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-65%The Signals of Organizational Misalignment—
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$64.50The Story
This book introduces a systemic framework for understanding how organizations function beneath their formal structures -- at the level of emotional load, moral tension, informal stabilization, and participation. Rather than offering tools, methods, or prescriptive interventions, the book examines how systems actually carry themselves in everyday institutional life, particularly under conditions of complexity, pressure, and uncertainty. The central premise is that organizational misalignment rarely begins with visible failure. Instead, it emerges through subtle, embodied signals: shifts in atmosphere, unspoken hesitation, informal workarounds, and the quiet redistribution of emotional and moral labor. These dynamics are widely felt by practitioners yet are often misinterpreted as individual sensitivity, interpersonal difficulty, or cultural ambiguity. The Signals of Organizational Misalignment enables reframes them as systemic signals that reveal the health, maturity, and coherence of the organization as a whole. Drawing on systems thinking, organizational psychology, and institutional analysis, the book develops a vocabulary for phenomena that are typically scattered across disciplines and seldom integrated in practice. Key concepts include rooms as interpretive environments; drift as a gradual movement away from coherence sustained by human compensation; moral load as a structural condition rather than a personal failing; and culture and participation as emergent properties rather than design outputs. These ideas are not presented as abstract theory but are grounded in lived organizational situations familiar to those working within complex institutions. Importantly, the book is written from the standpoint of situated professional experience rather than detached observation. It speaks to readers who operate within organizations — often in roles requiring judgment, containment, and responsibility—and who sense that something in the system is misaligned but lack the language to articulate or address it. By making the invisible dynamics of organizational life legible, The Signals of Organizational Misalignment enables readers to recognize patterns earlier, interpret systemic signals more accurately, and understand why well-intentioned improvement or change efforts often falter despite technical soundness. The book’s key contribution lies in its diagnostic clarity without prescriptive overload. The Signals of Organizational Misalignment enables does not instruct readers on what to implement; instead, it helps them see what is already happening, why certain dynamics persist, and what conditions must be in place before meaningful participation, innovation, or transformation can take root. In doing so, it complements existing productivity, leadership, and improvement literature by addressing the human and emotional architecture on which all such efforts ultimately depend.
Description
This book introduces a systemic framework for understanding how organizations function beneath their formal structures -- at the level of emotional load, moral tension, informal stabilization, and participation. Rather than offering tools, methods, or prescriptive interventions, the book examines how systems actually carry themselves in everyday institutional life, particularly under conditions of complexity, pressure, and uncertainty. The central premise is that organizational misalignment rarely begins with visible failure. Instead, it emerges through subtle, embodied signals: shifts in atmosphere, unspoken hesitation, informal workarounds, and the quiet redistribution of emotional and moral labor. These dynamics are widely felt by practitioners yet are often misinterpreted as individual sensitivity, interpersonal difficulty, or cultural ambiguity. The Signals of Organizational Misalignment enables reframes them as systemic signals that reveal the health, maturity, and coherence of the organization as a whole. Drawing on systems thinking, organizational psychology, and institutional analysis, the book develops a vocabulary for phenomena that are typically scattered across disciplines and seldom integrated in practice. Key concepts include rooms as interpretive environments; drift as a gradual movement away from coherence sustained by human compensation; moral load as a structural condition rather than a personal failing; and culture and participation as emergent properties rather than design outputs. These ideas are not presented as abstract theory but are grounded in lived organizational situations familiar to those working within complex institutions. Importantly, the book is written from the standpoint of situated professional experience rather than detached observation. It speaks to readers who operate within organizations — often in roles requiring judgment, containment, and responsibility—and who sense that something in the system is misaligned but lack the language to articulate or address it. By making the invisible dynamics of organizational life legible, The Signals of Organizational Misalignment enables readers to recognize patterns earlier, interpret systemic signals more accurately, and understand why well-intentioned improvement or change efforts often falter despite technical soundness. The book’s key contribution lies in its diagnostic clarity without prescriptive overload. The Signals of Organizational Misalignment enables does not instruct readers on what to implement; instead, it helps them see what is already happening, why certain dynamics persist, and what conditions must be in place before meaningful participation, innovation, or transformation can take root. In doing so, it complements existing productivity, leadership, and improvement literature by addressing the human and emotional architecture on which all such efforts ultimately depend.











