A framework for understanding organisational dynamics
Katina Cremona
In most situations, it is rarely one person(s) who is causing problems for others, even though it may often seem that way. Behaviour in organisations is multi-determined and complex and we need ways of examining and understanding dynamics that allow for this.

People issues in the workplace can often be confusing, unpleasant and stressful to all concerned. Most of us have experienced situations where we have worked with a colleague who has a reputation for being ‘difficult’; or colleagues who seem to be in constant conflict with each other; or a team that is not functioning well and yet we don’t really understand why.

Often, our natural tendency in these kinds of cases is to identify a problem person or persons and then a range of potential consequences ensues. The problem person is avoided, blamed, ostracised, warned, sacked or, in many cases, tolerated from a distance and talked about behind his or her back. A more positive outcome is that the person is offered development opportunities, but what happens if the identified person is not the only cause of a problem?

In fact, in most situations, it is rarely one person(s) who is causing problems for others, even though it may often seem that way. Behaviour in organisations is multi-determined and complex and we need ways of examining and understanding dynamics that allow for this. This paper discusses a four levels framework that provides a useful perspective that is systemic and, more controversially, teaches us that we are more responsible for what happens in our work groups than we would like to believe.

Level One: The Individual or Intrapersonal Level

The individual or intrapersonal level views the source and solution to people problems or behaviour as residing in a person. This level emphasises the person’s personality, skills and competence and little emphasis is placed on others or how the person relates to others.

It involves cause-and-effect thinking, potential blaming and placing the responsibility for a problem on one person.

For example, complaints about a senior manager, describing her as punitive and harsh may lead to mandatory coaching sessions or even counselling to remedy the causes of her behaviour.

Level one thinking is a natural tendency in us and we can probably think of situations when we have been quick to identify one person as the main cause of a problem we are facing. There may also be valid individual issues involving the person and he could well change his behaviour after coaching, counselling, being warned or given feedback to raise his performance. However, organisational life is rarely this simple and we can often do a disservice to the person concerned and end up not really dealing with the deeper issues that are contributing to the problems we face.

Level Two: The Interpersonal Level

The focus of the interpersonal level is on the quality and types of relationships between people. Taking an interpersonal level perspective, the punitive senior manager, in the previous example, needs to look at her communication style and develop better skills in listening and giving feedback.

Again, there may be a valid case for raising this manager’s awareness of her style and for developing her interpersonal competencies, but as we go to the next level, we will see that there are often more complex issues involved. The interpersonal and the individual (intrapersonal) levels are limited and yet, tend to be the most common ways people view people issues.

Level Three: The Group-as-a-Whole Level

The group-as-a-whole level is where the behaviour of groups or teams is seen as a social system made up of the sum of its parts. At this level, people’s behaviour can’t be simply explained away by a person’s unique personality or style, but is viewed as a synthesis of, and interaction with, the group’s life and mentality.

To explain this more fully, we need to understand the nature of groups and the effect they have on group members.

Groups, by their very nature, elicit strong ambivalent feelings.

Jacques1 claims that adults in institutions or group settings often use infantile coping strategies to cope with overwhelming ambivalent feelings. The different task, technical, social and environmental demands of organisational life can raise tension and anxiety levels in all of us to varying degrees.

As human beings, it is natural to want to feel comfortable and we cope with feelings of tension and ambivalence by unconsciously ‘getting rid of’ the feelings, traits and roles that we don’t feel comfortable with or don’t want to identify with. It is this unconscious pattern shared by group members that provides the substance of group life. In this way, group members are considered connected to each other by an unconscious tacit alliance that allows each group member to use other group members as objects to express parts of him or herself.

Projective identification

Projective identification is the term for the psychological mechanism whereby people find a person in the outside world who will serve as a vehicle so that they can modify their image of themselves, but vicariously experience a part of themselves in someone else. Projective identification simplifies one’s emotional life. A common example I have often experienced in teams is when one team member is the ‘outspoken, critical’ one who stands up to the boss and demands answers and higher standards. The rest of the team seem content enough to let the person take this role and be identified as a ‘troublemaker’. In fact, it almost appears as if the team members secretly enjoy watching their colleague go out on a limb while they remain silent. While their colleague takes this role, they don’t have to risk their jobs or comfort levels to speak out about their own dissatisfactions.

This example raises two points. One is that group members are ‘called into’ roles that provide some kind of service to the group. In a way, the group-as-a-whole has unconsciously distributed and divided the different ‘expressive, cognitive, instrumental, mythical and reparative elements2 among its members. These various roles, in part, help to manage anxiety and the ambivalent feelings of wanting to belong and not wanting to lose one’s identity, often found in group members. All roles serve meaningful and purposeful functions. Projective identification helps to get the work done.

Scapegoating

The second point raised from the example of the ‘troublemaker’ is the concept of scapegoating. If a group (or organisation) has had a strong experience of aggression, stress or frustration, excessive projective identification can lead to scapegoating. Here, people deposit unwanted parts of themselves like jealousy, incompetence or anger into a person and then seek to ‘get rid of’ this person somehow. It is as if the group can’t bear to look at what its done or face itself in the scapegoated person. It becomes a shared pattern of denial in the group. Many of us have been in situations where a person has been ‘sacrificed’ on behalf of a group or team and we’ve been left feeling bad about it and yet not clear about how it happened.

Without fully understanding the dynamics of scapegoating, organisations can seek to make sure ‘troublemakers’ disappear without realising that they may be the only vehicles through which the rest of the group can express its contempt or dissatisfaction with a task or leader. So, someone else will inevitably fill the role that is left free after the scapegoat’s absence and the deeper issues will not be addressed.

Scapegoats are unconsciously selected because they have a tendency to be outspoken (as in the previous example), are different demographically, or have a personality that suits ‘patient’ or ‘martyr’ roles. In fact, the roles we unconsciously take up in groups are influenced by our individual identity, the group’s identity, our gender and our personality tendencies towards particular roles. For example, in a mixed gender group3 men typically attribute affective-emotional qualities to women. Women are expected to play caretaking and maintenance roles in groups and men are expected to play task-oriented aggressive roles. It is a sign of maturity when we can allow ourselves and others to play different and, sometimes, contradictory roles.

The Punitive Manager

Let’s come back to our punitive manager whom we’ll call James and view his ‘problem’ behaviour from a group-as-a-whole perspective. James was specifically hired to transform an under-functioning department by sacking a large number of people. He was chosen for this role because he had a tough personal style and had a track record of success in these kinds of roles, i.e., he seemed to have no qualms about sacking people or giving strong feedback. However, James didn’t know that he was entering a team culture where managers did not give straight feedback about people’s performance. In fact, he was actually walking into a minefield of disgruntled staff who were sick of not knowing where they stood in relation to their career paths and had distorted views of their capabilities because they’d never been given honest feedback. It was inevitable that James would be scapegoated by the organisation once he had begun the task he was hired for. He was carrying an ‘assertive and performance focused’ part for his team members.

When managers see people like James as ‘punitive people managers’ or ‘bad’, they risk assessing the whole problem as residing in James, i.e., levels one and two, and may take strong actions against him. Without thinking from a group-as-a-whole perspective, they do not examine the context of the situation or why a group of managers allowed James to be so ‘bad’ or how it may have served the team of senior managers to have James carry the role of the ‘henchman’. Cultural assumptions and norms can be left unexamined or even further reinforced.

In any group situation, it is useful to ask these questions when members seem to be taking particularly strong roles, like being highly incompetent, emotional, caring, responsible, irresponsible, critical, etc. Keep in mind that when a person acts, they are acting not just on their behalf, but also on behalf of the group.

Level Four: The Organisational Level

The organisational level sees problems as paralleling or acting-out a wider organisational dynamic. A parallel process is when dynamics in one part of the organisation replicate sub-group, inter-group, inter-organisational, societal, or global contexts or dynamics.

The organisation that employed James may be experiencing strong pressure from its board to downsize. This company may be within an industry that is under extreme pressure. The board may be threatening to sack the CEO. James may be replicating this dynamic in his dealings with people in his team. As a consultant, I have often found myself getting involved in dynamics that parallel what is happening within a team I’m working with. A colleague and I once found ourselves in conflict over an issue that was related to an organisation we were consulting to. When we reflected on the nature of our disagreement, we realised it was a similar dynamic to one we had already identified within our client organisation.

Walk the Talk

Another common parallel process most of us have experienced is finding ourselves treating others in the same way our superiors have treated us. That’s one reason why the pressure on executive teams and CEOs to ‘walk the talk’ is so critical. Their behaviour models a dynamic that is often paralleled throughout the levels of the organisation.

How do we apply this framework to our daily work life?

Catch yourself complaining about individuals and explaining problems by using only levels one and two. Develop competing hypotheses about what may be happening by giving greater emphasis to levels three and four.

When a team is troubled, ask questions such as what feelings, traits or roles are specific people acting out? How does it serve the group for these people to take these roles?

Finally, examine yourself and what you may be feeling, or not wanting to feel or express. Take more responsibility and encourage others to take more responsibility for what is happening within their teams and organisations. It can make a critical difference to how issues are framed and then resolved.

1 “Social Systems as a defense against persecution and depressive anxiety”. In New Directions in Psycho-analysis, London, 1955
2 Gillette & McCullum, eds. Groups in context, a new perspective on group dynamics, America, 1995
3 Gillette & McCullum, 1995


Katina Cremona is one of the principals of People Savvy Consulting. People Savvy Consulting is an organisation development consultancy specialising in executive coaching, emotional intelligence, individual and team development and culture change.

Connet with Katina

Email: katina@peoplesavvyconsulting.com
Website: www.peoplesavvyconsulting.com






More Articles . . .

10 Questions To Ask Yourself About Your Marketing Kay Ross
A framework for understanding organisational dynamics Katina Cremona
Communicating with customers and clients from other cultures Sue Patterson
Discover Your Passion Stacey Currie
Find Your Courage. Become Fearless at Work. Margie Warrell
Five Ways to Improve Your Business Writing Skills Today Kylee Bristow
How to Achieve Success Without Selling Your Soul Indira Kennedy
Inspirational Women Suzi Dafnis
Pessimism and courage: How to be resilient in the face of criticism Warwick Hall
Pinterest for Business: How to Increase Website Traffic and Promote Your Brand Social Media for Small Business Podcast
Pivot Points: Making the Decisions that Matter in Business Monique Beedles
Podcasting as a Social Media Platform for Small Business Marketing Social Media for Small Business Podcast
Social Media Marketing Strategy For Your Business Belinda Bow
Successful Women Choose Confidence Sascha Crouch
The Secret to Successful Marketing on a Small Budget Michelle Gamble
7 Things you ought to know about Efficient and Effective Communication Angie Spiteri
A Business Plan Can Do More Than Raise Capital Kerry Feldman
A business plan is a working document Fiona Anson
A Stitch in Time Saves Money, Effort and Time! Angie Spiteri
Achieve Success. Implement a Comprehensive Business Strategy. Cindy Luken
Adding impact with PR Penny Young
Affecting Change in Communities. Advances in Leadership. Jo Brennan
And so this is Christmas! So celebrate what you have done... Wendy Buckingham
Are You Damaging Your Social Media Reputation? Suzi Dafnis
Are your customers really who you think they are ? Janet Sernack
Arrive on time, every time! Robyn Pearce
Attention All DIY Designers! In-house designing tips and techniques Artemiss Keyhani
Be a coach, not a critic! Five ways to turn your complaints and criticism into constructive comments Kris Cole
Be Open to Opportunities. Take Risks and Jump Quickly. Lisa Messenger
Be Part of the Action. The Skills You Need to Run a Business. Ghazaleh Lyari
Become an Enabler of Change. Adapt your old Business Mindset. Megan Tough
Boost Your Business with the Amazing Power of Words Tony Spencer Smith
Brand Loyalty: Six Components that Influence Consumer Engagement Cheryl Hayman
Building Your Business? Build Your People. Catherine Palin-Brinkworth
Business Plans Made Easy Jayne Arlett
Calling Young Businesswomen - Transforming your Passion into Profit Monica Rosenfeld
Can-do Thinking - It does make a difference Sandi Givens
Careering Towards Self Employment Megan Wahr
Centred Leadership: How Talented Women Thrive Susan McGrath
Cloud Computing Explained Paul Wallbank
Coaching - a new business buzzword or a worthwhile tool for peak performance? Tina Monk
Communication - the most misused word in our vocabulary Carly Anderson
Conditions for successful change Catherine Palin-Brinkworth
Create a Policy to Attract Success Wendy Buckingham
Dare yourself to shine Ann Reinten
Decide To Be Rich Robert Kiyosaki
Distinctions On Goal Planning Wendy Buckingham
Dollar Productive Behaviour - Your Key To Success Dr Fred Grosse
Effective Business Writing Today Valerie Khoo
Ex-footballer still kicking goals in the business arena Jason Death
Gain the Financial Intelligence To Make a Real Estate Fortune Dolf de Roos
Get Involved in the Guts of the Business. Women and Senior Operational Roles. Anna Booth
Get Ready to Increase Sales and Profit Mara Ulms
Goal Achievement: What Do You Really Want and How Do You Get It Fast? Blair Singer
Goal Setting - the key to getting where you want to be Dr Fred Grosse
Grocery shopping over the internet Karen Scott Davie
GST Update - Lodging your first Business Activity Statement Sabina Donnolley
How Mentors and Mentees Can Communicate More Effectively Chip McFarlane
How Much Are You Holding Yourself Back from Achieving Your Full Potential? Deborah Keep
How this Female Trailblazer Made it to the Top Bonnie Boezeman
How to be Ethical in Social Media Catriona Pollard
How to Become a Board Member in the 21st Century Anna Booth
How to Build a Back-end to Your Business and Multiply Your Profit Potential Mandy Collett
How to Engage Your Social Media Audience: Relevant, Useful and Generous Content Suzi Dafnis
How To Get More Done Kathy Kolbe
How to Have Difficult Conversations Rebecca Ryan
How to help your people stay in the loop Carlien Coultate
How to Source and Acquire Speaking Opportunities: The Inside Perspective Nadine Zrinzo
How to Structure Your Business Lynda Loong
How to Write Copy that Brings Results Fiona Marsden
How your Leadership Style Influences your Team’s Success Tracy Cooper
I'm Listening! Really I am! Carly Anderson
Ideas for saving time with email and computer technology
Part 1
Robyn Pearce
Ideas for saving time with email and computer technology
Part 2
Robyn Pearce
Improve Your Cash Flow Dolf de Roos
Improve Your Time Management in 6 Easy Steps! Jane Riley
Innovative Marketing. How Custom Publishing Can Boost Your Brand. Lisa Messenger
Inspirational Women Pollyanna Lenkic
Installing a new habit and breaking an old one - Part 1 Stephanie Burns
Installing a new habit and breaking an old one - Part 2 Stephanie Burns
Instinctive Management. Know Your Employees and Enjoy Your Work. Sasha Titchkosky
Is your business on course to success? Tina Monk
It’s Time for Women to Step Up and Change the World Linda Tarr-Whelan
Keeping in Contact with Customers Lianne Conner
Keeping your cash flow flowing Amanda Ellis
Leading High-Performance Teams – Interview with Andrew Jobling Natalie Ashdown
Learning from the wisdom of others Jan Burnes
Lessons for Business: Bad Service Experiences Posted Online Melanie Kansil
Make Every Impression Count! Nikki Heald
Make Room for Success - Get Rid of Tolerations Wendy Buckingham
Male and Female Speak - Understanding the Differences Candy Tymson
Managing people's emotions effectively at work Katina Cremona
Men and Women in the Workplace. Friends or foes? Margaret Byrne
Navigating Conversations in the Workplace. Where are the Street Signs? Bianca Keys
Outsourcing Your Social Media Administration Social Media for Small Business Podcast
People matters: HR issues for small business Anne Bartlett-Bragg
Promote yourself and get ahead in business! Candy Tymson
Reduce Stress in the Workplace Suzy Green
Remember why you set up your business, and working towards it once again Vanessa Bando
Resolving Stress Celine Healy
Save time and money Karen Scott Davie
Self awareness - A path to serenity Sandi Givens
Self-Sabotage - What is the Cost? Pollyanna Lenkic
Setting Group and Business Goals Effectively Wendy Buckingham
Seven strategies for goal achievement Sally Armstrong
Show Me The Money - Raise capital for your business Brookes McTavish
Signature Strength: How to Identify your Strengths as a Woman Suzy Green
SMART Goals Aren’t Good Enough Stacey Barr
Smart Marketing - How to Write Headlines that Sell Mandy Collett
Social Media Rules Social Media for Small Business Podcast
Social Media Strategy for Small Business Social Media for Small Business Podcast
Stand Out from the Competition. Tips to Negotiate a Fair Salary. Andrea Culligan
Steer Your Goals with Exciting Statistics Wendy Buckingham
Strategic Alliances - A great way to generate leads and increase your customer base Diana Sykes
Strive rather than survive in life Margaret Ambrose
The Facts About Franchising in Australia Gary Williamson
The Good News and the Bad News About Intellectual Property! Alicia Beverley
The Magic Of Networking Robyn Henderson
The Nice Girl Syndrome. Do You Have it? Lois Frankel
The Secret to Getting Real Action from your Marketing Campaign Belinda Weaver
There's only one way to motivate staff in the long term Brett Morris
Top 7 Tips on Leadership and Team Performance Nerida Gill
Top 9 Twitter Tips for Business Owners Sam Cannell
Trainer's Acts and their Impact on the Learner Stephanie Burns
Travel Tips # 1: Business Travel - can you survive it ? Anne Bartlett-Bragg
Travel Tips # 2: Business Travel - can you survive it ? Anne Bartlett-Bragg
Travel Tips # 3: Business Travel - can you survive it ? Anne Bartlett-Bragg
Tune in To Your Inner Branson. Become a Business Rock Star. Louise Woodbury
Turn Your ''Some Day'' Dreams into Real Goals Wendy Buckingham
Twitter for Business Networking Social Media for Small Business Podcast
What is a Goal? Wendy Buckingham
What is Global Leadership? Karen Cvitkovich
What Is Networking? Robyn Henderson
What you say vs what you mean Candy Tymson
Which Social Media Tool Is Best for Your Business? Suzi Dafnis
Who's Controlling Your Business' Destiny Stacey Barr
Who's running your show? Marita Dullard
Why did I think to start my business in the first place? Janet Sernack
Why have goals? Wendy Buckingham
Why image IS everything Jill Chivers
Why Taking Notes is So Important in Learning Stephanie Burns
Work-Life Zen: 4 Mind Tricks to Set You Free Michele Connolly
Your Guide to Writing Articles that Readers Love Cassandra Butler
 
 

Commander

5 months FREE on phone system rental


Rent a new phone system and connect your phone lines with Commander to receive 5 months rent free.


Why rent with Commander?

  • Tailored complete solutions
  • Great offers from leading phone system brands
  • Rental & communication on a single bill
  • Renting systems conserves cash flow

Hurry — Act before 30 June!