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Resilience
The COVID-19 pandemic has shown how vulnerable individuals, organizations, and
countries at all levels of development are to disasters.
Experience of adversity and unforeseen situations are common to individuals,
organizations and societies at large. In coping with forces beyond the control of an
organization, resilience is an essential for continuity and sustainable growth. The
McKinsey management and consulting group's study of the 2008 economic crisis noted
that some companies were hurt but recovered more quickly than others. "By 2009, the
earnings of the resilient companies had risen 10 percent, while that of the nonresilients
had gone down almost 15 percent (Sneader & Singhal, 2020).
This note looks at resilience with a view to understand the factors that foster or hinder
resilience.
The questions resilience seeks to answer: Why do some organizations experiencing
operational and financial stress succumb while others prove resilient and even thrive?
What are the key attributes that contribute to resiliency?
The search for competitive advantage is relentless following a crisis. Strategic leadership
requires an understanding of how the resilience operates at different levels and their
linkages to effectively cope with changes.
What Is Resilience?
Resilience, as defined by Hamel and Välikangas, "refers to a capacity for continuous
reconstruction. It requires innovation with respect to those organizational values,
processes, and behaviors that systematically favor perpetuation over innovation" (2003).
The concept of resilience has been examined from various perspectives. Ecologists such as
Holling (1973) and Perrings (2001) have defined it as the capacity to absorb stress and
shocks. Tinch (1998) notes characteristics such as stability, persistence, resistance,
Learning Topic
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nonvulnerability, and stochastic return time.
An integral part of resilience is a business continuity plan (BCP) that identifies major risks
of business interruption, plans to mitigate or reduce the impact of the identified risks, and
tests the plan to ensure its effectiveness. Business continuity equals revenue continuity
(Ruettgers, 2003).
Knowing what to secure, assessing risks, and developing business recovery policies is
central to business continuity.
The challenge for individuals, organizations, and societies is to build their capacity to
absorb or recover from change without draining resources. As part of the larger social
fabric, organizational resilience is understood in the context of the communities and the
society they operate in.
Why Resilience Matters
Organizations that fail to adjust to their changing environment soon lose their relevance
as they go out of business or get acquired. While new entrants, takeovers, and
bankruptcies are part of sustaining competitiveness, they cannot address the resilience
problem. First, there are organizations that are not open to takeovers, such as privately
owned companies, national service organizations such as the Red Cross, and government
agencies. Lack of resilience would lead to their inability to serve their objectives. Failure of
organizations means their intellectual capital disintegrates and may take years to recover.
Nonadaptive organizations lead to gross underuse of society's resources. The reason to
care about institutional resilience is that it improves its capacity for continual renewal.
Events such as the financial crisis of 2008, Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans in August
2005, the tsunami earthquake in the Indian Ocean in December 2004, the Fukushima
Daiichi nuclear disaster in March 2011, terror attacks of September 2001, and the
Chernobyl reactor failure in Ukraine in 1986 highlight the world's vulnerability to
disasters. The devastating effects of the global COVID-19 pandemic have affected
countries across the globe. In planning for the future, we must expect that all disasters are
possible, assume the worst, plan for the impact, and lay the foundation for speedy
recovery.
Upheavals profoundly change management practices. The Great Depression irrevocably
transformed management theory which had until then relied on mechanical input-output
measurements, giving rise to the human relations movement. The global financial crisis of
2008-10 led companies to shift from permanent employment. This eventually prompted
individuals to take on multiple jobs, now referred to as the "gig" economy.
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And the latest of these upheavals, COVID-19, will have a lasting impact on organizations
and leadership styles. Supply chains will be relooked; companies will restructure as more
work is done from home. As we become more digitally connected and more physically
disconnected, trust may become more important and more fragile. Organizations have to
step up to address such issues.
The degree of psychological and economic losses that individuals, organizations, and
societies suffer depends upon their resilience. Resilience goes beyond survival; it is the
ability to bounce back and even become stronger in spite of the threats to survival.
Preventive and predictive actions may reduce our vulnerability. However, it is our ability to
reduce loss through resilience that determines how well and how fast we return to
normalcy.
Carver (1998) describes potential outcomes of adverse events as succumbing, surviving
with impairment, recovery (resilience) and thriving. "A shared passion to be successful is a
crucial ingredient in creating resilient enterprises" (Sheffi, p. 15).
To understand the role of strategic leadership in ensuring that organizations bounce back
with speed in the face of adverse events, let us examine how resilience is developed.
Putting Resilience to Work
The environmental changes in recent years have created a keen interest in both
management scholars and practitioners to understand how individuals and organizations
cope with these changes. Psychiatrists have explored the factors that enable individuals
perform well under stress and to recoil from setbacks. For business leaders, therefore, the
focus is on both the individual and the organizational resilience.
According to Larry Mallak (1998), there are seven resilience principles that organization
leaders can put in place to ensure a resilient organization.
1. Perceive experiences constructively.
2. Perform positive adaptive behaviors.
3. Ensure adequate external resources.
4. Expand decision-making boundaries.
5. Practice bricolage.
6. Develop tolerance for uncertainty.
7. Build virtual role systems.
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Why do many organizations succumb when adversity strikes them? Dalziell and McManus
(2004) point out that the traditional approach was to make systems less vulnerable to
hazards. However, system resilience can be increased by increasing the speed of the
system to re-bounce from adverse events. The failure lies in their inability to execute
(Charan & Colvin, 1999).
Individual Resilience
The indivisible element in coping with change is the individual. The reaction of the
individual—
as a subordinate or a leader—determines how the organization would react to its changing
internal and external demands. Dalziell and McManus (2004) say that a key in system
resilience is the ability of the system to respond and recover from an event, but as they
note, "recover to what?" is also important.
Charles Carver (1998) cites four potential consequences when adversity strikes.
first, the downward slide in which the individual succumbs,
second, where the individual survives but with capabilities weakened,
third, when the individual bounces back to the original level, and
fourth, where the individual surpasses previous levels of functioning.
Resilient individuals carve out coping strategies that may be either positive (resilient or
thriving) or negative (surviving with impairment or succumbing). Resilience in individuals
comprises of developing self-efficacy that consists of confidence in one's own ability to
perform and its execution in the face of adversity (Mallak, 1998). They develop an innate
ability to move forward and succeed.
According to Bandura (1989), individuals effect changes in themselves and their situations
through their own efforts, including controlling thought processes, motivation, and
actions. Through empirical tests, Bandura shows that persons make "causal contribution to
their own motivation and action" within a system of what he calls "reciprocal causation
(Bandura, 1989).
Individual self-efficacy beliefs affect thought patterns that Bandura terms "self-aiding or
self-hindering" (1989). According to this social cognitive theory, much human behavior is
regulated by cognized goals and self-appraisal of capabilities. As Bandura (1989) states,
"The stronger their perceived self-efficacy, the higher the goals people set for themselves
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and the firmer their commitment to them." While short-term help is important for
recovery, Bandura states the key to building personal resilience is to avoid dependency
and therefore loss of control.
As organizations face unprecedented changes, they face a growing "boundarylessness" of
their organizations. Baruch (2004) notes that DeFillippi and Arthur (1994) argue that "a
major consequence of boundaryless organizations is the emergence of boundaryless
careers." As careers become multidirectional, individual resilience in a turbulent
environment demands that they retain a sense of their personal security through
continuity of their jobs. The blurring of boundaries has demolished static career systems
—"they have become more diverse and less controlled by employers" according to Baruch
(2004), who notes that managing individual careers requires qualities that differ
considerably from those in the past.
Baruch (2001) suggests that although the idea of employability is beneficial, it is
impractical for organizations to use it as a substitute for loyalty and trust-based
relationships. The multidirectional career model suggested by Baruch (2004) takes into
account the full scale of what he calls "landscapes" in which the individual "can climb the
mountain, opt for another mountain, take some hills instead, or wander along the plains"
as a way of illustrating options. The focus of most scholarly work on individual resilience is
on self-efficacy and self-navigation.
For a strategic leader, development of individual resilience is a first step to developing
organizational resilience.
Organizational Resilience
The model of a resilient organization is based on interaction between the individual and
the environment. Dalziell and McManus (2004) use the term resilience to describe "the
overarching goal of a system to continue to function to the fullest possible extent in the
face of stress to achieve its purpose, where resilience is a function of both the
vulnerability of the system and its adaptive capacity." They point to the "need to focus not
only on the vulnerability of our systems to failure, but also on our ability to manage and
minimize the impact of any failures (Dalziell & McManus, 2004).
The resiliency audit model for organizations developed by Hind et al. (1996) suggests that
a critical dimension of the interaction between the individual and organization is the
"psychological contract" based on a reciprocal relationship of individual's commitment and
trust in exchange of the organization providing job satisfaction, job security and
promotion prospects (Hind et al., 1996). Resilient organizations score high on the factors
in resiliency audit and ensure that the risk of violating the "psychological contract" in
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periods of change is minimized. They do this through helping individuals regularly assess
their skills and interests and support their life-long learning and career development to
ensure their employability in times of downturns.
Peter Senge (2005) explains that rapid changes require organizations to be flexible and
adaptable to stay competitive. The five disciplines that Senge identifies converging to
innovate learning organizations are:
1. systems thinking
2. personal mastery
3. mental models
4. building shared vision
5. team learning
Resilient organizations encourage and nurture a shift of mind, according to Senge, "from
seeing parts to seeing wholes, from seeing people as mere reactors to becoming active
participants in creating the future" (Senge, 2005).
Bricolage
Bricolage is the creation of solutions from whatever happens to be available. In times of
rapid change, formal organizational roles systems often collapse but need not result in
failure if the individuals retain the whole picture in their minds and assume whatever role
is vacated. Faced with unforeseen situations, according to Weick (1993), leaders know
they don't understand what is happening because they have never had to confront such
an event. "Extreme confidence and extreme caution both destroy what organizations most
need in changing times, namely, curiosity, openness, and complex sensing" (Weick, 1993).
When formal organizational structure is inadequate to meet with changes or it collapses,
the individual and social interactions developed in the organizations have to come in play
to counteract vulnerability.
Weick (1993) suggested a structure of organizational resilience by analyzing the Mann
Gulch fire in 1949, made famous in Norman Maclean's Young Men and Fire, which
resulted in the death of 13 men. He identified bricolage, virtual role systems, the attitude
of wisdom, and respectful interaction as factors in organizational resilience.
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The concepts of psychological contract, the learning organization, resiliency audit, and
distributive leadership cut across all organizations, large or small, and situations brought
about by change, gradual or sudden, and even in organizations where attention to routine
working is critical to their safety and survival.
Societal Resilience
"Societal" resilience is our adaptive response to unforeseen events and takes place at the
level of the individuals, private and public organizations, families, local communities and
the county, state and federal governments. Rose (2004) shows economic resilience to
disasters can be seen as dimensions of resilience. He also proposes a "general equilibrium
model" for analyzing the behavior of individuals, businesses, and markets.
The measurement of resilience and its audit are important, Rose says, because they
"enable us to evaluate strategy for reducing economic losses" from external changes
(2004). Inclusion of resilience in policy-making helps react to adversity and reduce losses.
Reich (2006) provides a psychological perspective and incorporation of three principles of
resilience in disaster planning: control, coherence, and connectedness. Disaster responses
should focus on reducing uncertainty through extensive communications and
understanding to generate cognitive clarity. Providing structure and coherence in
interactions helps people understand how the events in their lives are going to be
impacted. Reich notes: "The individual's need for social connectedness is probably never
greater than in times of disaster" (2006). The value of an integrative model, according to
Reich, "is that it provides a conceptual framework for understanding human resilience"
(2006).
A resilient community is based on resilient individuals. The resilience at individual,
organizational, and societal levels are interwoven, and any model of resilience should
reflect this interconnectedness. See Appendix.
Metrics for Evaluating Resilience
In light of events that show the vulnerability of countries throughout the world to
disasters, metrics are needed to measure and benchmark the resilience of organizations.
The 2019 FM Global Resilience Index Annual Report by Pentland Analytics provides
ranked scores for 130 countries by combining the 12 core drivers of resilience (FM Global,
2019):
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Facto rs
Economic Risk Quality Supply ChainFacto rs
Economic Risk Quality Supply Chain
Drive rs
Productivity Exposure to Natural Hazards
Control of Corruption
Political Risk Natural Hazard Risk Quality
Quality of Infrastructure
Oil Intensity Fire Risk Quality Corporate Governance
Urbanization Rate
Inherent Cyber Risk Supply Chain Visibility
The structure of the index enables business executives to identify the sources of strength
and vulnerability in a country's resilience.
BSI explores organizational resilience best practices by tracking how confident business
leaders
feel in the ability of their organizations to adapt to change. The BSI Organizational
Resilience Benchmark tool focuses on 16 elements in building and developing
organizational resilience, and its website allows a user to create a "spider diagram" for an
organization (BSI, 2020):
Leadership People Process Product
Leadership Culture Governance and Accountability
Horizon Scanning
Vision and Purpose
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Leadership People Process Product
Reputational Risk Community Engagement
Business Continuity
Innovation
Financial Management Awareness Training and Testing
Supplier Management
Resource Management Alignment Information and Knowledge
Adaptive Capacity
Organizational resilience results help to review how an organization's strengths and
vulnerabilities in leadership, people, processes, and product categories based on the 16
key elements compare against other organizations.
References
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Baruch, Y. (2001). Employability: a substitute for loyalty? Human Resource Development
International, 4(4), 543–566.
Baruch, Y. (2004). Transforming careers: From linear to multidirectional career paths -
organizational and individual perspectives. Career Development International.
9(1), 58–73
BSI. (2020). Organizational resilience index: Third annual report.
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resilience/index-report-2019.pdf
Carver, C. (1998). Resilience and thriving: Issues, models and linkages. Journal of Social
Issues, 54(2), 245–266.
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Charan, R., & Colvin, G. (1999, June 21). Why CEOs fail.
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Appendix: Resilience Culture
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