Most frameworks are linear in some way. SCR moves from situation to complication to resolution. Issue trees branch downward. Second-order effects trace chains forward. Even scenario planning, despite mapping four worlds, treats each world as a separate linear narrative.
System mapping is different because it captures something the other frameworks can’t: feedback loops. Things that cause themselves. Situations where A affects B, B affects C, and C circles back to affect A again.
The structure. You identify the key elements in a system: the variables, the actors, the forces, and then you map how they influence each other. Not in a tree or chain, but in a web. With arrows showing direction of influence and signs showing whether the influence is reinforcing (more of A creates more of B) or balancing (more of A creates less of B).
Why it’s fundamental. Most problems that executives face aren’t caused by one thing. They’re caused by systems, interlocking forces that reinforce each other in ways that make the problem resistant to simple solutions. You can fix one element and the system compensates. You can throw resources at a symptom and the underlying dynamic reasserts itself. A system map makes the invisible structure visible. It shows you where the leverage points are: the places where a small intervention changes the behavior of the entire system, versus the places where you can push as hard as you want and nothing changes.
Who developed it. Systems thinking has deep roots. Jay Forrester at MIT developed system dynamics in the 1950s. Donella Meadows, his student, wrote the foundational text Thinking in Systems in the early 2000s. Peter Senge brought it into management with The Fifth Discipline in 1990. The Santa Fe Institute has been advancing complexity science, which is the mathematical cousin of systems thinking, since the 1980s. But the core ideas are older than all of them. Any farmer understands feedback loops. Any ecologist thinks in systems. The formalization just gave it a vocabulary and a visual method.
The core concepts:
Why it matters:
How it connects with other frameworks. Second-order effects exercise is systems mapping in disguise, as it usually describes reinforcing loops. Stakeholder mapping feeds into systems mapping. Stakeholders don’t exist in isolation. They interact with each other and influence how things unfold. Issue trees decompose a problem into parts. Systems mapping shows how the parts connect to each other, including the connections that create circular causation.
Common pitfalls:
How to go about it: