Paradox Theory (Smith & Lewis)
Overview
Paradox theory addresses persistent contradictions in organizations — tensions that cannot be resolved permanently but must be managed through ongoing engagement. Smith and Lewis identify four core paradox types (performing, organizing, belonging, learning) and argue that dynamic equilibrium, achieved through acceptance and working through tensions rather than choosing one pole, enables long-term sustainability.
When to Use
- Diagnosing recurring organizational tensions that resist either/or solutions
- Designing strategies that embrace contradictory demands simultaneously
- Analyzing why past resolution attempts failed or created new tensions
- Understanding leadership challenges in ambidextrous or hybrid organizations
When NOT to Use
- When the tension is a genuine dilemma with a correct answer (not a paradox)
- When resource constraints make one option genuinely infeasible (a trade-off, not a paradox)
- When the analysis requires quantitative optimization of competing objectives
Assumptions
IRON LAW: Paradoxes CANNOT be resolved permanently — they must be
managed through ongoing acceptance and working through tensions,
not eliminated through either/or choices.
Key assumptions:
- Paradoxical tensions are inherent in organizing — they persist, not because of poor management, but because of the nature of complex systems
- Tensions become salient under conditions of plurality, change, and scarcity
- Defensive responses (splitting, projecting, repressing) make paradoxes worse
- Dynamic equilibrium requires both cognitive acceptance and behavioral working-through
Methodology
Step 1: Identify the Paradoxical Tensions
Classify tensions into the four categories:
| Type | Tension | Example |
|---|
| Performing | Multiple, competing goals or stakeholder demands | Profit vs social mission |
| Organizing | Competing designs, processes, or structures | Control vs flexibility |
| Belonging | Competing identities or values between individual and collective | Personal values vs organizational role |
| Learning | Tensions between building on the past and creating the future | Exploitation vs exploration |
Step 2: Diagnose the Response Pattern
Assess whether the organization responds defensively (either/or choice, denial, oscillation) or actively (acceptance, differentiation-integration, temporal separation).
Step 3: Assess Enabling Conditions
Evaluate whether dynamic capabilities for paradox management exist: cognitive complexity of leaders, organizational structures that separate and integrate, and cultural tolerance for ambiguity.
Step 4: Design Dynamic Equilibrium Strategy
Propose a both/and approach: identify how both poles can be pursued simultaneously through structural separation, temporal cycling, contextual integration, or synthesis.
Output Format
markdown
## Paradox Analysis: [Context]
### Paradox Identification
|-----------|--------|--------|---------------|
| [performing/organizing/belonging/learning] | [one demand] | [opposing demand] | [how it shows up] |
### Current Response Pattern
- Dominant response: [either/or choice / denial / oscillation / acceptance]
- Consequences: [what this response produces]
- Vicious cycle: [how the response worsens the tension, if applicable]
### Enabling Conditions Assessment
- Cognitive complexity: [leaders can/cannot hold both poles mentally]
- Structural support: [separation and integration mechanisms exist/missing]
- Cultural readiness: [ambiguity tolerance high/low]
### Dynamic Equilibrium Strategy
- Approach: [structural separation / temporal cycling / contextual integration / synthesis]
- Pole A actions: [how to pursue this pole]
- Pole B actions: [how to simultaneously pursue the opposite]
- Integration mechanism: [what connects both poles]
### Implications
1. [How to sustain the both/and approach over time]
2. [Early warning signs that the equilibrium is breaking down]
Gotchas
- Not every tension is a paradox — distinguish genuine paradoxes (persistent, contradictory, interdependent) from dilemmas (resolvable) and trade-offs (zero-sum)
- "Both/and" does not mean doing everything — it means thoughtfully engaging both poles, sometimes sequentially
- Paradoxes are often nested — resolving one reveals another at a different level
- Organizational actors experience paradoxes differently based on their position and identity
- Dynamic equilibrium is a process, not a state — it requires continuous attention and adjustment
- Smith and Lewis draw on Eastern philosophy (yin-yang) — linear Western logic struggles with genuine paradox
References
- Smith, W. K., & Lewis, M. W. (2011). Toward a theory of paradox: A dynamic equilibrium model of organizing. Academy of Management Review, 36(2), 381-403.
- Lewis, M. W. (2000). Exploring paradox: Toward a more comprehensive guide. Academy of Management Review, 25(4), 760-776.
- Schad, J., Lewis, M. W., Raisch, S., & Smith, W. K. (2016). Paradox research in management science. Academy of Management Annals, 10(1), 5-64.