Patrick Hoverstadt’s writings explore the Viable System Model (VSM) and systems thinking as essential frameworks for managing modern organisational complexity. He argues that traditional, linear management often fails because it relies on tacit models that cannot account for the turbulent, unpredictable environments in which businesses now operate. To remain viable, an organisation must function as a fractal structure, where every level possesses the necessary autonomy to adapt while maintaining cohesion through effective coordination and monitoring. The text outlines various systems laws, such as the Law of Requisite Variety, which dictates that a manager’s internal complexity must match the complexity of the external challenges they face. By examining organisational dynamics and feedback loops, Hoverstadt provides a “grammar” for diagnosing systemic failures and designing sustainable entities capable of self-renewal. Ultimately, these sources advocate for a shift from rigid hierarchies to dynamic modelling that embraces uncertainty as a tool for strategic growth.