Grey Rhinos and Black Swans

Understanding strategy and prepping for Grey Rhinos and Black Swans

When it comes to strategy, the corollaries to the ‘known, knowns’, the ‘known unknowns’, and the ‘unknown unknowns’ are to ‘expect the expected’, to ‘expect the unexpected’. And finally, to be completely floored by the unexpected.

 That is to shift strategically from Business-As-Usual (BAU), to dealing with a Grey Rhino (a highly probable, high impact, yet neglected threat) to a Black Swan event (the unknown unknowns).

Given that we have experienced at least three Black Swans in our lifetimes which to some were credible ‘Grey Rhino’ events, (9/11, the GFC and the CoVid pandemic), the opportunities to change the way we do things, to be prepared for the unexpected and create resilient ‘future-fit’ organisations, are no longer ‘nice-to-have’. They are essential.

However, the opportunities to change are the positives of the ‘unexpected’.

Before focusing on ‘where to begin’, it is worth reminding ourselves of where we have come from and what we have achieved. Let’s focus momentarily on the Pandemic achievements.

What did we learn?

One of the biggest learnings was the realisation that the ability to change quickly was not only possible, but could work well.

  • Trust returned.

  • We understood the importance of iterating and the value of simplicity.

  • We connected with clarity and purpose.

  • We also discovered our Strengths and our Weaknesses, as well as our Threats.

Now it is time to work on our Opportunities.

With a deeper understanding of the value of taking a holistic approach to change, it is more important than ever to simplify the complexity and bridge the gap between strategic ambition and results.

To really understand and evolve our operating models.

Definition of an Operating Model

An operating model describes the way an organisation does business.  It articulates how an organisation delivers value. It can also target its aspirations to doing business into the future. To do so the operating model needs to be dynamic. More than ever, it needs to be responsive to constant change and shifting demands – internally, externally and strategically.  

A robust operating model needs to continuously iterate each of its elements: its processes, organisation, decision making, software applications, locations etc. To do so requires a holistic approach - a blueprint that understands how all the moving parts fit together.

 Our ‘unexpected’ achievements over the past two years position our organisations to do this.

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What is an Operating Model?