Collaboration Revolution - Advancing Collaboration for the Future of Work - Blog & Research

Simple Coffee Collaboration & Meetings

Written by Brandon Klein | Jul 11, 2011 1:44:16 PM

We rarely talk about the chemical side of collaboration, but it is probably one of the most important factors for your collaboration success. Here are two relatively recent examples that need to be shared. 

1. Coffee CSA - This is one of the best examples of collaboration. Not only because of the way it connects businesses and consumers, but because it is arguably one of the most effective ways of collaboratively combating poverty. Spending $20 a month on coffee buying direct from an Ethiopian farmer is probably (can anyone prove this? Cash reward offered!) more effective that $2,000 cash to any charity claiming to do good work in the same geographic region.

+ One farmer's fair trade sustained income can keep a family of 10 out of food assistance for life

-  The average charity project is 3 years

+ An employed farmer can buy books and uniforms to send his/her kids to school for life

- The average charity projects is just 3 years

+ The average farmer needs to transport his product and therefore supports roads and commerce

- The average charity has their own SUV's for foreigners to visit

 

The coffee CSA literally lets you choose which farmer you want to buy your beans from. They are then delivered every month to satisfy your caffeinated persuasion. This particular CSA just made it big time in the NY Times

 

2. There have been some pretty substantial reports/studies into the effectiveness of coffee. Here is an inforgraphic well worth looking at.  This is a chart from the Canadian Department of National Defense that depicts the effectiveness of the little bean on soldiers in action. Pretty amazing! 

The effects of 200 mg of caffeine versus either a placebo or a non treatment control condition on target detection response time over 3 hours of a simulated sentry duty task. From Johnson and Merullo, 2000.

And down-under, they have taken this bean to the heart of corporate culture- meetings:
That study, titled “Caffeine, Cognition, and Persuasion: Evidence for Caffeine Increasing the Systematic Processing of Persuasive Messages” found that coffee increases mental alertness, focus and concentration. This heightening of mental capacity allows people to open up, process and understand the ideas being discussed during a coffee meeting. (Study by researcher Pearl Martin of the University of Queensland in Australia) 
Instead of reading the report however, I would recommend heading over to Lifehacker and read their in depth report that is easy to understand what caffeine actually does to you and your meetings!