Dear Chris,

WOW - what a wonderful sunny sunday morning news story.

My heartily congratulations!

Warmly,
Gabriela


----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Chris Corrigan 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Sunday, April 22, 2007 8:26 AM
  Subject: Tuning the bass note: a story from an organization using Open Space 
in an ongoing way.


  Hi friends:

  It's been awhile since I posted a story about a group I was working with, but 
I thought this one might be interesting.

  I spent the last week shuttered away in a lovely retreat setting on northern 
Vancouver Island amongst eagles, sea lions and killer whales working with a 
national organization who is helping indigenous communities to create effective 
governance that advances their rights and land title.  The leadership of the 
organization are old hands with Open Space; the President and I worked together 
for many years using Open Space in communities to galvanize leadership, and the 
interim CEO is a close friend and OST confidante.  These two gentlemen have 
been wanting the organization to adopt Open Space as their basic operating 
system for a year now, and they have hosted a couple of OST meetings within.  
Last week we did two OST meetings and some training to get things grounded even 
deeper. 

  The organization's interest in OST is both as its operational system and to 
use in communities to help leadership and community members do the work of 
governance.  The community work is interesting, but what I learned this week 
was more about how OST is used in a long term way within an organization. 

  For the last couple of years the organization has been in a developmental 
mode and it has focussed much on its structure, roles and responsibilities.  
Everything that is done is - technically - supposed to be in a workplan and 
supposed to be budgeted and accounted for.  However, the staff of the 
organization were finding that there was much work that needed to be done 
outside the plans and budgets that would make their formal work more effective 
- no surprise really but they discovered how critical this work is..  In an 
Open Space last year, the staff got quite turned on to the potential of the 
process to identify the "out of the budget" work that needed to be done.  A 
number of important projects were proposed and started but they had thin 
support from leadership and other pressing issues took over their time and 
attention.  Action waned and pessimism crept in. 

  Last week marked the initiation for a new CEO who is very interested in 
making sure there is time and space for staff to work on issues that support 
the culture and the relationships within the organization.  This group is 
spread wide and thin across Canada and so finding ways to work together 
virtually is important, especially to support action planning and follow up 
coming from what are becoming regular Open Space events.  So on Tuesday in a 
full day OST meeting about the operations of the organization, there were some 
excellent conversations on working as a network and supporting an 
organizational culture that is both responsible to the plan and budgets, but 
agile enough to be able to deal with unexpected opportunities.  Wednesday and 
Thursday we did some in house training and then Friday, hosted by three staff 
members, we opened space again for action planning on the sessions that were 
held on Tuesday.  People got right down to action plans, some of them creating 
gant charts and budget allocations.  All the action groups made commitments for 
what I call "next first steps" and the new CEO, recognizing the importance of 
what was unfolding in front of him invited the staff to make sure that everyone 
prioritized the work that came from the OST even over the other pressing issues 
they had waiting for them back at their offices.  He wanted to be sure that the 
results of the OST had the best possible chance for success even though they 
seemed not to be in the already approved workplans. 

  I wondered why this was, and we had a conversation along the following lines: 

  This group is using Open Space on a regular basis to take care of the work 
that is not in the workplans, not in the budget and not necessarily even 
directly a part of what their organization seems to be about. But what we 
learned this week is that Open Space, used in this way, takes care of the "bass 
notes" within an organization. There is a kind of deeper hum within every 
organization - call it the culture if you like, but it's more like a field - 
that supports the work, generates the working environment and connects to the 
purpose of each person. People who are highly satisfied with their jobs and 
organization will often feel connected to this deeper field. They resonate with 
the bass note, the fundamental note of the chord. When this note isn't present, 
it feels like work is not connected into a deeper pattern. Understand here that 
I am talking not about organizational purpose - it runs below that. It is more 
like organizational inspiration, operating at the level of the spirit of the 
place. Making Open Space part of the operating system of an organization 
results in tuning this bass note, or perhaps sounding it again. We have a 
chance to open space to breathe a little, get some distance from the mundane 
tasks of our job and ask some of the bigger questions about who we are and 
where the organization is going. 
  The folks in this organization are lucky that the upper leadership wants to 
see things working this way and has provided them with the time and resources 
both to meet in Open Space and to carry out the small projects starting next 
week that keep the bass note humming. And of course, we tuned up relationships 
as well, brought familiarity and warmth to an organization that is spread 
thinly across the whole country so that people can remember how we were when we 
were together, something that helps them continue to work virtually.

  Thought you'd like to know.   I'll post updates here as they progress.

  Chris

  -- 
  CHRIS CORRIGAN
  Facilitation - Training
  Open Space Technology

  Weblog: http://www.chriscorrigan.com/parkinglot
  Site: http://www.chriscorrigan.com

  Principal, Harvest Moon Consultants, Ltd.
  http://www.harvestmoonconsultants.com * * 
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