Integrating an Observation

TOP Note: This is a complex page that cannot be skimmed.

Introducing Art & His Observation

Art Kleiner (AK) is the Editor-in-Chief of Strategy+Business.
More on Art Kleiner …Closed a writer and lecturer with a background in management, organizational learning, and strategic planning. He has ghost-written many respected management texts and in recent times found his own voice writing about organizations. You can see his photo and read about him and the book referred to below here.

I came across his ideas initially in March-2008 through a presentation.
Download Here

This presentation developed ideas in his book: Who Really Matters: A Core Group Theory of Power Privilege & Success (2003). AK seemed to be describing something significant about organizations: something not given sufficient attention by myself or others.

AK’s opening anecdote is about «truth». He makes it clear that he is preoccupied with what is "really going on", especially in the hearts and minds of people, and what manifests in deliberate actions. These actions often differ from what might be expected by official charts and policies and even from what those involved claim to be doing or thinking. This concern for truth and the urge to penetrate to «what is really going on» are hallmarks of an orientation to elements of functioning as articulated within THEE.

Towards the end of the article, Kleiner writes: "we need a model that recognizes the primacy of the Core Groups while constraining them from abuses of power". If so, then that model should be found within THEE.

Interestingly, his model does not just contain The Core—actually, the label he uses for the Core Group is The Clan (required for the flow of allegiance). The Core sits alongside The Network (needed for the flow of knowledge), The Hierarchy (needed for the flow of authority) and The Market (needed for the flow of work).
See AK's Slide #8 in the Download

In terms of a match to reality, Slide #8 has a curious heading: Circulatory Systems. But do organizations have circulatory systems?Closed Many living systems have energized flows of liquid through channels. Might this name be a metaphor aiming to evoke the spirit of what is going on without corresponding to its essence? It seemed to me to be naming actual flows in the psychosocial realm i.e. AK is seeking to refer directly to something real.  If so, the name seems unfocused or over-generalized: a bit like someone saying he has seen a biped: OK—but was it a person, an ostrich, an ape or a kangaroo?

So here is the puzzle: Where does AK’s observation (model) fit within THEE? It took some thought to recognize where Core Group Theory might be located in the Taxonomy. In what follows, I will logically unpack my thinking processes using a Q & A format. To minimize likely terminological confusion I will use colour coding to distinguish AK's terms from THEE-terms.

For a brief definition of technical terms, use the glossary accessed via the Terms tab at the top of the left navigation column. More details in Taxonomic Structures.

My Inner Dialogue

Q: Are there really just 4 things in AK's set?

A: I must accept his assertion. ClosedRead why.

Q: Are there frameworks of 4 things in the taxonomic architecture?

A: Yes, in two places: the Style (or Modal) Hierarchy is a group of 4, and there is a set of 4 Tetradic structures in each of the many Structural Hierarchies.

Q:Could AK’s set be a Style Hierarchy?

A: No. It does not fit well. Styles in such a form show a marked similarity.

Q: Could AK’s set be part of a Structural Hierarchy?

A: Yes, very likely, because:

  • Tetradic structures lie at the heart of a Structural Hierarchy;
  • Each tetrad is easily noticed and usually viewed as highly significant; &
  • Tetradic structures have the required differences and complexity.

ClosedMore…

Q: Is any particular Structural Hierarchy in the Taxonomy a likely candidate?

A: Yes, because AK used certain terms to capture the essence, and taxonomic analysis can use such a careful choice of natural language names. I propose it belongs with the Interacting for Benefit subsidiary typology.
ClosedMore.

Refer to AK's Slide #8:  you will see that the Core is actually labeled the Clan. The whole is preoccupied with power and success (both in the book's title), and AK labels one of the entities as the Market.

This small list of names is highly suggestive of the framework dealing with Interacting for Benefit. The idea of seeking benefit fits well with the truth-generating question in the review of Who Really Matters about "who comes first?" in an organization.

The Interacting for Benefit Framework contains the following 7 types of mentality or ideology: Market-centred, Power-centred, Cause-centred, Community-centred, Kinship-centred, Perspective-centred, Reality-centred. Check out this summary. These labels refer to different ways that people handle themselves in order to gain personal benefit (success) as they see it.

As well as fitting with the spirit of these systems, AK has a close fit with two of them: Clan relates to Kinship-c, Market relates to Market-c

ClosedQ: What about the 5 otherTypes/Mentalities?

A:  We need to look at the actual Structural Hierarchy for that, because while the THEE-Types listed above are unitary, AK's entities are complex.

See details about Structural Hierarchies here. Briefly, they depend on grouping adjacent Levels so that all appear in each Grouping. The 1st Grouping of the Structural Hierarchy has Groups of just 1 thing (hence G1-Monads), and the order in this case can be predicted to be L1=Market, L2=Power, L3=Cause, L4=Community, L5=Kinship, L6=Perspective, L7=Reality. Although assigning mentality names is wholly insufficient for proper inquiry, it will have to do provisionally.

Higher Levels of the Structural Hierarchy are formed by grouping these Monads into overlapping sets of 2's, 3's, 4's, 5's, 6's until there is 1 unified set of 7. So the Tetrads, between them, cover all Types.

At the time of this analysis, I had neverClosed worked on this particular Structural Hierarchy, although I knew it must exist and be socially significant.

Q: How do AK's systems fit with the Interacting-for-Benefit Tetrads?

ClosedClick for a diagram showing the Structural Hierarchy pattern with my tentative assignment of AK's 4 circulatory systems to the 4 Tetrads (as argued above). All Types from the Interacting for Benefit list are shown to be covered within these.

Better viewing: Use browser zoom if needed.

A: The CORE GROUP naturally fits the 4th (top) Tetrad because it is the source of all power. It contains those people who define and integrate the psychosocial reality of the organization: key things like social forces, strategy, main products, best markets, pay and so on. The Core seems also to manifest Kinship-c and Community-c features like love, emotion, commitment, plus some diversity as a Perspective-c feature.

The MARKET suits the 1st Tetrad, which is grounded in Market-c (that's easy) and tops out at Community-c, which probably reflects the participation of everyone as required to do the organization's work, whatever it may be.

The 2nd Tetrad can be assigned the name HIERARCHY given that it is grounded in Power-c; and it tops in Kinship-c, where personal submission is required.

Finally, let's look at the 3rd Tetrad. Cause-c, Community-c, and Perspective-c are all high on self-awareness; knowledge and learning fit with Perspective-c, and Community-c is intrinsically unstructured. So this could well be AK's NETWORK.

Q: How certain is the above analysis?

A. I have a high degree of confidence that AK has correctly observed something within psychosocial reality. My initial analysis suggests that he has discovered the Tetrads in the Structural Hierarchy generated by the Interacting for Benefit subsidiary typology. However, I do not even know the name or function of this Structural Hierarchy. So much more investigation is required to confirm this conjecture. Other possibilities do exist Closed e.g. location in the Change framework. But pursuing alternative hypotheses here would take us too far from the goal of this webpage.

Q: Do we stop with the above analysis?

A. No—the benefit comes from starting with this analysis. ClosedMore…

Q: Are AK's names for the four entities satisfactory?

A: AK's names seem OK as a first attempt. If and when we obtain a deeper understanding, the names might need changing.
ClosedBecause …

Little is known about this Structural Hierarchy, and the assigned G1-names are probably unsatisfactory. So the names may need improving. My initial thoughts are that Core Group could be a great name—very evocative and accurate and far better than Clan which is too close to Kinship-centred for my comfort. I don't warm to Market as a name, because it creates a confusion with actual markets. Network sounds OK but perhaps too general. Hierarchy is a structural form within the Taxonomy and that could cause confusion.

Q: What sort of discoveries are possible?

A: Many. Almost every element in the Structural Hierarchy could be relevant to handling oneself, others or complex projects and social situations.

My Conclusion

THEE enables an intelligent but isolated and too easily neglected observation to be incorporated into a valid sophisticated schema of social interaction.

The incorporation within THEE validates and clarifies the original observation, and it points to additional areas for useful inquiry.

The observation will serve to assist in the further development of the Taxonomy.


This webpage was completed and permission to post obtained from AK in early 2009. In early 2010, curiosity led me to spend some months inquiring to check further. Preliminary findings will be posted in due course.


Originally posted: Jan 2010; Last updated 2-Feb-2014.