Sourced: https://www.enliveningedge.org/features/weaving-perspectives-teal-organizational-economic-mystical/

This post is the first in a series exploring the similarities, differences, and potential synergies between the work of Frederic Laloux, Otto Scharmer, and Thomas Hübl. Part One will focus on Laloux and Scharmer.


“The pain we feel is the pain of something old that is dying…while something new is waiting to be born. We happen to be in one of these transition periods where the old is starting to break down but the new hasn’t taken shape yet.”

Frederic Laloux, Reinventing Organizations: An Illustrated Invitation to Join the Conversation on Next-Stage Organizations (pp. 16-18)

“At the beginning of the twenty-first century, probably for the first time in human history, the living presence of the abyss —that is, that simultaneous existence of one world that is dying and another one that is being born—is a widely shared experience for millions of people across cultures, sectors, and generations.”

Otto Scharmer, Leading From the Emerging Future: From Ego-System to Eco-System Economies (p. 153)

Many Maps, One Journey – One Map, Many Journeys

The basic point of intersection between Frederic Laloux’s Reinventing Organizations and Otto Scharmer’s Leading From the Emerging Future is a map of developmental stages, which outlines the progression of human evolution over the last several centuries. With each new stage of consciousness comes radically new ways of creating social structures and systems.

While Scharmer and Laloux use different language to label the stages, it is clear they are essentially describing the same phenomenon. By juxtaposing the language of Scharmer and Laloux we begin to reveal a clearer picture of the unique attributes that distinguish each of these stages. Figure 1 below illustrates the comparison.

ScharmerAwarenessLalouxMetaphor
1.0TraditionalConformistMilitary/Church
2.0Ego-SystemAchievementMachine
3.0StakeholderPluralistFamily
4.0Eco-SystemEvolutionaryOrganism
Figure 1: Stages of Human Evolution according to Laloux & Scharmer

(Readers familiar with Spiral Dynamics and/or the work of Ken Wilber will recognize the parallels these stages have with Blue/Amber, Orange, Green, and Yellow/Teal. Laloux also uses this color scheme.)

While Laloux acknowledges that “everything changes” at each stage of evolution, the focus of his book is restricted to looking at the evolutionary process within the context of organizations. Even more specifically, he aims to identify some of the defining features of the next stage—or the “emerging future”—of organizations.

Laloux’s introduction to the developmental “spiral” is one of the best I have ever read, and he does a great job of showing what that process actually looks and feels like through the lens of organizational development. Laloux’s primary contribution is the recognition of certain features that show up consistently in organizations of various sizes, sectors, and cultures, therefore indicating that there is already a template that can be used to intentionally design evolutionary organizations.

Scharmer, on the other hand, takes a very broad view of the process and does a good job of connecting dots to show how the stages are enacted across eight economic “acupuncture points”: Nature, Labor, Capital, Technology, Leadership, Consumption, Coordination, and Ownership.

By articulating how the evolutionary journey unfolds through his four stages in each of these eight areas, Scharmer makes a significant contribution to the overall understanding of our current global situation, how we got here, where we’re going, and what needs to shift in order to facilitate a healthy transition to the next stage. I have seldom read anything that has so solidly grounded the theory of collective developmental stages in the practical reality of the specific details of the process.

The Gifts and Limitations of Each Stage

We can take the comparison of these books deeper by looking more closely at some of the observations that Scharmer and Laloux have made about each of these stages. While Scharmer reviews a vast amount of information and examples related to these stages, there are a few fundamental aspects that correlate well with what Laloux has observed about the evolution of organizations.

Scharmer points out that each stage emerges to address a primary societal challenge, and is therefore largely defined by the way it coordinates and organizes resources in response to that challenge. Laloux notes that each stage so far has had certain “breakthroughs” to successfully address its primary challenge, yet its way of responding also has “shadows” and inherent limitations. These limitations contribute to creating a new societal challenge, which demands a new response, thereby inviting the emergence of the next stage.

Figure 2 demonstrates the flow of this process.

StageEconomic model (Scharmer)Primary societal challenge (Scharmer)Response coordination mechanism (Scharmer)Breakthrough (Laloux)“Shadows” and Limitations (Laloux)
1.0 / ConformistState-centricStabilityCommanding hierarchy– Replicable Processes
– Stable Org Chart
– Social Mask
– Us vs. Them
2.0 / AchievementFree-MarketGrowthCompeting Markets– Innovation
– Accountability
– Meritocracy
– Exploitation
– Materialism
3.0 / PluralistSocial-MarketNegative domestic externalitiesNegotiating: stakeholder dialogue–Empowerment
– Values-driven Culture
–Organizational paralysis
– Power games
4.0 / EvolutionaryCo-creativeGlobal disruptive externalities, resiliencePresencing: awareness- based collective action– Self Management
– Wholeness
– Evolutionary Purpose
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Since the leading edge of humanity is just now entering the 4.0/Evolutionary/Teal stage, it’s not yet clear what the shadows of that model are. (I will explore this in a future article.) But we can rest assured that the pioneers of 5.0 will not be bored.

The Emergence of “Teal

Scharmer emphasizes that the evolution of economic structures follows the evolution of consciousness. He goes on to say that the 4.0 revolution requires “a multi-point strategy that, from a mundo or system perspective focuses on all eight acupuncture points.” (LFTEF, p. 240)

This co-creative eco-system model is characterized by “platforms for cross-sector cooperation and innovation that enable change-makers from all sectors to gather, become aware of, and understand the evolution of the whole system, and consequently act from impulses that originate from that shared awareness.” (LFTEF, p. 55)

That concept meshes well with Laloux’s Teal organizational breakthroughs: Self-ManagementWholeness, and Evolutionary Purpose. Laloux also mentions two other possible characteristics of a Teal economy and society that resonate with Schamer’s argument. The first is the creation of “a rich fabric of stewardship-holding between people and organizations that could prove highly resilient and make them capable of supporting each other in times of need.” (RO, p. 301)

The second is the notion that “the evolutionary purpose, rather than the organization, will become the entity around which people gather. A specific purpose will attract people and organizations in fluid and changing constellations, according to the need of the moment.” (RO, p. 303)

Part 2 will explore some of the attributes of 4.0/Teal as described by Scharmer and Laloux, and will introduce the work of Thomas Hübl and its relevance to understanding both the nature of Teal and what might be beyond it.