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"Learn
As You Go"Strategic Management A story from
James Taylor, president and chief executive officer, University of Louisville
Hospital, Louisville, Ky. (1996-1997) |
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Told
by: Brenda Zimmerman and Curt Lindberg Illustration of:
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The
Board members of University of Louisville Hospital had just hired a new CEO. One of his
early challenges was to be the creation a strategic plan for the next five years and
beyond. The Board and senior management had already gathered some consultants
proposals from highly respected national and international firms. It was expected that
James Taylor, the new CEO, would choose between the proposals and carry out the work.
He struggled with how we was
going deal with his new Board on this. He decided to be direct.
"The strategic
planning idea didnt make any sense in the rapidly evolving health care environment.
I told the Board that we should put aside the proposals to do a $500,000 strategic plan
and get on with addressing the strategic issues themselves. They already had identified
the key strategic issues. We knew what they were. I said that I thought we should learn as
we go from dealing with those issues if we are going to survive in this strange
organizational environment. Let us learn and evolve." Although Taylor was worried
about whether the Board would see him as "some kind of weird guy," they accepted
his ideas about acting on the strategic issues and learning through the process. He fosters an action learning,
issues oriented approach. Consultants are hired but only if they agree to work with the
team as co-learners "to add richness and diversity to our discussion."
"Consultants who propose to come up with solutions or figure out the process for
us" are not considered. Taylor found that most
consultants and managers generally do not understand his request. "It is hard to get people
comfortable with the idea of step by step, good enough as you go, and not falling back
into the idea that we can plan our way out of all this or avoiding the real issues by
continually studying. The tendency is to get some experts, plan it and avoid talking about
what the real issues are."
The hospital made progress
on some of the key strategic issues facing the hospital including the relationship with
two other hospitals in the city. Collaboration is not implemented on an overall basis but
on an issue by issue basis to discover what works and what does not work. Mistakes are
made. They learn from action. "I was talking with my
Board president the other day about some of the difficult strategic issues that we are
working our way through. He said that he thought I was the most patient person he had ever
run across. I looked at him a bit startled. He said that he meant it as a compliment. He
said the unique organizational situation we were facing meant I was not in control. My
ability to get things done, as in any complex adaptive system, is dependent upon a lot of
others who I cannot command. I guess my view of the way things work makes me seem patient
- not always without frustration."
The concept of emergent strategy
is not new nor is the idea of the lack of separation between strategy formulation and
implementation (see for example Mintzberg, 1994). However, the traditional approach of
senior executives planning the strategy for others to implement still dominates much of
the strategy literature and practice in organizations. Taylors story does not
deal with the identification of the strategic issues. Some were "known" and some
"emerged." His concern from past experience was that knowing the strategic
issues existed was the easy part. Knowing what to do with them was the challenge. His
story is about how to address the strategic issues through a layered process of action and
reflection - the "learn as you go" approach. "Its a more pragmatic, action orientation that says here are the strategic
issues so lets address them the best we can. Lets keep our eyes open and find
out what we can learn and make sure that we see the new strategic issues as they come or
the present ones as they fall away. Lets make sure we create an organizational
environment where we can see those things - where we can learn from our actions." Taylor had the courage and
humility to challenge the ideas of strategic planning at his hospital. His ideas of
emergence, co-evolution and unpredictability are informed by complexity. His choice of
interventions, including using minimum critical specifications and finding small actions
which connect with the larger strategic issues, are also based on his belief in
organizations as complex adaptive systems. However, for the most part he has not brought
these ideas into the open explicitly. He has chosen to work with what he believes are the
attractors in the system. He works with what will attract people to address a key
strategic issue. Taylor is tackling the hard
issues in his organization. For example, he has worked on a collaborative model for a
regional cancer care system. But rather than try to reach consensus on topics like this
where there are politics, where there is little agreement and no certainty, he tries to
find small actions and specific topics which they can act on to address the "big
picture". Lessons from the actions are then fed back as learning for the next loop.
It is learn as you go for Taylor. Reflection is important in this process. He uses
reflection to recognize the patterns in the interactions between the people and issues.
This pattern recognition is an ongoing process. He never assumes he understands it all. It
is a never ending inquiry about himself, the hospital and health care. "It isnt a good
expectation for people to think that their leaders can tell what the future is going to
be. Weve got to get people past that and not allow that to be an excuse for not
stepping up to the hard strategic issues and working through them." (Taylor) |
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Zimmerman and Curt Lindberg. Permission |