
In previous articles on New Collaborative (Existential) Enterprises, I've explained what existential enterprises are, how to avoid the most common landmines, how viral marketing works, and the role of innovation.
This article will focus on assembling the team for your New
Collaborative Enterprise. This step is what differentiates NCEs most
from traditional small enterprises. It is also probably the hardest
step, the most important, and the most personal.
Assembling the NCE is a juggling act. You need to simultaneously accomplish two things:
- Find people you profoundly love and respect -- an NCE is a partnership every bit as deep as a marriage.
- Find people whose skills and knowledge match, nearly
perfectly, the skill and knowledge needs of the enterprise you want to
build, with minimum overlap (if you have two experts in X and you only
need one, guess what the two experts will spend most of their time
doing?)
If this isn't hard enough, these attributes are likely to change
constantly: You may change your mind about what you want your NCE to
do, you and your partners' skills and expertise may change, and your
attitude towards your partners may change (or vice versa). All of these
will require changes to the team. The good news is that the selection
of the team isn't your (or any one person's) job -- it is the essential
collective responsibility of the team itself. NCEs are self-selected and self-managed
enterprises, because a cohesive group together can always make better
decisions than any one person can. As you're assembling the team, your
first job is to explain what an NCE is and what's so good about them to
your potential partners (I'll cover this in next week's article in this
series), so that they accept the shared responsibility for building the
team and the enterprise.
This will take some practice and may have some surprising fallout. You might find that as the team assembles itself, you're the one with the redundant skills, and the other potential partners will urge you to self-select yourself out
of the enterprise. If so, it's back to square one, creating a new team,
possibly doing something somewhat different from what you had
envisioned, where your skills and expertise are truly critical to the enterprise. If it sounds a lot like dating, it's because that's precisely what it is.
You may also find that, with the collective wisdom of the team, you may
have second thoughts about what you want the enterprise to do. One team
member may inform the team that the need you thought you had identified
doesn't really exist, or is quite different from what you'd thought.
When you refocus on a new need, a new enterprise objective and purpose,
it is likely that the skills and expertise you will need to bring it to
fruition will also change, and the whole constitution of the team will
need revisiting. Just remember, the selection of the team is a shared responsibility. There is no hierarchy.
There will also be a temptation, until the Internet and our society
really understand NCEs and help facilitate their formation, to settle
for something less than the ideal team. Obviously I can't tell you (and
your team) that this is a categorically bad idea. But it's like
lowering your sights after you've unsuccessfully asked several lovers
to marry you, and propositioning someone you don't really love just to
get a 'yes'. Sometimes it's better to keep looking rather than settle
for something that's not likely to succeed or make you happy. If you
want to be rich and miserable, an NCE is not the answer (marry someone
rich instead).
Each potential partner brings acquired skills and knowledge to the enterprise. Let's look at what these terms mean.
From what I've observed in over a hundred entrepreneurial businesses, there are five key groups of business skills:
- Creative skills -- the ability to conceive, design and apply new ideas
- Communication skills -- the ability to compose, present, and express ideas and information
- Information skills -- the ability to organize, understand and apply information
- Interpersonal skills -- the ability to appreciate, connect with, and persuade other people
- Spatial skills -- the ability to sense, visualize and coordinate physical objects and actions
While a base level of all these skills is essential for anyone who
hopes to succeed in business (or anything else in life), we each excel
at only a few of these skills. What we do best is largely a function of
what we most enjoy doing (because all of these skills can be learned,
and practice makes perfect). Our niche skills, our 'distinctive
competencies', may be broad (across all five skill groups) or deep
(e.g. the writer who composes brilliantly but can't even deliver his
own speeches, or sing his own songs, well).
Knowledge, on the other hand, is what you have learned about specific subject matter.
If I want to write software, just having the skills is not enough -- I
also need to study and learn programming languages and about
information systems and the business environments in which they're
used. Some knowledge can be acquired academically, while other
knowledge can only be learned from experience.
The combination of skills and knowledge is what we call expertise.
Ideally, you want your enterprise team members to have expertise. But
if you're young, you may have the skills but not the knowledge. And if
you're old, you may have the knowledge, but your skills may be rusty.
Your team may therefore consist of some people with skills and others
with knowledge -- as long as they love and respect each other, that can
be just as good as having expertise, and may be a lot easier to find.
I can see some eyebrows raising when I talk about loving the people you
work with. We have been culturally conditioned to leave our emotions at
the door when we go to work (and school), to spend half our waking
lives sublimating what we feel and just doing what we're told. In a
hierarchical organization this is ideal, though it saps the energy and
creativity out of workers. But how sick is that? Why should we spend
half our lives being what we're not?
If your enterprise is to be a place of passion, joy, and fulfilment (and it should
be!), then it will be a place where emotions run free, and that means
its partners need to deeply respect and love each other. No matter how
perfect a fit their skills and knowledge are, if they don't care for,
and about, each other, your enterprise will be a place of chaos and
conflict, and will eventually self-destruct. That makes the task of
assembling the team even harder. But imagine -- a whole team of people,
doing what they do best, their expertise perfectly meshed, engaged and
passionate and crazy about their jobs and each other -- isn't that
worth the hard work of assembling the perfect team?
I have reviewed, quite negatively, the first generation of social
software tools designed to help people find other people they want to
be with and/or work with. It does not surprise me that many of these
tools ask you for lots of personal information and seem to be used more
for finding dates than business partners. In fact, I think that's
what's good about them. Assembling the team for an NCE is a job of
matchmaking, of seeking love interests, as much as it is a job of
acquiring skills and knowledge in human 'containers'. That's one of the
reasons NCEs must be self-selected: No one person can accurately gauge
the affection that partners will have for each other, and it takes an
enormous amount of energy and effort to find just the right people,
more than any one person can hope to muster. The next generation of
social software tools will, I believe, make it much easier.
The pioneers of NCEs will need extraordinary patience and tact, as all
pioneers do, because we're not used to dealing with each other this
way, especially in establishing business relationships. Like all
pioneers, we'll need to learn by doing, and document what works and
what doesn't, and share this with each other, to make the road easier
for those that follow.
Last but not least, I have to confess, I have found no proven, successful model yet for a complete Existential, New Collaborative Enterprise.
I am hoping that when I meet with Charles Handy, whose concept of
Existential Enterprise is entirely consistent with the NCE concepts I
have been writing about since before I had heard of his work, he will
be able to tell me some success stories. I have studied about a dozen
enterprises that claimed, or appeared, to be excellent models, but
found them critically lacking in one or more attributes. I know of many
enterprises that have some of
the attributes of an NCE, and they all believe those attributes are
what make them successful and happy, but these aren't yet the stuff of
great models. If you took these attributes and combined them in one
enterprise, you would have a complete NCE, and there is no reason to believe it wouldn't
be a great company, and a perfect model for other pioneers to follow.
But I must be honest -- all the individual parts have been tested and
work wonderfully, but the whole has yet to be put together in one
vehicle and driven. Before the publication of the book of which these
articles are a part, I am hoping to find one, or even better, a few. If
not, readers will have to settle for some limited-scope success stories
instead of a comprehensive one. To illustrate this 'chapter' on
Assembling the Team I would then fall back on three family-owned
businesses I know well. Their partners meet all of the criteria I have
described above -- they love and trust each other, they have a perfect
match of skills and knowledge between them, with no overlap or
redundancy to cause 'expertise conflicts', and they make all key
decisions collaboratively and by unanimous consensus. My only reason
for not describing them in more detail here is that they didn't have to
go through the hard part of finding each other, assembling the perfect
team. They were already together, by fortunate accident of birth or
marriage. What's interesting is that I also know of many failed and miserable family-owned businesses, all of which lack
the love, trust, respect, and/or mesh of essential skills and knowledge
that my three successful proto-NCE family businesses have.
And even more interesting, neither the partners nor the employees in
these three NCE-like family businesses work anywhere near as hard as
most people. They have more leisure time, more time set aside for
social activities, and more fun than those in any other businesses I
know. And even when they are working, it is a true labour of love. They
are workplaces of great joy.
We all deserve as much.
PS: I need your help, dear readers. I have been using
Charles Handy's term Existential Enterprise, and my term New
Collaborative Enterprise (NCE) interchangeably. This is probably
confusing to readers, but I can't decide which term, if either,
to use. I wrote about NCEs several times before I discovered Handy's
work. His term is simpler and needs no acronym, but the word
'existential' sounds kind of academic, theoretical, even intimidating
to those who don't know what it means. So what name should I use?
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