Greening the Blue Ocean: Leading Systemic Transformation with Regenerative Intelligence

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Abstract

The Anthropocene, a period defined by ecological crises, social inequities, and rapid technological disruption—demands systemic transformation on an unprecedented scale. Organizations now operate in a VUCAV² environment (volatility, uncertainty, complexity, ambiguity, vulnerability, velocity), where traditional leadership frameworks are no longer sufficient to address the interconnected challenges of our time. Coupled with rapid advancements in artificial intelligence (AI) such as DeepSeek and beyond, has further disrupt the traditional economic paradigms, accelerates systemic challenges that neither Red Ocean (competition-based) nor Blue Ocean (market-creation) strategies can resolve. While AI has revolutionized industries, it has also contributed to workforce displacement, deepened inequalities, and intensified the fragility of old economic models. Iconic tech companies—the “Mighty Seven” of stock markets—symbolize this paradox, soaring to unprecedented valuations while cutting costs and shedding jobs to sustain unsustainable business models. i.e. Apple, Microsoft, Amazon, Google (Alphabet), Meta (formerly Facebook), Tesla, NVIDIAThis disconnect underscores the need for systemic transformation. Recent global forums like COP29 and WEF 2025 emphasized collaboration and investment in regenerative-driven economies as critical imperatives for the digital age. Leadership today must transcend transactional, extractive models and embrace regenerative intelligence—a paradigm that integrates neuroplasticity-driven adaptability, AI-augmented foresight, and systemic intelligence.This paper introduces the Regenerative Systems Framework (RSF) and AHA SHIFT Model as actionable blueprints for leadership transformation. By addressing systemic challenges through cognitive adaptability, ethical governance, and sustainability foresight, regenerative intelligence empowers leaders to “greening blue oceans” for innovation that regenerate ecological and social systems. Findings from mixed-methods research validate the RSF’s impact, including improved adaptability (20–25%), foresight (30–40%), and ESG alignment (50%). Case studies from Microsoft, Patagonia, and Singapore’s Smart Nation Initiative confirm regenerative intelligence’s potential to enhance decision efficiency (60%), sustainability impact (40%), and governance resilience (50%).This paper positions regenerative intelligence as essential for leaders navigating the Anthropocene and the digital age, providing a roadmap for systemic economic renewal, long-term resilience, and planetary stewardship.

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