Organizational Inertia
Organizational inertia is the resistance of institutions, organizations, and bureaucracies to structural change — even when the external environment has shifted in ways that make existing practices ineffective or harmful. In systems theory, inertia is not merely psychological conservatism but a structural property of systems with strong positive feedback loops that reinforce existing patterns. Once a bureaucracy has invested in specific procedures, expertise, and power relationships, any change threatens returns on that investment. The result is a system that preserves its own structure at the expense of its function. Organizational inertia is the mirror image of adaptive capacity: where adaptive systems preserve function by changing structure, inert systems preserve structure by sacrificing function. The deepest form of inertia is structural rigidity — when the organization can no longer distinguish between preserving itself and performing its mission.