Explore Ralph Stacey’s theory of Complex Responsive Processes. Learn why traditional knowledge management and systems thinking often fail to capture reality.

Knowledge isn't a thing you own—it’s something that happens between people in the living present. The future is being constructed right now, in the way you and I are talking and in the way power is shifting in this very moment.
I would like to learn Complex responsive processes of relating by Stacey








Ralph Stacey’s theory of Complex Responsive Processes challenges the traditional view of organizations as machines or systems that can be controlled from the outside. Instead of leaders pulling levers to change culture, Stacey suggests that organizations are formed by people constantly interacting and 'bumping into each other.' This perspective shifts the focus from abstract organizational maps to the living present, where meaning and action are co-created through the active process of people relating to one another.
In traditional Knowledge Management, knowledge is often treated like a pile of bricks that can be packaged, stored in databases, and managed. However, the theory of Complex Responsive Processes argues that knowledge is not a static object you can own or bottle. Instead, knowledge is an active process that happens between people. This suggests that attempts to simply extract information and turn it into manuals often miss the essential, living nature of how people actually share understanding.
The podcast discusses how organizations often try to extract tacit knowledge—the deeply personal or intuitive understanding people have—and convert it into explicit knowledge, such as formal manuals or databases. From the perspective of Complex Responsive Processes, this effort is often a fantasy. Because knowledge is an active process of relating rather than a physical asset, it cannot be easily detached from the human interactions and the specific contexts in which it originally emerged.
Stacey critiques traditional Systems Thinking because it treats organizations as big machines where leaders stand on the outside looking in. This 'map-based' approach assumes that management can objectively observe and control the 'output' or 'culture' of a company. Complex Responsive Processes argues that leaders are actually in the middle of the crowd, not outside of it. By acknowledging this 'messiness,' the theory provides a more grounded and realistic view of how organizational life truly functions.
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