Brandon Klein Brandon understands that better teams are fundamental to all of our success. As a global thought leader, ushering in the 'Future of Work' revolution, he paves the way using data + design to accelerate the Collaboration Revolution. Brandon is the Co-Founder of the software start-up, Collaboration.Ai and an active member of The Value Web, a non-profit committed to changing the way decisions are made to better impact our world. Jul 11

Self Organizing Teams

Problem

People will not be fully engaged to a topic they don’t feel passionate about or feel they are being forced into. They will announce that they don’t have all the expertise to solve a given problem, or find another way out of doing the real work required.

 

Solution

Sometimes the best way to “chunk” work is to allow the group to disassemble it themselves. This is one of the rationales of the synthesis conversation, to allow the participants to put it together, hence owning it.

You can also get interesting results by having people go to where they are most interested among a set of topic rooms during a museum tour kind of assignment.

The key here is to trust that the teams that need to get formed will get formed. The group will organize around the work that needs to get done, convince themselves that they can do it, and then make it happen. Attempts to manage this process will only get in the way.

Assignments should “guide”, not “direct”

 

breakout groups, chip saltsman, pattern language, self-organizing

Brandon Klein Brandon understands that better teams are fundamental to all of our success. As a global thought leader, ushering in the 'Future of Work' revolution, he paves the way using data + design to accelerate the Collaboration Revolution. Brandon is the Co-Founder of the software start-up, Collaboration.Ai and an active member of The Value Web, a non-profit committed to changing the way decisions are made to better impact our world.