Subscribe to our blog!

Your email:

Leverage Points Blog

Current Articles | RSS Feed RSS Feed

Harnessing the Energy of Opposites

 

By Russ Gaskin

How do today’s leaders create profound innovation in the face of complexity? According to an executive report by the IBM Institute for Business Value, they do it by “embracing dynamic tensions.”

In a report released in July, “Cultivating organizational creativity in an age of complexity,” Barbara J. Lombardo and Daniel John Roddy assert thatBalancing Rocks “leaders who embrace the dynamic tension between creative disruption and operational efficiency can create new models of extraordinary value. . . . By harnessing the energy of opposites, creative leaders and their organizations can benefit from new assumptions that replace less effective ‘either/or’ approaches.”

The IBM researchers additionally found that “to succeed in an increasingly interconnected world, creative leaders avoid choosing between unacceptable alternatives. Instead, they use the power inherent in these dualities to invent new assumptions and create new models geared to an ever-changing world.”

The report lists seven key tensions that leaders can creatively optimize to create innovative breakthroughs:

Local and Global: “The new generation of social media-inspired globalists will push past tired management models and East versus West cultural stereotypes”

Real World and Digital World: “Forward-thinking business designs will seek to create new value at the intersection of the physical and virtual worlds”

Systems Thinking and Design Thinking: “Finding solutions to complex problems requires both analytical and creative thinking styles working together”

Business and Society & Environment: “Truly sustainable growth and profitability comes from solutions that address the needs of society and the environment”

Zero Sum and Expand the Pie: “Creative leadership is about seeking opportunities for shared value creation, even in the toughest of times and the most difficult of circumstances”

Power and Influence: “Organizational creativity thrives when leadership styles adjust as needed to support both top-down and bottom-up innovation initiatives”

Operational Efficiency and Creative Disruption: “Complex systems (for example, the human body) are able to adapt in an orderly fashion to unexpected challenges because their many distinctive parts work smoothly together”

Polarity Thinking

The body of work known as “polarity thinking” (or “polarity management”), pioneered by Dr. Barry Johnson, provides a practical and sophisticated method for leveraging dynamic tensions (or polarities). Polarities are situations like seven key tensions described above, in which both conflicting points of view are true. When leaders manage this ongoing, natural tension, they can often channel it into a creative synergy that leads to superior outcomes.

Leveraging polarities involves making a fundamental distinction between solvable either/or problems and both/and polarities, which are inherently unsolvable (but leverage-able). The ability to shift from exclusive reliance on either/or thinking to leveraging both/and thinking is a critical competency for success in an increasingly complex and interdependent world.

Tremendous breakthroughs can occur when forward-thinking organizations learn to harness the power of polarities to their advantage.

Russ GaskinRuss Gaskin is chief business officer of Green America, and a teacher and consultant on social innovation and shared value creation. Through his consulting practice, CoCreative Consulting, Russ helps companies and multi-stakeholder groups generate innovative solutions to chronic challenges. Russ holds a master’s degree in organization development from AmericanUniversity and the NTL Institute.

Russ and Cliff Kayser will be presenting a workshop on Polarity Management in Seattle, WA, November 3, 2011.  

Comments

Of course "Harnessing the Energy" caught my attention. Thank you for a terrific article Russ and for your continuing great posts Janice. I wish I could be in Seattle in November.
Posted @ Saturday, September 17, 2011 9:46 AM by Judy Ringer
I went to the Polarity Management workshop at last year's conference and it provided a way of approaching solutions that--I think--will convert those who resist change into those that at least will approach it anew. It does this by validating the value of each 'sides' approach and acknowledging that each contributes to a complete solution. Very eye-opening and worth the whole price of the conference!
Posted @ Saturday, September 24, 2011 12:58 PM by Peg Carlson-Bowen
Thanks for your comments, Judy and Peg. I find that the word "energy" applies very well to polarities. When a group first sees a chronic, tough conflict through the lens of polarities, the energy in the room instantly shifts in a powerful, visceral way. 
 
In fact, my colleague Cliff Kayser, with whom I'm doing the workshop in November, has a great little metaphor for harnessing the energy in polarities: 
 
A sign on the beach says, “BEWARE of RIP CURRENTS.”  
 
We know that a rip current occurs when waves break onto the shore from opposite directions, creating a powerful current – like a river going out to sea in the opposite direction of the shore.  
 
If you aren’t familiar with rip currents and get caught in one while swimming, a potentially fatal mistake is to make the logical conclusion, based on the initial data, that your choice is to either swim to the safety of shore or be carried out to sea. Following this logic can result in becoming exhausted very quickly to devastating results. In fact, over 100 people die from rip currents each year. 
 
Thanks to others passing the wisdom gleaned from experiences with rip currents, we learn to “swim parallel to shore” to avoid disaster-—a critical reframing of the situation!  
 
However, some professional surfers actually learn to play in the “energy system” of rip currents. Surfers ride the rip current out to sea, surf the waves back to shore, and ride the rip current back like a conveyer. Surfers far exceed survival in rip currents; they tap their energy systems and thrive in them!  
Posted @ Tuesday, September 27, 2011 2:11 PM by Russ Gaskin
I would add the convergent and divergent thinking.
Posted @ Tuesday, October 04, 2011 8:19 AM by Sandor Heder
Comments have been closed for this article.