taking this aspect into consideration, the probability
of successfully implementing a new business model
is very low. Business modelling must take this into
account. Homeostasis is a heuristic device that
provides a plausible explanation to the way
organizations resist change in order to maintain their
identity and therefore survive in a changing
environment. We have shown that homeostasis can
explain both formulation of Business Models (how
to deliver and capture value) and the operational part
(how the strategy is carried out).
Modelling homeostasis does not mean that we
consider that change is impossible, only that change
is very hard to create and maintain. To institute
change, the homeostatic system first must be
neutralized. This is very hard to do because of
Cannon’s four propositions. However hard it is,
resistance to change can have very good reasons that
need to be investigated.
Weinberg and Weinberg (1988) point out that
Cannon doesn’t speak of goals and targets but rather
about constancy. A homeostatic system, therefore,
has no specific goal or target. It simply maintains
some constancy with whatever number of
mechanisms it can bring to bear. If we want to take
homeostasis seriously, being that it provides such a
good explanation of organizational life (and even
life in general), we need to overcome our own
homeostatic system and remove the terms goals,
targets, purpose, ends etc. Rather we need to search
for constancy and how it is maintained. This can be
a radical change in business modelling, a change that
its own homeostasis may be unwilling to allow.
This work should be followed by a more
humanistic view in business modelling, modelling
people and their attitude toward change rather than
the traditional role, business rule, business process
paradigm.
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