The phenomenology of uncertainty in relation to CEOs: a reconsideration of Wilfred Bion’s theories
thesis
posted on 2017-02-14, 02:13authored bySavage, Julie Raelene
The initial research questions informing this study emerged from this
researcher’s lived experience as a psychodynamically-oriented organisational
consultant: How do Chief Executive Officers (CEOs) lead an organisation and
manage their personal uncertainties? What strategies do they use to defend
against their uncertainties? Or do they give in to them? How do they lead
efficient and effective organisations when they are positioned between the
uncertainties inherent in those to whom they report and those who report to
them? These are significant questions in relation to leadership and uncertainty.
To explore the phenomenon of uncertainty experienced by CEOs within their
roles in organisational contexts, eight CEOs were selected for study. A
phenomenological approach was accompanied by heuristic and naturalistic
inquiry methods, sequentially. As part of the observational sequence, the
researcher accompanied four of the eight CEOs across five working days. The
rationale for this combination of interview only and interview / research
observation was to test ‘what the CEOs said’ against how they ‘performed’ as
leaders within their organisations: words versus actions. The CEOs provided a
richness of data which emerged the following themes: their relationship with
their Reporting Body, Family, Emotion, Decision Making, and Uncertainty. It
became evident that uncertainty was a sub-text throughout.
An unexpected parallel process emerged through the researcher’s daily contact
with the CEOs’ experiences of uncertainty. Naturalistic inquiry methods
assisted analysis of the researcher’s personal journey of intense uncertainty that
unfolded from ‘living a week in the life of each of the four CEO-respondents’.
This phenomenon became a significant finding for future researchers planning a
similar study.
Wilfred Bion has been described as “the deepest thinker within psychoanalysis”
and a plethora of researchers and writers have built upon the foundations Bion
provided. This study drew from his work because his theories are based on ‘lived experience’. However, there was a need to recalibrate his theories when
interpreting the research data because “uncertainty” is not listed in indexes of
his written work. This study brings Bion and Uncertainty to the index
foreground because findings show that beneath Bion’s theories - beneath his
foundation - paradoxically, uncertainty operates.
Thinking is undervalued in organisations. The challenge for CEOs is to shift
from reacting-in-the-moment to creating the time and space to Stop, Think,
Intuit and Reflect before Responding (STIRR) when faced with intense
uncertainty. If CEOs are able to: develop ‘negative capability’, factor in the
probability that the individuals who form the (work) groups in their
organisations experience similar uncertainties, and consider seriously the
elements of Bion’s various theories on unconscious motivating forces - how they
inform workplace dynamics operating out-of-awareness of those involved - then
organisations will become far more efficient and effective. They need to do so
because …
Uncertainty is inevitable.