
In a recent article We Did That!, I made a number of points about the lost art of collaboration:
- Although we often have the preconditions for good
collaboration (shared goal, sense of urgency and commitment, productive
participation process, sense of belonging, open communication, trust,
and complementary, diverse backgrounds), the inherent competitiveness that pervades everything we do in life tends to interfere and preclude true collaboration from occurring.
- We tend to collaborate very effectively in emergency
situations (like helping each other out during a blackout), suggesting
that good collaboration may be instinctive, an instinct we have
tragically lost.
- When collaboration works well (in nature, in emergencies,
and when the chemistry of the team is exceptional) we collaborate not
because collaboration works, but because it's fun.
- Hierarchy, our cult of leadership, and the inflated egos of
managers, combine to make collaboration in most businesses almost
impossible.
- Collaboration could be improved by (a) creating a lot more
opportunities to practice it, (b) speaking out when supposedly or
potentially collaborative activities aren't, and fixing them so they
are, and (c) ousting the egos and outing the wallflowers in
collaborative groups so participation is equal.
Carolyn Allen, who lives and breathes this stuff, provides this additional wisdom:
- Infrastructure -- support and facilitation services,
coaching, technical resources -- helps to keep collaborative efforts
from going off the rails.
- Open communication and collegiality among participants, so
that the work that needs to be done can be equitably apportioned,
appreciated and respected, is essential to the process.
- Diversity of process -- using different techniques to
jump-start or enhance collaboration -- is as important to effective
collaboration as diversity of people.
A record proportion of today's workforce, especially in North America,
is self-employed. For them, collaboration is essential to doing
projects at more than a subsistence level -- pilot projects,
subcontract work, and small, one-shot assignments. The jump from
self-employment to entrepreneurship -- and credibility with larger
buyers of their services -- requires collaborative partnership. So there's a few million people who should be really motivated to get much better at this art.
In business, meanwhile, the term 'collaboration' has been misused,
misappropriated and adulterated so much that it has become muddled with
mere contracting, teamwork, and work allocation. Collaboration is much
more than any of these things, but, sadly, because so many large
business environments are so dysfunctional, it is almost impossible to
find great examples of business collaboration anywhere. The best
examples of collaboration are to be found outside the suffocating
hierarchies of business -- in scientific endeavor (many Nobel Prize-winning scientific endeavors have been global collaborations), in the arts (both in composition, like Lennon-McCartney's work, and in performance, like jazz improvisation), and in sport (where
the best teams work together so intuitively and seamlessly that their
collective performance far exceeds the sum of their individual
competencies, and where a strong captain, superstar or coach is an
impediment rather than an advantage). And of course, in nature, where
for most species collaboration, not competition, is the key to survival.
Business needs to raise the bar by which it assesses its collaborative
performance to a comparable high level, and appreciate that many of the
attributes (competitiveness, hierarchy, the cult of leadership, and
sheer mind-boggling size) that are the hallmarks of the modern
corporation work directly against the achievement of greatness in
collaboration. It will be up to entrepreneurs, who don't have these
attributes, to show the way.
So I would define collaboration, as demonstrated in great scientific, artistic, athletic and natural endeavors, this way: Working together to produce a result far superior to that which any group of individuals working alone could ever produce.
The whole, in other words, is greater than the sum of the parts. None
of the Beatles, individually, could ever, in a lifetime with all the
resources in the world at their disposal, produce anything of the
calibre of Abbey Road.
Before we look at how collaboration could be enhanced and enabled, let's look at some more examples:
- The Prayer Cycle
- Jon Elias' moving collaborative composition, involving a dozen of the
world's most diverse and creative songwriters, of a suite of nine
adagios overlaid seamlessly with stunning music harmonies from
different cultures
- Eliot & Pound
- The back-and-forth, ruthless editing of TS Eliot's work by Ezra
Pound, to craft some of the world's tightest and most powerful poetry
- Whitehead & Russell - The collaboration between mathematician Alfred North Whitehead and philosopher Bertrand Russell on Principia Mathematica, the groundbreaking book that bridged their two disciplines and laid the foundation for modern logic
- The Human Genome Project
(or the Making of the Atomic Bomb) - International collaboration that
fast-tracked scientific advances that would otherwise have taken at
least a generation longer
- Open Source software
- Like Mozilla Firefox, Thunderbird and nVu, the 'best simple' internet
software, developed by parallel and sequential work of hundreds
- Van Gogh and Gauguin
- Two artists, both coming late to their art after failing at other
professions, who met and worked together and helped each other develop
the technique and mastery that has endured ever since
- The New Jersey Devils
- A hockey team built on a shoestring from players of unexceptional
talent whose amazing chemistry, and ability to function almost as a
single connected organism, has three times trounced the most expensive
and superstar-laden teams in the sport. And who last year defeated the
Anaheim Mighty Ducks, a team largely built on the same model, in a
titanic struggle described by one leading commentator as "a great drama
bereft of stars" in which the awarding of MVP to any individual was "a
travesty".
I can't claim to understand the magic of human interplay that makes
these such stellar examples of collaboration. But I can tell you the
story of a much more modest, personal collaboration that I'm working on
right now. As many of you know, I'm intrigued with the potential
business (and philanthropic, world-saving) applications of The Wisdom of Crowds.
Through one of my readers (and now good friend) Jon Husband I met Mike
McInerney and through Mike I met John Sutherland, with whom I am now
working on the Wisdom of Crowds business model. John and I are cut from
different cloth, with different strengths and weaknesses but a shared
love of and belief in innovation.
When John and I developed the Wisdom of Crowds business model, it was
pure collaboration. We had each tried, unsuccessfully, to develop the
model separately. So we started with a clean slate, using John's MindMapping
documentation tool to capture what we agreed on. In ninety minutes of
discussion, questioning, persuasion, give-and-take, trotting out of
examples, objections, and 'ahas', we had overcome some huge obstacles
in our individual preconceptions of how the model could and should
work, and produced a remarkable collective work product,
a modest but perfect example of great collaboration. Both John and I
are quite strong-willed, so I tried to figure out why this exercise had
worked so well.
We were motivated, which certainly helped. I've been asked to make
proposals to a couple of businesses this week on the subject, so there
was certainly a sense of urgency. And we were clear on the objective.
But John and I had worked together, using the same tool, with an equal
sense of urgency and an equally clear objective, on another project a
month earlier, where three other people were also involved. Not only
was the process in this earlier instance exasperating, like pulling
teeth, it was an unproductive tug-of-war of different solution sets
that almost deteriorated into feuding. What was documented using the
tool was not what was presented to the client.
What was different in this earlier, failed attempt at collaboration? In my opinion, John and I exhibit what I would call intellectual agility,
while our colleagues in the earlier session do not. Consultants as a
whole necessarily have big egos and believe passionately that they have
the best answers. They are successful because they can convince clients
that their answers are unimpeachable and will achieve the desired
result. In some cases as a result they get 'locked in' to certain
solutions, processes and ways of thinking. Intellectual agility is the
ability to allow yourself to fully understand, appreciate, adapt to and
integrate others' ideas and ways of thinking with your own, and, on
occasion, to abandon your own preconceptions quickly and entirely when
presented with compelling evidence of a better answer. In front of a
client, such agility so might be seen as a sign of weakness. But
working with a group of peers it is, I believe, the very essence of
collaboration, and a skill that does not come easily to many.
After all, many of us were taught that the assembly line -- that
exemplar of mediocre and mind-numbing efficiency -- was the first
breakthrough business model of collaboration.
How could we make people, and entrepreneurial businesses, at least,
more intellectually agile, and hence more collaborative? Here are my
early thoughts on this -- please jump in with your comments:
- We need to teach people the skill. When I was younger I
would have been hopeless at this. John is a great role model, but it's
taken him almost as long as it took me to acquire the skill. I suspect
some people are incapable of learning it. I also suspect it's
intuitive, so it may be more a case of teaching us to shut up and
listen with an open mind and stop competing with and prejudging others.
In other words to re-learn
the skill that our culture has driven out of us. Expert facilitation of
collaborative sessions would also help, but it won't be enough by
itself to make unskilled people skilled collaborators. Time to go back
to school.
- We need to recognize and reward great collaborative
successes (those that go far beyond mere coordination, cooperation, and
sharing of information). What gets rewarded gets done, and copied by
others.
- We need to self-assess, and assess in business, our
collaborative ability. This is a core entrepreneurial competency, up
there with critical thinking, creative thinking, and clear
communication.
- We need to find more role models for it outside the arts,
sciences and sports -- especially in business and in the political
arena (good collaboration skills could reinvent negotiation from an
adversarial contest to a win-win art).
I would hazard a guess that excellent collaboration skill is almost
entirely absent in those we call 'leaders' in all aspects of human
endeavor. I'd also guess that women are inherently better at it than
men.
I'm going to add a chapter to Natural Enterprise on the subject.
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