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Proactive



 
 
The use of the word proactive, sometimes also written pro-active was limited to the domain of experimental psychology in the 1930s. Oxford English Dictionary (OED) credits Paul Whiteley and Gerald Blankfort, citing their 1933 paper discussing proactive inhibition as the "impairment or retardation of learning or of the remembering of what is learned by effects that remain active from conditions prior to the learning". The 1946 book Man's Search for Meaning
Man's Search for Meaning

Viktor Frankl's 1946 book Man's Search for Meaning chronicles his experiences as a Nazi concentration camps inmate and describes his psychotherapeutic method of finding a reason to live....
 brought the word to the wider public domain.






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The use of the word proactive, sometimes also written pro-active was limited to the domain of experimental psychology in the 1930s. Oxford English Dictionary (OED) credits Paul Whiteley and Gerald Blankfort, citing their 1933 paper discussing proactive inhibition as the "impairment or retardation of learning or of the remembering of what is learned by effects that remain active from conditions prior to the learning". The 1946 book Man's Search for Meaning
Man's Search for Meaning

Viktor Frankl's 1946 book Man's Search for Meaning chronicles his experiences as a Nazi concentration camps inmate and describes his psychotherapeutic method of finding a reason to live....
 brought the word to the wider public domain. The author, Austrian existential neuropsychiatrist Dr. Viktor Emil Frankl, used the word proactive to describe a person who took responsibility for his or her life, rather than looking for causes in outside circumstances or other people. Frankl stressed the importance of courage, perseverance, individual responsibility and awareness of the existence of choices, regardless of the situation or context.

Much of this theory was formed in Nazi concentration camps where Frankl lost his wife, mother, father and family, but decided that even under the worst circumstances, people can make and find meaning.

Alain Paul Martin
Alain Paul Martin

Alain Paul Martin is the author of books on strategic intelligence and proactive thinking. He has advised the Director General of UNESCO on priority setting, principle-based leadership and strategic issues....
 observed that Frankl's original idea was gradually reduced to a binary opposition between the reactive (wrong and bad) and the proactive (right and good) options. Restricting choice solely to the reactive and proactive options can impede the freedom of choice and risk to severely hamper innovation and creativity.

Brainstorming, Strategic Thinking, Policy Formulation and Governance


Borrowing from medicine, Frankl and Sun Tzu
Sun Tzu

Sun Tzu , also called Sun Wu , is traditionally believed to be the author of The Art of War, sometimes called the Sun Tzu, an influential ancient China book on military strategy considered to be a prime example of Taoism strategy....
, Alain Paul Martin defined Harvard University Global System™ – a decision-making framework to increase awareness of the freedom of choice and stimulate team innovation and creativity. The horizontal dimension comprises four interventions:
  • (a) Laissez-faire
  • (b) Focus on Relationship (symptomatic intervention in medicine such as a pain killer)
  • (c) Focus on Substance or Problem Solving (etiologic intervention in medicine such as an antibiotic injection to cure bacteria),
  • (d) Focus on a Hybrid Intervention integrating both the substantive and the relational choices (oral antibiotics sweetened for children who would resent the etiologic intervention noted in c above).


For each of the above four interventions, four generic and ethical groups of options can be explored namely:

  1. Wait-and-see options: There are situations where the stay-put stance is strategically justified. Going for the status quo and remaining purposely and consciously inactive or adopting a wait-and-see attitude can be desirable by choice or by necessity. This intervention can, alas, also be adopted through willful or unwitting negligence.
  2. Compliance options: Such options are often retained in interventions unrelated to your mission, i.e. when where the effort can neither contribute to increasing revenue or service (or decreasing costs) nor improving the corporate posture over the foreseeable future. The compliance stance is to do only what is necessary to get by. It can also be a temporary strategy to deal with a sudden crisis, such as nominating an interim caretaker to fill an unexpected vacancy. Martin notes that no-regret decisions in game theory are an example of compliance options. He also stresses that cutting corners or acting in an unethical way is alien to the compliance stance.
  3. Active options: This stance is to play the game, adopt the best practices or do what is normally expected or commonly accepted in your community or sector. Think of the ISO9000 or ISO16000 in quality-assurance circles or the MIL-S in the military. Martin notes that in labor relations, an active stance is what is perceived as fair and reasonable, such as the calls for parity in public-sector negotiations to maintain compensation in line with the private sector.
  4. Proactive options: In Martin's framework, the proactive stance builds on foreknowledge (intelligence) and creativity to anticipate and see the situation (even a conflict or a crisis) as an opportunity, regardless of how threatening or how bad it looks; and to influence the system constructively instead of reacting to it. The objective is to create an unmatched opportunity and a leading competitive advantage, frequently by doing better (not necessarily more) with fewer resources. The proactive stance considers the contribution each stakeholder can make to the issue. Even in situations where the issue is irrelevant, the proactive stance is to find ways to benefit from riding on the issue. Alain Martin calls hitch hiking this process of acting in the shadow of another issue. He reminds us that while the active option is to play the game, the proactive choice is often to change the rules of the game, especially when the rules of engagement are unfair.


After introducing the framework to decision makers in business and governments throughout the 1970s, Alain P. Martin defined the above four options in his first published book in 1983 titled Think Proactive: New Insights into Decision-Making, which sparked further research on the framework. He also worked with the intelligence community and defense establishments applying the proactive decision-making framework in project management and risk assessment
Risk assessment

Risk assessment is a step in a risk management process. Risk assessment is the determination of quantitative or qualitative value of risk related to a concrete situation and a recognized threat ....
. Alain Martin stresses the importance of exploring all generic choices including the proactive options. However, it is not always prudent to be proactive with all stakeholders in every situation. There are instances where it is best to adopt the current practices, do the minimum to get by, or merely wait and see. A. P. Martin warns decision-makers that trying to be proactive with everyone is the best recipe for a pacemaker!

To respond to government policies, corporations should brainstorm to explore at the very least four clusters of choices: (1) wait & see options, (2) compliance i.e. do the minimum to get by, (3) Active options, i.e. best practices, or (4) proactive options such as hitchhiking on the policy to maximize competitive opportunity. The book Think Proactive demonstrates how four multinational companies (British Petroleum, Nortel, Alcan and a large bank) independently brainstormed all above response options to address the same government legislation, With due diligence, each company picked a different route to address the law without adverse consequences. But, a fifth company, Sun Life, decided to fight the legislation in court (reactive stance) because they thought that the only alternative 'going proactive' was prohibitive in cost. Had Sun Life applied the Proactive Thinking framework, specifically the Strategy Grid of Harvard University Global SystemTM, it could have adopted a wait-and-see approach, like BP, or a compliance strategy, like Nortel, and in the process save the loss of millions of dollars and thousands of customers, that led to a major reorganization in the executive suite.

The four options were also applied in working sessions during the debates on global warming leading to the Kyoto Protocol.

In engineering and particularly in IT and telecommunications, fault-tolerant chips in control systems, open-system platforms, RFID and bus architectures can operate under several modes (proactive, active, compliant or wait & see). The proactive option specifically applies to systems that have the artificial intelligence to convert threats into opportunities, i.e. learn from errors and change the rules of the game to adapt to a new environment (Hubble, Proactive GSM applications for mobile communications, proactive fault tolerance and recovery).

Other uses


Management

In 1989, the term proactive was further popularized in the business
Business

A business is a legally recognized organization designed to provide good s and/or Service to consumers. Businesses are predominant in capitalism economies, most being privately owned and formed to earn profit that will increase the wealth of its owners....
 press in Stephen Covey
Stephen Covey

Stephen R. Covey wrote the best-selling book, The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People. Other books he has written include First Things First, Principle-Centered Leadership, and The Seven Habits of Highly Effective Families....
's 7 Habits of Highly Effective People. Though he used the word in Frankl's original sense, the word has come to mean "to act before a situation becomes a source of confrontation or crisis" vs. after the fact. Since the term "proactive" is a recent neologism
Neologism

A neologism is a newly coined word that may be in the process of entering common use, but has not yet been accepted into mainstream language . Neologisms are often directly attributable to a specific person, publication, period, or event....
, it is frequently misunderstood and contrasted to "reactive
Reactive

Reactive can refer to:*Generally, capable of having a reaction*Reactance , the imaginary component of AC impedance*In behavioral medicine reactive often refers to a treatment approach where a does not initiate contact as opposed to proactive treatment where the therapist initiates contact with the client e.g....
" or "passive
Passive

Passive is the opposite of active. It has several specific meanings:* Passive voice of a verb* Passivation is the formation of a non-reactive surface film that inhibits further corrosion of a metal...
". In this form it tends to have a higher power of connotation
Connotation (semiotics)

In semiotics, connotation arises when the denotation relationship between a signifier and its signified is inadequate to serve the needs of the community....
. Not surprisingly, it has temporarily gained a considerable popularity in management jargon
Jargon

Jargon is terminology which has been especially defined in relationship to a specific activity, profession, or group. In other words, the term covers the language used by people who work in a particular area or who have a common interest....
 and marketing
Marketing

Marketing is defined by the American Marketing Association as the activity, set of institutions, and processes for creating, communicating, delivering, and exchanging offerings that have value for customers, clients, partners, and society at large....
 language, alongside other buzzword
Buzzword

A buzzword is a vague idiom, usually a neologism, that is common to managerial, technical, administrative, and political work environments. Although meant to impress the listener with the speaker's pretense to knowledge, buzzwords render sentences opaque, difficult to understand and question, because the buzzword does not mean what it denomi...
s. See also: Proactivity

Behavioural medicine

In behavioral medicine
Behavioral medicine

Behavioral Medicine is an interdisciplinary field of medicine concerned with the development and integration of psychosocial, behavioral and biomedical knowledge relevant to health and illness....
, proactive often refers to a treatment approach where a therapist initiates contacts as opposed to reactive
Reactive

Reactive can refer to:*Generally, capable of having a reaction*Reactance , the imaginary component of AC impedance*In behavioral medicine reactive often refers to a treatment approach where a does not initiate contact as opposed to proactive treatment where the therapist initiates contact with the client e.g....
 where the responsibility for contacts with the therapist is entirely on the client e.g. proactive and reactive quitline
Quitline

Quitline is a telephone helpline offering treatment for addiction and behavior change. Presently most quitlines treat tobacco or alcohol addiction....
s for tobacco or alcohol.

The Proactive Thinking Framework and Proactive Behavior

Martin, together with his partners, introduced the multidimensional framework of Proactive Thinking as a structured approach to complement brainstorming methods in large corporations and government agencies. The approach clearly evolved beyond its psychological roots, increasing the panorama of options available to decision-makers. Unlike Proactivity (Proactive Behavior) which is mostly applied to one class of social systems namely individuals in the workplace, the Proactive Thinking framework applies primarily to issues (threats and opportunities) and complex social systems such as communities and organizations (corporations, government, NGOs, World Bank). Although applicable to individuals, the Proactive-Thinking framework focuses on governance, strategy and policy formulation, project management and government machinery, frequently in large-scale organizational change.

See also

  • Responsible Decision Making
  • Proactive Cyber Defence
    Proactive Cyber Defence

    Proactive Cyber Defence means acting in anticipation to oppose an attack against computers and networks. It represents the dynamic between purely offensive and defensive action; interdicting and disrupting an attack or a threat?s preparation to attack, either pre-emptively or in self-defence....


External links

  • Be proactive - A wiki how to guide