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November 02, 2007
Leadership and Systems Thinking
Col. George E. Reed, US Army
Defense AT&L
Leaders operate in the realm of bewildering uncertainty and staggering
complexity. Today’s problems are rarely simple and clear-cut. If they were, they
would likely already have been solved by someone else. If not well
considered—and sometimes even when they are—today’s solutions become tomorrow’s
problems.
Success in the contemporary operating environment requires different ways
of thinking about problems and organizations. This article introduces some
concepts of systems thinking and suggests that it is a framework that should be
understood and applied by leaders at all levels, but especially those within the
acquisition community. It is insufficient and often counterproductive for leaders merely to
act as good cogs in the machine. Leaders perform a valuable service when they
discern that a venerated system or process has outlived its usefulness, or that
it is operating as originally designed but against the organization’s overall
purpose. Sometimes we forget that systems are created by people, based on an
idea about what should happen at a given point in time. A wise senior warrant officer
referred to this phenomenon as a BOGSAT—a bunch of guys sitting around
talking.
Systems Endure
To read the rest of this article, please click on the following URL: Leadership and Systems Thinking
Posted by ACASA on November 2, 2007 at 03:47 PM in Systems Articles | Permalink