Creative Collaboration is the master strategy for our time.

As I fully develop this statement in the months to come, I hope you will share my point of view.

The purpose of this newsletter is to help you engage and explore untapped possibilities in your work with groups and organizations as a volunteer, coworker, member, or leader. You may be in a major ongoing working relationship over time, even decades. You may be engaged in a specific project with a limited life span. You may be in a working relationship that comes and goes in periodic episodes. Or you may be in a situation that requires you to come together with others in common cause.

What Is Collaboration?

It is more than a positive, cooperative working relationship. A true, creative collaboration joins individuals, groups, or organizations to work together and make possible significant results that cannot be accomplished separately.  In other words, there is a synergy, a ‘1-plus-1-equals-3’ effect, that makes the effort worthwhile. Many otherwise cooperative work relationships fail to fully engage participants’ diverse capabilities and imagination.

I want to share my experience and understanding of the ‘architecture’ of collaborative possibility. This is more than a checklist. It is an examination of intelligent, disciplined ways to engage human complexity and leverage collective capacity. Collaboration is an ‘art’ and a ‘practice’ that I will unpack in the coming months.

There are five major opportunities to develop creative collaboration with others. You can immediately begin to apply the framework and tools from this newsletter. First, consider your key working relationships. Then, identify the typical developmental stages that present an opportunity to consciously improve the level of creative collaboration.

·      Lay a solid foundation for a new initiative that supports the realization of a shared vision.

·      Integrate new members into an existing group without slowing down progress.

·      Increase the capacity of an existing group that has settled into comfortable, habits that only generate average results.

·      Forge a new partnership or strategic alliance with a level of respect and trust that can be sustained.

·      Improve challenging human dynamics that impair participant satisfaction and limit positive results.

Why Make the Effort to Collaborate?

·      Impact. Creative, cooperative relationships with others can extend your personal capacity to accomplish shared goals and fulfill the mission.

·      Resilience.  When you stand with each other, you become more resourceful and able to recover from setbacks, meet challenges, and overcome barriers.

·      Meaning. In organizational leadership workshops when I ask participants about their ‘personal best’ collaborative experiences, I regularly encounter people who recall the vibrancy and fulfillment of a distant collaboration that they never experienced again. These individual memories are far more than isolated anecdotes.

–       The wisdom of indigenous people around the world affirms collaboration as a path of survival, learning, and success.
–       Scientific observation of successful adaptation by humans and animals highlights the importance of resourceful collaboration.
–       There is emerging awareness of the power of trusting, cooperative action in a technologically connected world.

From the depths of human history to the leading edge of technology, unity for a shared purpose is powerful and important.

How Does Collaboration Work?

Synergy requires an intelligent investment of time and energy that prevents misunderstanding, establishes respect and trust, avoids destructive conflict, and increases the flow of creativity. However, the human equation of personalities, preferences, and ‘politics’ (power) can make collaboration difficult, or even impossible.

Knowing ‘HOW’  begins with your mental model. The pessimist sees difficulty in opportunity. The optimist sees opportunity in difficulty. The most effective practitioners of creative collaboration that I have worked with are pragmatic idealists. They have few illusions about the human equation and its challenges. They also firmly hold an optimistic vision of the potential when human beings operate from the “better angels of their nature.” The journey from the puzzle of ‘What Is’ to the possibility of ‘What Could Be’ begins with the willingness to walk together and the ‘know-how’ to navigate and course-correct as necessary.

You can begin this walk by examining existing and planned collaborations. Consider five elemental characteristics and assess whether you and those you work with have what is necessary in place to build a strong, sustainable collaborative relationship.

•   Participants clearly recognize their interdependence.

•   Plans and decisions emerge from the open, respectful management of differences.

•   Decision makers (individual or group) engage other participants in authentic dialogue to gain broad, consensus support.

•   Participants commit to the same goal(s) and there is shared responsibility for the path to get there.

•   Patterns of predictable, constructive behavior emerge out of participants’ interaction over time.

Next month, I will introduce the four core practices of collaboration and describe how they develop these characteristics.
Collaboration is a journey of possibility. ONWARD!

Practice Tip #1

Line Up Expectations. Misunderstood or unshared expectations can generate inefficiency, resentment, and conflict. Healthy collaboration requires clear, shared expectations. Plan a conversation to build or tune-up a collaborative relationship. Write down:
a. what you expect of yourself, and
b. what you expect of others
Ask others to do the same. Arrange a face-to-face meeting and lay out your expectations side-by-side. Start the discussion with common ground where you are in agreement. Then, candidly discuss any expectations where there is a lack of clarity or some disagreement. Listen carefully and reflect back your understanding of your colleague’s wishes and concerns. Avoid a ‘right-wrong’ debate and seek a dialogue of mutual understanding. Once you understand each other, check to confirm that everyone’s expectations are well aligned. If they are not, promptly negotiate any differences in expectations until you reach a mutually satisfactory agreement. If you can not reach agreement at this time, take some time to consider whether it is possible to continue the collaboration and ‘agree to disagree.’ If not, you must carefully consider your options. (More about option generation and principled negotiation in a future newsletter)

Words of wisdom

“Sticks in a bundle cannot be broken.”
Bondei proverb
“In the long history of humankind (and animal kind, too) those who learned to collaborate and improvise most effectively have prevailed.”
Charles Darwin, Origin of the Species
“in a networked world,, trust is the most important currency.”
Eric Schmidt, former chairman GOOGLE
“Alone we can do so little: together we can do so much.”
Helen Keller, social activist

One Trackback

  • By mortgagecrow on May 21, 2015 at 10:29 pm

    mortgagecrow I am so grateful for your blog post.Much thanks again. Cool.

    I am so grateful for your blog post.Much thanks again. Cool.

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