The Challenge of Chaos Management
06/12/2026
By Robbin Laird
My 2026 framework Mastering Chaos begins from a premise that most leadership literature still refuses to accept: traditional crisis management is not merely inadequate. It is actively dangerous. It was designed for a world of isolated, slow-moving systems with slack built into every layer. That world no longer exists.
The term that anchors the framework is deliberately provocative: the anarchy of the moment. Disorder is not a temporary disruption you ride out. It is not a storm that passes so you can return to normal operations. It is the system itself. The parameters of modern organizational life are in constant motion, shifting under our feet faster than any fixed-point analysis can track.
This is not simply a matter of having more bad news to process, though the 24/7 media environment certainly accelerates the sensation. The more important point is structural: the DNA of a crisis has mutated. We have built a world defined by deep, invisible interconnectivity, and that interconnectivity has a specific mechanical consequence. When a crisis erupts anywhere in this network, it refuses to stay in its lane. It bleeds across systems operating at different scales and different speeds, spawning secondary crises before the first one is even diagnosed.
The twin engines of modern chaos are what systems theorists call tight coupling and interactive complexity. In a loosely coupled system, you have slack, buffers, redundant inventory, breathing room to observe a failure, walk over, and fix it. Tight coupling eliminates that slack. Components are so closely packed that a failure in a single node propagates violently and immediately through the entire network.
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