
Navigate complexity with three transformative habits that revolutionize leadership. Praised by Oxfam's Executive Director and embraced by Google and Microsoft, this book asks: What if uncertainty isn't your enemy? Discover why William Torbert calls it "an invitation into lifelong learning that transforms organizations."
Jennifer Garvey Berger and Keith Johnston, authors of Simple Habits for Complex Times: Powerful Practices for Leaders, are globally recognized leadership experts and founding partners of Cultivating Leadership, a consultancy advising organizations like Microsoft and Wikimedia Foundation.
Berger, a Harvard-trained Ph.D. in adult development and protegé of Robert Kegan, is celebrated for her work on adaptive leadership in volatile environments, exemplified in her earlier books Changing on the Job and Unlocking Leadership Mindtraps.
Johnston brings decades of experience from senior roles at Oxfam International and the New Zealand government, combining behavioral science with real-world organizational challenges. Their collaboration merges Berger’s research on complexity-conscious leadership with Johnston’s systemic change expertise.
The book, translated into 12 languages and integrated into Stanford and INSEAD MBA curricula, has been endorsed by thought leaders like Microsoft CTO Eric Passmore. Berger’s popular “Growth Edge” coaching framework and Johnston’s government advisory work reinforce their authority in designing resilience strategies for Fortune 500 CEOs and public sector leaders alike.
Simple Habits for Complex Times offers leaders three practices—asking different questions, taking multiple perspectives, and seeing systems—to navigate uncertainty and complexity. Instead of relying on rigid plans, it teaches agility and adaptive thinking to thrive in volatile environments like corporate, nonprofit, or government sectors.
Leaders facing rapid change, such as CEOs, managers, or team leads in tech, NGOs, or government, will benefit most. It’s ideal for those seeking frameworks to solve interconnected problems, foster innovation, or guide teams through ambiguity.
Yes—it’s praised for blending academic rigor (based on adult development theory) with actionable habits. Its focus on VUCA (volatility, uncertainty, complexity, ambiguity) makes it relevant for modern challenges like remote work, AI disruption, and global crises.
The authors reframe VUCA as an opportunity, not a threat. By shifting focus from predicting outcomes to building adaptive capacity, leaders learn to embrace uncertainty, spot patterns, and make decisions without perfect data.
Berger’s Harvard training under Robert Kegan (adult development theory) informs its focus on mental complexity. Her consultancy work with Google, Microsoft, and NGOs grounds concepts in real leadership struggles.
A method Berger developed to help leaders identify their “growth edge”—the boundary between current capabilities and untapped potential. It’s used to apply the book’s habits through reflective questioning and feedback.
Yes, it features anonymized cases from Berger’s coaching practice, like guiding a tech firm through a merger and helping a nonprofit pivot during a funding crisis. These illustrate habit application across industries.
Unlike Atomic Habits’ focus on individual routines, Simple Habits targets collective adaptability in teams. Compared to Leaders Eat Last’s empathy-driven approach, it adds systemic thinking tools for complexity.
Some note its abstract concepts require patience to apply. It’s less prescriptive than traditional leadership books, which may frustrate readers seeking step-by-step fixes.
Absolutely. For example, seeing the system helps diagnose communication breakdowns in distributed teams, while taking multiple perspectives fosters inclusivity across time zones.
Both emphasize curiosity over control in uncertain times.
It operationalizes Kegan’s stages of mental complexity, showing how leaders evolve from relying on rules (“Socialized Mind”) to embracing ambiguity (“Self-Transforming Mind”).
通过作者的声音感受这本书
将知识转化为引人入胜、富含实例的见解
快速捕捉核心观点,高效学习
以有趣互动的方式享受这本书
We must prepare for jobs and futures that don't yet exist.
Traditional forecasting methods prove increasingly inadequate.
Leaders must develop comfort with ambiguity.
Effective questioning also involves timing and context.
Embracing uncertainty [is] a source of possibility.
将《Simple habits for complex times》的核心观点拆解为易于理解的要点,了解创新团队如何创造、协作和成长。
将《Simple habits for complex times》提炼为快速记忆要点,突出坦诚、团队合作和创造力的关键原则。

通过生动的故事体验《Simple habits for complex times》,将创新经验转化为令人难忘且可应用的精彩时刻。
随心提问,选择声音,共同创造真正与你产生共鸣的见解。

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Think about the last time you faced a problem that refused to behave. You applied every solution in your toolkit, consulted the experts, followed best practices-and still, the situation spiraled in unexpected directions. Welcome to the defining challenge of our era: navigating a world where complexity isn't the exception but the rule. Most leadership training prepares us for a world that no longer exists, one where problems had clear causes and solutions followed predictable paths. But what happens when six children die under your agency's watch in 18 months, and you have three hours to determine whether you're facing individual failures or systemic collapse? This is the reality Yolanda Murphy confronts as director of a statewide Family and Children's Services Division, and it's emblematic of the kind of complexity leaders face daily. The old playbook-analyze, decide, execute-crumbles when the ground itself keeps shifting beneath your feet.