Possibility, Limitation, and Readiness: Why Organisations Can’t Rely on “Anything Is Possible”

For years, many of us have repeated the optimistic mantra that “anything is possible.” It’s an appealing idea — energising, liberating, and emotionally uplifting. But when we look closely at how real systems work, especially organisations operating under pressure, the statement doesn’t hold up.

In fact, it obscures something far more important and far more useful: possibility is always structured, and readiness is what determines how we move within that structure.

This insight sits at the heart of organisational change.

 

Unbounded vs. Bounded Systems: A Crucial Distinction

If we imagine an unbounded, non‑material informational being — the kind of entity some traditions call “God” — then perhaps “anything is possible” is coherent. A being without limitation, without material constraint, without dependency, could in principle access an unlimited field of possibility.

But organisations are not unbounded systems. Humans are not unbounded systems. Teams, leaders, and institutions all operate within real constraints:

  • finite resources

  • limited clarity

  • competing priorities

  • environmental pressures

  • cultural dynamics

  • emotional and cognitive load

These constraints are not flaws. They are the conditions under which agency becomes meaningful.

 

Possibility Is Structured, Not Infinite

Every organisation exists within a field of possibilities — a landscape of potential futures. But this field is not an open, infinite expanse. It is shaped by:

  • current capability

  • current culture

  • current relationships

  • current environment

  • current constraints

Within this field, some futures are adjacent — viable next steps the organisation can realistically take. Others are remote — desirable perhaps, but not accessible from here.

This is the architecture of possibility.

And it means that not anything is possible from any position.

 

Readiness: The Capacity to Move Within the Field

If possibility is structured, then readiness becomes the decisive factor.

Readiness is not enthusiasm. It’s not motivation. It’s not positivity.

Readiness is the capacity to make good choices under real limitation.

It is the organisational ability to:

  • see the adjacent possible clearly

  • choose deliberately among viable options

  • act coherently despite uncertainty

  • move into better futures step by step

Readiness is how bounded systems navigate structured possibility.

 

Why “Anything Is Possible” Undermines Real Change

When leaders believe “anything is possible,” they often fall into predictable traps:

  • Overreaching — attempting futures the system cannot yet support

  • Under‑preparing — assuming capability will appear when needed

  • Avoiding choice — waiting for perfect conditions that never arrive

  • Misreading the environment — ignoring constraints that shape viability

The result is drift, frustration, and repeated failure to activate change.

By contrast, when leaders understand that possibility is structured, they begin to:

  • focus on viable next steps

  • build capability deliberately

  • strengthen readiness

  • expand the adjacent possible over time

This is how real transformation happens.

 

The Environment Moves Whether You Do or Not

The field of possibility is dynamic. Markets shift. Technologies evolve. Policies change. Competitors adapt. Workforces transform.

If an organisation does not choose, the environment chooses for it.

Unreadiness hands the organisation’s future over to external forces. Readiness reclaims agency.

 

A More Accurate, More Powerful View

Instead of saying “anything is possible,” a more truthful and more useful statement is:

Many futures are possible, but only some are viable from here — and readiness is the capacity to choose among them.

This view honours both:

  • the structured nature of reality, and

  • the real agency organisations possess

It avoids magical thinking while preserving genuine possibility.

And it aligns perfectly with how change actually unfolds in complex systems.

 

The Work of Leadership

Leadership is not about imagining infinite futures. It’s about discerning the viable ones — and preparing the organisation to step into them.

That is the work of readiness. That is the work of agency. And that is the work that determines whether organisations drift or thrive in a moving environment.

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