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Stop Solving the Wrong Problems

Take a good hard look in the organizational mirror

Alexei Maridashvili / Unsplash

Akhilesh Gulati
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PIVOT Management Consultants

Thu, 12/11/2025 - 12:03
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I’ve had this conversation countless times—sometimes with a frustrated client, often with a colleague, and occasionally with my own reflection.

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We hear familiar calls for help:
• “We need better communication.”
• “People need to collaborate more.”
• “We’ve lost our culture.”

These observations show up when an organization begins to struggle, and they are certainly valid concerns. Communication, collaboration, and culture are vital. However, after years of working inside and alongside complex organizations, I’ve come to believe they are rarely the fundamental issue.

Instead, what appears on the surface is a symptom pointing to something deeper, less visible, and far more challenging to name. What we call “organizational problems” are, in my view, systemic issues disguised as day-to-day frustrations.

The invisible operating code

The temptation is always to treat the symptom. It’s easier to mandate a new dashboard, launch a realignment, or schedule a team-building retreat. And truthfully, I’ve participated in these surface-level solutions myself—sometimes because it’s expected, and other times because it’s simply less demanding than addressing the systemic patterns.

But the real leverage is gained when we’re willing to look beneath the surface. The organization, like any complex system, is run by an invisible operating code made up of entrenched patterns and norms. When this code is faulty, the organizational challenges we see follow as a logical result.

The quiet system failures that erode performance and morale include:

The clarity gap: This manifests as a lack of clear, shared purpose and scattered, shifting priorities that pull teams in conflicting directions and contribute to unrealistic expectations.

Trust deficits: Low psychological safety and trust across teams lead to siloed thinking, turf protection, and bottlenecks in decision-making.

Process inconsistency: Ambiguous standards and bottlenecks in operations that force an overreliance on frantic firefighting instead of root-cause analysis and disciplined prevention.

Avoidance of truth: Fear of accountability that leads to avoiding difficult conversations and allowing core issues to compound silently.

Empowerment void: A systemic failure to develop leaders at all levels, coupled with a limited mandate for frontline teams to own and stop the line to fix defects at the source.

These aren’t moral flaws of the people; they’re the predictable outputs of the system they inhabit. We’ve learned to tune out this background noise, yet it determines how value is delivered, how decisions are made, and how people engage. (Interestingly, if we revisit The Goal, by Eliyahu Goldratt and Jeff Cox [North River Press, 2012], we can see the same underlying system issues.)

The organization as a mirror

If we accept this systemic view, we must also accept the “mirror effect.” Organizations faithfully reflect the clarity—or confusion—of the people who lead and shape them.

The organization reflects our values, our habits, our assumptions, and perhaps most painfully, our blind spots. This reflection isn’t always comfortable, but it’s precisely where the greatest opportunity for change resides.

The breakthrough comes when we make a conscious pivot in our approach. This isn’t just a process change; it’s a fundamental shift in mind-set.

Problem/pivot:
• Firefighting/disciplined continuous improvement
• Fear of accountability or blame/shared problem solving
• Silos/shared purpose and cross-functional alignment
• Confusion/clarity in roles, standards, and priorities

I’m not suggesting these systemic issues are easy to solve. But I believe that when we look deeper, we stop wasting energy trying to fix the mirror’s reflection. Instead, we gain the critical insight needed to address the source of the reflection.

So, maybe the highest-leverage question isn’t, “How do we fix this organizational problem?” Perhaps it’s, “What are the underlying systemic dynamics that are shaping what we see and frustrating our best efforts?”

When we’re willing to ask that question honestly, we can finally begin building systems that work for us instead of against us.

Comments

Submitted by Dirk van Putten (not verified) on Thu, 12/11/2025 - 09:48

Stop Solving the Wrong Problems - Great Article!

Hello Akhilesh:

What a great article! It aligns with my awareness and mindset gained by my studies of Deming and Ackoff. You may really enjoy getting involved with the In2:InThinking Network as the ideas in your article is often discussed and studied. 

Thank you, Dirk van Putten

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Submitted by Akhilesh Gulati on Mon, 12/15/2025 - 16:37

In reply to Stop Solving the Wrong Problems - Great Article! by Dirk van Putten (not verified)

Hello Dirk, Thank you so…

Hello Dirk,

Thank you so much for the kind words about the article! It’s immensely gratifying to hear that it aligns with your mindset, especially one shaped by the insights of Deming and Ackoff. Their systemic approaches and emphasis on defining the right system before trying to fix it have been major influences on my own thinking.

I truly appreciate you bringing the In2:InThinking Network to my attention. Given your recommendation and the fact that they are discussing similar ideas, I will certainly look into getting involved. It sounds like a perfect place to continue this important dialogue.

I hope we can keep the conversation going!

Best regards,

Akhilesh

  • Reply

Submitted by Jay Arthur (not verified) on Thu, 12/11/2025 - 09:56

It's the System!

I agree. The system creates an environment where these issues can manifest.

Fix the system, fix the company.

  • Reply

Submitted by Akhilesh Gulati on Mon, 12/15/2025 - 16:41

In reply to It's the System! by Jay Arthur (not verified)

Hello Jay, You encapsulate…

Hello Jay,

You encapsulate the central idea perfectly. I couldn't agree more: "Fix the system, fix the company."

The key challenge, of course, is that the system itself is often a complex web of interconnected processes, metrics, culture, and incentives—it's not just a set of mechanical parts.

When you talk about "fixing the system," what aspects do you feel are the most critical to address first in a typical organization? Is it the measurement system, the incentive structure, or the communication and collaboration flow?

I appreciate you boiling the concept down to such a powerful, action-oriented statement.

Best regards,

Akhilesh

  • Reply

Submitted by CG Mistry (not verified) on Thu, 12/11/2025 - 16:28

Real Cause of organization agony

Akhilesh, Hats off to discuss a common problem that hampers many companies from being successful. It takes a look from outside to inside to figure out the real problem which is hiding behind many trivial ones on the surface of the problem.

  • Reply

Submitted by Akhilesh Gulati on Mon, 12/15/2025 - 16:46

In reply to Real Cause of organization agony by CG Mistry (not verified)

Thank you, CG! I appreciate…

Thank you, CG! I appreciate your kind words and your excellent way of framing the diagnostic process.

You hit on a crucial point: that looking from the "outside to inside" is what's required to bypass the "many trivial ones on the surface." The trivial problems are usually just symptoms—the visible smoke—while the real problem is the source of the fire, often embedded deep within the organizational structure or process design.  You might also recall my article published here 'Thinking on the Edge'; your capturing the thought 'outside to inside' builds on that.

It takes a conscious effort to resist the urge to immediately jump on the first visible symptom and instead ask, "What must be true about our system for this surface problem to exist?" That shift in perspective is often the hardest, but most rewarding, part of the process.

I’m glad we share that view!

Best regards,

Akhilesh

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