The International Journal of Professional Management - ISSN 20422341
Collaborative Leadership
Volume 10, Issue 5, September 2015
Mike Bagshaw
m.bagshaw@worc.ac.uk
Much of life is about solving problems, satisfying the needs of the people around you while achieving your own goals. A simple problem has few facets, affects few people, and has at least one complete solution. There aren’t many simple problems. A complex problem has many facets, affects many people, and has many possible ways of dealing with it, but no ideal solution that suits everyone concerned. Complexity is increasing all around us. The global economy involves huge numbers of people in any enterprise, with a similarly huge number of opinions, and these opinions meet disagreement. Problems with no solution are sometimes called ‘wicked problems,’ a term popularised by Rittel & Webber (1973).
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