Dave Pollard's environmental philosophy, creative works, business papers and essays. In search of a better way to live and make a living, and a better understanding of how the world really works.
Christopher
Allen of the Life With
Alacrity blog has expanded his articles on group size, with an
article on community
sizes and another on personal
circle sizes. The latter are our
own self-centred circles (those we're in the middle of), while the
former are
circles of which we have chosen to be a member. The dynamics of the
two, Christopher says, are different. Let's start with the personal
circles:
The Support Circle
(3-5 people) is the innermost, and consists of
people you would seek help from in a crisis.
The Sympathy Circle
(7-20 people, with a median of 10-15) are those
whose
death you'd find devastating, people you really care about.
The Trust Circle
(40-200 people, with a median of about 120) are those
people you trust and have strong personal ties with (you'd miss them if
you/they 'moved away').
The Emotional
Circle (median size of just
under 300 people) are those
people you have "weak ties" to, i.e. some kind of probably
non-reciprocal 'liking' for. You're probably familiar with 'The
Strength of Weak Ties' and the
importance of this peripheral group of people in helping you find the
people and opportunities that will have a dramatic effect on your life
and happiness.
Christopher also refers to a group called 'familiar strangers', people
you recognize but don't know.
Taken together, these circles form a 'topology' that Christopher
describes as follows:
Think
of these circles as the ridge lines of a topographical map. An
individual sits at the center, and around him lie many other people,
fading slowly away as the distance increases. Winding through these
topographical lines, like forests or rivers, are geographies of
physical and emotional connection.
Kin are one of the most interesting geographies, because they lie all
across the map. There's a clump of them in the innermost circles, but
there are also many who lie in the realm of Familiar Strangers,
including those cousins and great-aunts who you only see at family
gatherings, and whom you know nothing about. There are also forces
being exerted upon the circles, acting like gravity to draw people
together.
Turning to community
sizes:
Working
Groups (optimally 4-9 people,
with a median of 7): Many studies
suggest this size is optimal for communication, collaboration, and
decision-making. Also works well for dinner parties and poker games.
Beyond 9 and up to 25 members, groups get increasingly dysfunctional
(12-15 is worst, so think twice about gathering your whole Sympathy
Circle together for any purpose).
Enterprise
Groups (optimally 25-75, with
a median of 50): An enterprise
is a systemic activity, a mutual undertaking with a common objective or
focus of interest. This is the optimal size for guilds, associations,
business enterprises, 'unconferences' and social networks -- you get
diversity and the 'wisdom of crowds' and critical mass for action, but
the group is still self-manageable. Christopher calls this the
'non-exclusive Dunbar number' because such groups rarely have
sufficient cohesion to attract anyone's full-time or life-long
energies. Beyond 75, groups again become increasingly dysfunctional,
until, beyond the 'official' Dunbar number of 150, the geometrically
increasing work needed to try to sustain any real cohesion, trust and
participation outweighs the so-called 'economies of scale'.
So what does all this mean for social networking, blogging, twittering,
Natural Enterprise, intentional community, the future of work, etc.?
Here are Pollard's
Hypotheses of Social Cohesion, so far hypothetical, except insofar as
I've observed the dynamics in a lot of workplaces:
If we want business to
be agile, resilient and innovative, we should break all organizations
down into small, autonomous enterprises, ideally with no more than 75
people each, and ideally focused on the local community they're a part
of, where their people and customers live (physically, or, if the
product is made of bits rather than atoms, virtually). There really are
no 'economies of scale' beyond this size.
As we move towards the
World
of Ends, more and more
production will be Peer Production, and stuff will be made by networks
of innovative small enterprises and Working Groups, not by
large corporations. I describe how that will work here.
The project teams I
have worked on that have accomplished the most per-person per-hour have
had memberships hovering around 7 or 50, with the smaller size (7)
working best for short-term focused projects and projects that have a
lot of shared and enduring passion among the members, and the larger
size (50) working best for more ambitious, open-ended problem-solving
projects where passion is more diffused or the members don't know each
other well. My guess is that Open Space events would work best
with groups of about 50, though I may be wrong.
Indigenous
'uncivilized' cultures generally had clans similar in size to the
optimal Enterprise Groups, and gatherer-hunter groups similar in size
to the optimal Working Groups. But because their 'world' of possible
contacts was so much smaller than ours their Emotional Circle and Trust
Circle would have been the same group, and that probably would
have allowed them the 'bandwidth' to have a larger Sympathy Circle and
Support Circle as well -- in fact all four might have been the same,
their 'tribe' or 'clan'. So they would have had no need for nuclear
'families' or for an inner circle of 'intimate' friends for sympathy
and support. I think one of the challenges of intentional communities
is that some members, perhaps 'naturally', expect them to be
the Support, Sympathy, Trust and Emotional Circle all wrapped up in one
-- unrealistic in our modern society. Perhaps intentional communities
need to plan to create cohesive Support and Sympathy Circles within
their membership, while encouraging the whole community to become a
Trust Circle, so that they can expand beyond the Sympathy Circle size
most seem to be stuck at.
My 'Gravitational
Community' listed on the right sidebar of this blog, and the number of
people I'm in regular two-way contact with (mostly as a result of my
blog), and the number of people I follow on Twitter, all seem to be
converging on 70-80 people, with about 40 of them 'hard core' and the
others ever-changing, entering and leaving my orbit as I enter and
leave theirs. There is substantial gravitational pull in these
networks, with many of the members likewise connected to each other.
These are people I think I would like to live in community with. I
think this is personal, social Trust Circle gravity. My guess is that,
for most people, a manageable Trust Circle is closer to the low end
than the high end of the 40-200 range and below the 120 median. As I've
spent more and more time online I think the 'quality' of these
friendships (congruence of interests, mutual knowledge and respect) has
grown even though fewer and fewer live in my physical neighbourhood. I
acknowledge, however, that it's hard (and sometimes risky) to move
'virtual' relationships into your Support and Sympathy Circles.
We are social creatures at heart, and increasing our understanding of
social cohesion and group effectiveness is important, for our
personal happiness and ability to live peacefully with each other, and
to help us to find meaningful, productive work as our current economy
crumbles. What does the topology of your various social networks and
work communities look like?
And what could we do, instead of herding people into anonymous housing
subdivisions and indifferent hierarchical corporations,
to better reflect our desire for self-selected
social connection and to improve our work effectiveness?
Top 4 drawings, taken
from Christopher's site, drawn by Nancy Margulies. Postscript:
Christopher is planning another article in this series, this time on
power laws, and what happens when some members of groups are more equal
than others.
MY GRAVITATIONAL COMMUNITY People
who have inspired or informed me frequently over the past few months.
For my full blogroll/online reference library, see
here. [* indicates
people I connect with in real time, f2f, via IM, Skype or SL chat.]
- original research,surveys etc.
- original,well-crafted fiction
- great finds: resources,blogs,essays, artistic works
- news not found anywhere else
- category killers: aggregators that capture the best of many blogs/feeds, so they need not be read individually
- clever, concise political opinion consistent with their own views
- benchmarks,quantitative analysis
- personal stories,experiences,lessons learned
- first-hand accounts
- live reports from events
- insight:leading-edge thinking & novel perspectives
- short educational pieces
- relevant "aha" graphics
- great photos
- useful tools and checklists
- précis, summaries, reviews and other time-savers
- fun stuff: quizzes, self-evaluations, other interactive content
Blog writers
want to see more:
- constructive criticism, reaction, feedback
- 'thank you' comments, and why readers liked their post
- requests for future posts on specific subjects
- foundation articles: posts that writers can build on, on their own blogs
- reading lists/aggregations of material on specific, leading-edge subjects that writers can use as resource material
- wonderful examples of writing of a particular genre, that they can learn from
- comments that engender lively discussion
- guidance on how to write in the strange world of weblogs