← L² Lab
🔗 Systems Thinking
Card 22
🏢 🔄 🤦

Why do organizations keep making the same mistakes?

💭 How to Think About This

Post-mortem after failure → Good intentions → Nothing changes → Same failure! Organizations have SYSTEM-level pathologies: perverse metrics, institutional memory loss, firefighting mode. Even smart individuals get trapped in dumb systems.

Is organizational dysfunction primarily a people problem or a systems problem?

🤔 Which thinking lens(es) did you use?

Select all the lenses you used:

👨‍👩‍👧 For Parents & Teachers

🌱 A Small Everyday Story

A crisis. A hero saves the day.
A post-mortem. Good intentions.
Then deadlines. Firefighting returns.
The lessons are forgotten.
Two years later, same crisis.
New hero. Same story.

See more guidance →

🧠 Thinking habits this builds:

  • Recognizing organizational pathologies as system problems, not people problems
  • Understanding Goodhart's Law and metric gaming
  • Seeing the firefighting loop and why prevention is undervalued
  • Appreciating institutional memory and knowledge management

🌿 Behaviors you may notice (and reinforce):

  • "Is this a people problem or a system problem?" questions
  • Noticing when metrics are being gamed
  • Understanding why good people make bad organizational decisions
  • Appreciating blameless post-mortems and psychological safety

How to reinforce: When they see organizational dysfunction, ask: What loop is this organization stuck in? What would need to change at the system level?

🔄 When ideas are still forming:

Some learners may blame individuals for organizational failures. Others may not see how incentives shape behavior.

Helpful response: "If you replaced everyone with 'better' people but kept the same metrics and incentives, what would change?" Help them see system-level causes.

🔬 If you want to go deeper:

  • Research blameless post-mortems in tech companies
  • Analyze an organization they know: What loops is it stuck in?
  • Discuss why some organizations learn and others don't

Key concepts (for adults): Goodhart's Law, organizational learning, institutional memory, firefighting mode, blameless post-mortems, psychological safety, incentive alignment.