Question
How do I apply the idea that adaptive governance?
Quick Answer
Select one governance mechanism in your organization — an approval process, a meeting cadence, a reporting structure, a resource allocation method — and evaluate it using four questions: (1) What purpose does this mechanism serve? What organizational need does it address? (2) Is it still serving.
The most direct way to practice is through a focused exercise: Select one governance mechanism in your organization — an approval process, a meeting cadence, a reporting structure, a resource allocation method — and evaluate it using four questions: (1) What purpose does this mechanism serve? What organizational need does it address? (2) Is it still serving that purpose effectively? Has the organizational context changed since this mechanism was designed? (3) What are the costs of this mechanism — time consumed, decisions delayed, flexibility reduced, people frustrated? (4) What alternative mechanism could serve the same purpose with lower cost? Design the alternative as a time-bounded pilot: implement it for one month, measure the difference, and decide whether to retain, modify, or revert. This is adaptive governance in practice — conscious, evidence-based evolution of organizational structure.
Common pitfall: Governance rigidity — treating governance structures as permanent fixtures rather than evolving tools. Organizations often treat their governance structures — meeting cadences, approval processes, reporting lines, decision rights — as immutable features of the organizational landscape. The meeting exists because the meeting has always existed. The approval process persists because the approval process has always persisted. This rigidity becomes increasingly costly as the organization changes: governance structures designed for a 50-person startup constrain a 500-person growth company, and governance structures designed for stable markets paralyze organizations in volatile ones. The antidote is treating every governance mechanism as provisional — subject to regular review and deliberate evolution.
This practice connects to Phase 85 (Organizational Sovereignty) — building it as a repeatable habit compounds over time.
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