Hi Christine,

Thank you for your kind note. I love your story of French Open Space!

I am very encouraged by your narrative of Orange Business Services in France. Let us gather these stories from throughout the world, and socialize them, celebrate them, and publicize them without delay.

With that in mind, I would love to share this very French story of Orange Business Services at the Scrum Gathering keynote in Paris. Do you think Rafael can be contacted to share some pictures of these events, and the wider narrative? If he allows, I am happy to share this story. Will you contact him and explore the idea?

In the USA there have been some reports of uses of Open Space here and there. However there is no known body of knowledge or known A-B-C procedure for applying Open Space to the work of adopting Agile. And so in Paris I plan to enumerate Steps which I know to work, from some experience.

The spirit in most workplaces is quite dead. Open Space can help it come alive. I think that in Agile adoptions, the **mandate** of practices promotes a kind of down-spirit, while the act of **invitation** lifts the spirit.

I think that THIS is what we might need to communicate: that **invitation** is the name of the new game. And also that Open Space is where leaders can learn how **invitation** can generate much better results through much more engagement. And how Open Space helps let this happen...


Open Agile Adoption and Liminality

The hypothesis is that Agile creates an endless flow of destabilizing liminality, complete with large and ongoing feelings of fear, worry, and triggering anxiety. Everyone involved (leaders, managers, workers) experience this triggering anxiety together. And not just when Agile is 1st introduced. Genuine Agile produces a huge amount of continuous learning & therefore continuous change.

A core hypothesis of Open Agile Adoption is that continuous learning creates continuous liminality.

If this is true, then we already know what to do: we must borrow the concept of the passage rite from cultural anthropology, and put it to work. This is a core idea found in the Open Agile Adoption technique.

References:

On Liminality: http://newtechusa.net/agile/liminality/
On Passage Rites: http://newtechusa.net/agile/on-passage-rites/
On Invitation: http://newtechusa.net/agile/people-then-practices/


The Game

The goal:
To transform the world of work. In a big way. Beyond software!
To get rid of "down-spirit" and encourage "up-spirit."
We often call this state of being "genuine engagement at work."

The best strategy for playing that I can think of now, goes like this:

1/ Use Open Space to address the absolutely huge opening of opportunity presented by failed Agile adoptions.

2/ Demonstrate an absolutely dramatic improvement in Agile adoption results, when and where Open Space is utilized

3/ Notice that about 40% of the people attending Open Space meetings in Agile adoptions are people from the business side who do connect in some way with Information Tech.

Now, these business people are THE BRIDGE into the wider system of the business organization. So if we do an amazing job of improving Agile adoptions, we may then be invited to come and play bigger. And well beyond software. I have some experience with this already!

So the 1st step is to make a very big impact inside the IT/Agile adoption space. Then, onward from there. Agile adoptions represent the biggest opening of opportunity, now.


What We Might Do Next

We do have a very tough road ahead of us. The emerging approach to create a genuine movement toward widespread use of Open Space inside Agile adoptions seems to have these elements:

1/ Gather Stories: Gather stories from throughout the world about the use of Open Space to assist success in Agile adoptions

2/ Tell Stories: Tell these existing stories in specific places where Agile people gather (online venues and conference events)

3/ Provide Tools: Provide the tools now, that people need to do this themselves (A-B-C guidance and access to skilled Facilitation)

4/ Celebrate Results: Publicize (by being wise in the leveraged use of social media)

5/ Release It: Help it happen and then Let-It-Happen, without trying too hard

Whew, this got kind of long. Thanks again for your note! And

Kind Regards,
Dan




On 8/20/13 6:07 AM, christine koehler wrote:
Hi Dan

Congratulations for your lovely buddha grand-daughter !

Thank you for your story. As a French Open Space practitioner who heard for so many years that French and Open Space were not made to get together, I am always happy to hear exactely opposite stories ;-) Today as Michael Pannwitz says, we are the most fast growing community in the Open Space World.

Now I can tell you the story of Open Space and Agile in France.. Indeed it's an old love story :

In 2004, a small and diverse group of people launched the Open Space Institute of France. One of them was an engineer, and had already adopted agility : Raphael Pierquin. So, the first Open Space event in the IT community in France was held for Orange Business Services, a subsidiary of our historical telecommunication corporation France Telecom, after Raphael introduced there Agility. This happened in 2005 I think. Since that he organizes each year the Agile Open gathering using Open Space and the software company he co-founded is run with Open Space principles. When in 2009 I co-organized with Luc Bizeul the first European Open Space on Open Space, half of the participants were agile folks.

My guess is that this explains why the core members of the French Agile community are quite familiar with Open Space and that you got retweeted from over here :-).

These days as I personaly want to understand more about agility, but if possible concretely and not from books (and also not from software development as I am not a tech lady), I joined a group of a dozen Agile people who are wondering why agile principles don't go further and transform organizations : they/we form the Stoos movement. One of the organizer of your French training on OpenAgileAdoption after the Scrum gathering in Paris is Oana Juncu, who belongs to this group. We live in a small world.

I'd be happy to connect the Agile/Scrum/OpenSpace communities from France and abroad on Sunday, sept 22, just before the Scrum Gathering starts. Invitation is on its way, and it looks I need to find a bigger place already.. Thank you Suzanne for encouraging me to do that.
I'll post more details soon.

Hope to meet you there

Christine



On Thu, Jul 25, 2013 at 6:38 PM, Daniel Mezick <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

    Good morning OST-List!

    I am Daniel Mezick, probably someone you never heard of.


    I'm an executive & Agile coach that seeks (and occasionally
    obtains) work in that section of the USA between NYC and Boston. I
    live in CT. I have a story to tell you...and an invitation...


    Open and Agile

    ...about 4 years ago I start experimenting with Open Space, using
    it inside public www.AgileBoston.org <http://www.AgileBoston.org>
    conference events. I study OST more. In 2010 we at Agile Boston
    innovate by getting the 80-page proceeding from a large public OST
    event rendered to a PDF and shipped to all participants in less
    than 24 hours. (We employ a rapid transcription service to render
    the per-session outputs to text and images, then create a WORD doc
    and PDF.)

    I actually did not know what the hell I was doing. I just knew it
    was a generally good idea to socialize Open Space in Boston.

    Little do I know...

    In late 2010, by Googling around I discover the free-download PDF
    of the SPIRIT book by HO. Reading that changes everything for me.
    I realize that OST is really about development and transformation
    in organizations, NOT simply for public conferences and general
    education. (This is how the "Agile community" currently uses Open
    Space.)

    As a consultant to organizations, I realize that the SPIRIT book
    for some reason is completely overlooked by the Agile community,
    and that this book had the seeds of success in it. The "secret
    sauce". I begin experimenting with bringing Open Space meetings
    into my Agile coaching engagements. The basic hypothesis is that
    the introduction of change (Agile in this case) creates alarming
    levels of anxiety and worry. And, that Open Space might actually
    help reduce worry and fear.

    From late 2010 to the present day, I begin experimenting with
    using Open Space in service to rapid and lasting Agile adoptions.
    By diving into this work with willing clients, I begin to realize
    the power of Open Space... with them. We find that we can reduce
    the anxiety of change via the power and mystery of "invitation." I
    begin to study and build upon work from Ed Seykota ("testing for
    willingness"), Michael Herman ("invitation"), Harrison Owen (the
    SPIRIT book), others.

    In 2011 I do a few more experiments and begin pulling ideas from
    cultural anthropology (Victor Turner), from positive psychology
    (Tony Hsieh's application of Martin Seligman's work) and from the
    art and science of game design (Jane McGonigal).

    In 2012 I write THE CULTURE GAME (www.TheCultureGame.com
    <http://www.TheCultureGame.com>), a book about how to help your
    organization get smarter. At this point I have worked with OST in
    more than a few organizations. In that book I write a chapter,
    chapter 21, and give it the title "Open The Space". That chapter
    contains several "easter eggs" which a few astute readers find and
    begin using. I start to get emails from around the world about
    that chapter. In that chapter I reference many of Harrison's
    works, I disclose some of the Open Agile Adoption technique.In
    that chapter, I specifically provide the link to the SPIRIT book.

    By late 2012, I have confirmation of several hypotheses. The first
    is that without engagement, we have nothing. That seems very
    obvious, yet the current Agile literature has little or nothing to
    say about the role of engagement in effective Agile adoptions.
    Second is that there is no engagement without /psychological
    safety/ sufficient /_to_/ engage. Third, safety (and a general
    sense of well-being) is a largely a function of creating an
    "inviting structure". By structure I mean: a clear goal, or
    purpose...and a clear set of rules...and a great, always-on
    feedback system and the big one..."opt-in participation".

    I started ranting on Twitter and on my blog about how "mandated
    collaboration" in Agile adoptions is at best misguided. How
    mandated practices may be...harmful. Remember by this point I have
    my experience and case data. I am speaking from some experience.

    At first, no one seemed to hear me. But after a while, I start
    getting ReTweets a lot. And people started talking back to me from
    around the world and there is conversation. Questions. Insights. I
    start connecting with all kinds of people around this idea. Some
    of the ReTweets are from people with French names who Tweet in
    French AND English.


    So here I am with this more-than-pretty-good technique that
    incorporates Open Space. And I am kind of feeding out provocative
    questions about Agile coaching, and talking a lot about
    invitation, and about the futility of mandates...I also make some
    radical assertions. This goes on for a while.

    Then I got this interesting invitation.

    It's an invite to come and /keynote/ the Global ScrumGathering in
    Paris France in September of 2013. The invite is from some of
    those French people who ReTweet my Tweets. They tell me I can talk
    about absolutely anything I deem important, and ask me to "come
    and play" with them.

    It takes me about 2 minutes to make up my mind. As soon as this
    happens, I know it is one of these providential-type events that
    becomes a defining moment. I gather up all my notes and start
    crafting the speech. I also immediately contact Harrison Owen, and
    bring all my work and notes up to his place in Camden to talk, and
    explain OAA with Open Space to him, and seek his guidance. That
    was back in early July.

    And so: here we are. I'm going over there to Paris to talk about
    Open Agile Adoption with Open Space to six hundred Agile and Scrum
    practitioners. Many of them are coaches. The OAA technique
    incorporates OST, storytelling, play, and some ancient and proven
    tribal patterns for managing change, specifically the /rite of
    passage/ pattern.

    There is a list of links at the bottom of this note, so you can
    get a sense of what I am presenting. Over July and August I am
    planning to explain the whole technique to you and everyone else,
    holding back the case data and the toolkit until 9/24 in Paris,
    when I deliver the actual speech. On that day, the toolkit and all
    the tools become free to the world via an open source license and
    a free download. The intent is to provide a body of work that
    others can immediately use and more importantly, improve upon.

    We know that people are only 25 or 30 percent engaged at work.
    (see related link below.) Open Space is a profoundly useful way to
    double or even triple engagement from there. The hypothesis of
    Open Agile Adoption is that /a safe space is required for true
    group learning/ to take root. And that Open Space is the primary
    tool for constructing that kind of place.

    The keynote address is designed to resonate before and after the
    event. Before the event, INFOQ.com is publishing articles, videos
    and interviews on Open Agile Adoption. During the event, the
    speech will be transcribed, videotaped and recorded by the Scrum
    Alliance. After the event these Scrum Alliance artifacts will be
    available to anyone in the world via the Scrum Alliance. Also
    after the event I plan to make the case data and Open Agile
    Adoption toolkit free to the world, such that anyone with "a good
    head and a good heart" can do it and do it well.

    I'm taking a page from Harrison's playbook, and from his ethos,
    choosing to make the entire body of know-how free to the world.
    I'm hoping that Open Agile Adoption (and derivatives) become the
    standard for implementing more rapid and lasting Agile adoptions...

    ...Not everyone is likely to be happy if this comes true. The Open
    Space element has the potential to radically reduce the amount of
    Agile coaching that is actually needed to get a rapid and lasting
    Agile adoption. That reduces billable hours!

    Further (and of far more interest to you) is the idea that skilled
    OST Facilitators are required to execute well with the Open Agile
    Adoption technique. This has the potential to open up new demand
    for those here with deep OST skills and experience.

    There is clear potential for a certain "changing of the guard" in
    Agile adoptions worldwide. There is potential for disruption...and
    maybe a little bit of chaos.

    After the Paris Scrum Gathering, I plan to offer short, plain-talk
    seminars in how to do Open Agile Adoption. I do not plan to teach
    Open Space facilitation in detail, because others in this
    community are already doing this very well, and also because there
    is more to Open Agile Adoption that just Open Space. There are
    elements of storytelling, elements of a passage rite, elements of
    gaming, play and more. I plan to teach the overall OAA technique
    to people who want to learn it. In France in September, I am
    teaching two ½ day seminars on 9/26 and 9/28 after the Scrum
    Gathering. When I return I plan to continue teaching in the United
    States.

    I am asking for help. Will you help me socialize the idea that
    Open Space is essential for creating rapid and lasting Agile
    adoptions?

    You can help in the following ways:

    0/ Be playful, and help me refine and improve Open Agile Adoption
    with others

    1/ Learn more about OAA via the provided links below. Then, ask me
    questions.

    2/ Tell me if you offer Open Space training courses, and send me
    your info, so I can promote your course to Open Agile Adoption
    practitioners. If you are a Facilitator for hire, I want to talk
    to you!

    3/ Examine the work, and provide feedback as I disclose it over
    the next month.

    4/ Sign up for the Facebook group Open Agile Adoption via this
    link: https://www.facebook.com/groups/204037609756665/

    5/ Help me get in front of Agile audiences to the extent you can.
    This year I am speaking on Open Agile Adoption with Open Space at
    these events (in date order):

    8/7/13: session, Agile2013

    9/24/13: keynote, Global Scrum Gathering, Paris

    11/6/13: keynote, Agile Tour, Quebec City Quebec CA

    I hope you like this story,

    and I hope you want it to continue,

    and I hope want to help write it.

    I am inviting you to come and do that. Will you join me with
    others in writing the next chapter of the Open Agile Adoption story?


    I hope you will consider doing exactly that.

    Kind Regards,

    Daniel Mezick

    www.DanielMezick.com <http://www.DanielMezick.com>

    [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>

    203 915 7248

    Related Links:

    GALLUP Link on (dis) engagement

    /$350 billion per year in lost productivity./

    
http://businessjournal.gallup.com/content/247/the-high-cost-of-disengaged-employees.aspx

    SPIRIT Link (Harrison Owen book)

    http://www.openspaceworld.com/Spirit.pdf

    Open Agile Adoption Link

    www.OpenAgileAdoption.com <http://www.OpenAgileAdoption.com>

    Mandated Collaboration Link

    http://newtechusa.net/agile/the-recipe-for-botched-agile-adoptions/

    Scrum Gathering Link (click 'keynotes' and then click "right arrow"...

    
http://www.scrumalliance.org/courses-events/events/global-gatherings/2013/paris-2013

    Agile2013 Link

    http://www.agilequebec.ca/nouvelles/agile-tour-2013-keynote/

    Agile Tour Quebec City keynote Link

    http://www.agilequebec.ca/nouvelles/agile-tour-2013-keynote/

    Open Agile Adoption Group on Facebook

    https://www.facebook.com/groups/204037609756665/


--
    Daniel Mezick, President

    New Technology Solutions Inc.

    (203) 915 7248 (cell)

    Bio <http://newtechusa.net/dan-mezick/>. Blog
    <http://newtechusa.net/blog/>. Twitter
    <http://twitter.com/#%21/danmezick/>.

    Examine my new book:The Culture Game
    <http://newtechusa.net/about/the-culture-game-book/>: Tools for
    the Agile Manager.

    Explore Agile Team Training
    <http://newtechusa.net/services/agile-scrum-training/> and
    Coaching. <http://newtechusa.net/services/agile-scrum-coaching/>

    Explore the Agile Boston
    <http://newtechusa.net//user-groups/ma/>Community.


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--

Christine Koehler, créatrice d'espace de Dialogue et de Coopération
 Executive Coach, Médiateur
www.christine-koehler.fr <http://www.christine-koehler.fr/>
 Tel :  06 13 28 71 38
  Fax : 09 72  32 36  65
New ! Formation 20/06/2013 De l'évènement au Processus <http://christine-koehler.fr/2013/formation-de-levenement-au-processus-avril-2013/>




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To post send emails [email protected]
To unsubscribe send an email [email protected]
To subscribe or manage your subscription click below:
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--

Daniel Mezick, President

New Technology Solutions Inc.

(203) 915 7248 (cell)

Bio <http://newtechusa.net/dan-mezick/>. Blog <http://newtechusa.net/blog/>. Twitter <http://twitter.com/#%21/danmezick/>.

Examine my new book:The Culture Game <http://newtechusa.net/about/the-culture-game-book/>: Tools for the Agile Manager.

Explore Agile Team Training <http://newtechusa.net/services/agile-scrum-training/> and Coaching. <http://newtechusa.net/services/agile-scrum-coaching/>

Explore the Agile Boston <http://newtechusa.net//user-groups/ma/>Community.

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