Vuca Terminology PDF
Vuca Terminology PDF
Vuca Terminology PDF
Abstract: VUCA, an acronym for Volatility, Uncertainty, Complexity and Ambiguity is fast becoming a
catchphrase in the corporate arena and an often-discussed topic for today’s adaptive leaders during annual
strategy meets. Economic turbulence and the rapid rate of change in our business environment are throwing
many organizations and their leaders pretty much off-balance as they are unable to keep pace with the vagaries
of a VUCA world. In a 'VUCA world,' both pundits and executives have said, core activities essential to driving
organizational performance--like strategic planning--are viewed as mere exercises in futility. The Harvard
Business Manager Blog titles their V.U.C.A. article “The Age of Jugglers”. In these times, past and present
achievements do not always translate into future successes. Or as business expert and former German DAX-
company executive Stefanie Voss puts it, “it’s becoming increasingly difficult to keep all the balls in the air.”
Companies big and small face a host of new challenges. The world is becoming more complex and volatile, and
these conditions make even short-term decisions difficult. Transparent markets and an ever-faster pace create
high workplace pressures. In this context the current paper discusses the straits to success in a VUCA
environment.
I. Introduction
VUCA is an acronym that has recently found its way into the business lexicon. The components it
refers to--volatility, uncertainty, complexity, and ambiguity--are words that have been variously used to describe
an environment which defies confident diagnosis and befuddles executives. In a 'VUCA world,' both pundits
and executives have said, core activities essential to driving organizational performance--like strategic planning-
-are viewed as mere exercises in futility. VUCA conditions render useless any efforts to understand the future
and to plan responses.
The notion of VUCA was introduced by the U.S. Army War College to describe uncertain, complex,
and ambiguous, multilateral world which resulted from the end of the Cold War. We are moving from a world
of problems, which demands speed, analysis and uncertainty to solve in a world of dilemmas, which demands
patience, sense making and an engagement with uncertainty. ‟VUCA‟ is Volatile, Uncertain, Complex and
Ambiguous are the characteristics of modern strategic dilemmas which requires a different orientation and a set
of skills.
Dilemmas span disciplines and frustrate attempt to craft elegant and final solutions. According to
VUCA if we wait too long for a moment, it may pass without our knowledge. It is the recognition that there can
be many ways beyond hand a competitor of its advantage. Management‟s version of the use of Special Forces is
an effort to switch from a hierarchical into a modular form of organization. Thus, shifting of agency from the
executive committees to self and proxies is a tendency to form partnerships that verges on the indiscriminate .In
this turbulent business environment, HR managers must apply VUCA model as a framework to develop leaders.
The current paper focuses on the straits to success in a VUCA world.
Harish Manwani (2013) observes that we are living in a world where volatility and uncertainty have
become the New Normal. Companies that were synonymous with their product categories just a few years ago
are now no longer inexistence. We live in a VUCA world surrounded by black swans. This is the New Normal.
But even with this unpredictably changing world, there are a few important underlying megatrends that will
shape our future.
Kishore Kumar Das & Aftab Ara (2014) finds that we are moving from a world of problems, which
demands speed, analysis and uncertainty to solve, to a world of dilemmas, which demands patience, sense
making and an engagement with uncertainty. ‟VUCA‟ is Volatile, Uncertain, Complex and Ambiguous are the
characteristics of modern strategic dilemmas which requires a different orientation and a set of skills. Dilemmas
span disciplines and frustrate attempts to craft elegant and final solutions.
Betof, Lisa M.D. Owens, Sue Todd (2014) observes that the once identifiable boundaries of our
marketplaces and industries have become permeable. Now they shift continuously, sometimes slowly,
sometimes quickly, but always feeling slightly beyond our grasp. In this environment, leaders realize that a
sustainable future is only possible if organizations can sense, adapt, and respond to change; if they can help their
organizations evolve with an evolving world.
Nick Petrie (2014) observes that It seemed that the nature of the challenges that managers
were facing was rapidly changing; however, the methods that we were using to develop them were
staying the same. The last decade has seen many industries enter a period of increasingly rapid change. The
most recent global recession, of 2007 has contributed to an environment that many of us believe is
fundamentally different from that of 10 years ago.
Thriving in this VUCA world means adapting as new business contexts emerge. For leaders, it means:
creating an environment of openness that values discovery, diverse perspectives, and experimentation
detecting the weak signals that foretell shifts in customer loyalty, or opportunities enabled by new
technology
conducting iterative dialogues that put new ideas into the context of the company's work, and translate new
information into differentiating capabilities
unpacking business challenges to reveal the learning gaps for individuals, teams, and the organization's
practices, processes, and systems
Strengthening thoughtful decision making in the organization.
The VUCA world encompasses four similar-sounding yet strikingly distinct challenges that deserve a special
mention here:
Volatility The nature, speed, volume, magnitude and dynamics of change. The situation is unstable and may be
of an unpredictable duration. However, it is not an unanticipated situation as knowledge about a similar
challenge was already predicted. For instance, a share price fluctuation for an organization following a change
in its leadership, or after an internal scam has been exposed.
Uncertainty The lack of predictability of issues and events. Despite the lack of much information, the basic
causes and likely effects of the event are known and the outcome generally results in a substantial change. For
instance, the sudden launch of a similar, yet superior, product offering by a close competitor.
Complexity The confounding of issues and the chaos associated with this. Some information regarding the
nature of complexity is available or can be predicted. However, the sheer volume and the nature of the problem
could prove to be overwhelming. For instance, the unique tax and regulatory environments, tariffs and cultural
expectations associated with doing business in several countries.
Ambiguity The haziness of stark reality! Herein, the causal relationships is unclear. The situation is
unprecedented and one must brace himself to face the unknown. For instance, you decide to enter unchartered
territory by exploring immature or emerging markets or launch products out of your core competency/ comfort
zone.
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So, the obvious question emerges: is it really possible to prepare for a VUCA world? Well, it certainly is.
Applying critical thinking in order to better tackle apparently challenging situations and make well-thought-
through decisions in a VUCA world is the answer you‟re looking for.
For volatile situations Separating facts from opinions is the key. So is formulating thoughts objectively and
precisely as well as ensuring clarity in communication.
For uncertain situations Listening and comprehension is vital. Being open-minded about alternative points of
view and dealing with contradiction are also necessary in such situations.
For complex situations One needs to gather facts from various sources do logical enquiry and reasoning and
also weigh the alternatives. Weighing alternatives, making decisions under pressure and testing the solutions
against relevant criteria are also vital.
For Ambiguous situations Curiosity; eliciting and evaluating arguments; asking the right questions;
adaptability and agility in thinking as well as seeing the consequences and likely implications are essential in
such circumstances. Quite simply, critical thinking is excellence in thought processes which precedes excellence
in our actions.
Consumer Centricity
As the world changes, consumers are also changing. There are an emerging poor in the developed
world and an emerging affluent in the developing world. The way people shop and consume is also changing.
More than ever, businesses must have an insight into the changing needs and aspirations of their consumers to
be successful.
Today‟s organizations are no longer defined by fixed workplaces, nine-to-five working hours or by a
set of homogenous employees. Organizations are becoming boundary-less and often, location agnostic.
Operational and business models are being turned on their heads with the advent of enterprises like Uber,
Airbnb, Etsy and Amazon. These complexities will continue to exponentially increase as we enter a hyper-
digital era with Artificial Intelligence (AI), Robotics, 3D printing, Wearable‟s, and much more looming over the
horizon. Going ahead, organizations of the future will function as platforms connecting diverse, distributed, and
multi-talented individuals who will come together to create value.
It is understood that the workforce today has expanded to include contractual and contingent workers,
partners, vendors and suppliers, as well as customers and competitors – the extended enterprise. This “extended
enterprise” is as critical to the success of any organization as the permanent employees. However, seamlessly
integrating this ecosystem of stakeholders such that they can come together in a purposeful manner to create
value for the organization and fulfil their individual potentials is posing to be a challenge. In the Industrial Era,
work got done in silos with process adherence and efficiency playing a huge role. This style of working will no
longer suffice as we enter an era characterized by flux and ambiguity – the VUCA (Volatile, Uncertain,
Complex, and Ambiguous) world.
Currently, many organizations are caught up in trying to deploy different systems of engagement like
social intranets, blogs, enterprise collaboration platforms, and so on. However, these are very often disconnected
from the core HR systems where organizational information and data reside. This leads to incongruence and an
inability to connect the loops in the value chain. This is also where most of the digital and collaboration
initiatives flounder. This is where HR can play a crucial role in bridging the two systems – not only through
technology but also by re-imagining the processes, the organizational design, and other initiatives like
community management, empowering employees with digital skills for them to navigate this new world with
ease, and enabling and creating a culture of collaboration and sharing.
HR Re-imagination can happen at multiple levels to empower employees and the organization and form the
bedrock of a new organizational culture. Some of these initiatives are briefly described below:
1. Extended Enterprise - Employees are no longer a homogenous set of people. Contractors, consultants,
partners, vendors, customers and competitors are coming together to get the work done. Therefore,
organizations that support communities consisting of this extended enterprise stand to benefit in multiple
ways like improved agility, diversity of thought and greater innovation capabilities and increased level of
trust among different stakeholders.
2. Enterprise Social Networks (ESNs) - Organizations are becoming increasingly distributed, diverse, and
digital. Employees today expect to be able to work from anywhere, anytime, and from any device. ESNs,
once thought of as a “good-to-have” have transformed into “must-haves” to keep this distributed workforce
connected, to enable seamless sharing of explicit and tacit knowledge, and to facilitate conversations across
geographies, business units, and domains -- a critical component of the future of work. HR must don the
mantle of collaboration enablers and community managers to build connected enterprises.
3. Communities of Practices - Organizations today work across domains and areas of expertise. It is no longer
possible for an individual or a small team of people to find solutions to complex problems, exceptions and
challenges that businesses are facing today. Practitioners come together in these communities to share the
latest and the best, to find innovative solutions and contribute to the growth of the domain. Individuals join
communities voluntarily when they see value and can evolve both professionally and personally.
By putting communities and collaboration front and centre, HR can highlight the importance of
leveraging the advantages of network and emergent technology (social, mobile, analytics, etc.). This new way of
working will include enterprise platforms and other collaboration enablers that, if appropriately used, reduce the
cost of communication to almost zero. They can also facilitate self-driven learning, a culture of transparency and
ongoing feedback, contextual and dialogue-driven problem solving. Most importantly, these tools can cut across
organizational silos and tap into the organizational hive mind to build a learning agile and future-ready
workplace.
This shift requires a careful and intentionally-designed workplace where collaboration and social
learning is not a bolt-on aspect but a part of core business strategy. A culture of participation must be supported
where “participation” does not imply bureaucratic compliance and cooperation, but thoughtful conversation and
open sharing.
More Focus on Vertical Development: There are two different types of development–horizontal and vertical. A
great deal of time has been spent on “horizontal” development (competencies), but very little time on “vertical”
development (developmental stages). The methods for horizontal and vertical development are very different.
Horizontal development can be “transmitted” (from an expert), but vertical development must be earned (for
oneself).
Transfer of Greater Developmental Ownership to the Individual: People develop fastest when they feel
responsible for their own progress. The current model encourages people to believe that someone else is
responsible for their development–human resources, their manager, or trainers. We will need to help people out
of the passenger seat and into the driver‟s seat of their own development.
Greater Focus on Collective rather than Individual Leadership: Leadership development has come to a point
of being too individually focused and elitist. There is a transition occurring from the old paradigm in which
leadership resided in a person or role, to a new one in which leadership is a collective process that is spread
throughout networks of people. The question will change from, “Who are the leaders?” to “What conditions do
we need for leadership to flourish in the network?” How do we spread leadership capacity throughout the
organization and democratize leadership?
Much Greater Focus on Innovation in Leadership Development Methods There are no simple, existing
models or programs that will be sufficient to develop the levels of collective leadership required to meet an
increasingly complex future. Instead, an era of rapid innovation will be needed in which organizations
experiment with new approaches that combine diverse ideas in new ways and share these with others.
Technology and the web will both provide the infrastructure and drive the change. Organizations that embrace
the changes will do better than those who resist it.
Table.1
Current Focus Future Focus
The “What” of Leadership The “What” and “How” of Development
Horizontal Development Horizontal and Vertical Development
HR/Training Companies, own Development Each Person owns Development
Collective Leadership is Spread throughout the
Leadership Resides in Individual Managers
Network
Source: Centre for Creative Leadership
Leaders, from CEOs to any other internal manager, therefore have a major role to play in ensuring their
organizations are responding to the requirements of the VUCA business environment. Research on responsible
leadership is still at a nascent stage. However, given its all-compassing approach toward ethicality, valuing
others and inclusivity, it is certain that this type of leadership is the “need of the hour” for effectively addressing
the requirements of a VUCA world. The foundation of responsible leadership is based on the following treatise:
“Give to the world the best you have and the best will come back to you”.
IX. Conclusion:
The VUCA world is not going to disappear. As technology develops faster and the world becomes
more and more a global market place, there is no place to hide. Change is relentless and the landscape in which
we work is constantly shifting. The leadership role becomes increasingly one of creating moments of clarity and
focus, whilst at the same time keeping an eye on what is shifting and preparing to react to it. Reacting without
having vision leaves people feeling confused and demotivated. Rigidly adhering to a chosen strategy risks
missing opportunities or failing to respond to market and environmental changes. Somehow leaders need to
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walk a fine line between these two positions in order to be flexible and yet sufficiently focused to keep people
motivated. VUCA is complex and challenging, but it is also an environment that can allow true leadership
talents to emerge at all levels of the organisation. Indeed one of the major lessons of the VUCA world is that
leaders need to engage all employees at all levels to gain their trust and contribution in dealing with the great
range of challenges that VUCA poses. Seen from this point of view VUCA becomes an opportunity for
development and greater collaboration, rather than a risk to be mitigated.
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