Saturday, September 3, 2011

EVOLUTION AND FOUNDATION OF BUSINESSS

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relationships disappear, to be replaced by mere causes and effects” (Solomon, 1999, p.
18). The ideals of efficiency and control, two of the most appealing concepts for
managers and planners, are derived directly from Newtonian physics while more holistic
and organic concepts are revolutionizing contemporary physics and engineering
themselves (p. 17). The machine metaphor has not been replaced but rather “improved”
through information technologies. The information processing capacity of computers has
over-excited managers and made them forget that what we need is not more information
but more wisdom which requires human experience and ethical sensitivity.
What is common to these metaphors are the assumptions that match what Eisler (1989)
has called the dominator model of social organization – a win-loose paradigm that
involves ranking, power over others, hierarchies of control, competition and the
institutionalization of violence. Unless we transcend the dominator paradigm, which
seems to permeate the thinking and actions of people in Western civilizations, it will be
difficult to come up with alternative metaphors and new visions to guide the evolution of
the business world and the emergence of evolutionary corporations.
The new sciences, also known as the sciences of complexity, offer new insights that
support the idea of an interconnected, collaborative, participatory, and creative universe
(Goerner, 1994). New metaphors and powerful images are being born as this new
scientific understanding spreads. For instance, Moore (1997) introduces the powerful
idea of business ecosystems as a metaphor for the new type of cooperative and
competitive relationships that take place in today’s business world. He argues that our
traditional understanding of competition – from a dominator model point of view – is no
longer adequate to the new realities, and that an ecosystemic understanding of business
interactions has profound implications for corporate strategy. “We have only just begun
the process of discovering and inventing the new organizational forms that will inhabit
the 21st Century. We need the courage to let go of the old world, to relinquish most of
what we have cherished, to abandon our interpretations about what does and doesn’t
work” (Wheatley, 1992).
LEADERSHIP AND INNOVATION FOR SUSTAINABILITY
“We cannot direct the wind,
but we can adjust the sails”
— Contemporary Western Proverb
The challenge for the evolution of the business world is clearly articulated by Nattrass
and Altomare (1999) who explain that “it is no longer sufficient to be a smart
organization, one that can scan the commercial environment, detect variations, and react
accordingly. If we restrict ourselves to reacting to signals when it comes to human
impact ... we may well end up focusing our organizational resources just on minimizing
the pain of irreversible damage. Our business organizations need to become conscious of
the evolutionary role business plays in the future of the planet and to take responsibility
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for that role.” Following the image of a business ecosystem embedded and entangled in a
socio-cultural and bio-physical context, we can appreciate the need to move from reactive
and even proactive organizational strategies to an interactive mode involving coevolution.
The economy is one of the most relevant aspects of the socio-cultural context in which
business operates. From a systems perspective, the economy cannot be detached from
society and the natural environment. Such an integrated view of economy, society, and
nature is encompassed in the notion of a sustainable economy which, according to
Milbrath (1989, p. 82), is one that preserves and enhances a well-functioning ecosystem;
provides humans with the products and services necessary for a good and dignified life;
provides opportunities for fulfilling work and self-realization; achieves and maintains
economic justice; and utilizes resources at a sustainable rate that does not deplete future
generations. Some organizations are taking the lead by creating business opportunities
through the creation of a sustainable economy.
An extraordinary example is the well-known case of Interface, Inc. They have introduced
innovations such as the lease of carpet tiles that allows them to be in charge of the whole
life cycle of their products, eliminate waste, reduce costs, inspire personnel, and protect
the environment. Interface is living up to its goal of becoming one of the first names in
industrial ecology (Interface, 1997). Their vision, as articulated by their Founder,
Chairman and CEO, Ray C. Anderson, says it all:
Interface will be environmentally sustainable. But our mission is larger. We will also be
financially sustainable, for the simple reason that our corporation must survive and that we must
assure the livelihood of our associates and the investment of all our stakeholders. We will be
socially sustainable, respecting the communities in which we work, positively influencing all those
whose lives we touch, and taking care not to deplete the human spirit on which we depend… Our
sustainability goals – financial, social, and environmental – are inextricably bound together, which
is why we make such a point out of doing well by doing good (in Nattrass & Altomare, 1999, p.
101).
When reviewing the case of Interface with my executive MBA students, I hear mostly
comments that show incredulity. They see the detailed and comprehensive changes
implemented by Interface to fulfill its vision as an exception to the business world.
However, there is enough evidence of the move toward sustainability that if a corporation
or institution does not pay attention to the revolution of “natural capitalism” it will lose
competitive advantage. “The move toward radical resource productivity and natural
capitalism is beginning to feel inevitable rather than merely possible” (Hawken, Lovins,
& Lovins, 1999, p. xiii).
Paul Ray (2000), in his sociological studies, has identified a fast growing segment of the
US population – currently 50 million people – that embrace a social and ecological
consciousness. He calls them the “cultural creatives.” These are the individuals who are
willing to live and act in ways that bring about a sustainable culture. There are businesses
that understand the implications of the emergence of this segment and in the last decades
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new products and services have been developed to satisfy the needs and support the
values of the cultural creatives.
A clear case is the relatively new family of funds aimed at individuals who want to make
money while making a difference. Socially responsible investing (SRI) does not seek
moral perfection but tries to affect positive change and promote best practices (The
Economist, 2000, p. 70). The growth and performance of SRI supports the argument put
forward by Hawken, Lovins, and Lovins (1999) in terms of the inevitability of the move
toward sustainability because it makes business sense. Many pension-fund managers
believe that they cannot take an ethical stand because of their fiduciary duty to their
clients. However, socially and environmentally responsible stock indexes are
outperforming their ethically neutral counterparts. Environmental and social issues can
have profound impact on a company bottom line. “Virtue… can bring more than its own
reward” (The Economist, 2000, p. 70).
Some of the rewards received by companies engaged in sustainable practices include
(Nattrass & Altomare, 1999, p. 192-198):
• Increase in eco-efficiency (the ability of doing more with less) that impacts the bottom
line;
• Attraction of talented people as well as generation of employee commitment and
motivation;
• Innovation of new products and services that meet environmental criteria as well as of
production processes that close the loop;
• Development of the knowledge base and core competencies for the market of the
future;
• Improvement of relations with local residents concerned with the wellbeing of their
communities;
• Promotion of industry-wide self-regulation and impact on legislation;
• Achievement of quality standards under ISO and the International Chamber of
Commerce environmental criteria;
• Inclusion in socially and environmentally responsible mutual funds and investment
portfolios;
• Attention to media and activist pressures that affect consumer’s perceptions; and
• (last but not least), the reward that comes from knowing that it is the right thing to do.
There are many business opportunities still unexplored in the challenge of sustainability.
Those companies that are willing to engage in processes of learning, innovation and
management of complexity – the processes of adjusting the sails to the uncontrollable
winds of change – are the ones with the greatest possibilities of profiting from the
sustainability trend.
KNOWLEDGE, LEARNING, AND COMPLEXITY
“We’re not machines, we’re human social systems.
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Our knowledge management strategies should be crafted accordingly”
— Mark McElroy
Knowledge has always been relevant for the good performance of business. However, the
kind of relevant knowledge to develop and maintain competitive advantage has changed
over time (see figure 1). During the first half of the 20th century, successful companies
focused on improving their internal processes – production and managerial operations
needed to be efficient. Scientific management, as developed by Frederick W. Taylor, is
an example of business knowledge of the first kind. But increase in competition and
expansion of the economy made it necessary to focus beyond the enterprise itself in order
to learn more about the market, the industry, the consumers. Business knowledge of the
second kind, therefore, is contextual. The work of Michael Porter on competitive
advantage is a quintessential example of this kind of knowledge with great impact in the
80’s. These two stages of business knowledge reflect a reductionistic and mechanistic
scientific paradigm that is portrayed in the outdated-but-still-in-use business metaphors of
the jungle, war, and machine. The companies of the 21st century, the emerging
evolutionary corporations, transcend that. Business knowledge of the third kind
comprises an understanding of the socio-cultural and bio-physical dynamics of the
organizational environment and draws insight from the sciences of complexity to infuse
strategy and tactics for innovative value creation.
Figure 1. Business knowledge for evolutionary management
The centrality of knowledge in contemporary management brought into being the thriving
field of knowledge management (KM). Mark McElroy (2000) has described two
Figure 1. Business knowledge for evolutionary management
(adapted from Laszlo & Laszlo, 1997).
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generations of knowledge management. First generation KM focuses on knowledge
sharing – how to distribute existing organizational knowledge, usually through
technology – while second generation KM focuses on knowledge creation – how to
satisfy organizational needs for new knowledge, usually through processes of learning
and innovation. Learning has become one of the main sources of sustainable competitive
advantage (Senge, 1993, p. 3).
But it is not simply learning processes the ones that create value in the business world. It
is learning through collaboration – that is, organizational learning. Knowledge and
innovation are the result – the byproducts – of ongoing collaborative processes that create
the conditions for creativity and synergy. This is the vision of a learning organization,
which, in words of Peter Senge (1993), is a place where
people continually expand their capacity to create the results they truly desire, where new and
expansive patterns of thinking are nurtured, where collective aspiration is set free, and where
people are continually learning how to learn together (p. 2).
The machine metaphor applied to an organization removes its human character and
makes it a static and sterile system. The fact is that organizations are human activity
systems that reflect the purposes, values, expectations and emotions of the people that
comprise them. A more appropriate metaphor for the organization is a living organism –
an image that makes explicit the dynamic complexity of organizational life.
Complex systems are evolving systems. A living organism is capable of selfmaintenance,
self-renewal, and self-transcendence (Capra, 1996). Evolution is a process
of self-organization into higher levels of functional and structural complexity (Laszlo,
1996). These features of complex evolving systems offer new insights for the design of
organizational strategies, structures, and processes. “The company that acts like a living
organism will naturally be a learning organization absorbing and reacting to information
in an evolutionary manner. Companies that are conceived of as machines, rather than
living organisms, are unlikely to be aware of external shifts in public opinion or be
sensitive enough to their key relationships, because they will not be sensitive to the
unexpected” (McIntosh, Leipziger, Jones, & Coleman, 1998, p. 74-75).
LONG-TERM AND BIG PICTURE REDEFINED
“Think big picture....
“The more you try to grasp, the more possibilities you have”
— Allan Weisman
The vision of a sustainable future is compelling, inspiring, meaningful. It is also critical –
the wellbeing of future generations depends on our ability to live in partnership with
Earth. But there is even more depth to the sustainability challenge. It is evolutionary.
The evolutionary perspective can be adequately thought of as the “big picture” – but it is
not a static and permanent image of the larger context of our human existence, but rather
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an understanding of the dynamic processes of change of which we are a part. In this
sense, evolution is the big moving picture and we humans are key actors.
How long is long-term in the business world? Five, ten, twenty years… Regardless of the
exact variation, in evolutionary terms, it is very short. Long-term for the Iroquois Indians
is seven generations. This is closer to the long term required for evolutionary change
agency in which humans, individually and collectively, need to engage.
Our planet was formed 4.6 billion years ago. Humans have lived on Earth for about 2.5
million years. Civilizations developed about 10,000 years ago and written histories only
cover 5,000 years approximately. In the last 200 years (0.00000044% of Earth time),
humans have brought more change on the planet than in the past billion years. An
analogy may help gain perspective on these time spans (Milbrath, 1989, p. 2):
Imagine a movie that runs a full year representing all the time since the origin of the earth. Each
frame in the motion picture is the equivalent of one year of real time. The normal movie speed of
twenty-four frames a second has to be increased about six times to 146 frames (years) per second
to fit this movie into a single year. That means that 8.752 years of real time would flash by during
each minute of the movie…. A day of the movie would represent 12,602.240 years. Imagine that
the movie begins on January 1, coinciding with the origin of the earth, and ends with our present
time at New Years’ Eve the following year. As the movie runs for weeks, no sign of life is seen.
The first glimmers of one-celled microbial life do not develop until March….
In our year long movie, more complex life forms… do not develop until August and September.
Larger and still more complex multicellular organism do not appear until November. Dinosaurs
appear about December 13th and become extinct after about thirteen days. Mammals appear about
December fifteen. The genus Homo does not develop until five hours before midnight on
December 31. Homo sapiens sapiens (modern humans) developed only 100,000 years ago; eleven
minutes before midnight. Civilization does not appear until one minute before midnight. A
lifetime of a modern human would be only one-half of a second.
The industrial era has lasted about two seconds. During that era, humans have used up and
scattered a large proportion of the resources in the earth’s crust, altered and exploited ecosystems
to serve strictly human needs, held all other species at their mercy, and driven many species to
extinction. They are now well on the way to poisoning the biosphere and changing the earth’s
climate. In comparison to the dinosaurs who survived on the planet thirteen days, can Homo
sapiens last even one day? Microbes that long precede us will still be here long after we are gone.
Banathy (1996) provides a historical view of societal evolution (see figure 2). Each stage
of societal evolution builds on another. Technological innovation can be seen as one of
the motors of change, moving from technologies that allow us to survive and satisfy our
basic human needs to technologies that expand our physical and cognitive capacities.
Figure 2 illustrates the acceleration in the rate of change, the trend toward global
integration, and the emergence of the systems paradigm. Each one of these stages
represent periods of relative stability. However, the transitions from one stage to another
are periods of utter confusion and chaos in which the status quo cannot be maintained
given the changes in the environment. During these transitions – or bifurcation points –
the next stage of societal evolution cannot be predicted.
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Chaos theory, one of the pillars of the sciences of complexity, describes a phenomenon
called the butterfly effect: in bifurcation points, the turbulent conditions in a complex
dynamic system make possible the overall transformation of the system through small
changes (Laszlo, 1996, p.46). Individuals and organizations may ask themselves “what
difference will I make if I behave ethically in society?” and the thought of a single
initiative of social and environmental responsibility against all the unsustainable practices
of society at large seems to discourage ethical and innovative initiatives. The popular
quote from Margaret Mead, “never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed
individuals can change the world; indeed, it’s the only thing that ever has,” gains new
meaning through the lens of the sciences of complexity. Prigogine, in his work Order out
of Chaos expresses this idea in the following way:
The threat lies in the realization that in our universe the security of stable, permanent rules are
gone forever. We are living in a dangerous and uncertain world that inspires no blind confidence.
Our hope arises from the knowledge that even small fluctuations may grow and change the overall
structure. As a result, individual activity is not doomed to insignificance” (quoted in Banathy,
1996, p. 313).
Contemporary global societies are currently experiencing another bifurcation. A new
stage in societal evolution is about to be born. The key difference from the previous
transitions from one stage to the other is that this is the first time in human history that we
are able to explain what is happening while it is happening (Mead in Montuori, 1989, p.
27). This gives us an unprecedented opportunity. With the new understanding of
evolutionary dynamics and systemic approaches to the participatory design of strategies,
structures and processes, our species can stop drifting upon the currents of change and
begin to adjust its sails in view of sustainable evolutionary futures.
Figure 2. A historical view of societal evolution
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There are many indications that the new evolutionary stage could be labeled “sustainable
society” – but in evolution there are no guaranties, and devolution or extinction are
always possibilities. “We can take responsibility, individually and collectively, for the
conscious evolution of our human systems. We can hold others – individuals,
corporations, and governments – accountable as well. It no longer matters “who is to
blame”; what matters is that we all take responsibility for the direction and impact of our
society. In this generation, in our era, humans have become integral agents of evolution.
More than that, we are evolution becoming conscious of itself” (Nattrass and Altomare,
1999, p. 199).
IMPLICATIONS FOR BUSINESS EDUCATION
“Tell me, I forget;
Show me, I remember;
Involve me, I understand”
— Ancient Eastern Proverb
The creation of the evolutionary corporations that will bring about a sustainable society is
a task that begins today. Organizations can begin doing things in new ways, to design
new strategies, to implement new processes and structures. But these actions require
capable people that understand the challenges, that embrace the new scientific paradigm,
that can think long term, that are committed to the creation of meaning. “An actual
change to a more sustainable way of life… require(s) a degree of change in understanding
and attitudes. Education is one of the ways in which moral values and positions are
developed in society. A transition to sustainability may therefore require some change in
current educational programmes” (Clayton & Radcliffe, 1996, p. 237).
Bowers (1993) considers that educators are not yet aware of the cultural myths and
assumptions that underlie their practice. Most educational innovators are still “caught in
the myth of an anthropocentric universe.... The avalanche of information on the human
impact on the environment is now so great that it is almost inconceivable that it is still
being ignored by people who represent themselves as the leaders in education. But
unfortunately this is the case” (Bowers, 1993, p. 115).
Unless business education, dedicated to the development of the talent for the business
world, reflects the emergent evolutionary paradigm both in processes and contents,
companies will continue to respond to new realities with old approaches. An essential
task in business education “would be to develop a wider concept of social and
environmental responsibility” (Clayton & Radcliffe, 1996, p. 237).
Contemporary business education fails to help business students achieve sufficient
educational breadth, particularly with regard to their role and responsibility in an
increasingly interconnected planet. “By developing curricular projects linked to
community needs, [business] faculty can further their students' technical skills when
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helping them simultaneously develop greater inter-personal, inter-cultural, and ethical
sensitivity” (Zlotkowski, 1996).
Evolutionary corporations have strong and explicit core values that embrace
sustainability; recognize the business benefits of sustainability; are committed to
organizational learning and to the human development of their people; understand the
evolutionary systems perspective; have an expanded sense of responsibility &
accountability; seek financial robustness; and accept their role as agents of socio-cultural
evolution (Nattrass & Altomare, 1999, p. 189-191). Business education needs to
facilitate the development of the knowledge, skills, values and attitudes that will cover
the spectrum of evolutionary management, bringing a more balanced perspective to the
overly emphasized financial bottom line.
Banathy (1996, p. 318-319) differentiates between maintenance and evolutionary
learning. The first is adaptive. It involves the acquisition of fixed viewpoints, methods,
and rules of dealing with known and recurring events. It maintains the status quo, and it
is appropriate during periods of socio-cultural stability. In contrast, evolutionary learning
is innovative. It enables the learner to cope with uncertainty and change, renew
perspectives and creatively design co-evolutionary human systems. It is a more
appropriate learning approach during bifurcation points. Educational systems in general
(and business schools are not the exception) have been focused primarily on maintenance
learning and the creation of knowers that know a lot about existing business knowledge
and approaches. But new realities and global challenges call for evolutionary learning
and the empowerment of learners capable of generating new knowledge and processes to
respond to the changing socio-cultural and bio-physical environment.
Milbrath (1989, p. 110) suggests that educational institutions need to reorient their efforts
toward helping students learn systems thinking, futures design, probabilistic decision
making, integrative analysis, creativity, values inquiry, and ethical reasoning. Following
a similar perspective, the business education programs of EGADE1 seek to elicit creative
problem solvers, transformative agents, ethical visionaries, self-directed learners,
managers of complexity, cross-cultural leaders, and technology shapers. This vision
informs the contents and processes of the courses we offer in order to facilitate the
development of competencies such as nonlinear systemic thinking, systems design, selfmotivation,
openness to change and uncertainty, empathy, and innovation. In our courses,
we are introducing collaborative and self-directed learning methodologies and we
encourage the adaptation and application of the knowledge covered in the active
organizational contexts of the students.2
1 The Graduate School of Business Administration and Leadership of the Monterrey Institute of
Technology (ITESM) in Mexico. EGADE has been ranked for three consecutive years as the best business
school in Latin America.
2 Two MBA courses that are being offered with a purposeful focus on these aspects are
“Strategies, Structures and Processes of Organization” and “Organizational Learning and Development”
that Dr. Alexander Laszlo and I team teach.
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Business education need to include evolutionary systemic approaches and the vision of a
sustainable economy. Ethical innovation cannot happen through a top-down mandate, but
rather occurs as the result of self-organizing, collaborative and creative processes within
an organization that has made explicit the values and the commitment to move toward
sustainability.
CONCLUSION
The world is changing and the business world is a key shaper of emergent possibilities.
The evolution of the business world and with it, the evolution of society, can be a
conscious and purposeful process. Nevertheless, it will not be an easy transition. There
is a huge inertia of modern industrial ways, and those taking the lead will find risks and
resistance. As Machiavelli (1984) put it:
There is nothing more difficult to carry out nor more doubtful of success, nor more dangerous to
handle, than to initiate a new order of things. For the reformer has enemies in all who profit by the
old order, and only lukewarm defenders in all those who would profit by the new order. The
lukewarmness arises partly from the fear of their adversaries who have law in their favor; and
partly from the incredulity of mankind, who do not truly believe in anything new until they have
had actual experience of it.
Although Machiavelli’s perspective was not quite aligned with the evolutionary paradigm
and the sustainability vision, the relevance of his statement relates to the perennial
difficulty of creating new paths. And yet, there could be nothing more challenging and
rewarding. Sustainability makes business sense.

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