How can you plan for a future that is uncertain and unpredictable?
An interview with Margaret Heffernan.
How much time, energy, and effort do you spend planning for what lies ahead for your team or organization?ย Given the dawning realization in most workplaces following the global pandemicย that unpredictable and continual change is really the only certainty your business plans can be guaranteed, itโs worth asking if all your efforts at planning are worth the paper they are written on.
โForecasting experts have found that if youโre very, very open-minded and consult a broad range of information sources, then probably the furthest out you can reliably plan is about 400 days,โ explainedย Margaret Heffernan, author ofย Uncharted: How To Map The Futureย whenย we interviewed her recently.
โIf, however, like the rest of us, youโre not quite that rigorousย and you donโt regularly review your forecasts, then itโs more likely that your horizon for accurate forecasting is about 150 days.โ
This means your best-laid plans for future are valid for about five months at best.ย
โA significant downside to being addicted to predicting the future is that the plans and forecasts begin to take on a false sense of value,โ said Margaret.ย โThose who are addicted to prediction and to planning make themselves very rigid, so when things donโt go according to plan, all they can experience is a sense of loss.โ
So,
How Can You Plan For The Future More Intelligently?
Margaret suggests that understanding the difference between complicated and complex systems is the key to plan for future. Every organization has both complicated and complex systems operating within it:
- Aย complicated system
Aย complicated systemย is generally a linear system in which patterns of cause and effect repeat in predictable ways and can be streamlined to create efficiency.ย An example of a complicated system would be the baggage checking-in process at the airport.ย There are lots of moving components and people involved in getting a bag to its destination, but itโs easy to see the whole system and the process is largely the same every day with few unforeseen situations likely to arise.ย This means it can be optimized for efficiency.ย
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- Aย complex system
Aย complex systemย is not linear and has lots of different factors interacting with each other. This can make it difficult to see the whole system at once because thousands of factors can be creating multiple reactions.ย It also means that things can change quickly, making planning challenging.ย In a complex system, flexibility is more valuable than expertise and efficiency, as the most recent thing that happened may not happen again.
To plan for future more effectively for the complicated and complex systems in your workplace, Margaret recommends the following:
Take stock of your complicated and complex systems.ย
Look at the systems and processes within your workplace and identify which ones are complicated and suited for theย managementย of efficiencies and which ones are complex and require artistic flexibility.ย This will help you plan for the future more intelligently.
How are you encouraging people to understand the difference and equipping them with the capabilities to navigate both?ย
For example, a โjust in timeโ approach is appropriate for a complicated system and is geared towards optimum efficiency.ย Whereas a โjust in caseโ approach focuses on understanding what could happen that would have a huge impact, and ensuring contingencies are in place to make the business more resilient.ย
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Let go of yourย addictionย to prediction.ย
While there is benefit in planning, itโs important to remember that plans are not reality.ย If you can be flexible and divert from the plan when required, you will have a more intuitive, creative, and imaginative response to the situation.ย
Try asking yourself, โWhat is the real story? How does it unfold? Where could it get me?โ to take a more curious approach to opportunities and challenges, rather than trying to get your plan โback on track.โ
Encourage the skills of curiosity andย creativity.ย
Rather than trying to โmanageโ a complex system, take a more โartisticโ approach.ย
For example, artists regularly work with the uncertainty of what the outcome of a project will be. They spend lots of time absorbing the world around them, observing people, and letting ideas coalesce. They understand at the start that they donโt know how itโs going to unfold, but they begin anyway.
Can you let go of yourย fearย of uncertainty and give yourself permission to pursue a far richer array of future possibilities?ย Could you prioritize exploration and experimentation to uncover creative solutions to complex challenges?ย Could you invite, empower, and trust people to help you find new solutions?ย Do you have theย resilienceย of an artist to plan for future?
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What is your plan for the future? How are you planning for the uncertainty of the year ahead?
Leave a comment below.
(You can hear the full interview on the Making Positive Psychology Work podcast here.)
Written by: Michelle McQuaidย Originally appeared on: Psychology Today Republished with permission
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