Can you tell the difference between a disturbance and a Disruption?  I’ve found in my speeches that most people can’t. 

There’s actually a big difference.  A disturbance will cause you to pause and think about how to get your Success Formula to react quickly.  But a Disruption causes you to stop and think about the viability of your Success Formula.  It creates a pattern interrupt that it causes you to think about your Lock-ins and consider entirely new Success Formulas.  A disturbance is often externally generated, a whack to your head so to speak, while a Disruption comes from within the organization because it attacks your Lock-in.

I’m going to reach out of business for this example.  When Katrina hit the Gulf Coast I urged the government to stop business as usual, and create White Space for rebuilding the area into a better, more powerful economic environment.  Katrina created a severe Challenge to the area.  The problems left behind were so large that business as usual could not deal with them.  But would the area actually change, or be left to cope via its old means and resources?

The President went on television in front of bright lights (powered by portable generators) to say that yes, New Orleans needed to be rebuilt.  And he promised lots of money.  But there were no specific agenda items that would change the old ways we had of dealing with catastrophes, nor solutions to the patchwork of local, parish, state and national approaches that often conflict.  At the time of the speech we all wished for a quick rebuilding, but it was clear that would not happen – and it hasn’t.  It couldn’t if we didn’t change our way of operating – change our Success Formula.

This happened similarly when we responded to the attacks of September 11, 2001.  We gave families of the dead money, but otherwise we lost our opportunity to change how we prepare, how we manage first-responders, and how we operate our airlines.  Those things are all still the same – and unlikely to change – because we did not Disrupt our way of doing things and create White Space to develop new solutions.

We didn’t Disrupt the way we deal with catastrophes.  We didn’t change the way we’d always operated.  To mimic a recent clever TV ad, all that was really offered was "throwing money at the problem."  And that, in fact, hasn’t happened because the way we distribute money is so broken the process can’t allocate funds quickly enough to help.  The money is promised, but not distributed and it looks increasingly like it won’t be due to chronic government deficits and urgent needs from elsewhere (such as Iraq, Medicaid, etc.)

Katrina was a Challenge.  It demonstrated our inability to prepare for and respond to catastrophes.  It begged for a Disruption to our Lock-in to old government approaches so we could develop new solutions.  But, rather than undertake a Disruption we instead mired ourselves in disturbances as lawmakers and spending officials haggle through the problems of our dysfunctional process.  The Challenge pointed out the flawed approach, but we have not done anything about it.

Some have said to me that these government examples are unfair – because government can’t be Disrupted.  And that is simply untrue.  After December 7, 1941 we Disrupted government allowing businesses to react quickly in the production of Liberty Ships, airplanes and all manner of military apparatus to move us expeditiously into WWII.  We opened the floodgates to new ideas for fast action – and we produced more equipment (and solutions) faster than anyone, including our enemies, believed possible.   

Challenges expose weaknesses.  But we too often focus on the problems created by the Challenges rather than the Challenge itself.  We quickly reach for Disturbances that make a lot of noise, but don’t really change our Success Formula.  When that happens, you can predict the future quite well – for behavior will remain unchanged.  Only by Disrupting – implementing pattern interrupts that cause us to question the status quo – and bringing in committed White Space can we meet the Challenge head-on and create Success.