4.2 Article

Tackling wicked problems in strategic management with systems thinking

Journal

STRATEGIC ORGANIZATION
Volume 21, Issue 3, Pages 721-732

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/14761270211038635

Keywords

reductionist thinking; strategic management; systems thinking; wicked problems

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Strategy scholars often tackle complex global social and environmental issues by optimizing organizational success, but this approach divorces firms from the social-ecological context that makes these problems wicked. This essay argues that strategy research into wicked problems can benefit from systems thinking, which involves investigating co-evolutionary dynamics, advancing processual insights, and recognizing tipping points and transformative change.
Strategy scholars are increasingly attempting to tackle complex global social and environmental issues (i.e. wicked problems); yet, many strategy scholars approach these wicked problems in the same way they approach business problems-by building causal models that seek to optimize some form of organizational success. Strategy scholars seek to reduce complexity, focusing on the significant variables that explain the salient outcomes. This approach to wicked problems, ironically, divorces firms from the very social-ecological context that makes the problem wicked. In this essay, we argue that strategy research into wicked problems can benefit from systems thinking, which deviates radically from the reductionist approach to analysis taken by many strategy scholars. We review some of the basic tenets of systems thinking and describe their differences from reductionist thinking. Furthermore, we ask strategy scholars to widen their theoretical lens by (1) investigating co-evolutionary dynamics rather than focusing primarily on static models, (2) advancing processual insights rather than favoring causal identification, and (3) recognizing tipping points and transformative change rather than assuming linear monotonic changes.

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