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The Round Square – How to make your organization hybrid?

Reviewed by Manu Steens in Crisis Management,Hybrid Organization,Risk Management,Round Square
  • AuthorPascal Van Loo

The Round Square – How to make your organization hybrid? by Pascal Van Loo

In this post I write my own opinion, not that of any organization.

I found only a Dutch version of this book, but the content seems important enough to share the general ideas of it.

Contents

  • Square & Round Organizations
    • Square Organizations
    • Round Organizations
  • The Solution: Hybrid
  • Three movements
  • Four questions

Square & Round Organizations

The polarity between square and round organizations, with the round square in between, is highlighted from the author’s 27 years of practical experience. In the introduction, he starts from the fact that the world is VUCA, and that more and more, this world is evolving faster and faster. This is a reality that organisations must arm themselves against, tailored to themselves, their environment and their stakeholders, including their customers. Earlier, in his work on organizations, Laloux talked about an evolution of these adaptations. He was talking about ‘teal’ organisations. Pascal talks about round organizations, square organizations, and round squares. What’s all that? In other words, what did I remember about it?

Square Organizations

Square organizations are structures with a strict hierarchy, where procedures are central, and production must be achieved. Square organizations stand for security, peace, structure, limited freedom of movement in what you want to do, clear internal agreements that provide guidance, step-by-step plans. But all of this comes with a danger of too much of this, with over-regulation occurring and the worker choking on too little freedom.

Round Organizations

Round organizations, on the other hand, are the opposite extreme: chaotic, lacking structure, ‘teal’, relying on improvisation, the problem-solving ability of the employees and their desire to transcend challenges. It works on the basis of intuition, creativity and dynamism. Risks here are challenges that make you indecisive, and a lack of framework that can lead to the end of the organization. So that’s not “the” solution either.

The Solution: Hybrid

The solution is to become a hybrid organization, round where possible, square where necessary, or vice versa. What stuck with me from the book launch is that it is not wrong in itself to be square or round, as long as you can be both as an organization where your employees need it. Are people more likely to need a leader or a colleague? Then give them what they need: hierarchy or a coaching session.

The big disadvantage of squares as I read it is that they cage the employees. Pascal describes three cages and what they do to people: the golden cage, the iron cage and the bamboo cage.

The three forms were elaborated in the second chapter as follows:

Four questionsSquareRoundHybrid
What are the driving forces?Fear or HarmonyAutonomy, energy or trustChange and polar voltage
What is it?Tight, command, control, compliance, compartmentalizationLots and circularlyHybrid hybrid form, a chaordic pendulum
What are the outputs and usefulness?Rest, shrink or suffocateSpace or chaosMovement – fight, flight, stiffen
What is the underlying worldview?Manageable worldLiving systemYin & yang

Three movements

A topic that will be discussed are three movements that are made:

  • We round off what is square
  • What is round we make more square
  • Where possible, we hybridize.

These three approaches are illustrated on the basis of six more elaborate practical cases from Pascal’s experience. He ends this chapter in a fourth chapter: the eye test: do you mainly look round, square or hybrid?

Four questions

In Chapter 5 – Aha, now what? He answers 4 questions:

  • WHAT do I do now?
  • What do I DO now?
  • What am I doing now?
  • What do I do NOW?

Towards the end, he briefly discusses the characteristics of network leaders, which he encountered in his path as a change manager:

  • They look through both-and-glasses. As a result, they can handle polarities.
  • Complexity doesn’t deter them.
  • They know that they don’t know everything themselves and that they have to constantly reinvent the organization.
  • Trust in their employees and that everything will work out is their starting point.

You don’t become a network leader overnight. There are two options for this. Or you make a psychological click because of a drastic event in your life. Or they question their own role each time. “What do I do now?” “Why do I do what I do?” ‘How do my history, my childhood and the impressions of my parental home determine the way I live my life and how I fulfil my role in the organisation?’

Both ways of making the click seem to lead to broad-mindedness and confidence.

Title: Het Ronde Vierkant – Hoe organisaties veranderen, Author: Pascal Van Loo, Publisher: Lannoo Campus, ISBN: 9789401458856

About Pascal Van Loo

Pascal Van Loo is an experienced organizational psychologist and change manager with a rich background in both academia and practical applications of change management. He has developed a unique perspective on organizational dynamics, which he shares in his book. He integrates various innovative forms in structured organizations and has a robust record as a consultant and educator.

OTHER BOOKS BY THIS AUTHOR

Het ronde vierkant

Manu Steens

Manu works at the Flemish Government in risk management and Business Continuity Management. On this website, he shares his own opinions regarding these and related fields.

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About Pascal Van Loo

Pascal Van Loo is an experienced organizational psychologist and change manager with a rich background in both academia and practical applications of change management. He has developed a unique perspective on organizational dynamics, which he shares in his book. He integrates various innovative forms in structured organizations and has a robust record as a consultant and educator.

OTHER BOOKS BY THIS AUTHOR

Het ronde vierkant

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By education I am a Civil Engineer (Master in Engineering Sciences option Physics) and Master in Sciences, option Physics. After seven years of working as a consultant, I was able to work for the Flemish Government where I still work.

Since 2003 I have been committed to ICT security and since 2013I have been responsible for Business Continuity Management and Crisis Management. It is through that trajectory that I picked up the virus to study and apply everything that has to do with risks.

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