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Systems thinking
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in practice
A key component of thinking strategically is
recognising that issues do not exist in isolation. Holding a
mechanistic view of policies as levers that have a focused and
direct impact on a situation, without considering the wider
implications of an intervention, can be short sighted and
potentially disastrous. Strategic thinking requires the
inter-related nature of circumstances to be recognised up front
rather than relying on a post hoc screening to identify unintended
consequences and impacts.
What Is Systems Thinking?
Systems thinking is both a
mindset and particular set of tools for identifying and mapping the
inter-related nature and complexity of real world situations. It
encourages explicit recognition of causes and effects, drivers and
impacts, and in so doing helps anticipate the effect a policy
intervention is likely to have on variables or issues of interest.
Furthermore, the processes of applying systems thinking to a
situation is a way of bringing to light the different assumptions
held by stakeholders or team members about the way the world works.
When Is It Useful?
Systems thinking is particularly
powerful for understanding dynamic complexity, which stems from the
relationships between factors in a system. A dynamically complex
system cannot simply be broken down into pieces in the same way as a
structurally complex system, which derives its complexity simply
from the sheer number of factors involved. Where structural
complexity can be modelled and managed using databases and
spreadsheets, dynamic complexity needs a more organic approach to
understand the complex web of influences that often results in
various forms of feedback loops. Such loops add a time dimension to
system complexity and often magnify or dampen the intended effect of
an action in a non-obvious manner.
Influence Diagrams
The core tool in systems thinking
is the influence diagram, which captures graphically how each factor
or variable in a system influences the others. Arrows are used to
indicate the direction of the influence together with a '+' or
'-' sign to show whether an increase in the one variable leads
to an increase or decrease in the other. A double line across an
arrow indicates a delay before the influence is felt.

In the diagram above, an increase in training
leads to an immediate increase in costs, but - via a delayed
increase in morale which in turn reduces staff turnover and hence
recruitment - a delayed reduction in costs. An additional
complication is provided by the feedback loop driven by the
relationship between recruitment levels and the need to train new
staff.
The diagrams help to improve understanding of the
drivers of behaviour in the system, and can uncover
counter-intuitive effects of interventions. They can show how a
change in one factor may have an impact elsewhere or feed back to
affect itself, and also how two seemingly independent factors are
actually linked.
Influence diagrams are best constructed in a
working session with a small number of key people. The sessions are
likely to stimulate in depth discussion as each participant's
assumptions and views are explored and incorporated into the
emerging picture.
Driver Trees
An influence diagram aims to map
the relationship between all the variables in a system. However, it
is likely that there are one or two key variables of particular
strategic interest that need to be either maximised or minimised.
Unravelling the influence diagram into a driver tree can be a
powerful way of highlighting and communicating the drivers of these
key variables, and hence provide insight into the kind of
interventions that are needed to impact them.
Unravelling the influence diagram above can help
to highlight the drivers of cost. The feedback loops in the system
mean that certain variables appear in more than one branch of the
tree. Where variables are repeated in this way they are
conventionally placed in brackets.

Driver trees raise a number of questions, not least the relative
significance of the different branches of the tree in driving the
key variable.
Impact Trees
There will be only a limited
number of variables within a system that can be directly influenced
to act as levers for change. An alternative way to unravel the
influence diagram is to highlight the impact that managing these
variables will have on the rest of the system. Again using the
example influence diagram above, an impact tree can be constructed
to more explicitly highlight the consequences of increasing the
level of training as described above.

Impact trees provide a causal sequence for
understanding how managing one variable is expected to have an
impact on another variable of interest. Social Researchers encourage
a similarly explicit articulation of how an intervention is expected
to have its impact using Theories of Change methodology, outlined in
the Magenta Book.
Interpreting Feedback Loops
Constructing an influence diagram
will highlight the great number of feedback loops that exist within
any complex system. Interpreting these loops is central to
understanding the likely behaviour of the system.
Reinforcing Loops
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A dominant reinforcing loop is a
self-sustaining process that will lead to either exponential
growth or decay. The critical factor is whether the process is
proceeding in the desired direction, as once started the
process will continue unchecked unless an intervention is made
to break the cycle.
The rise and decline of neighbourhoods demonstrates the
potentially beneficial or destructive power of reinforcing
feedback loops. |
Balancing Loops
|
A balancing loop perpetuates the status
quo. As one factor changes, other factors exert a balancing
influence to return it to original level.
This behaviour can either act as barrier to change or a
beneficial stabilising mechanism. To drive change any
intervention must be influential enough to over-ride the
balancing effects. |
 |
Balancing Loop with a Delay
 |
A delay in the influence of a balancing
effect can produce oscillatory behaviour through repeated over
compensation. As the balancing forces act to maintain the
status quo, the lack of responsiveness in the system means
that corrective action is excessive and the mark is over shot.
Aggressive or heavy-handed management of such a system will
produce instability. If the system can not be made more
responsive the only option is to take change more slowly. |
Reinforcing Loop with Delayed Balance

A reinforcing loop with a delayed balancing
influence will demonstrate 's-curve' style growth. The
reinforcing loop produces a period of accelerating growth or
expansion, which then slows and eventually comes to a halt under the
delayed influence of the balancing effect. A classic learning curve
follows this pattern.
Sustained growth can not achieved by simply
encouraging the reinforcing process, but must be unlocked by
removing or weakening the balancing influence that is creating the
limitation to sustained growth.
Using Systems Thinking
- Work in groups: developing an influence diagram as a group
exercise forces everyone to explicitly list the factors that
matter in the system and then decide on the relationships between
them.
- Use the influence diagram and tree to identify areas of study at
the very beginning of the work and intermittently thereafter for
further direction.
- An influence diagram can include both quantitative and
qualitative factors and relationships.
- The tree and influence diagram can be used to inform the
construction of quantitative models using software such as Vensim
(free for personal use), Ithink
or Powersim, which
can be used to simulate system behaviour. (Note that the model's
usefulness will be limited by the difficulty of meaningfully
defining a mathematical algorithm for each influence or
relationship).
- This approach is best used for designing and testing
interventions, rather than designing systems.
Strengths
- Systems thinking can generate new insights into the drivers of a
dynamically complex issue.
- The systems approach provides a powerful way for project teams
to establish a shared agenda for addressing a problem. It allows
development of consensus and ownership, leading to shared
commitment to decision making.
- It ensures feedback loops are recognised and incorporated into
policy design.
- The systems approach provides a powerful way for project teams
to reach a shared understanding of how a system operates.
Weaknesses
- It is very easy to overcomplicate the system map and lose the
key insights. It is important to focus on the key feedback loops
and cut out the less important links.
- The process can be significantly undermined by team members who:
- dislike the approach and are out to prove it does not work
- are committed to a prior solution or who are fixated on
finding "a solution"
- have hidden agendas that they are unwilling to disclose.
References
"Systems Failure" by
Jake Chapman (Demos)
Checkland, P "Systems Thinking, Systems
Practice", Wiley, 1981
Checkland, P and Scholes,J, "Soft Systems
Methodology in Action", Wiley 1990 which provides a thorough
update of the methodology together with several extended examples.
"Practical Soft Systems Analysis" by
D.Patching, FT Prentice Hall 1990 provides a simple step by step
introduction
"The emergent properties of SSM in Use: A
symposium by reflective practitioners" by P.Checkland et al,
Systemic Practice and Action Research, 13(6) p.799 2000 contains
personal accounts of experience in the use of SSM in a wide range of
contexts.
The Mind Tools website
provides an introduction to system thinking and the behaviour of
feedback loops.
Rich Pictures
are
another creative way of representing systems.
"Systems Thinking: a practice guide" by
Business Dynamics, IBM Business Consulting Services (trevor.cooper@uk.ibm.com)
Business
Dynamics: Systems Thinking and Modelling for a Complex World .
By John Sterman
Systems Thinking, is The
Fifth Discipline Fieldbook: Strategies and Tools for Building a
Learning Organisation.
Structuring the thinking - Systems thinking
In Practice: SU Deprived Areas Project
The Deprived Areas team wanted to examine the dynamics
of deprived areas, mapping out the factors that, when combined, can 'lock'
an area into deprivation. The existence of a 'vicious circle' in deprived
areas had been indicated by academic studies and regeneration
practitioners and the team wished to amalgamate the studies and combine
them with further research to understand all of the factors contributing
to this vicious circle. The team used evidence from visits to deprived
areas, interviews with regeneration practitioners and academic studies to
start building up a picture of the links in the cycle. It soon became
clear that a multiplicity of factors were contributing to the 'cycle of
decline', including factors relating to the operation of the housing
market, incentives to work, and social capital. A very complex influence
diagram containing around 40 linked factors was developed.

The cycle of decline proved a useful tool in the
following ways:
- It illustrated the importance of linking physical regeneration
(housing, environment) with economic, 'work-focused' factors and
social factors, with implications for government policy towards
deprived areas.
- It showed where the performance of public services can perpetuate
the problems in deprived areas, and therefore where government can
take action immediately.
- It showed how some factors, e.g. poor health. appeared to be mainly
an outcome of deprivation, rather than a driver, with implications for
priorities for public expenditure in deprived areas.
- It allowed the team to identify where interventions might be
effective in 'breaking' the cycle and helping areas to regenerate.
Further development of the cycle included analysis of
where different drivers might apply to different types of deprived area,
and work to show how successful interventions in the main drivers might
create a 'cycle of success'.
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