----- Original Message ----- 
From: Susan M Kerr 
To: [email protected] 
Sent: Wednesday, May 04, 2005 7:52 PM
Subject: Re: The World Cafe


My copy of The World Cafe arrived yesterday, so I've only just started the 
reading, but it looks very interesting. We used World Cafe last year in 
Scotland at the OT22 conference (Organizational Transformation - year 22) for 
the first morning, then went into Open Space for the remainder of the 3 days.

John Adams was one of the key facilitators of that - if he is on this perhaps 
he can speak to the process or motivation for using it. I thought it was a good 
experience - yes more structured than a usual open space beginning but I liked 
hearing the ideas from the different groups and how they built on each other - 
and the physical medium of writing/drawing on the paper covering the tables. 
And for me, it helped get to know the people in the group. 

Following that we went into open space with opening the circle as usual.

I don't know if it will be used at OT23 this July in Milwaukee or not - perhaps 
if Shelia Isakson is on here she can speak to that.

Not having lead OS yet (I'm a fringe dweller on this list) I have participated 
in a few. Currently where I work the leaders are not quite open to it. I am 
exploring WC as a tool I might be able to introduce there and would like to 
hear more how others have used it and what benefits they have found with it. 

Susan Kerr
Milwaukee, WI, USA


G'day All

Chris Corrigan's nudging is always difficult to resist ... :-) 

My sense is that Susan's experience is a nice indication of where and how Cafe 
processes can complement OST. 

John Adams who Susan mentioned is well known to Harrison and many others on 
this list; he was present when Open Space was first 
"rolled out" at Organizational Transformation (OT) 3 in 1985. John is a great 
friend of mine and he and I have had periodic exchanges 
about the uses of OST and World Cafe (TWC) processes. 

He has said to me that, in his role of facilitator of recent annual OT 
gatherings, he has introduced TWC both in the opening and closing
1/2 day sessions - around the main OST event - to very good effect. *  

Perhaps the 'reasons' for this, in my take, is that sitting at small tables - 
what I have called 'eyeball to eyeball' distance apart and what Lisa Kimball
describes as 'knee to knee' - produces feelings of inclusivity and intimacy 
which in turn means that participants quickly go deeply into 
questions which emerge at the time rather than being prepared in advance.   

Moving around periodically (which does not always happen in TWC meetings) leads 
to meeting new people, and helps participants 
appreciate that there can be many perspectives of an issue, some of which they 
had not remotely imagined. Also participants often report
that the germ of an idea which arose at one table developed further when it was 
taken to another group. 

There is much more which could be said, not the least that in particular 
circumstances - independent of a time factor - one of these formats is more 
appropriate
than the other. 

I wonder if anyone else here who has used both of these wondrous processes 
would wish to say something about the issue of 'control' which 
'worries' Harrison. It does me too, particularly when the facilitator/host of a 
WCT event is not a 'spacer type person'! Yet in my observation there 
are contexts in which the 'disadvantage' of a bit more 'hands on' by the 
facilitator can be thought of as being outweighed by participants having 
a lively experience, as Susan, Jeff  and others have expressed.

And perhaps also touch on distinctions between facilitating and hosting?

The new book which Dave Cox mentioned is a treasure trove of wholesome stories 
of the effectiveness of TWC and of very thoughtful 
questions - and is a totally different entity to Juanita Brown's PhD 
dissertation; Berrett Koehler have seen to that. 

Let me say again (having done so previously on our list) that I see OST and TWC 
as very compatible. For are they not both methodologies
in which treating each other well is the starting point in the course of 
addressing questions that matter? And do they not both bring forth the 
possibility
of producing feelings of freshness and of the emergence of unforeseen 
creativity and optimism? 

Harrison and Juanita are both to be accorded the highest of accolades, in my 
opinion. 

With love

Alan 
Hong Kong 

* John notes: 

"If anyone has not yet heard, OT 23 will be held this summer in Milwaukee July 
26-29. And OT 24 will be July 25-29 on the big island of Hawaii, at the 
retreat center of Joel and Michelle Levy. I am sure that we will continue to 
experiment with integrations of TWC and OST at these two coming attractions."

*
*
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