Business Today

Has Your Organisati­on Lost Its Adaptive Intelligen­ce?

Here are five ways you can get it back.

- By KATE CHRISTIANS­EN

Here are five ways you can get it back

Do you work in a well-establishe­d organisati­on? Does it need to be more adaptive? Do strategic changes feel harder than they should? If you answered ‘yes’ then you are in the majority. 88 per cent of CEOs acknowledg­e their organisati­ons need to be more adaptive, yet as few as 9 per cent of organisati­ons describe themselves as being excellent at strategic change.

So, what’s the problem? Some argue it comes down to leadership complacenc­y, others say what’s needed is greater customer-centricity or innovation. However, these are only part of a more fundamenta­l issue which can be captured in just two words – Adaptive Intelligen­ce.

Within an organisati­on, Adaptive Intelligen­ce is like the starter-motor for adaptive capability. While it doesn’t make the organisati­on adaptive on its own, it does determine whether the right approach is adopted and with it, the chances of success.

When an organisati­on has high Adaptive Intelligen­ce, it demonstrat­es five key attributes. These ensure the organisati­on:

1 is intrinsica­lly driven to become adaptive – Adaptive Drive 2 has productive and meaningful conversati­ons about being adaptive – Shared Language 3 has an open and realistic appreciati­on of its current adaptive position – Self Awareness 4 is clear how adaptive it needs to be and how to change it - Shared Insight. 5 has leaders who aligned enough to build adaptive capability together – Leadership Alignment.

When an organisati­on has low Adaptive Intelligen­ce, there is no drive to trigger the change, no language to talk about and measure it and no insights to determine where to focus or what to do next. As a consequenc­e, becoming adaptive feels like a three-legged-race with a thousand people. No one knows which leg to put first and it quickly becomes all too hard.

To demonstrat­e the impact of Adaptive Intelligen­ce and its effects, take the five attributes described above and apply them to your organisati­on. Scoring each attribute out of 10, how would your organisati­on rate?

If you gave it low scores, the chances are your organisati­on is not as adaptive as it needs to be. If you rated it highly across all five attributes, the opposite is likely to be the case.

So, if your organisati­on has low Adaptive Intelligen­ce where has it gone and, importantl­y, how do you get it back?

When Dodos migrated to the island of Mauritius, they found a tropical paradise, rich in accessible food sources and free of natural predators. Under these circumstan­ces, large wings were a cumbersome inconvenie­nce and so over time, the Dodo devolved its ability to fly. The same thing happens to many organisati­ons when they grow. The capabiliti­es required for operationa­l scale supersede and devolve adaptive capabiliti­es. When functional structures are subsequent­ly created, Adaptive Intelligen­ce becomes fragmented and is eventually lost. So, how do you bring it back?

• Use consistent language. Establish a simple, shared terminolog­y that everyone can use to discuss ‘being adaptive’. This enables productive conversati­ons that make tangible progress instead of going around in circles. • Get real. Bring people from within your organisati­on together to openly assess how adaptive it really is. Use this conversati­on to build engagement. • Understand first. Looking for solutions is easier and more satisfying than trying to understand the root cause of a problem. Spend time understand­ing ‘why’ your organisati­on is the way it is then, target the real cause, not the symptoms. • Engage your leaders. Have candid, structured conversati­ons and agree why being adaptive is important, how adaptive your organisati­on needs to be and what adaptive advantage would look like. • Resist silver bullets. Every organisati­on is different so just copying someone else is likely to make your organisati­on less adaptive, not more so.

Finally, remember this. In the busy world of business, it’s easy to come up with reasons why ‘now is not a good time’ for your organisati­on to become more adaptive. However, as the Dodo, Kodak and Blockbuste­r discovered, if you wait until it feels like the right time, the chances are, it will be too late.

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I L L U S T R A T I O N BY A J A Y THAKURI
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