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Systems Thinking...Taking the Next Step is a multimedia Learning Environment which picks up where The Fifth Discipline left off. Now, instead of just reading about it, you can experience the paradigm, language, method, and technology of Systems Thinking as applied in real-world, case study examples. It includes an interactive case study, in which you will have the opportunity to play the role of CEO of a high-tech Company trying to implement an aggressive growth strategy in a highly-competitive emerging market.
This CD-ROM is great for giving people across your organization a first-level exposure to the power of Systems Thinking as an approach to strategy design.
The Value Proposition
Using the iThink software in Systems Thinking enables…
The senior management team of a well-known applications software company was debating whether to be in the client service business, or whether it ought to just "stick to the knitting" of pure software development-the latter being the decided preference of the majority of the team. The firm decided to use the iThink software to construct a very simple model that might shed some light on this question. A simplified version of the map that resulted is reproduced below. Simulations of the associated iThink model clearly indicated that the client service revenue stream would have a definite tendency to grow relatively faster than the software revenue stream over time. This "inadvertent evolution," a relative expansion of client service revenues, was in direct conflict with the preferences of the majority of the senior management team. Had the team not come to understand that the evolution was a direct consequence of "the physics" of the business, they might have tried to resist it. Such resistance, referred to as "fighting the physics" in Systems Thinking parlance, usually results in a high-cost/high-frustration mode of operation. Understanding the "physics," on the other hand, enables people to better understand their options, and hence to make decisions that respect the physics-without necessarily "giving in" to them.