Commitment Under Uncertainty: Decision Architecture for Future and Change Capability in Higher Education

This is the fifth article in a series on future and change capability in higher education. The ‘what this series is about’ paragraphs just below are the same as in my Linkedin article and you can skip them if you’ve read that, but from ‘Decision architecture’ I’ve added a lot more depth than in Linkedin.

What this series is about

I think I’m in safe territory argument-wise as I suggest that universities have moved beyond periodic disruption to an ongoing intensification of uncertainty. I don’t need to rehearse the influence of AI and labour markets in flux, funding volatility, shifting public trust, changing student learning and support needs, policy instability, pandemics, global conflict, fuel crises… all this isn’t going to resolve into a new equilibrium. I think we also all know that universities can’t rest on the same laurels that they have for the last few hundred years.

Reactive institutional change tends not to be pleasant for anyone. Experienced by staff and students in phenomena like ‘a sudden strategic lurch’, or even a ‘needed restructure’, it depletes the institutional capacity needed to respond to the next pressure and doesn’t do much for broader strategic outcomes, including the learning and wellbeing of our students. On the other hand, incremental sustaining change can stall when leadership, 5-year plan, or other conditions shift. We need a better way of planning and accommodating for change and managing risk, while staying true to what is actually important.

Future and change capability is the ability to make coherent, deliberate choices about what to change and what to hold steady, and then to follow through, making universities more robust to disruptors and adaptable to opportunities. This a designed institutional condition. It’s important practically as well as strategically – for students develop future and change capability that will sustain them in their lives and careers, educators need to be future and change capable as well. So do the curriculum and pedagogy, and the institution more broadly. They enable one another. For the last fifteen years or so, I’ve been exploring literature that might help inform these ideas, and learning how universities are distinctive and what might work for them to become more future and change capable.

Here are my previous posts in this series:

post 1: why future and change capability in higher education?

post 2: identity before adaptability

post 3: university permeability and adaptive ecosystems

post 4: midway point reflection and why is Ruth exploring all this?

This post is post 5: Decision architecture

The earlier articles argued that future and change capability rests on two foundations: clarity of institutional identity and deliberate permeability. By identity I mean a settled sense of institutional purpose that functions as a decision framework, shaping what gets started, what gets stopped, and how constrained resources are allocated. By permeability I mean the intentional design of relationships and channels through which ideas, evidence and practice move across institutional boundaries, both within the institution and between the institution and the wider world. My midpoint reflection a couple of weeks ago drew those arguments together and sketched what remained to be addressed.

The next question relates to commitment. Universities can develop clarity of identity and invest seriously in permeability without producing sustained strategic direction. Identity tells an institution what matters. Permeability helps it notice and interpret change. But neither of those, alone or together, guarantees that insight becomes action or that priorities become anything more durable than a 5-year plan, or that they might need to change. Future and change capability requires designed mechanisms for converting what is seen and learned into decisions. That is what this blog post is about.

This post introduces decision architecture as the structural layer through which strategic choices are formed and institutional commitment is sustained over time. A companion article (I’ll write that one next) addresses how those commitments are governed once made: how institutions calibrate the tempo of different decisions, manage strategic portfolios, and develop the capability to stop as well as start.

Motion without commitment

Most universities already have strategic plans, portfolio reviews, risk committees, and consultation processes. Put another way, we have plenty of strategic machinery. But we tend to have much less architecture that differentiates meaningfully among kinds of commitments and ties them to identity and consequence.

The pattern is recognisable across very different institutions. Strategic documents articulate ambition while resource allocation shifts only at the margins. Pilot initiatives multiply without clear criteria for what would justify scaling or stopping. Consultation processes expand while decision rights remain opaque, making it unclear who has the authority to conclude a deliberation and act on its findings. Legacy programs persist not because they are performing well but because withdrawal carries reputational and political cost. Risk management focuses on cataloguing compliance exposure rather than examining strategic vulnerability.

These dynamics are rarely products of bad intent or insufficient intelligence. They arise from architectures that treat fundamentally different kinds of decisions as procedurally equivalent. A decision about long-term research concentration moves through the same committee structures at roughly the same pace as a decision about a short-cycle curriculum trial. A decision that would reallocate significant resources requires the same level of consultation as one with minimal institutional consequence. When everything is treated as requiring equivalent deliberation, the system produces neither the depth of reflection major commitments deserve nor the speed smaller decisions require.

The result is motion without commitment. This is sustained institutional ‘busyness’ that does not move in a meaningful direction. For staff and students, this can register as repetition, delay, and the quiet erosion of confidence that worthwhile change will ever stick.

Decision architecture as a designed layer

Decision architecture is the structured system through which an institution determines who decides what, on what evidentiary basis, at what pace, and with what consequences. It is the layer at which identity, insight and authority intersect. Strategy establishes direction and priority. Decision architecture determines how commitments in that direction are authorised, tested, sustained and, where necessary, concluded.

It is useful to be clear about what decision architecture is not. It is not culture, though it does shape culture over time. It is not leadership personality, though leaders operate within it. It is not a compliance framework, though it may incorporate compliance obligations. Decision architecture is a set of designed pathways and mechanisms that govern how choices are made and sustained. As structural arrangements, they operate independently of who happens to occupy leadership roles at any given moment.

These distinctions are important because many attempts to improve university decision-making address symptoms rather than causes. Calls for bolder leadership, fewer committees, or a more entrepreneurial culture are common, but actual change in these directions is rarer, because universities often leave the underlying architecture unchanged. An institution with diffuse decision architecture will produce hesitant, incremental choices regardless of the qualities of its leaders, because the architecture itself creates incentives for caution and diffusion. Well-designed architecture makes good decision-making more likely, because it embeds the conditions for coherent choice rather than depending on exceptional individuals to compensate for structural weakness.

Two elements of this architecture are particularly of consequence for institutions trying to build future and change capability: the capacity to make explicit strategic bets under uncertainty, and the capacity to exercise genuine risk judgement rather than risk compliance.

Strategic bets and assumption testing

Every strategy contains bets, whether an institution acknowledges them or not. Decisions to invest in particular disciplines, grow specific student cohorts, develop new delivery modes, or build partnership platforms all rest on assumptions about how the external environment will evolve and how the institution will perform within it. The question is whether institutions are making bets explicitly and well – that is, with the assumptions made visible and testable.

I’d suggest that in many institutions, those assumptions remain implicit. Plans describe aspiration and financial models project growth, but the underlying hypotheses about policy stability, demand trajectories, workforce capability and partner behaviour are rarely named and even less monitored as the conditions for continued investment. When circumstances change, institutions can discover retrospectively that their strategy depended on assumptions that no longer hold, requiring inelegant manoeuvring, reframing or the abandonment of stated objectives and initiatives.

A future- and change-capable institution treats strategy as a portfolio of explicit bets. A strategic bet has three elements: a defined commitment of attention and resources; a set of underlying assumptions about the conditions required for success; and predetermined signals that would warrant continuation or adaptation. The point is to design against stubborn adherence to prior commitments regardless of what the evidence shows. It is a form of designed commitment that remains reviewable against explicit assumptions and thresholds. Approached this way, strategy becomes a discipline of intellectual honesty about what an institution is actually wagering and why, rather than a performance of ambition that obscures the choices being made.

Explicit bets produce several forms of discipline that implicit commitments do not. They make strategic exposure visible. Institutions may spread investment thinly to avoid visible failure, but thinly spread investment rarely produces distinctive capability, and naming bets encourages deliberate choice about where concentration is warranted. They surface assumptions that can be monitored. Growth in international enrolment depends on geopolitical stability, visa settings and price competitiveness; expansion into professional short credentials depends on employer recognition and internal delivery capability. Assumption mapping brings these conditions into view before they become problems, rather than only after they have done so. And explicit bets create pathways for recalibration, because when indicators shift, the institution has already identified the thresholds at which adjustment is warranted, reducing the likelihood of both premature abandonment and damaging delay.

The Open University offers a useful illustration here. What makes it useful is something much quieter than dramatic strategic reinvention. The five-year plan is the current expression of a strategy that has been in place for decades. The OU was founded around a distinctive answer to basic questions about who higher education is for and what barriers matter, and that answer — open to people, places, methods and ideas, with educational opportunity and social justice at the centre — has shaped successive strategic periods rather than been replaced by them. Widening access, supported distance learning, part-time provision and flexible entry are not initiatives the OU has adopted because they are fashionable. They are coherent with a long-settled institutional identity. That is what gives them their staying power, and what allows the institution, when the external environment shifts, to distinguish between pressures that warrant genuine adaptation and those that should be absorbed without altering course. Not every disruption requires a strategic response. Knowing which ones do depends on having a settled sense of what you are there to do.

That is what strategic commitment anchored in identity looks like in practice. It is not rigidity, but a durable orienting logic that makes adaptation purposeful rather than reactive.

The implication is that strategic bets require identity as their anchor. Without it, bets fragment, each initiative justified on its own terms rather than as part of a coherent institutional direction. Without permeability, bets are made blind, without the external intelligence needed to test whether their assumptions are holding. And without decision architecture that authorises, reviews and when necessary concludes them, even well-conceived bets drift back into the same pattern of accumulation and inertia that strategic machinery on its own cannot prevent.

Risk as judgement, not compliance

Risk management in universities has been criticised as largely a compliance activity. Risk registers catalogue operational and reputational hazards, committees review them, and assurance processes confirm that mitigations are in place. These functions serve a real purpose. What they tend not to address is a different and often more significant category of exposure – the strategic risk of inaction.

Consider a familiar institutional trajectory. An early and successful push into international student recruitment generates strong revenue. That revenue is then absorbed into recurrent expenditure. The dependency deepens over several years, each increment too small to trigger formal review, until the institution is carrying a structural exposure that would have looked alarming if it had been assumed all at once. No single decision created it. There was no moment at which a risk committee weighed the options and chose badly. The risk accumulated in the space between decisions, in the absence of any mechanism for asking whether the institution’s overall strategic posture remained sound. That is the kind of risk that conventional frameworks are poorly designed to surface, because they are oriented toward what might go wrong with things already being done rather than toward the cumulative consequences of what is not being examined.

A future- and change-capable institution treats risk appetite as a strategic instrument. Risk appetite clarifies what kinds and levels of risk the institution is prepared to absorb in pursuit of its mission, and it makes that judgement differently across different domains. An institution whose mission centres on regional community engagement should carry a different risk posture regarding partnerships that might compromise community trust than one oriented toward global research intensity. These reflect different assessments of which institutional capacities are most distinctive, most fragile, and most difficult to rebuild once damaged, rather than simply different thresholds on a common scale.

Differentiation by domain is important. Curriculum experimentation may warrant a high tolerance for failure and a fast cycle of trial and learning. Partnership development may warrant more caution where relational capital takes years to build and can be damaged quickly. Infrastructure decisions may require conservative risk management precisely because the consequences of failure are long-lasting and costly to reverse. Treating all these as instances of a single institutional risk appetite produces neither appropriate caution where it is needed nor appropriate boldness where it is warranted.

Risk posture should also be grounded in genuine risk intelligence, which in most universities is narrower than it ought to be. The people with the richest insights about what is actually risky (academics working at the frontiers of their fields, professional staff managing relationships with employers and communities, students navigating programs that may or may not be serving them well) are largely outside the formal risk architecture. An academic who raises a concern about a program’s labour market relevance at a faculty meeting, only to watch it pass without institutional consequence, is experiencing a design failure. The institution has not built pathways through which that kind of intelligence reaches the people and forums with the authority to act on it.

Commitment as capability

Identity defines what an institution is for. Permeability expands what it can see. Decision architecture determines what it can actually commit to and sustain. Without that third element, an institution may have genuine clarity of purpose and rich situational awareness, and still find itself unable to convert either into strategic direction that holds across time, leadership transitions and shifting external conditions.

Designing that architecture is not a matter of adding more process to institutions that some might say already have too much of it. It is a matter of differentiation among the kinds of decisions that warrant deep deliberation and those that warrant speed; among the domains where risk-taking serves the mission and those where it threatens what is most distinctive; among commitments that deserve sustained resourcing and those that have run their course. That differentiation is what turns strategic intention into sustained strategic capability.

The next article turns to how those commitments are governed once made, including how institutions calibrate the tempo of different decisions, manage their portfolios, and build the capacity to stop as well as start.

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Identity Before Adaptability: Laying the Foundations for Future and Change Capability in Higher Education

In my previous post, I argued that a central challenge facing universities in these times of flux is not resistance to change, but a lack of future and change capability. By this I mean the institutional ability to decide, deliberately and in time, when and what to change and when and what not to, and then to act on those decisions. This second piece considers a foundational condition for building that capability: clarity of purpose and identity.

Australian universities face constant pressure to adapt. Artificial intelligence, funding volatility, policy shifts and changes in student demand all demand response. Many commentators have pointed out that institutions are not built for speed or sustained change, and discussions about why often focus on process, structure, and culture. While these are important factors, I suggest that a key difficulty lies at the level of strategy, or deeper still, at the level of identity. Without a clear sense of purpose in an institution, too many changes appear equally urgent, equally plausible, and equally unavoidable, making coherent choice increasingly difficult.

Identity before adaptability

At the institutional level, future and change capability begins with shared clarity about what an institution exists to do, what it will prioritise, and what it will choose not to pursue as conditions evolve. Technical capability, financial capacity, and a skilled workforce all matter. However, in the absence of a coherent identity, even well-resourced institutions struggle to translate capability into sustained direction.

By identity I mean a clear articulation of purpose and long-term priorities that functions as a decision framework, with strategic and operational consequences. Identity shapes what we stop, what we scale, and how we allocate constrained time, budget, and political capital. It also informs how we respond to external pressure and internal opportunity.

As with individual identity, institutional identity emerges from a combination of self-awareness and contextual awareness. It synthesises understanding of distinctive strengths and values with knowledge of community needs, policy directions, and emerging opportunities. Institutional identities are not slogans or branding exercises. They are made visible through educational offerings, research agendas, engagement practices, and partnerships.

Importantly, institutional identity is primarily horizontal rather than vertical. It is not about tiering institutions by status or performance, but about purpose and mission. Institutions might orient themselves toward online lifelong professional learning; integrated academic and work-based education; modular skills development; deep regional engagement; or missions relating to environmental sustainability, health, or security. These are choices about contribution, not rank.

The future is diverse and fast-changing. It is increasingly clear that a single, resource-constrained institution cannot do everything or respond to everything effectively. Rather than maximising breadth, institutions need to make deliberate choices about a smaller number of priorities and pursue them well. Paradoxically, this selectivity strengthens adaptability by reducing noise and clarifying what matters when change is required.

It should be noted that clarity of identity does not remove short-term pressure. Universities will continue to face urgent demands arising from funding constraints, workforce challenges, and policy shifts. What identity provides is a basis for judgement: deciding which pressures to absorb, which to resist, and which warrant deeper adaptation. Without this shared basis, institutions risk treating all pressures as equally urgent, increasing fragmentation and strategic drift.

Starting with the sector: who are we and what are we for?

Institutional identity does not develop in isolation. Universities operate within systems that both enable and constrain what is possible.

At the sector level, fundamental questions remain unresolved: what does Australian society expect higher education to contribute over the long term? How does the sector understand its collective role in meeting those expectations? How can we design a system capable of responding to increasing complexity in technology, workforce demand, and social need?

Sector-level clarity is important because it shapes how institutions interpret external signals such as funding incentives, regulation, rankings, and reputational cues. Government policy settings play a significant role in shaping what kinds of institutional directions are seen as legitimate, fundable, and sustainable. While these settings inevitably shift with political priorities, they are most effective when underpinned by a shared understanding of what higher education is for and how it operates. In the absence of that foundation, short-term signals dominate and coherence erodes at both system and institutional levels.

Sector-level identity enables institutional positioning. Where it is weak or ambiguous, institutional identity is progressively diluted, and strategies become increasingly reactive.

The cost of trying to be everything

In many respects, Australian universities are strikingly similar. Many pursue growth in the same markets, compete for the same student cohorts, and seek recognition through the same measures of success. The result is duplication, dispersed capability, and rising internal complexity.

In some ways, duplication and breadth of activity are not problematic. In complex systems, some redundancy and slack can support experimentation, learning, and innovation. Difficulties arise when breadth reflects accumulated activity rather than deliberate choice, and when few activities are ever stopped. Under these conditions, inefficiency becomes structural rather than strategic. Cautious expansion happens across many fronts. Institutions grow widely rather than deeply, diluting focus and making it harder to sustain excellence or adapt coherently.

There are, however, signs of alternative approaches within the Australian system. Some institutions have begun aligning strategy around a smaller number of distinctive commitments, such as focused research concentrations, deep regional engagement, or industry-embedded education. Smaller providers often operate with clearer specialisation, orienting programs and partnerships around specific missions.

In these cases, identity starts to function as a lived decision framework rather than an abstract statement. Choices about investment, partnership, growth, and withdrawal are made with reference to mission rather than opportunity alone. This provides clearer signals to staff, students, and partners about what the institution is for and how success should be understood.

Such approaches involve trade-offs. They may require declining opportunities, narrowing scope, or resisting sector-wide trends. Yet they can also reduce internal friction, strengthen coherence across teaching, research, and engagement, and support more confident long-term investment. Where clarity is present, institutions are better positioned to adapt without repeatedly resetting direction.

Time horizons, strategic lurches, leadership, and trust

Institutional identity work unfolds over much longer horizons than those that typically govern university decision making. Three-year government terms, five-year strategic plans, executive contracts, and council appointments create short cycles of attention and accountability. In the absence of an enduring sense of purpose, these cycles can produce not strategic drift but strategic lurching: repeated shifts in direction as institutions respond to successive policy signals, leadership preferences, or funding pressures.

A coherent institutional identity evolves over time but provides continuity across these transitions. It enables institutions to adjust course without repeatedly redefining purpose, supporting cumulative rather than episodic strategy.

Clarity and continuity of identity are closely linked to trust. When priorities are diffuse or frequently changing, staff learn that effort invested in one direction may be under-supported or reversed. For students and partners, instability makes informed choices more difficult. For governments and communities, unclear identity weakens confidence that public investment aligns with public purpose.

Trust is built through consistency of intent. Adaptation is more likely to be supported when guided by stable institutional commitments. Identity functions as a durable reference point: core commitments remain relatively enduring, while their expression develops through evidence, experimentation, and learning. Identity work is therefore an ongoing institutional practice rather than a one-off strategic exercise.

Differentiation and the Australian policy context

A sector composed of institutions with clear, consistent, and complementary identities is a differentiated system. While differentiation is widely endorsed in principle, it is weakly supported by current Australian policy settings. Funding, regulatory, and accountability frameworks largely assume institutional homogeneity, while rankings reinforce convergence by rewarding comprehensive activity across a narrow set of indicators. Together, these dynamics encourage institutions to look alike and compete on similar terms.

The Australian Universities Accord has reopened important questions about sector purpose and coherence. One opportunity lies in moving beyond uniform expectations toward a more differentiated ecosystem. Mission-based or bespoke institutional compacts are often proposed as a mechanism for achieving this.

Mission-based funding has been widely criticised in Australia, and not without reason. In theory, such compacts align funding and accountability with clearly articulated missions rather than generic performance metrics. In practice, they have often drifted toward compliance or micromanagement, limiting their capacity to genuinely support differentiation.

International experience suggests that more effective approaches focus on a small number of long-horizon outcomes, include independent review, allocate meaningful funding to missions, and operate on stable review cycles. Differentiation can sit above a shared baseline of agreed principles around quality, equity, and regional provision. Specialisation at institutional level need not reduce student choice at system level when supported by credit portability, shared curricula, and cross-institution enrolment mechanisms. Rankings will continue to shape reputation, but institutions can rebalance internal success measures toward mission outcomes to reduce disproportionate strategic responses to marginal rank movements.

Historically, Australian higher education policy has prioritised comparability, growth, and comprehensiveness. While these settings have supported expansion and stability, they also make it difficult for institutions to pursue distinctive long-term missions with confidence or to adapt in conditions of ongoing complexity.

The work of institutional identity development

Institutional identity development is difficult work. It requires confronting legacy assumptions about breadth and growth, undertaking honest assessment of strengths and constraints, and making decisions that may be unpopular. Sustaining identity over time requires leadership and governance arrangements that treat purpose as enduring institutional work rather than branding or a static element of a strategic plan.

From identity to capability

A more future and change capable higher education system will not be achieved by expecting every institution to do everything, nor by relying on short cycles of reform or performance pressure alone. It requires institutions with clear, enduring identities that guide coherent choices over time, and a policy environment that enables difference without fragmenting the system as a whole.

When institutional purpose is stable, adaptation becomes more deliberate, trust more likely, and collaboration more feasible. Differentiation, understood not as hierarchy but as complementarity, allows institutions to contribute in distinct ways while collectively meeting public needs. In this sense, identity is not a constraint on adaptability but its precondition, providing a stable basis for judgement as universities navigate uncertainty, leadership change, and shifting societal expectations.

The next piece in this series turns to how clarity of identity can be translated into action and adaptability.

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