Thanks a lot! I particularly liked: “His 3 key questions for an org seeking to 
transform are: 1)  "what would leadership look like, if no one had any 'command 
authority'?

2) Does everyone have a voice in the decisions that affect them? 3) Can 
innovation arise from anyone, at any time?”  I can’t remember who “he” was, but 
the questions are brilliant. Useful questions always are...Brilliant! Had he 
added, “Command Authority is illusory.” (and maybe he did) – that would be the 
icing on the cake. To be sure, people have the “title”, and the “authorities” – 
but anybody who has ever “been there” knows that is not how things work. It is 
how some folks say they work. Some hope they work... but at the end of the day, 
“Command Authority is a paper tiger. 

 

Reminds me of a situation of some years back. I had recruited a 4 Star Admiral 
(soon to be retired) at the “Executive Director” of something called “The 
Future of Hampton Roads.” A large community based/regional development 
organization with just about 1.3 million people. At the time that was about how 
many people there were in the US Army. The Admiral asked me, “What I had gotten 
him into?” – and I said, “Sir, I think it is about like being in command of the 
US Army without a shred of formal authority.” His response? “Oh... Sounds just 
like my old job.

 

Great person, great leader.

 

Harrison

 

Ps – if you want the details check out 
http://openspaceworld.com/future_hampton.htm 

 

 

Winter Address

7808 River Falls Drive

Potomac, MD 20854

301-365-2093

 

Summer Address

189 Beaucaire Ave.

Camden, ME 04843

207-763-3261

 

Websites

www.openspaceworld.com

www.ho-image.com

OSLIST To subscribe, unsubscribe, change your options, view the archives of 
OSLIST Go 
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From: OSList [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Rosa 
Zubizarreta via OSList
Sent: Monday, November 24, 2014 9:49 AM
To: Ashley Cooper
Cc: World wide Open Space Technology email list
Subject: Re: [OSList] Fwd: reporting back from MIX...

 

Hi Ashley! 

Thanks for your question... great motivation to begin typing up a few notes.
Here are some of my favorites...


Vineet Nayar: (paraphrase) Key role of CEO is to say "I don't know" (and to 
really mean it!);
 to NOT have all the answers, so that others will have room to contribute.

(bit reminiscent of OS, no? :-) 

Core values of CEO: honesty, humility, openness, vulnerability. He started off 
a bit slowly in his talk,
and then really warmed up in a very powerful way. His book is called "Employees 
First, Customers Second." I've not read it yet, but I plan to...

Frederic Laloux: His book "Reinventing organizations" is good, and, I really 
enjoyed him as a speaker. 
'Hacking the decision-making process' as key, in all the transformative orgs 
he's studied;
offered a model of a "third way" betw. hierarchical decision-making & consensus 
decision-making . 

Calls it the "advice process"... seeking to expand the range of each person's 
self-discretionary activity, while at the same time,

creating opportunities for input and alignment. 

Also spoke about how "no hierarchy" does NOT mean flat, but that more precisely 
it means no "power" hierarchy;

no one holds power over another ('command authority'). "When you take out power 
hierarchies, lots of natural hierarchies appear, based on 
passion, contribution, skills, expertise, etc.  We all become both leaders as 
well as followers of someone else. 

His 3 key questions for an org seeking to transform are: 1)  "what would 
leadership look like, if no one had any 'command authority'?

2) Does everyone have a voice in the decisions that affect them? 3) Can 
innovation arise from anyone, at any time?

Heiko Fischer, Resourceful Humans -- What would it look like, if organizations 
were as creative as the people inside them? 

His main point was, ask your own people... "How would you organize, if you 
could organize this organization the way you want it to be?"

Offer them range of possibilities to start the conversation so that they can 
see a spectrum... yet each organization will need to find 
its own solutions, based on its unique character. 

Someone asked, "was it terrifying, to give up all that power?" He said, "YES! 
We had to fight our own demons, in order to surrender to what we knew we had to 
do. As soon as we let go, it all came together... "  

Described process of getting there, with one organization; began with doing 
constellation work with entire executive team, asking them to respond 
non-verbally to question "how clear is the CEO's vision to you?" by physically 
standing in different locations of room. How honest and shocking the responses 
were...  

>From that physical experience, was able to start an authentic conversation. 
>"We tend to focus on increasing motivation and increasing competency, but the 
>third leg of the stool, enabling, that is hugely important -- removing the 
>restrictions that are in the way of people doing what they already want to do, 
>and are already capable of doing. To do this, leader needs to surround 
>themselves with people who will honestly challenge him or her." 

James DeJuilo from Tongal was great  -- creativity set free, by crowd-sourcing 
filmed content...
a community that has a company attached to it, instead of the other way 
around... 

Helen Bevan and Jackie Lynton... very energizing.... crowdsourcing org change 
inside huge bureaucracy...

 

Leerom Segal and Jay Goldman from Klick Health -- "Technology Eats 
Bureaucracy"... 
creative applications of data and tech to empower people.

Book: "The Decoded Company" Collaboration software: Genome


and last but not least, my absolute fave...

Alanna Krause from Enspiral and Loomio. 

moving from the "tyranny of structurelessness", to tyranny-less structures...

Enspiral is network of social entrepreneurs, some of  whom developed Loomio 
(open-soutce collaboration software)

to support own transparent decision-making process, including collaborative 
budgeting.

Article: When Business Met Occupy: Innovating for True Collaborative 
Decision-Making 
<http://www.mixprize.org/story/when-business-met-occupy-innovating-true-collaborative-decision-making-and-true-empowerment>
 

main job of leaders: 1) give good ideas a place to go, and 
2) recognize and value facilitation.

***

Ok... that's it for now...

enjoy!

 




Rosa Zubizarreta

Diapraxis: Facilitating Creative Collaboration
http://www.diapraxis.com <http://www.diapraxis.com/> 

 

 

On Sun, Nov 23, 2014 at 11:32 AM, Ashley Cooper <[email protected]> wrote:

Rosa,

 

Thank you so much for this summary. Are there any talks that you would highly 
recommend that we watch?

 

Appreciatively,

Ashley

 

-- 

Ashley Cooper

​Co-Founder & ​

Learning Architect
 <http://www.mycelium.is/> www.mycelium.is


 

Now accepting APPLICATIONS for the Mycelium 12-week Winter Learning Journey. 
 <http://mycelium.is/learningjourney/> Find out more here.

 

 

On Sat, Nov 22, 2014 at 7:44 PM, Rosa Zubizarreta via OSList 
<[email protected]> wrote:

Hi all,

In spite of the old-style format, I found the MIX  
<http://mixmashup.org/mashup/events> to be an extremely inspiring gathering.

Below some extracts from an e-mail I wrote to a friend... 

***

The conference format was (almost) completely didactic, lecture-style, 
jam-packed, hardly any breaks. AND, as challenging as that was, the content 
itself was extraordinary, completely inspiring, beyond awesome. How's that for 
a contradiction?

The MIX folks are extremely bright, dedicated, and passionate about finding 
people and organizations that are totally breaking the mold with regard to new 
organizational forms. This includes young companies that started this way from 
scratch, as well as older companies that were originally hierarchical and have 
transformed in some significant way. They are doing their best to promote these 
organizations/networks/initiatives and their work.

 

So, great people from all over the world… successful non-hierarchical companies 
from all over the world….really good stuff! The MIX folks are aware that this 
work isn't completely new, that there have been innovative examples of 
successful non-hierarchical orgs at different times. At the same time, they 
also believe we are at a tipping point, where we need to have new 
organizational forms become much more widespread -- and, they are doing their 
best to help make that happen, through sharing the stories of successful 
examples, highlighting how each one is a unique journey, and pointing to 
underlying principles.

 

Very little room was allotted for participation from attendees, except during 
the lab day. At the same time, it was great to be hearing from the folks who 
have actually created these new organizations, or initiated change efforts 
within older organizations. It seemed that many of the presenters had actually 
opened space in their organizations in drastic ways, not as external 
consultants coming in but as founders and leaders and/or internal change 
agents. I was moved by their honesty and vulnerability, and by their openness 
in sharing their challenges and ups and downs and work-in-progress.

 

I can imagine the trade-offs the conference organizers may have been struggling 
with...  likely they wanted to offer as many of these stories as possible, yet 
at the same time were not wanting to make it a longer conference. Recently 
Chris shared a design on the AoH e-mail list, in a thread about working with 
experts, of having people work in ten different groups doing collective story 
harvests. Something like that could have been useful here, and/or useful for 
the next one-- especially if followed by a way for people to share the harvests 
with one another afterward. 

 

And, the organizers may or may not be ready for that... seems like there was 
some feedback about designing a more participatory event after the MashUp two 
years ago. Maybe it's still percolating? Anyway, what a fascinating mix we 
ourselves are as humans, such a bundle of gifts and challenges (still-unopened 
gifts), all mixed together! And all of us having so much to contribute, and so 
much to learn...

 

In sum, I found it a highly valuable experience, paradoxes and all, and very 
much appreciated the opportunity of meeting a community of passionate 
innovators, who share a deep respect for a diversity of perspectives and a 
diversity of paths...

 

with all best wishes,

 

Rosa

 




Rosa Zubizarreta

Diapraxis: Facilitating Creative Collaboration
http://www.diapraxis.com

 

 

 

 

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