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Printable Handouts
Navigable Slide Index
- Introduction
- Talk outline
- The NHS: 25 years of change
- Minister of defense
- Chiefs of the Defense Staff
- Chief of the General Staff 1964-2009
- First Sea Lord and Chief of the Naval Staff
- Chief of the Air Staff
- Drowning in the waves of change
- Top ten critical change issues
- 75% of change programmes fail in their own terms
- The problem with change
- Critical problems: commander
- Omnipotent and omniscient commanders
- Tame problems: management
- Management as a science
- Wicked problems have no simple solution
- Leaders as wheelwrights: leadership as an art
- Differentiating authority (1)
- Differentiating authority (2)
- Problems and power
- Power and compliance
- Addressing wicked problems (1)
- Four primary ways of organizing social life
- Elegant solutions
- Argument and the limits of elegant logic
- Elegant solutions don't solve wicked problems
- Hierarchy
- Egalitarianism
- Group think and peer pressure as regressive
- Addressing wicked problems (2)
- Clumsy solutions
- Elegant solutions and wicked problems
- Elegant solutions to global warming
- Clumsy solution to global warming
- Wicked problems require bricoleurs
- Adopt the role of the bricoleur
- Individualists
- Questions not answers
- Reflection not reaction
- Empathy not egotism
- Egalitarians
- Comparing random and scale-free distribution
- Collective intelligence not individual genius
- Positive deviance not negative acquiescence
- Positive deviance: malnourishment in Vietnam
- Community of fate not a fatalist community
- Hierarchists
- Relationships not structures
- Destructive consent
- Sloan's dilemma
- Destructive consent and constructive dissent
- The extraordinarization of the mundane
- Critical learning points
- Conclusion
- Thank you
Topics Covered
- The Leadership Challenge of Wicked Problems
- The problem of change
- What kind of problem are you facing: Tame, Wicked or Critical?
- Elegant solutions to Tame & Critical Problems
- Why Elegant Solutions don't resolve
- Wicked Problems
- Why Clumsy Solutions to Wicked Problems might work
Talk Citation
Grint, K. (2010, July 28). The leadership challenges of wicked problems [Video file]. In The Business & Management Collection, Henry Stewart Talks. Retrieved December 26, 2024, from https://doi.org/10.69645/PQTU7613.Export Citation (RIS)
Publication History
Transcript
Please wait while the transcript is being prepared...
0:00
Hello, my name is Keith Grint from Warwick Business School at Warwick University,
and I'm here to talk about the leadership challenge of Wicked problems.
0:11
I want to talk, first of all, generally about the problem of change,
and then what kind of a problem you're facing, whether it's Tame, Wicked or Critical.
Then I'm going to look at elegant solutions to Tame and Critical problems.
Finally, we're going to address Wicked problems themselves.
We're going to look at why elegant solutions don't resolve Wicked problems,
and why clumsy solutions to Wicked problems might work.
0:34
Let me start by just getting you to look through this list of changes that have occurred to the British National Health Service between 1982 and 2006.
You don't need to know any of the details or what's going on here,
but just be amazed by the number of reconstructions that occur.
What you're basically looking at is an annual reconstruction,
and I want you to think about and, perhaps, worry about why it is that we seem to be unable to operate unless we change everything every year.
1:08
Just in case you think this is something which only affects the health service.
This is a list of the Ministers of Defence for the UK between similar kinds of years, 1964-2009,
and again, what you see is a significant turnover of people at the top of these organisations.
In this particular case, it's one every 28 months.
1:30
Here what you see are the Chiefs of the Defence Staff,
these are the people who were in charge of the Army, Navy and Air Force combined and again, very similar kind of pattern.
Here you have somebody changing over every 24 months, every two years.