An Organic Approach to Project Management

Randy Englund

In Flocks and Swarms - The End of Control As We Know It

(blogs.cio.com, Tuesday, October 24, 2006), Michael Hugos asks, “What makes a flock of birds or a school of fish move as if they are a single entity? What makes them all suddenly rise, turn and accelerate at the same time? There is something more subtle at work here than just a leader bird or a captain fish telling all the others what to do. What can we learn from the dynamics of flocks and swarms that is relevant to the way we structure and operate a real-time business?”
To which I say, this is chaos theory in operation, also known as complexity science when applied to human dynamics and organizational behavior. The swarming behavior that he describes follows a pattern where small initial conditions can lead to a big happening, but which initial condition and what outcome are unpredictable. The point is that these are patterns at work in nature as well as in the practice of project management.
We have much to learn from flocks of geese and from redwood forests. By getting project teams started in the right direction, with a clear sense of where they are going and why, project leaders create initial conditions that then allow people to move naturally toward the goal. Our need for feedback and interdependence and all other forms of motivation are patterns at work that can function very effectively when invoked organically by the leader. - Randy Englund, www.englundpmc.com