Over the last couple of months I have had a series of discussions with several students about their future as they move forwards with their systems practice. They are keen and eager to step forward in the world as systems thinking practitioners. There is only one problem……where do they get employment or how do they set up as independent businesses?
True, there are more jobs coming through for systems thinking practitioners nowadays, but still nowhere near enough. The field is dominated by gangs and cliques who look after one another and in some respects, systems thinking has gone feral. Generally, those not working in the field cannot tell the difference between those who look good and those who are good.
There is another issue at play, also. Organisations may say they want to employ systems thinkers but they give less thought about how they will accommodate them in an organisational context. By definition, systems thinkers think differently. They are excited by things others often cannot even see. They sometimes do not conform to the norm, preferring instead to be a bit of a maverick. They might hate routine and norms. If they are anything like me, they hate wasting time on trivialities. There has to be purpose and meaning in what they do. You cannot put them in a box, or you can be assured that they will fight their way out of it in record time.
I have experience of this myself. I don’t fit! Anywhere! I struggle with formal office environments where people tend to spend more time controlling each other (even though they think they don’t) and moulding everyone to a norm. Sometimes, it creeps in, bit by bit and before you know it you are one of the dull hidden gems, bored and despondent, looking for a way out.
This was one reason I went into consultancy and tutoring. For a different slant in my career. I soon, however, came up against the bitter competition in consultancy and witnessed more unethical practice than I ever want to see again.
So, what do we do? We educate and train people in systems thinking and then they don’t fit anywhere. To date, there are not enough employment avenues to accommodate them.
Then people ask how I managed to step into the world of systems thinking. When they hear how hard it was and what it really takes to stay afloat, some think twice about it. It was and is hard. Very hard. No-one sees the 18-20 hours days, 7 days a week, week after week, just to make ends meet. They don’t see the 4am starts and 5.30am trains when they read about your exploits online. They don’t see you leave the house at 4am and not return until midnight. They don’t see your fridge with empty shelves because you haven’t even had time to buy milk and the basic groceries for the last fortnight. I cannot express just how hard it can be and how dedicated you need to be to make it work.
How do we change this? How do we make room and employment for systems thinkers? Personally, I still think it is too soon. The outlets are not generally there. Yes, there are some outlets, but for the amount of practitioners we are educating and training, I hear of a far greater percentage who feel lost when it comes to their career, seemingly with nowhere to go that will accommodate the way we have educated them to think.
I do think the bigger systems thinking organisations who champion the discipline have a part to play here. How can they use their power to make a pathway for others to enter the field? What can they do to support those who want to fully step into it?
Some say that systems thinking is not a profession. It is a way of thinking that you use when doing other things. For example, you may be a health commissioner and you use systems thinking to enhance your commissioning practices.
Is it too early then? Is systems thinking still not in the place of it being a profession in its own right? There is an apprenticeship now but it is still very early days. In years to come it might be easier. People might have generally started to understand who and what systems thinkers are.
In the meantime, what do those of us in the field do? We are paving a way that will be easier for those who take the journey after us. At the moment though, the stories I hear in the field are of frustrated people who can see what they want but cannot quite put their hands on it.


Can you train someone to be a systems-thinker or is it an innate thing (nurture or nature)? The point about feeling isolated was different nothing brought up in an INCOSE workshop by an organisation that claimed to be able to identify potential systems thinkers through answers to a sort of psychology questionnaire. They thought that there were natural systems thinkers who just “were” irrespective of training.
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In his book ‘Systems Practice: How to Act..’ Ray Ison claims that we are all born with systemic sensibilities. Over time, they become dormant. Our societies do not support them to flourish (particularly in the western world) we are educated in ways that deadens them etc. We can, therefore, educate and train in a way that reawakens those systems sensibilities. We do this on course TB872, Managing Change with STiP. It can be a painful process. Firstly, students are exposed to the fact that the way they think now is not necessarily systems thinking. They are also told how generally, people carry our their work and lives partly unaware of the traditions of understanding on which they draw in their thinking. It is a combination of our reawakened systemic sensibilities, coupled with systems literacy that forms our systems thinking in practice. The issue is that once we have educated and trained to reawaken systemic sensibilities, people tend to see that this thinking does not fit – be that in our workplaces, our society, our lives…
So, I think that saying there are some people who are inherently systems thinkers is true. They are possibly the ones who have been lucky enough to keep their systemic sensibilities alive and flourishing. There may be some people who, having been moulded in a particular way by everything in our society and lives, will never reawaken their systemic sensibilities. Then there are those somewhere in between who, when given the right conditions to reawaken their systemic sensibilities, step right into it. These are the ones who then don’t fit in standard workplaces or don’t fit with the general ‘rules of the game’. They can be seen as mavericks, trouble makers, awkward. In reality, they have reawakened that within them that enables them to see a world that has become invisible to others.
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