The organisational value of Conwayâs Law
The reality is that this statement has a much broader validity. In all my work in organisation design and beyond, the feeling that this law holds is a constant.
Scholars often refer to the law by two related concepts:
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Homomorphism or Isomorphism. I wonât discuss the difference in the two terms, but essentially is a mathematical principle by which one structure holds a structure-preserving map of another structure. In simpler terms, a system replicates recognisable elements of the organisation that developed it. This leads to what Allan Kelly defined as the Reverse of Conwayâs law: Organisations with long-lived systems will adopt a structure modelled on the system.
- In simpler terms, some call it the Mirroring Effect, by which a system produces a mirror image of the organisation that made it.
For the moment, it is sufficient to say that multiple researchers have validated these principles in various fields, not just in software design.
But why is this important?
The reason is that if we move away from one second from software products into something broader, we can immediately see many relationships with concrete cases out there:
- We have seen already how a massive aeroplane accident has resulted from a faulty communication structure in an organisation in theory designed to be entirely focused on safety and the importance of engineering.
- Several large scandals in organisations (think of Enron) have resulted from conscious organisational decisions that ultimately reflected the failure of an entire system.
- Think also of the minor everyday issue you might have with customer support for a product when youâre getting handed over from one department to another. Isnât that the result of the internal organisation structure?
This is becoming more and more relevant today because the acceleration aspect of
VUCA makes all these aspects more visible.
An example: Retail
Having had several experiences in retail, I see the actual effects of Conwayâs Law whenever I enter a store. Physical stores (and, notably, e-commerce sites) deeply reflect how the organisation is structured and its communication structure. Think of apparel: few cases come immediately to mind.
- Apparel stores are mainly organised across gender (men/women) differentiations and age clusters (kids/adults). In most cases, this reflects a distinction that runs deep into the organisation, from style to product development, to merchandising and sourcing. This distinction immediately creates issues the moment genderless fashion comes into play and limits blur: small sizes, another area grouped under âkidsâ, even if adults also buy them.
- So-called âomnichannelâ services. Ever tried to buy online and return something in store? Iâm sure you all have experienced at least a pair of rolled eyes by the chair when asking for this service. The issue is that most organisations are still organised by channel; thus, returning to a physical store means that something sold online will end up in the stock count of a physical store. In most cases, business control mechanisms, resource allocation, incentives all are still by channel, despite the promise of an omnichannel experience.
- I have already mentioned the example of customer support before. How often did it happen to have had a technical problem with a product you bought, and while seeking assistance, you get bumped from the retailer to the producer, from the customer service department to the technical one.
All these examples reflect how broad the implications of Conwayâs Law are, especially if we intend the concept of âsystemâ in its most enormous possible sense, precisely as Conway himself intended.
A possible corollary to Conwayâs Law.
This is why we should look at the critical output that an organisation produces, the experience delivered to its customers. This makes me think we can extend Conwayâs Law with a corollary.
The quality of customer experience delivered by an organisation will inevitably be the product of its organisational design.
And I intend all elements of organisational design. Communication structure is one (and probably the most relevant), but what emerges here is another layer of meaning for the concept of intentionality in organisation design: you want to provide consistency across all your organisational elements.
Another call for Intentionality
The above strikes a new chord for the Intentional Approach to Design that I am exploring and should include the following steps.
- Adopt an outside-in perspective, understanding customers and critical stakeholders in your design. This means moving away from the idea that the environment is simply an external factor, moving entirely into an Ecosystem logic.
- Always consider communication flows within the organisation as what will make or break your design. This means thinking both in terms of formal Organisational Model and Operating Model, but also in terms of the informal collaboration channels.
- Make sure you understand your own bias as the organisationâs designer. This is the most challenging part because we often underestimate the role of our ideas and how much they influence the design.
- Remember that Intentional Example will be the route for propagating the new design. As we discovered last week, it is paramount that change is implemented by intentionally giving the correct examples as needed.
- Last but not least, make sure you intentionally decide which organisation components will not be designed and leave the emergence. Choosing not to choose is a critical element of Conwayâs Law because the property to which the law refers is latent, not intentional.
Have you seen Conwayâs Law in action? What are your thoughts about it? Is it something we should exploit instead of battling?
Sergio