
Leaders as Architects of Change provides new approaches, frames and tools for leaders and their teams to design, drive, and support cultures of workplace inquiry which create collective capacity and adaptivity, and which ground and connect people in times of change.
Written by scholar-practitioners, alongside global business leaders, the book explores how organizations can thrive in a brittle, anxious, nonlinear, and incomprehensible (BANI) world. Drawing on evidence-based research and real-world experience, the contributors present practical frameworks for antifragility, emotional intelligence, adaptive culture, and collaborative leadership. Through chapters on AI-driven disruption, organizational resilience, dissent by design, and trust in virtual teams, the book reveals how leaders can design adaptive systems that bend without breaking, cultivate psychological safety, and unlock human flourishing. Rather than offering prescriptive fixes, it provides tools to architect conditions for resilience, innovation, and belonging.
The book will resonate with executives, academics, consultants, and students of leadership who seek actionable strategies to navigate volatility. Readers will gain both insight and courage to reimagine organizations not as machines of control but as living systems of connection, adaptability, and purpose.
Sharon M. Ravitch is Professor of Practice at the University of Pennsylvania, USA, and teaches executives across sectors at Wharton Business School's Executive Education hub. She is a global leadership and organizational diagnostics consultant and researcher working with leaders and organizations around the world to foment individual and organizational sense-making for cultural and inclusive excellence.
Raghu Krishnamoorthy is the Senior Fellow and Director of Penn's renowned Chief Learning Officer doctoral program at the University of Pennsylvania Graduate School of Education, USA. He has written and lectured extensively on the future of work, the workplace, and workers. He spent 38 years in the corporate world before entering academia and retired as the CHRO for General Electric.