Seems like convergence, action planning and carrying out the action was all wrapped up into 3 nanoseconds.
Way cool!
Greetings from Berlin
mmp

Harrison Owen wrote:
On the subject of Door Prizes - my very favorite happened when I was an
early teenager. Thirteen to be exact, and for all you parents out there --
that is just the beginning of The Trouble!
I had a birthday party to celebrate my 13th and I thought a Door Prize
sounded cool. We didn't use that word, "cool," that way in those days long
ago, but you get the picture. You also need to know that I loved animals of
all varieties, and usually had a small collection, much to my mother's
dismay.
My pride and joy was Sniffy - a cute little Skunk**. You guessed it. Sniffy
was the Door Prize, all wrapped up in a cozy box. The winner turned out to
be a precocious young lady (you know the kind -- 13 going on 25 - Way
Cool!). She got the box and squealed with delight - a scream that went up
several octaves when she opened it to reveal. . . SNIFFY, in all of his
radiant glory! Actually it was just the usual black and white Skunk, as he
had been "de-odorized." But when he appeared nobody knew his true status
(except for my very best friends who were sworn to secrecy).
Well - That Door Prize cleared the house. Everybody, I mean
e-v-e-r-y-b-o-d-y, - out the door.  Talk about building community. Loving
your neighbor, Caring for the down trodden. I have been trying to reform
ever since. But one thing for sure -- I, with the help of Sniffy, created a
lot of Open Space! But when it comes to convergence, I don't think I had the
proper instructions.
Harrison

** For those of you who do not live on the North American continent, and may
not be familiar with Skunks. . . They are very cute, very stupid, and VERY
SMELLY! One shot from that Skunk (they have a musk gland) will totally
destroy (not kill, but he wished he were dead) a very large dog. And that
dog, once sprayed is not allowed in the house for weeks. There is nothing
you can do. Washing just makes it worse.
Harrison Owen

7808 River Falls Drive

Potomac, Maryland   20854

Phone 301-365-2093

Skype hhowen

Open Space Training  <http://www.openspaceworld.com/> www.openspaceworld.com


Open Space Institute  <http://www.openspaceworld.org/>
www.openspaceworld.org

Personal website <http://www.ho-image.com/> www.ho-image.com
OSLIST: To subscribe, unsubscribe, change your options, view the archives
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-----Original Message-----
From: OSLIST [mailto:osl...@listserv.boisestate.edu] On Behalf Of Chris
Corrigan
Sent: Thursday, March 06, 2008 12:41 AM
To: osl...@listserv.boisestate.edu
Subject: Re: Convergence for Group Consensu

My gosh...what a thing it would be to win a door in a door prize drawing.

Sorry.

Yes, a door prize is a common incentive at conferences and such.  Basically
anyone who comes through the door at an event is issued a ticket and at the
end of an event, a draw is held for small prizes.  It results in a peculiar
dynamic whereby a number is read out, one person cheers, 160 people groan
and everyone makes a quick recovery and congratulates the victor on their
skillful acquisition of a T-shirt that is too big for them.

You might not be aware of it, but we North Americans have some peculiar
customs.

:-)

Chris

On Wed, Mar 5, 2008 at 11:13 AM, avner <avn...@zahav.net.il> wrote:

How didn`t I think about it Michael?

Avner


----- Original Message -----
From: "Michael M Pannwitz" <mmpa...@boscop.org>
To: <osl...@listserv.boisestate.edu>

Sent: Wednesday, March 05, 2008 8:54 PM
Subject: Re: Convergence for Group Consensu


come on avner, thats simple:
you look in the catalogue of doors and find out how much that door costs,
that is the door prize,
then you draw (write) the prize of the door on the door
got it?
mmp

avner wrote:
Chris, what is a `door prize drawing`?, for us the non english speakers?

Avner
  ----- Original Message -----
  From: Diane Gibeault To: osl...@listserv.boisestate.edu Sent:
Wednesday, March 05, 2008 6:43 PM
  Subject: Re: Convergence for Group Consensu


  Hadn't thought of that Chris. The door prize is a fun way to reconnect
with the more free and playful part of OS and might take the edge off
this more structured part of OS. Diane

   From: OSLIST [mailto:osl...@listserv.boisestate.edu] On Behalf Of
Chris Corrigan
  Sent: 4 mars 2008 21:12
  To: osl...@listserv.boisestate.edu
  Subject: Re: Convergence for Group Consensu

   That's a very cool way to do it Diane.  could combine it with a door
prize drawing as well (also very common in Aboriginal community meetings
...:-)  )

  Thanks for this.

  chris

  On Tue, Mar 4, 2008 at 11:13 AM, Diane Gibeault
<diane.gibea...@rogers.com> wrote:

  Hi Kim,

   When looking for the general directions the majority of a group wishes
to take after discussions in Open Space, here is an option similar to dot
voting but with less peer influence on the results. That may not always
be important but when it is, the following alternative helps. Canadian
aboriginal people shared with us this technique for compiling votes - or
points of the survey as I now call it (Vote would imply decision making
by participants when often, it is the leadership group that decides and
confirms after the survey, that priorities proposed by participants are
effectively a go for action planning given resources, context etc.).

   Their way is very quick and simple: tickets in envelopes attached to
each report on the wall. They prefer this method since the individual
choices are less influenced by the number of points (or votes) others
have given to a topic report for the simple reason that the points are
not visible.

   Participants read the Book of Reports identifying at the same time
their top priorities and combining identical topics with the initiators'
consent. After the combinations have been announced by the facilitation
team, as people walk out through each of the aisles in the circle, they
are handed a strip of tickets (e.g. 5 tickets).  They place their tickets
in envelopes attached under each report on the wall. Then, participants
are invited to go to a report - not their own - count results, mark the
total on the envelope attached to the report. One volunteer per report
remains at the wall for the announcement of results. When counting is all
done, the facilitator asks if any report has the maximum number of points
a report could receive (e.g., same number as the number of participants
when it's one vote per person per report), and then goes down by 10 until
someone shouts that their report is in that range. As report numbers and
titles are announced volunteers note them on flip charts to capture the
priorities of the group. This approach was used with several OS events of
450 people and it works wonderfully.

    Diane

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  CHRIS CORRIGAN
  Facilitation - Training - Process Design
  Open Space Technology

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

  Principal, Harvest Moon Consultants, Ltd.
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