- Albert Einstein
I. Adaptability
Adaptability Quotient, or AQ, is the measurable study of the most basic of our human talents: the ability to change on purpose. Adaptability is a form of intelligence with increasing importance for work and recruitment in times of unprecedented change; AQ is the intelligence scale that can measure, test, and improve aptitude and skills. It asks not how much people know, but how well they manipulate information, including ability to unlearn what is no longer productive. It infuses exploration into thinking and work, asking, in business competition, “What might kill you next?”
Adaptability Quotient, or AQ, is the measurable study of the most basic of our human talents: the ability to change on purpose. Adaptability is a form of intelligence with increasing importance for work and recruitment in times of unprecedented change; AQ is the intelligence scale that can measure, test, and improve aptitude and skills. It asks not how much people know, but how well they manipulate information, including ability to unlearn what is no longer productive. It infuses exploration into thinking and work, asking, in business competition, “What might kill you next?”
It is the key to evolution described by Darwin, who focused
on adaptability to changing environments as more important to species survival than
strength or intelligence, as in “adapt or die.” Evolutionary biologist Daniel Lieberman describes
responsiveness to change as part of human cultural evolution, beyond physical
anthropology. Culture is the sum of ideas
and practices passed on between human generations, being the baseline—a received
value system—for creative problem-solving and innovation. Collective
intelligence is not static but evolutionary, and personal intelligence likewise
morphs to carry us across the adult development chart from birth.
Forbes’ “Adapt or Die” (2013) whitepaper defines AQ as: “the
ability to adjust course, product, service, and strategy in response to
unanticipated changes in the market.” While the Forbes definition
is business-orientated, Martin, Nejad,
Colmar, and Liem in their article "Adaptability: How Students' Responses
to Uncertainty and Novelty Predict Their Academic and Non-Academic Outcomes”
(2013) defined AQ more broadly as “the capacity to adjust one’s thoughts and
behaviors in order to effectively respond to uncertainty, new information, or
changed circumstances."
According to Harvard Business Review, adaptability is
“The new competitive advantage for the 21st century.” (2011) In Fast Company in 2018, Natalie
Fratto reported that “adaptability quotient will soon become the primary
predictor of success [in business, exceeding] general intelligence (IQ) and
emotional intelligence (EQ – Goleman’s term).”
Stuart Parkin (2010) defines AQ as the ability to perceive
when change is occurring, ability to come to terms with new demands--and then
to identify opportunities to seize on--not just for survival but leveraging new
circumstances to thrive. Parkin uses the
example of Moore’s Law from computing as a model of constant innovation needed
to assess and meet ongoing change. When we change successfully, the reward of
neurochemicals to the brain gives us the motivation to pursue creative
solutions to what stresses us out. The World Health Organization calls stress
“the number-one health epidemic of the 21st century.” Much of stress
is, full circle, the outcome of trying to adapt to change under the constraints
of uncertainty, which blocks our decision-making confidence.
Stress is the mental-health problem that fast emerges when
efficacy fails us; as in the crisis we experience, either personal or
world-wide, when things don’t go as planned – the Covid crisis is now our Crisis
#1. It has caused a confidence rift in
our individual sense of competence, extending out to local, national, and world
systems, while forcing all of these to be rapidly re-assessed and adapted. A visible instance is the business case of
restaurants either converting to take-out or opting to close completely, a
decision between quite different business models. Parking-lot dining al fresco is a third
adaptation.
In 2012, in HR Magazine, Jo Ayoubi set out AQ as a skill-set predisposition to:
1)
Quickly appreciate when change is happening
2)
Test and experiment early and often, beyond
products and services, to examine business models, process, and strategies [as
systems]
3)
Manage stakeholders and relationships,
especially within multinationals
4)
Motivate and lead in rapidly changing
environments
The whole question of adaptability will be getting a global
workaround in the coming months and years, because major changes are more about
adaptability than conventional “best practices” that can be known, measured,
and evaluated by historical precedent or status quo. This will be a new ball game. Including the meaning of competence for
customer service systems as they adjust to new measures of efficacy for the
customer experience based on flexibility and based around the need for
just-in-time information.
For individuals, adaptability creates a new dimension for
applying and measuring intelligence under the “press” of rapid change and novel
circumstances. This pressure may raise
awareness that agile expert systems are more necessary than ever for effective
problem solving, and consumers of everything from coffee to higher education might
feel relieved of their ongoing need to think they can handle problems using
just their own resources and wits.
II. Disruption
Off-plan problem-solving is
essential to dealing with disruptions, unplanned-for change versus long-term
planning outcomes. Human beings respond
first to fear rather than rationality, because that’s the way the mind responds
to any urgent need for changed behavior.
This happens when weak signals (that something is wrong and needs
fixing) become stronger and harder to ignore (something must be done now).
AQ is a mental practice that
people take up not because they want to, but when forced to by extraordinary
events. It is a form of off-plan
thinking, the route the crew of Apollo 13 had to follow when their oxygen tank
blew up on the way to the moon in 1970. Anytime
the rules change mid-game is when we are forced to reset our approach to the
hierarchy of ideas—what is most important, what is urgent or less urgent, and
possibly the very nature of our mission.
For Apollo, it meant re-imagining the mission from the original moon
landing to returning to earth.
Likewise, in AQ testing,
subjects are asked to imagine disaster scenarios in which their main income
stream dries up suddenly, or a climate change cuts off customers (Fratto). “What if” questions introduce these or a like
unprecedented disruption that interrupts the comfort of previous learning to
impose a totally different knowledge set as the next database of
operations. The leading questions then
become:
How well can you manipulate new
information? How quickly can you pivot
to let go of old assumptions that are no longer reliable, but actually mislead
your thinking in irrelevant directions? How
good is your ability to learn from failure and experiment with options almost
instantly?
instantly?
An applied answer is the
difference between how Blockbuster and Netflix looked at the market for movie
rentals, or Kodak versus IBM in going digital with imaging. Carol Dweck’s work on the Growth Mindset has
proven the value of looking at neuroplasticity as a constantly developing
process, rather than intelligence as a static state of mind.
In business, where AQ is a
developing industry, 90% of HR decision makers identify AQ as the top trait to
deal with change and uncertainty, as the shelf-life of skills shrinks by 35%
every 3 years, job changing accelerates to every 4.2 years, and workers hold 9-plus
jobs over their worklife, within 3, 4, 5
and more careers. On a wider scale, for the
S&P 500 index, the average company tenure was 33 years in the early 20th
century, while now that time is cut by almost two-thirds to just 12.
Adaptability is what has made us
the leading species on earth. However,
it is not our naturally desired state.
We are drawn to rely on established doctrine and standardized ways of
looking at problems and potential solutions--the legacy of culture. These sources reflect deeply held beliefs
about the way things should work, assumptions about what our values should be,
and which alternatives fit and don’t fit our values and long-term purposes.
Questioning our own assumptions
is not something we like doing. It goes
against our presumption that we can trust our own thinking (see briefing on
Overestimating Judgment). So not
everyone is going to be ready to adapt, and even fewer to innovate (the
adaptor/innovator scale developed by Michael Kirton as KAI). Radical change happens under great stress,
the very circumstance when we most seek to maintain the status quo as a form of
societal security.
AQ questions (Executive Agenda, Nov. 13,
2019): Typical AQ questions, rated on a scale of 1-5 (practiced rarely to routinely):
1.
I can readily imagine new uses for old ideas.
2.
My failures present opportunities for innovation.
3.
I like to experiment with new ideas.
4.
I am able to shift gears with minimal complaints
or issues.
5.
I challenge myself to question what I presume to
know.
6.
My core ideas are clear to me and others.
Exploring, or Questioning Assumption, is a good First Step in virtually every process. The ongoing practice of relentless self-examination can only serve to enlighten and keep the edge sharp...in my humble opinion, anyway!
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