Pandemic Perspectives

Page 59

Wake Up Call For Industry Leaders: The Time To Think About COVID-19 As A Complex Adaptive Challenge Is Now Ira J. Bedzow, Ph.D.

Photo Credit: Visionhaus

The COVID-19 pandemic is creating complex adaptive challenges that affect most (if not every) industry sector in the country. Unlike technical challenges, which are easy to identify and can be solved by an authority or expert who affects change in one or two problematic areas, complex adaptive challenges are not as straightforward. These challenges require both a change in organizational perspective to identify the issue and a change in approach across the organization to implement a solution. Don’t get me wrong, businesses and organizations are facing many technical problems as well, such as how to stay afloat in the short term. These challenges are neither easy nor insignificant. Yet potential solutions to these challenges can nevertheless be found using existing resources, problem-solving strategies and protocols. For example, decisions, such as whether companies furlough employees or seek loans to retain them, expand online or delivery services or cut supply for the time being, all make immediate changes while still maintaining the existing overarching modus operandi. If leaders look only to solve these immediate problems without also taking a step back to consider the bigger picture–i.e. which social and financial disruptions are temporary and which will change the state of business– they may stay afloat in the short term only to face existential problems later. The reason the COVID-19 pandemic is creating complex adaptive challenges across industries is due to the pandemic’s effect on both public health and economics. Because a vaccine is realistically 12 to 18 months away, even if social distancing stops the spread of the pandemic by the summer–which at this point is an optimistic goal–our reality will not suddenly snap back to the status quo ante. Just as there are regular measles outbreaks in communities of anti-vaxxers, the country must be on guard against a second wave in the

fall and future outbreaks until most of the population can get immunized. This fear of future outbreaks will change the way consumers shop and suppliers deliver goods. It will also change the way the public regulates social gatherings. The changes will last for so long that returning to the “old way of doing business” will become impossible by virtue of the fact that companies that do not adapt will not survive. And, even if they do, consumers will have become comfortable with the new mode of business and will no longer want to return to the old ways. If you have any doubt this is true, consider how the long-term effects will play out across the real estate and education industries. Even if the particular effects may be different, the challenge is the same for both. The reason I am choosing real estate and education is that the former is primarily a for-profit industry and the latter is primarily not-for-profit.

COVID-19 and the shifting real estate landscape New urbanism is a real estate movement that started in the 1980s but really took off in the early 2000s. It changed the way that real estate companies looked at development, urban planning and municipal land-use strategies. Moving away from suburban sprawl, density became more popular and mixed-use development (which combine multi-family, retail, and office buildings) created spaces where people can live, work and shop. However, real estate companies must now consider how the pandemic will change future development as well as the current real estate landscape going forward. By this I mean that leaders in the industry must predict COVID-19’s ripple effect on the real estate business, long after the pandemic has been quelled. For example, will zoning laws change to require greater public health safety standards? This might include lower density projects or increased costs of construction or renovation, by requiring more complex heating and ventilation systems to purify the air and/or larger common spaces, both of which affect the value of current property holdings. For mixed use projects or retail centers with entertainment as its anchor or shadow anchor, how will the public’s change in demand for previous forms of entertainment create leasing challenges or the need for adaptive reuse? How will changes in leasing of retail and office space affect surrounding apartments or housing located near those properties? Empty shopping malls and office buildings decrease the value of the surrounding property and potentially increases the rate of crime in nearby areas. These types of questions do not yet have clear answers that can be identified let alone solved by making one or two changes in a company’s business model. Leaders need to start thinking broadly and in new ways about the future of their business.

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Generation COVID: From the Eye of the Storm, a New Generation is Born

14min
pages 64-72

Want More Women in Leadership Roles? Focus on Their Strategy and Not Their Smile

3min
page 63

Hospital Industry Faces Reckoning: Where Do We Go From Here?

3min
page 57

Imperative Wake Up Call For Industry Leaders: The Time To Think About COVID-19 As A Complex Adaptive Challenge Is Now

6min
pages 59-62

COVID-19: In the Race for a Vaccine, Biopharmaceutical Companies Showing Moral

3min
page 58

The COVID-19 Pandemic: For-Profit Health Plans Win, Hospitals Lose

4min
pages 55-56

Don’t Disparage the Pace of COVID-19 Research

7min
pages 53-54

Amid a Historic Pandemic, Public Health Must Take the Lead Even With Other

3min
page 52

How Tech Is Saving Lives During COVID

4min
pages 50-51

A Pandemic Ethical Conundrum: Must Health Care Workers Risk Their Lives to Treat

27min
pages 39-48

The COVID-19 Vaccine is Coming. But Will We Be Ready?

3min
page 49

The COVID-19 Pandemic is Squeezing Women Out of Science

13min
pages 34-38

Let Ageism Bite the Dust During COVID

3min
page 32

Unspoken and Undone: Caring for Women Dealing with the Emotional Trauma of COVID-19

2min
page 33

A Pandemic in a Pandemic: Gender Based Violence and COVID

3min
page 31

Higher Education’s Misguided Obsession with Diversity Officers

5min
pages 29-30

Too Little or Too Late: U.S. Senate Response to Public Health Crises

4min
pages 26-28

Weighing the Economics, Public Health Benefits of Sheltering in Place

4min
page 25

We Need a Better CARES Package for the Elderly

3min
page 24

A Poignant EMS Week Amid a Historic Pandemic

5min
pages 19-20

NYC Paramedic Describes Holding ‘Ad Hoc Wake’ in Ambulance for Coronavirus Victim

2min
page 22

To Stop College Students from Attending “COVID Parties” Start Asking Why

4min
pages 15-16

The Trump Rally in Tulsa is A Recipe for Disaster

3min
page 10

COVID-19 Patients? Saving Ourselves from the Groundhog Day Effect When the Current Crisis Passes, Will We All Still be Created Equal? May Have Different Answers The Ethical Minefield of Prioritizing Health Care for Some with COVID

3min
page 21

Improving Communication in Technology Driven Mental Health

3min
page 18

With COVID-19, Civil Discontent Must Not Lead to Civil Disobedience

4min
pages 11-14

COVID-Safe: Amidst the Pandemic, Look Out for Number One

3min
page 17

Senator Paul’s Skepticism of Experts Sets a Very Dangerous Precedent

3min
page 8

To End the Female Recession, Women Need Their Own Rally Cry

4min
page 7

Trump’s Kung Flu Takes its Place in Chronology of Racial Fear-Mongering

3min
page 9
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