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The word hierarchy dates back to the 14th century and as with many command and control terms from long ago, there are religious connotations. Hierรณs is the Greek term for sacred or holy and arkhฤ“s is the term for ruling. Combine these together and you get โ€˜head priestโ€™. (hierรกrkhฤ“s) Over the years, Latin, French and English derivatives produced similar meanings. By the 17th century hierarchy became linked to the ranks of the clergy, cementing its relationship to religion. Nowadays, hierarchy can be found not only in religion, but in the military and in the corporate world through defined levels of management power and influence. Which leads me to describe how I believe hierarchy starts with a โ€˜higher arc and keyโ€™. Whether or not we should blame Frederick Winslow Taylor is inconsequential. Organizations, for the most part, have been established in an arc format of management and employees are constantly seeking new keys to open new doors of the arc. Those keys often represent money, power and the ability to control decisions. Sometimes it may have to do with knowledge. The more keys you successfully hold, and thus the more doors you unlock, the more money, power and ability you hold to control future decisions. The link between โ€˜command and controlโ€™ and โ€˜hierarchyโ€™ is disturbingly evident. Thus, employees are conditioned to individually seek out keys without regard for collaboration, sharing, and so on. The arc represents the fact two (or more) employees may be seeking out keys at the same moment in time, from opposite ends of the arc, causing fiefdoms and bureaucracies of hoarding, as they try in earnest to move up the arc. The arc acts as the basis in which internal competition thrives. The keys are merely the bait in which competitive behaviour is manifested.

What Do Others Say?

Alain de Vulpian, founder of Cofremca and Chairman of Sociovision states:
We are in the process of moving from a pyramidal, hierarchical society to a single-story society where heterarchical relationships dominate.
Gary Hamel and Bill Breen in The Future of Management help us with this citation from the book:
Hierarchies are very good at aggregating effort, at coordinating the activities of many people with widely varying roles. But theyโ€™re not very good at mobilizing effort, at inspiring people to go above and beyond. When it comes to mobilizing human capability, communities outperform bureaucracies.
Jon Husband treats us to the following:
We all know and understand hierarchy - the enduring principle of the institutions that govern us and in which we work and live. The people at the top of the institutions control the agendas and make the decisions, which are then "pushed" out and down to be executed, implemented, followed. That's changing.
I think Verna Allee sums things up rather well for me in this piece, from her book The Future of Knowledge:
We are currently in a state of transition from one worldview to another. However, we face a dilemma. Because we have not completely adjusted our business models to the emerging worldview, we are experiencing emergent dynamics that we do not yet understand.

What To Do?

To defeat the arc, one must first recognize that situational hierarchy is necessary in todayโ€™s organization. Hierarchy for hierarchyโ€™s sake is no way in which to run a company nowadays. Situational hierarchy, however, permits the organization the wherewithal to invoke decision-making power as necessary. For example, itโ€™s not as though an organization is going to conduct an open vote when the senior leadership team and/or board are contemplating an acquisition. Situational hierarchy, in this case, makes absolute sense. To defeat the arc, therefore, we need not only situational hierarchy but a combination of open leadership, collaboration, and a networked organizational structure. Iโ€™ll continue this line of thinking in my next mental meandering.
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