The document discusses new paradigms for organizing in the 21st century beyond traditional models of organizations as machines or families. It proposes that organizations should be viewed as living systems that have the innate ability to sense and adapt to their environment. The organization as a living system paradigm involves three principles: self-management, wholeness, and evolutionary purpose. Self-management involves giving all employees the power necessary for their jobs without a traditional hierarchy and promoting conflict resolution and decision-making skills. Wholeness means allowing employees to bring their full selves to work and respecting human needs. Evolutionary purpose means organizations should find their own path forward by listening to their purpose rather than being controlled externally.
4. The organization as living system
Living systems have the innate capacity to sense changes in
their environment and to adapt from within
Source: Frederic Laloux, Reinventing Organisations (2014)
6. Self-management
• No hierarchy/control, or
consensus but…
• Everyone has the level of
power necessary for their
job
• Clear structures
• Capacity building for conflict
resolving and decision-
making
• No functions but roles
• Transparancy
Source: Frederic Laloux, Reinventing Organisations (2014)
7. Wholeness
• In many organizations
people are ‘surviving’, but...
• Take your professional
masks off
• Show your whole self with
all your human traits
• The workplace respects the
human scale
• Wholeness and diversity:
masculine and feminine,
reason and intuition
Source: Frederic Laloux, Reinventing Organisations (2014)
8. Evolutionairy purpose
• The organization is not a
holding or a collection of
people, but...
• The organization has its
own evolutionary purpose
• Listen to what it wants to
become
• Follow the natural
development
Source: Frederic Laloux, Reinventing Organisations (2014)
9. Which basic assumptions do we have?
• Workers are lazy. If they are not
watched, they will not work
diligently.
• Workers work primarily for money.
• Workers are not capable of making
good decisions about important
matters that affect the economic
performance of the company. Bosses
are good at making these decisions.
• Workers put their own interest
ahead of what is best for the
organization. They are selfish.
• Workers need care and protection,
just as children need the care of their
parents.
• Workers need to be told what to do,
when to do it, and how to do it.
Bosses need to hold them
accountable.
• Managers are out there to control
workers.
• Managers are motivated by
promotion and bonuses.
• Managers don’t know what’s
happening in the organisation.
• Managers work primarily for money.
• Managers are egoistic and selfish.
• Managers only look at the short
term.
• Managers need to have all
information in order to make good
decisions.
Source: Frederic Laloux, Reinventing Organisations (2014)
10. Which assumption do you have yourself?
• Fear, control, scarcity
Or
• Abundance, trust
11.
12.
13. “There are not problems waiting to be solved but
potential waiting to be unfolded” *
“It will be painful”
“Work with people
who are ready for it”
*Source: Frederic Laloux, Reinventing Organisations (2014)
14. Contact me for more information
or start a conversation
E-mail: m.sturm@salineadvies.nl
Phone: +31 6 22614208
15. A few people can build a bridge
that can be walked on by many