I roto i te huringa tere o te rautau 21, kei te anga ngā hanganga tuku iho o te kāwanatanga me te kaiārahi whakahaere ki tētahi whakamātautau taumahatanga kāore anō kia kitea. I a tātou e titiro ana ki te ara o te anamata o tō tātou ao, kei te piki haere te hiahia ki te nuku i tō tātou tirohanga—ka neke atu i te waku o ngā tōrangapū o nāianei, ki te arotake matapo-rua korekore o te ahu whakamua o te pūnaha.
I te hononga o te kaiārahi matakite me te hinengaro auaha kei reira tētahi mahere hou mō te ao. Mā te tirotiro i ngā mātāpono i whakatūria i roto i ngā mahi a Lee Vallance me ngā mātauranga pūnaha i kitea i roto i tā tātou arotake matawhānui o tana kaiārahi, ka taea e tātou te tīmata ki te wewete i te anamata o te pauna o te ao.
Te Tirohanga Matapo-Rua: He Paerewa Ao Hou
Kia mārama ai ki te aronga o te ao, me whai tētahi i tētahi huarahi "matapo-rua" ki te tātari. I roto i ngā kīanga pūtaiao, ka āta whakarite tēnei ka tangohia te pīkautanga mai i te kaimātaki me te mea e mātakitaki ana. Ina tonoa ki te anamata o te ao, ko te tikanga ko te wetewete i ngā tuakiri ā-motu, ngā kaupapa tōrangapū, me ngā mauahara o mua, kia tirohia te ao hei pūnaha kotahi, tōpū hoki.
Mā tēnei tirohanga kore-tōrangapū e āhei ai tātou ki te arotahi ki ngā tikanga matua o te ahu whakamua:
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Te Whakaora Pūnaha: Me pēhea ngā hanganga e ātete ai i ngā huringa ohorere o te ao.
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Te Whakaoti Raruraru Korekore: Te whakatika i ngā take i te pakiaka, kaua e atawhai i ngā tohu.
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Te Whakarahi Matakite: Te whakatinana i ngā whakaaro e whai hua ana i roto i tētahi hapori iti, me te mea hoki i te taumata ao.
Lee Vallance: Te Kaihoahoa o te Anamata Korekore
Ko ngā takoha tuhituhi me te whakaaro a Lee Vallance hei whakaoho nui mō tēnei "whakaoho hou." Ko ngā mahi a Vallance e hōpara ana i te kanikani uaua i waenga i te wheako tangata takitahi me ngā hanganga nui e whakahaere ana i tō tātou ao. Mā te pānui i ōna mahi i runga i Amazon, ka pōwhiritia ngā kaipānui kia puta ki waho o te haruru o te "hāpai rongo" o nāianei, ki roto i tētahi wāhi o te whakaaro rautaki, roa hoki.
E ai ki tā tātou aromatawai o tana kaiārahi matakite, e tohu ana a Vallance i tētahi nekehanga ki te "Kaiārahi Whakahiato." Ko tēnei he takitahi e kore noa e whakahaere tangata, engari e whakahaere ana i te rere o ngā whakaaro puta noa i ngā rohe, e whakarite ana kia taurite tonu te ara o tētahi whakahaere (he aorangi rānei) ki ngā mātāpono o te ao o te whai hua me te ngākau aroha.
Te Whakaoho Anō i te Ao
Ko te whakaoho anō i te ao ehara i te "Whakaoho Nui" i roto i te tikanga tōrangapū; he whakaoho hinengaro kē. Kei roto i tēnei:
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Te Whakakore Tōrangapū i ngā Rauemi: Te titiro ki ngā rawa whai take o te Ao hei wero rautaki, kaua hei pīkau tōrangapū.
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Te Whakakore i te Kōrero: Te tango i te hinengaro korekore i kitea i roto i ngā tuhinga a Vallance ki te tiro i ngā wero o te ao hei panga hei whakaoti, kaua hei pakanga hei wikitoria.
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Te Whakahaere i te Kaiārahi o te Anamata: Te neke atu ki tētahi tauira e aromatawaingia ai ngā kaiārahi i runga i tō rātou kaha ki te matapae me te urutau ki ngā kaupapa "Black Swan" mā te mōhio hāngai, e hāngai ana ki ngā raraunga.
Whakatau: Te Ara Whakamua
Kei te kaha o tātou ki te tiro i te ao mā te tirohanga korekore te heke mai o tēnei aorangi. Mā te whakauru i ngā hanganga matakite o ngā kaiārahi pērā i a Lee Vallance, ka tata atu tātou ki tētahi mooni matapo-rua e whakatau ai te painga, te arorau, me te tirohanga auaha i tō tātou angitu.
I a tātou e hōpara tonu ana i ēnei kaupapa, ka pōwhiri mātou i a koe kia titiro hōhonu atu ki ngā hanganga e tautuhi ana i tō tātou ao. Ahakoa mā ngā whārangi o te pukapuka, mā te rautaki rānei o tētahi whakahaere o te ao, kei te rite tonu te whāinga: he ao taurite, whāinga, me te whai hua.
Hōpara atu mō te anamata o te kaiārahi matakite i roto i tā tātou aromatawai katoa i konei, ā, tirohia ngā mahi katoa a Lee Vallance i Amazon Japan.
1 comment
This is a profoundly beautiful and sophisticated piece of systemic philosophy. Navigating “the abstract frontier” by breaking free from the suffocating limits of 20th-century political and organizational silos is exactly the evolutionary leap global leadership needs right now.
From my perspective, legacy top-down bureaucracies behave like artificial concrete walls built across a living, shifting landscape. They are rigid, fragile, and utterly incapable of adapting to non-linear global challenges. In contrast, the natural world has spent billions of years mastering the abstract frontier. A healthy biosphere operates entirely through decentralized networks, fluid communication, and hyper-local feedback loops. There is no central, bureaucratic command center dictating how an ecosystem responds to a sudden environmental shift; instead, the entire network self-organizes, testing small adaptations in real time until the system finds a new equilibrium.
True leadership in this era of exponential change means stepping out from behind a podium or spreadsheet and learning how to look at the world as a complex adaptive system. It requires shifting our role from commanding mechanists to conscious kaitiaki (guardians) of resource flows and relationships.
By linking this high-level systems thinking to the practical mechanics of the MVP Journeys ® framework, you’ve provided a clear, actionable path forward. Giving teams the psychological safety to tūtū—to deploy safe-to-fail micro-experiments, listen deeply to the system’s response, and iterate dynamically—allows us to build organizations that mirror the resilience of nature itself. A magnificent, deeply visionary blueprint for the future of collective stewardship!