Are Results Genuine or Skin Deep? What the Potemkin Village Teaches Us.
by
Edward Addai
#ManagingForResults #SystemsLeadership #ComplexityScience #InstitutionalChange #CollectiveImpact #DevelopmentPractice #PublicValue #Leadership
In the late eighteenth century, tales emerged of
Grigory Potemkin constructing elaborate façade villages to impress Catherine
the Great during her journey through Crimea. Whether apocryphal or embellished,
the term “Potemkin village” now captures a profound truth. It describes a
carefully constructed illusion of success that conceals underlying dysfunction.
The proverbial watermelon situation in results reporting: green outside, red
inside. In the social sector, where accountability is often mediated through
reports, dashboards, and donor narratives, one must always ask. Are we
delivering results, or merely curating the appearance of results?
Why appearances can deceive
At its core, a Potemkin village reflects a
misalignment between signals and substance. Systems under pressure to
demonstrate performance often optimize for visible outputs rather than
meaningful outcomes. Politicians like it. The electorate like it. And social sector
managers like it. Complexity science reminds us that systems adapt to
incentives, not intentions. When funding, recognition, and legitimacy depend on
short-term metrics, actors may rationally invest in symbolic compliance rather
than real transformation (Merton, 1968). Institutional economics deepens this
insight. Formal rules such as reporting frameworks interact with informal norms
such as fear of failure to produce this “performance theatre” (North, 1990).
The result is a system that looks vibrant from afar but is hollow within, like
a painted fruit that nourishes no one.
The cost of Potemkin Villages
The danger is not cosmetic. It is structural. When
systems prioritise appearances, they divert resources from delivering results
to the construction of narratives. A school may report improved enrolment while
learning outcomes stagnate. A child protection system may show increased case
processing while failing to ensure safety. From a results perspective, this
represents a failure to expand what people are actually able to be and do (Sen,
1999). The illusion of progress becomes a trap. It locks systems into
reinforcing loops where success is claimed, scrutiny diminishes, and real
problems deepen beneath the surface. In such systems, data becomes a mirror
that reflects what power wants to see, not what reality demands. And the truth
is that the problems don’t go away.
So how do you manage for authentic
results?
To manage for results is to dismantle the Potemkin
instinct. It requires shifting from performance as display to performance as
learning. First, leaders must redesign measurement systems to privilege
outcomes over outputs. This means tracing causal pathways from activity to
lived change and investing in independent verification where possible. Second,
feedback loops must be strengthened. Real-time data, community voice, and
frontline insight should be sought intentionally to act as corrective lenses
that reveal gaps between intention and impact. Third, institutional incentives
must reward truth-telling. When failure is penalised, illusion thrives. When
learning is valued, systems self-correct. Finally, collective impact approaches
can align multiple actors around shared outcomes, reducing the fragmentation
that often enables façade-building (Kania and Kramer, 2011).
The discipline of seeing clearly
The counterfactual is instructive. Imagine a system
where every reported success is interrogated, where beneficiaries co-define
what progress means, and where leaders treat uncomfortable data as an asset
rather than a threat. Such a system may appear slower, less polished, even
messy. Yet it is precisely this messiness that signals authenticity. Managing
for results in complex systems is less about painting a landscape and more about
cultivating a forest. Growth is uneven, feedback is constant, and appearances
can mislead.
The call to action is simple yet demanding. Social
sector leaders must cultivate the courage to see and to show reality as it is.
This is not merely a technical shift. It is an ethical commitment. For in the
end, the greatest risk is not that systems fail the people they exist to serve,
but that they succeed in pretending they have not.
References
Kania,
J. and Kramer, M. (2011) ‘Collective Impact’, Stanford Social Innovation Review,
9(1), pp. 36–41.
Merton,
R.K. (1968) Social Theory and Social Structure. New York: Free Press.
North,
D.C. (1990) Institutions, Institutional Change and Economic Performance.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Sen,
A. (1999) Development as Freedom. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
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