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The Analyst as Sense-Maker in the VUCA World
13 November 2025Lessons from Leavitt’s Diamond and Systems Thinking
Introduction: Beyond the One-Dimensional Fix
Every business analyst has seen it happen: a new system is launched to streamline processes — yet productivity drops, morale falls, and support calls skyrocket. The problem isn’t the technology. It’s the thinking.
Too often, organizations approach change as a linear upgrade, assuming that fixing one component will automatically improve performance. But as any experienced analyst knows, organizations are living systems, and changing one part inevitably affects the rest.
That’s where holistic thinking comes in. It’s not just a buzzword — it’s a mindset rooted in Leavitt’s Diamond and systems thinking, two timeless ideas that help business analysts see the whole picture before making a single change.
Leavitt’s Diamond: Seeing the Organization as a System
Developed by Harold Leavitt in 1965, Leavitt’s Diamond proposes that every organization is made up of four tightly interrelated components:
1. People – the individuals, teams, culture, and skills.
2. Tasks – the work that needs to be done and how it’s performed.
3. Structure – the formal and informal frameworks of roles, governance, and communication.
4. Technology – the systems, tools, and infrastructure that enable work.
Change one, and the others will adjust — sometimes in unexpected ways. For example, introducing new technology (like automation or AI) affects tasks (what people do), people (skills and motivation), and structure (roles and reporting). If these dependencies are ignored, the result is friction, resistance, and unintended consequences.
The Leavitt’s Diamond reminds analysts to think in terms of balance rather than silos. It’s not about improving a process in isolation — it’s about ensuring that improvements align across all four dimensions.
Systems Thinking: The Mindset Behind the Model
Where Leavitt’s Diamond provides a structure, systems thinking gives a philosophy. INCOSE defines systems thinking as the ability to view organizations as complex systems of interdependent parts — each with feedback loops, boundaries, and perspectives.
The approach was championed by Peter Checkland’s Soft Systems Methodology (SSM), which teaches that there’s rarely one “right” solution. Instead, business analysts must explore multiple worldviews and understand how different stakeholders define the problem itself. At its heart, systems thinking challenges the BA to ask: What relationships exist between the parts of this system? How might a change in one area ripple through others? Whose perspectives are shaping our understanding of success?
By combining Leavitt’s practical model with this reflective mindset, analysts move from problem solvers to organizational sense-makers — professionals who can diagnose, predict, and guide sustainable change.
Applying Leavitt’s Diamond in Business Analysis
So, do you know how this plays out in practice? Let’s look at how a business analyst can use the model to guide discovery and impact assessment.
| Dimension | Typical BA Questions | Potential Risks if Ignored |
|---|---|---|
| People | Who needs new skills, motivation, or clarity? | Resistance, low morale, turnover |
| Tasks | How will daily work change? Are roles redefined? | Inefficiency, confusion, duplication |
| Structure | Do reporting lines, incentives, or decision rights need to evolve? | Bottlenecks, governance gaps |
| Technology | What tools or systems will enable the change — and how will they interact? | Integration issues, data silos |
Example: The Healthcare Transformation Project
A hospital implements a new digital patient record system to improve accuracy and speed. Initially, delays increase. Why?
People: Clinicians lacked training and confidence.
Tasks: Data entry took longer per patient.
Structure: Approval processes for new entries were unclear.
Technology: The system wasn’t optimized for bedside use.
Revisiting the change through Leavitt’s lens revealed the missing alignment. By retraining staff, simplifying workflows, and updating governance, the project achieved its intended benefits — and staff satisfaction improved dramatically.
Why Holistic Thinking Matters More Than Ever
In today’s environment of digital transformation, Agile delivery, and constant disruption, the ability to think systemically is a defining skill for modern business analysts. Here’s why it matters:
Agility requires balance. Rapid iteration means rapid ripple effects — without holistic analysis, short-term wins can create long-term problems.
Technology isn’t neutral. New tools reshape collaboration and user expectations. Analysts must anticipate those shifts.
Value comes from connections. Modern enterprises rely on cross-functional integration; seeing interdependencies is essential to delivering value.
Business analysts today act as organizational integrators — translating strategic intent into change that works across people, process, and technology. That integration begins with holistic thinking.
Practical Tips for Applying Leavitt’s Diamond
1. Start with a diagnostic workshop. Use Leavitt’s four components as discussion headings when investigating a problem or opportunity.
2. Map dependencies visually. Create a simple “diamond map” showing how a proposed change in one area affects the others.
3. Revisit during every project phase. Use the model at initiation, design, and implementation reviews to maintain alignment.
4. Blend with systems techniques. Combine Leavitt’s Diamond with tools like rich pictures, causal loop diagrams, or stakeholder maps to deepen understanding.
5. Communicate holistically. Present findings in a way that connects people, process, structure, and technology — not as separate streams.
Conclusion: The Analyst as a System Thinker
In complex change, the analyst’s role is not to fix problems — it’s to rebalance systems. That simple insight captures the essence of holistic business analysis.
Leavitt’s Diamond provides a framework; systems thinking provides the philosophy. Together, they remind us that every solution exists within a living, interdependent network of people, processes, and structures.
When business analysts learn to see these connections clearly, they stop reacting to problems — and start shaping change that lasts.
From Thinking Holistically to Practicing Strategically
The ability to see the bigger picture is the first step. The next is knowing how to turn that insight into actionable business change.
That’s exactly what the BCS Business Analysis Practice course focuses on. It builds on the concepts of Leavitt’s Diamond and Systems Thinking by teaching analysts how to apply them when defining business needs, assessing strategic options, and developing business cases that deliver sustainable value.
In this course, you’ll learn how to:
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Use strategic analysis techniques (such as PESTLE, SWOT, and VMOST) to understand the business context.
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Apply holistic models like Leavitt’s Diamond to explore interdependencies between people, processes, structure, and technology.
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Engage stakeholders to co-create feasible and balanced solutions.
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Build a compelling business case that aligns with organizational strategy and ensures measurable benefits.
If the ideas of holistic and systems thinking resonate with you, this course is the natural next step to strengthen your skills and bring those principles into practice.
👉 Learn more or register here.




