Metaphors Shape Our Thinking
Picture this: a company proudly unveils its new five-year enterprise architecture plan. The diagrams are pristine, the layers clearly defined. But within a year, new technologies emerge, customer behaviors shift, and competitors pivot. The plan—while elegant—already feels outdated.
This scenario highlights a problem: our most common metaphor for thinking about enterprises—the architectural one—may be limiting our adaptability. We speak of blueprints and foundations, pillars and frameworks, structures and facades. These aren’t just convenient phrases—they shape how we think, design, and lead.
But what if the architectural metaphor, with its emphasis on stability and control, doesn’t serve us as well as it once did? What if other metaphors could offer more dynamic, responsive, and human ways to understand organizations?
When Architectural Metaphors Fall Short
I can almost hear the pushback: “But architecture as a metaphor has served us well!” And it has. Architectural thinking has helped us visualize complexity, plan for scale, and communicate clearly.
But it also carries hidden assumptions:
- It emphasizes structure over dynamics—suggesting that once built, organizations should maintain form rather than evolve
- It implies designer control—casting leaders as architects who dictate outcomes instead of participants in adaptive systems
- It focuses on stability—prioritizing permanence in a world where responsiveness often matters more
- It suggests completion—as if organizations can be “finished” rather than continuously becoming
Most critically, architecture doesn’t capture the human essence of organizations. Buildings don’t resist change or generate innovation. They don’t learn, collaborate, or challenge authority. People do.
Architectural thinking still has its place—especially in creating durable interfaces, aligning layers, and designing for scale. But it may need to be complemented by metaphors that better reflect the living, shifting nature of enterprise life.
Alternative Lenses: What Else Might Enterprises Be Like?
What if we changed the metaphor? What might we see if we looked at our organizations through a different lens?
The Machine Metaphor
Some enterprises are still implicitly viewed as machines—systems of gears and cogs working together for maximum efficiency. This metaphor emphasizes:
- Process optimization
- Clear cause-and-effect logic
- Interchangeable parts
- Predictable outputs from given inputs
This mindset is helpful for standardization, compliance, and manufacturing. But machines don’t adapt to change, don’t generate purpose, and don’t innovate. They’re optimized for repeatability—not resilience.
The Ecosystem Metaphor
What if enterprises were more like ecosystems—interconnected networks of organisms adapting in real time? This metaphor highlights:
- Interdependence and mutualism
- Emergent behavior without central control
- Evolution through selection and adaptation
- Diversity as a source of resilience
This framing acknowledges complexity, unpredictability, and systemic health. But it can understate intentionality. Ecosystems evolve slowly, often brutally, and not always in desirable directions.
The City Metaphor
Cities offer a compelling hybrid metaphor: intentionally designed, yet organically evolving. They feature:
- Multiple centers of gravity and culture
- Layered history and institutional memory
- Infrastructure that enables, rather than limits
- Renewal that coexists with preservation
Cities capture both design and emergence. And while some elements (like zoning or transit) change slowly, others (like startups, neighborhoods, subcultures) evolve rapidly. Still, city governance and timescales can feel slow and complex compared to enterprise needs.
The Garden Metaphor
Gardens—particularly cultivated ones like kitchen gardens—present a rich and nuanced alternative:
- Designed intentionally, yet grown organically
- Guided by stewardship rather than command
- Structured with beds, trellises, and paths—but alive
- Governed by natural cycles of planting, tending, harvesting, and renewal
- Dependent on factors beyond human control (weather, pests, seasons)
Gardens are co-created environments. They invite planning and adaptation. They thrive with care, iteration, and respect for complexity. Sound familiar?
Comparing the Metaphors
Each metaphor reveals something—and conceals something. Here’s how they compare:
Metaphor | Strengths | Limitations | View of Change | Leadership Role |
---|---|---|---|---|
Architecture | Structure, stability, scalability | Static, over-emphasizes control | Planned, episodic | Architect/Designer |
Machine | Efficiency, predictability, standardization | Rigid, mechanistic, impersonal | Engineered upgrades | Engineer/Operator |
Ecosystem | Adaptability, interdependence, resilience | Limited intentionality, slow evolution | Natural selection | Observer/Participant |
City | Multiple identities, layered history, infrastructure | Complex governance, slow transformation | Planned + organic | Mayor/Planner |
Garden | Balance of design and growth, seasonal renewal | Slower pace, weather dependency | Cyclical cultivation | Gardener/Steward |
Should We Use a Different Metaphor?
While each alternative offers useful insights, gardening may be the most versatile and human metaphor for enterprise design today. It naturally addresses key tensions:
- Intentionality vs. emergence—gardens are designed but respect natural growth
- Control vs. conditions—gardeners create environments, not outcomes
- Adaptation as routine—seasons change, pests come, droughts happen
- Diversity and coherence—companion planting allows difference within synergy
Gardening isn’t about perfection or control. It’s about care, rhythm, and responsiveness.
Leadership Through Cultivation
What if leadership were less about directing and more about cultivating? Gardeners:
- Design with purpose—laying out structures that fit their environment
- Prepare the soil—creating fertile conditions for growth
- Provide support—offering scaffolds without stifling development
- Protect wisely—shielding from extremes without insulating from all stress
- Prune intentionally—shaping growth through careful intervention
This is leadership as stewardship—not command. It’s an approach that honors human complexity and invites adaptive capability.
Of course, no metaphor is perfect. Gardens may evolve too slowly for some business contexts. Seasonal cycles don’t always match market rhythms. But unlike architecture, gardening accommodates change as normal, not exceptional.
Questions to Cultivate
I’m not arguing we abandon architectural thinking altogether. But perhaps it’s time we invited other metaphors into the conversation. Let’s start by cultivating better questions:
- What would change if you saw yourself as a gardener instead of an architect?
- How might enterprise “governance” become “stewardship”?
- Where is architectural thinking helping you? Where is it holding you back?
- What parts of your organization already resemble a garden?
- What would a “master gardener” approach to leadership look like in your context?
The metaphors we choose matter. They shape not just how we talk about organizations, but how we build them. Perhaps by shifting the metaphor, we can also shift what’s possible.
What metaphors guide your thinking about enterprise design? Have you discovered alternatives that better reflect how organizations really work?
Is your enterprise architecture constraining rather than enabling your organization’s potential?
Let’s Get In Touch to explore how reframing your metaphors can transform your approach to enterprise design, reduce decision-making friction, and cultivate adaptive capabilities that thrive amid uncertainty.