then translate into control measures to prevent risk events, and mitigate outcomes if they do occur.

Root cause analysis seeks to ensure that an underlying causal factor is addressed so that a similar incident cannot occur again for that reason. If one only addresses contributing factors, while leaving the root cause undeclared and unaddressed, then the opportunity to take the required preventive action is missed. Thus, we can see that incident analysis is not just looking backwards. In fact, it’s a key measure by which to prevent repetition of an incident, or to entirely remove a hazard from the operating environment.

Agile non-profit strategy

Many non-profit organisations have limited resources, and yet ask their volunteers and staff to achieve success and avoid faults in executing complex strategies.

At a time when volatility, uncertainty, complexity and ambiguity (the negative VUCA) are strongly in evidence, boards and their management teams can help their people by creating space to reflect on priorities (vision), use data and insights to improve understandingclarify the short to medium term goals, and promote agility by testing and progressively refining problem solutions (the positive VUCA).

This last element is not granting permission to fail, but is offering the freedom to discover problems with an initial plan. The ‘agile strategy’ approach is meant to allow greater flexibility in strategy execution, but also recognition that a plan is likely to require adjustment along the way, whether due to unforeseen (sometimes unforeseeable) external factors, or due to insights gained through the implementation process.

Foresight bias’

If ‘hindsight bias’ describes a form of distorted thinking about the past, how should we describe distorted thinking about the future? Optimism and pessimism are the two extremes on the continuum of future thinking modes, and yet each of these in themselves represents a spectrum of positive and negative elements.

Optimism is good when it expresses confidence in growth opportunities and drives effective strategy. It is risky however, when it is simply ‘wishful thinking’. It can be unrealistic and fail to adequately account for resource constraints and external circumstances which prevent success.

Pessimism is good when it is risk averse and takes care of the people involved, the environment, and anything else that could be harmed if something were to go wrong. It is bad however, when it causes leaders to avoid new ventures and responses to emerging needs.

Boards therefore need to calibrate their risk appetite so that innovation is prudently supported, and consequently, so that progress can be achieved. Balancing entrepreneurial energy with appropriate controls is at the heart of good governance.

https://polgovpro.blog/

вторник, 20 июня 2017 г.

VUCA, Meet META: the 2017 List of Superaccelerators




The VUCA acronym has been around for some time now, because we really do live in a volatile, uncertain, complex, and ambiguous world. As we near the one-year anniversary of the Brexit vote that is ushering the United Kingdom out of the European Union, any sort of VUCA index would have to be on the rise, given the fallout from Brexit, the surprise of the US presidential election, mixed signals about any number of international political and trade relations, and so on. The list of VUCA factors could be a long one.
But META can provide at least a modicum of reassurance. META is the acronym, based on extensive research into the four key aspects of corporate performance, that my colleagues at Heidrick & Struggles and I use to describe a detailed method for accelerating that performance: Mobilize, Execute, and Transform with Agility. And the good news is that the measurement we developed to identify the very best performers among the 500 largest companies in the world registered an improvement between our first list, in mid-2016, and the list we are now releasing for 2017.
VUCA may be taking the world in one direction, but META shows at least the top performers moving in the other.
The list of top performers, which we call “superaccelerators,” grew from 23 in 2016 to 25 this year. These companies are those that passed stringent tests that we developed for Accelerating Performance. Our research found that these four tests measure the kind of deep understanding of management that leads to sustained success. We call them the “rules of 20,” and we applied them to the top 500 companies in the world by market capitalization, as follows:
  • The companies had to be in the top 20% in revenue growth in both the last three years and the last seven, meaning that they have been standouts both recently and over an extended period. We use revenues, rather than stock price, as the measure because it is the most direct test of how much customers value a company.
  • The superaccelerators could generate no more than 20% of their increase in revenue inorganically (through acquisitions). Growth, alone, isn’t what matters. To be an indicator of success, that growth has to come from serving customers better or finding more of them.
  • The companies couldn’t get more than 20% of their revenue from their home governments. Many state-owned companies are global powers, but that doesn’t mean they’re paragons of management.
  • Finally, the model companies couldn’t have seen their profit margin drop by more than 20% over the seven years. We didn’t want to recognize companies that focused on revenue growth to the exclusion of everything else, because that sort of emphasis is rarely sustainable. (This rule of 20 addresses the question we get asked most frequently: “Why isn’t Amazon on the list?” Amazon is a great company, but its mantra that “your profits are our opportunity” has produced enough pressure on margins that it simply didn’t meet this fourth criterion.)
Those are stringent tests, so it’s encouraging that there are more superaccelerators this year than last. (For the 2016 list, see “What does it take to be a ‘superaccelerator’?”) These companies did not benefit just from being in one sector, such as technology, or in one particularly hot geography. While the United States dominated the list of superaccelerators again this year, with 16, China’s representation increased to 5, from 3. In all, Asia is represented by 9 superaccelerators; Europe has none. The companies come from a range of industries—healthcare/life sciences, consumer, financial services, real estate, professional services, and communications, as well as technology.
The spread of industries and geographies underscores one of the most interesting findings from our research: how a company is managed along our four dimensions—mobilizing, executing, transforming, and agility—mattered far more than being in an especially profitable industry or geography. A top-performing team, for instance, generates 23% more economic value than a poorly performing team handling the same function. Boards of superaccelerators show distinct characteristics—for instance, they are smaller than average, have less experience from outside the industry, and have fewer members over the age of 60.
The principles of META can be applied at organizations in any industry or geography, helping companies make sense of changes in their environment and react in a timely manner. They let companies play, in essence, offense and defense at the same time, sustaining the current source of competitive advantage while exploiting new sources of growth.
With capital becoming ever more global, liquid, and informed, creative ideas and agile execution can produce success in any combination of industries and markets.
Here is the full list of the companies that are this year’s best examples of how to take advantage of those opportunities (arranged in descending order of 2016 revenue):

Unless you know something I don’t, the world will stay in a VUCA state for the foreseeable future. Yet as these 25 companies demonstrate, when organizations find ways to mobilize, execute, and transform with agility, they can turn uncertainty into opportunity—now and for years to come.