The Adjacent Possible and Organisational Readiness
Every system — biological, organisational, or social — has an adjacent possible: the set of actions it is structurally capable of taking next. Not the ideal future. Not the strategic aspiration. The next viable step.
Leaders often ignore this. They aim for the desirable rather than the possible. And the system pushes back.
Readiness defines the adjacent possible
Readiness is the architecture that determines:
what the system can do
what it cannot do
what it can almost do
what it could do with structural support
This is not about ambition. It is about structural reality.
Why the adjacent possible matters
Systems do not leap. They step. And they step only into spaces that are structurally supported.
When leaders push beyond the adjacent possible, they create:
overload
confusion
fragmentation
failure loops
cynicism
The system isn’t resisting. It’s simply not architecturally capable of the movement.
How to work with the adjacent possible
The task of leadership is not to force movement. It is to expand the adjacent possible by adjusting structural conditions:
reduce load
increase clarity
strengthen decision pathways
align incentives with architecture
remove friction
build capability
As the architecture strengthens, the adjacent possible expands.
The practical takeaway
Readiness is not about willingness. It is about structural possibility.
Leaders who understand the adjacent possible stop pushing systems into failure and start architecting systems into capability.