Impact Networks
@tags:: #litā/šbook/highlights
@links:: community, community building, networks, network stewardship,
@ref:: Impact Networks
@author:: David Ehrlichman
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Reference
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Notes
Preface
This book is about how to cultivate impact networks that enable diverse groups of people to connect, coordinate, and collaborate within and across organizations to do more together than is possible alone.
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Collaborative networks may be called many things: associations, alliances, coalitions, collaborations, collective impact initiatives, consortia, and more.
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- collaborative networks,
- [note::"Interested in collaborative networks" - I'd like to include this in my website bio/mission statement"]
Monitor Institute, the social sector wing of a global management consulting firm.
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Building Smart Communities through Network Weaving, by Valdis Krebs and June Holley, a white paper about how we can strengthen our communities by recognizing and cultivating the networks of connections that underlie them.
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handbook Net Gains, by Peter Plastrik and Madeleine Taylor, an early resource for network builders seeking social change.
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RE-AMP Network, a massive collaboration of more than one hundred organizations working to reduce greenhouse gas emissions across the midwestern United States;
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We have been fortunate to partner with more than fifty different impact networks in the past ten years, and through these experiences we started to notice consistent patterns among networks, even when their context and focus varied widely. While the whys and whats were unique to each network, the howsāthe principles and processes used to create themāwere quite consistent.
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Introduction
Our Complex World
The Cynefin framework is helpful in differentiating simple, complicated, complex, and chaotic issues:2 Simple issues can be definitively solved, with a clear beginning and end, such as cooking a meal. Complicated issues involve many moving parts, but they can be defined and understood. They are technical in nature, with predictable solutions that can be implemented effectively by people with the right expertise.3 Planning and implementing the logistical operations for an event is complicated but not complex. Complex issues are difficult to define, as they have no clear beginning or end. They also have no readily apparent solution, and we cannot accurately predict the path ahead. Consequently, we have to be able to adapt to changing circumstances and modify strategies as we learn what works and what does not. An example of a complex challenge is equitably eliminating greenhouse gas emissions across a large region. We will return to this issue later. Chaotic issues, like their complex counterparts, cannot be accurately predicted or controlled. They are also turbulent, dangerous, and rapidly evolving. Chaotic situationsāsuch as a humanitarian disasterāoften require that we act quickly to save lives or tend to emergencies before working to establish some sense of order. They call for a rapid response to distribute information and resources to where they are needed most, before addressing the underlying issues.
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Most people love the idea of collaborationĀ .Ā .Ā .Ā as long as it promises to do exactly what they want it to do. But that is not how collaboration works. Collaboration (as we talk about it) is not forced or coerced. It requires you to give up control. And because itās not predetermined, it requires you to give up certainty.
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- collaboration, 1socialpost-queue,
We need collaborative structures that are flexible enough to shift on a momentās notice, that are resilient enough to withstand turbulence and disruption, and that bring people together as equals to share leadership and decision-making.
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Organizing for Complexity
RE-AMP Network, a collection of more than 140 organizations and foundations working across sectors to equitably eliminate greenhouse gas emissions across nine midwestern states by 2050.
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- 1action, network stewardship, 1resource/network,
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100Kin10 is a massive collaborative effort that is bringing together more than three hundred academic institutions, nonprofits, foundations, businesses, and government agencies to train and support one hundred thousand science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) teachers across the United States in ten years.
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Justice in Motion Defender Network is a collection of human rights defenders and organizations in Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador, and Nicaragua that have joined together to help migrants quickly obtain legal assistance across borders.
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the Clean Electronics Production Network (CEPN). CEPN brings together many of the worldās top technology suppliers and brands with labor and environmental advocates, governments, and other leading experts to move toward elimination of workersā exposure to toxic chemicals in electronics production.
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Impact networks build on the life force of communityāshared principles, resilience, self-organization, and trustāwhile leveraging the advantages of an effective organization, including a common aim, an operational backbone, and a bias for action. Through this unique blend of qualities, impact networks increase the flow of information, reduce waste, and align strategies across entire systemsāall while liberating the energy of multiple actors operating at a variety of scales.
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In the Pages Ahead
You can find all these and more in the Converge Network Toolkit, hosted at converge.net. There you will find a library of free tools and facilitation guides, color versions of the network maps contained in this book, invitations to learning experiences, and opportunities to connect and share with other network leaders.
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Part 1, āWorking Through Networks,ā provides an overview of what networks are and how they work. Chapter 1, āThe Web of Change,ā introduces the different forms of impact networks and explores two case studies illustrating how networks develop and grow their impact over time. Chapter 2, āThe Network Mindset,ā defines the core tenets of the network approach, how networks and hierarchies are distinct yet related, and how working through networks changes the way we think of leadership and strategy. Chapter 3, āMaking Networks Work,ā expands further on the primary forms of impact networks, with diagrams explaining how they are structured. It also summarizes the process of cultivating impact networks, outlining five core activities that are expanded in detail in part 2. Chapter 4, āNetwork Leadership,ā describes four network leadership roles along with four fundamental principles of network leadership: foster self-organization, promote emergence, embrace change, and hold dynamic tensions. Part 2, āCultivating Impact Networks,ā dives deeply into five core activities of impact networks, offering a practical guide for network leaders. Chapter 5, āClarify Purpose and Principles,ā describes how to catalyze a new impact network, find common purpose, and define shared principles to guide networks as they evolve. Chapter 6, āConvene the People,ā explores who to bring together and offers key considerations for designing and facilitating transformative network gatherings. Chapter 7, āCultivate Trust,ā provides practices for weaving connections, deepening trust, and holding courageous conversations. Chapter 8, āCoordinate Actionsā contains tactics for accelerating the flow of information across a network, practicing reciprocity, and responding to moments of crisis. Chapter 9, āCollaborate for Systems Change,ā describes practices for making sense of a system and identifying high-potential areas for action. It also presents pathways for catalyzing systemic change, including shifting social norms and growing a movement. Chapter 10, āThe Enabling Infrastructure,ā concludes the body of the book with practical advice on how to structure an impact network, how to craft agreements for participation, how to make decisions collectively, how to embed evaluation to generate key learnings that will inform the networkās development, and how to resource networks, including pivotal practices for network funders.
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working through networks
The Web of Change
Impact networks take three primary forms: learning networks, action networks, and movement networks. Each form is best suited for a particular function. Learning networks are focused on connection and learning. They are formed to facilitate the flow of information or knowledge to advance collective learning on a particular issue. Action networks are focused on connection, learning, and action. They are formed to facilitate connection and learning in service of coordinated action. Movement networks link many other learning and action networks together, creating a network-of-networks. While they often function much like a learning or action network at their core, movement networks also facilitate information sharing and coordinate actions among multiple different networks for a common aim.
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Networks for Impact
Relationships: The Heart of Networks
Relationships are at the heart of everything that impact networks accomplish. From two decades of research on networks and other multistakeholder collaborations, Jane Wei-Skillern of the Haas School of Business at the University of California, Berkeley, finds that āthe single most important factor behind all successful collaborations is trust-based relationships among participants. Many collaborative efforts ultimately fail to reach their full potential because they lack a strong relational foundation.ā
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In the absence of relationships, effective collaboration is not possible.
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The Network Mindset
The network mindset is captured most succinctly by four principles championed by Jane Wei-Skillern.3 Leaders who have adopted a network mindset focus on the following: ā¢ Scaling impact, not growing their organization or function ā¢ Being part of an interconnected system, not the center of it ā¢ Sharing leadership and credit with peers, not hoarding power or trying to be a hero ā¢ Building trust-based relationships, not systems of control
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The Hierarchical Mindset
hierarchical structures are a poor choice for multistakeholder collaborations. By holding on to control, the people at the top of hierarchies limit the self-organizing potential of the rest of the system. By maintaining a rigid structure that ranks some people over others, hierarchies create unequal access to information and power, which erodes trust. And in collaborative environments, there is often no central authority or shared governing body capable of directing the many diverse stakeholder groups involved. Or worse, there is a single point of command whose response imposes too much bureaucracy and fails to incorporate the diverse perspectives required to navigate complexity.
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- [note::Shortcomings of hierarchical structures. What are the strengths? Decision-making agility?]
Networks and Hierarchies, Together
In a heterarchy, formal power and decision-making is distributedānobody has a baked-in, structural advantage over others. At the same time, some people may have more influence than others on specific issues based on their knowledge, experience, or role.
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Making the Mindset Shift
Hierarchical Mindset Network Mindset Mechanistic worldview Living systems worldview System seen as a hierarchical pyramid System seen as a web of interactions Organization at the center of focus Purpose at the center of focus Top-down, directive leadership Distributed, servant leadership Centralized decision-making Collective decision-making Impulse to command and control Impulse to connect and collaborate Information restricted Information shared Task oriented Relationship oriented Bias toward deliberate strategy Embrace of emergent strategy Distinctions between the hierarchical mindset and the network mindset.
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Self-organizing happens when people are invited to notice and act on opportunities based on their own judgment. When people are free to try new things, initiate experiments, and connect and collaborate with others from across the system, networks become āleader-ful.
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self-organizing potential of a network is fostered by servant leaders (to borrow a term coined by Robert Greenleaf11) who cultivate the conditions for connection, learning, and action to arise.
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Making Networks Work
Primary Forms of Impact Networks
Learning Networks
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(the process of determining participation criteria is known as bounding a network
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Participants may also form learning circles, gathering together to hold conversations, share knowledge, and collect information on a specific topic related to the networkās purpose.
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Action Networks
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Action networks have been called many things, including alliances, coalitions, collective impact initiatives, consortiums, innovation networks, and more.
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Movement Networks
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Core Activities of Impact Networks
The work of cultivating and sustaining impact networks involves five core activities. For ease of reference, they are referred to as the āFive Csā: ā¢ Clarify purpose and principles ā¢ Convene the people ā¢ Cultivate trust ā¢ Coordinate actions ā¢ Collaborate for systems change
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I. Clarify Purpose and Principles
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Due to their self-organizing nature, impact networks cannot be controlled. They can, however, be oriented toward a shared purpose. This is how they stay coherent even as they grow. Purpose is āthe invisible leader,ā writes Samantha Slade, author of Going Horizontal
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II. Convene the People
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III. Cultivate Trust
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Although it is widely accepted that trusting relationships are beneficial when it comes to collaboration, the common assumption is that trust is a by-product of other activities and that it takes a long time to develop. Rather than deliberately building trust, the norm is to focus on getting to action and letting relationships develop naturally over time. However, we have consistently found that trust is the single most important factor behind successful impact networks; networks move at the speed of trust.4 Therefore, trust should be deliberately nurtured from the outset of a networkās development.
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IV. Coordinate Actions
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V. Collaborate for Systems Change
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The puzzle metaphor exemplifies three conditions that make a network approach so valuable: ā¢ Local knowledge: People are engaged with different parts of the system, with expertise in their piece of the puzzle. ā¢ Separation: People are disconnected and unable or unwilling to share knowledge and resources with one another. ā¢ Complexity: The system is more complex than anyone can grasp on their own. Only by bringing the pieces together can groups make sense of the whole puzzle.
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Cultivating the Conditions for Networks to Thrive
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To answer this question, itās helpful to think of networks as like a garden. Unlike machines, which can be built to exact specifications, gardens cannot be forced to grow in a certain way. No two gardens are exactly the same, because every plant grows in relationship with its neighbors, soil, and climate. Itās also not possible to grow a garden overnight: it takes time for the plants to develop, no matter how much attention you give them.
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- [note::Same analogy used in "Cultivating Community"]
Network Leadership
Network leadership is rooted in trusting relationships, collaboration, and shared power; it is adaptive, facilitative, and grounded in the wisdom of living systems. Network leadership is also distributedāanyone can demonstrate network leadership, from wherever they are, in many different ways. This more inclusive understanding of leadership inspires self-organization and provides a source of creative potential that makes networks such a powerful vehicle for innovation and change.
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Network Leadership Roles
we see four primary leadership roles that appear at different moments in a networkās life cycle: catalyzing, facilitation, weaving, and coordination: ā¢ Catalyzing is the art of crafting a vision and inspiring action. Catalysts are particularly instrumental in forming new networks: they bring people together for the first time to explore the potential and get the effort off the ground. Once a network is launched, catalyzing continues to be needed to organize new project teams, raise resources, and foster new opportunities to expand the networkās impact. ā¢ Facilitation is about guiding participants through group processes to find common ground and collaborate with one another. Facilitators design and lead convenings, hold space for different points of view, and help conversations flow. ā¢ Weaving involves fostering new connections and deepening relationships. Weavers engage with participants to gather input, introduce participants to each other to inspire self-organization, and build bridges with new communities to help the network grow. ā¢ Coordination is the work of organizing the networkās internal systems and structures to enable participants to share information and advance collective work. Coordinators establish and maintain network operations, support knowledge management, and assist network teams.
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Principles of Network Leadership
Following are four principles of network leadership we have experienced and observed across impact networks at every scale: ā¢ Foster self-organization ā¢ Promote emergence ā¢ Embrace change ā¢ Hold dynamic tensions
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Foster Self-Organization
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One of the primary responsibilities of network leaders, then, is to cultivate the conditions for greater levels of self-organization to arise. Network leaders have the humility to step back and follow the lead of others. In Converge we follow the maxim of the Enspiral network: āNo one should lead all the time, and everyone should lead some of the time.ā5 This is what distributed leadership is all about.
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Promote Emergence
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Management theorist Henry Mintzberg writes that all strategy is both deliberate and emergent.7 Deliberate strategies set their sights on accomplishing a series of planned actions to realize a set of well-defined outcomes. At the same time, strategy also tends to emerge over time as planned activities collide with reality and are then adapted to accommodate a changing experience. Emergent approaches to strategy recognize that we simply cannot predict the future, and that it is often necessaryāparticularly in the face of complexityāto learn your way into what needs to be done and how to do it.
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Or as E. L. Doctorow said about the process of writing a book, āItās like driving a car at night. You never see further than your headlights, but you can make the whole trip that way.ā
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Prioritize Connection
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As activist and educator Grace Lee Boggs has said, āIn this exquisitely connected world, itās never a question of ācritical mass.ā Itās always about critical connections.ā
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Sense into the Future
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Engage in Experimentation
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Embrace Change
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We prefer to use the term resilience, defined by the Stockholm Resilience Center as āthe capacity of a system, be it an individual, a forest, a city or an economy, to deal with change and continue to develop.ā15 Resilience is a measure of how well a system can absorb shocks and use disturbances to spur renewal and innovation.
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Two approaches for increasing a networkās resilience are to decentralize connections and create redundancies.
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Decentralize Connections
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Create Redundancies
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Creating redundancies in networks through wide bridges allows resources and information to continue flowing even when certain individuals are unresponsive or unavailable.
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Hold Dynamic Tensions
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As impact networks evolve, they are bound to face a number of dynamic tensions: ādynamicā because they are always in flux, ātensionsā to signify a relationship between ideas or qualities with seemingly conflicting demands or implications. If managed effectively, these tensions, also known as polarities, can be a powerful source of energy. Having āno tension in a system signifies no aliveness, no learning, no evolution,ā write Giles Hutchins and Laura Storm in Regenerative Leadership
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- [note::Where there is no conflict, there is no innovation.
First time coming across this topic - might have to engage more.]
different tensions could arise as networks develop, but we have seen six in particular that show up time and time again: ā¢ Building trust and taking action ā¢ Participation and pace ā¢ Self-interest and shared interest ā¢ The parts and the whole ā¢ Planning and emergence ā¢ Divergence and convergence
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Dynamic tensions arenāt problems to be solved; they are polarities to be aware of, integrated, and held with care throughout the life cycle of a network.
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Building Trust and Taking Action
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Participation and Pace
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Self-Interest and Shared Interest
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altruistic concerns alone are rarely enough to justify participantsā continued engagement in a network, given busy schedules and competing priorities. For people to continue participating over the long term, the network will also need to advance their self-interests in some wayāfor instance, by facilitating valuable connections, generating new learnings, or advancing individual and organizational priorities.
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The Parts and the Whole
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Planning and Emergence
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āDeliberate process, emergent results.ā
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Divergence and Convergence
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FIGURE 4.2. Divergence (expressing different perspectives) allows for convergence (bringing ideas together), which leads to emergence (discovering new possibilities).
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To quote the prolific writer Seth Godin, āYou are more prepared than you realize. You probably arenāt ready, and you canāt be ready, not if youāre doing something worthwhile.ā
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cultivating impact networks
Clarify Purpose and Principles
Catalyzing a New Network
Exploring the Potential for a Network
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1. Make Sense of the System, and Build on What Already Exists
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Start by doing your homework to understand whatās really going on. This means having conversations with lots of different people who are engaged in the issue. Where is there common ground? Where is there disagreement? Is there a shared purpose that can bring people together? Do the people doing the work see the need or opportunity for greater connectivity and collaboration? Examine the work through an equity lens. Why is the system the way it is? Who has power, and who doesnāt? What needs to be centered in this work? Which people and perspectives are historically or currently underrepresented or marginalized?
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2. Organize an Exploratory Gathering
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At that exploratory gathering, discuss the following questions:3 ā¢ Why should we start this network? ā¢ Why should we not start this network? ā¢ What are the possible issues we would work on? ā¢ Who else should be at the table? Then, toward the end of the gathering, ask: ā¢ Should we proceed? ā¢ If so, to what degree are you interested in participating? (See chapter 10 for four levels of engagement that people can choose from.)
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3. Form a Design Team
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4. Organize an Initial Convening, and Begin Cycling through the Five Cs
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Finding Common Purpose
Integrating Multiple Levels of Purpose
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Sharing personal motivations also helps to humanize participants when they are used to seeing each other in a purely professional context. One particular exercise we use to accomplish this is called Purpose Stands. In this exercise, each participant delivers a one-minute timed speech that answers a central question: Why do I do what I do? This question reveals a personās mission in the world, which may or may not align with the responsibilities of their day job. These one-minute speeches donāt focus on the practical what but on the personal why that defines oneās work. The full instructions for leading Purpose Stands can be found online in the Converge Network Toolkit (visit converge.net to access this and other tools referenced in the pages ahead).
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Shifting Focus from Problems to Possibilities
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Envisioning the Future
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After more time for ideation, participants were asked to consider a shortened time horizon: āFor that fifty-year vision to happen, where do we have to be in twenty-five years?ā With each step, participants were challenged to bring their vision closer and closer to the present day, identifying potential strategies that could be transformational over the long term. Working backward in time, people were asked, āWhere do we have to be in two years?ā and finally, āWhere do we have to be, right now?ā
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Crafting a Collective Purpose
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Defining Shared Principles
Capturing Agreements in a Charter
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Charters typically include context for why the network was formed, the networkās purpose and principles, and a high-level summary of who is involved. Charters may also include the networkās priorities or focus areas. Additional operating agreements can be captured in a corresponding document, including governance and decision-making processes, operational structure, and participation agreements (see chapter 10 for more information on establishing participation agreements). Visit the Converge Network Toolkit to access a Network Charter Template containing section headings, sample content, and prompts for developing a charter.
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Evolving Purpose and Principles
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Convene the People
The world doesnāt change one person at a time. It changes as networks of relationships form among people who discover they share a common cause and vision of whatās possible. āMARGARET WHEATLEY AND DEBORAH FRIEZE, āUsing Emergence to Take Social Innovations to Scale
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People often join a network because they are inspired by its purpose, but they stay because of who is involved. Who is part of a network may be just as important, if not more important, than why the network exists.
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Inviting Co-creation
Identifying Who to Convene
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writes Vu Le, author of the popular Nonprofit AF blog. āMarginalized people and communities donāt have the same access to relationships: Relationships are not equitably distributed.ā3 Therefore, one important step that network leadersāand catalysts in particularācan take to avoid replicating patterns of inequity is to center people who are affected by the issue at hand, as well as those who typically are excluded from networksāfrom the very beginning. This doesnāt mean āletting them participate,ā it means listening and following their leadership.
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Deciding How Many to Convene
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āthe network effectā tells us that networks become more valuable as more people are connected to them.5 But this phenomenon holds up only to a point. Human and biological networks (like the networks of neurons in our brains) in particular have been shown to have a ābreakpoint,ā above which the network effect no longer rings true. This is the point at which further growth is no longer beneficial and the network begins a pruning process, shrinking until it reaches an equilibriumāthe ideal size for the network at that time. Ultimately, as Jeff Stibel, author of Breakpoint, attests, the quality of a networkās connections is much more important than its size.
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We have found that most groups are able to hold a single conversation with up to about twenty-four people, though it requires a thoughtful design, well-planned room setup, and skilled facilitation. Other experts in the field agree: ā12 is large enough to offer a diversity of opinion and large enough that it allows for a certain quotient of mystery and intrigue, of constructive unfamiliarity,ā writes Priya Parker in The Art of Gathering
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adrienne maree brown uses a guideline that the amount of time needed for a meaningful full-group conversation is about five minutes per person.8 Given that the average person can only pay attention for about 90 to 120 minutes at a time before their eyes completely glaze over,9 a group of twenty-four people at five minutes each brings you right up to the upper limit.
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However, networks that grow too large may lose their sense of intimacy and take too many resources to sustain. āIf inclusion is the purpose and identity of the gathering, a porous boundary is fine, even perhaps necessary,ā writes Parker. āBut gatherings with many other, wholly admirable purposes can suffer from over-inclusion.ā If youāre unsure how to proceed, ask yourself, āWho is this network for first
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Designing Meaningful Gatherings
And an assortment of in-person and online activities provide spaces for people to engage around shared interests, such as network calls and webinars, site visits, learning journeys, meals organized around a conversation topic, professional development opportunities, and peer assists. Network leaders are always looking for opportunities to facilitate connection and accelerate the flow of information.
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Key Considerations for Designing Convenings
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But we are convinced that the designāincluding agenda and structureāis even more responsible for a conveningās ultimate success. Though every convening should be customized to fit the particular context of the network, we have learned a few key lessons that inform each one of our designs: ā¢ Put relationships first ā¢ Embrace the magic of small groups ā¢ Focus on the framing questions ā¢ Cultivate deeper experiences ā¢ Incorporate space ā¢ Infuse energy into the network
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Put Relationships First
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Far too many meetings are designed primarily around content. But the most valuable resource at any gathering is the people who attend. The rare opportunity of having people together at one time is too often wasted with presentations that could be recorded and broadcast online instead. We recommend moving far away from the āsage on the stageā approach, where so-called experts are the only ones talking and everyone else is passively listening. Recognize that everyone in the room is an expert about something. Everyone has something to contribute. Draw on the wisdom of the crowd, and create spaces where people are regularly interacting with one another, learning from one another, and finding ways to support each otherās work.
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- [note::YES. Lol'd at "sage on a stage".]
Embrace the Magic of Small Groups
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For people to engage most fully, they need to be in small enough groups that they can see and interact with each other simulta neously. Small groups are uniquely powerful as sites of practice; they function as fractals, microcosms of the whole. As Peter Block writes, āThe small group is the unit of transformation and the container for the experience of belonging.ā
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As a general guideline, think of the full group as a place for framing and summarizing, and use small groups to dig into content and discussions.
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Focus on the Framing Questions
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Getting the framing questions right is the key to this equation. The right questions help groups focus their attention on what matters most. Otherwise, conversations might range widely from group to group, creating a lack of cohesion across the convening. We spend as much time in our designs crafting thoughtful framing questions as anything else. The best questions get to the heart of the matter. They invite people to bring their own meaning forward, based on their own experiences. They have an edge that creates palpable energy when people offer their response. Often the most important piece of the design is to get the questions right, put them in the right sequence, and then pair each question with a group size and amount of time to do it justice.
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One of our favorite techniques is to rotate people through a series of quick pairs or small groups with a set of framing questions. At the beginning of a session, questions such as āWhy does this work matter to you?ā and āWhat are your hopes for our time today?ā help to set the context for the work ahead. At the end of a session, questions like āWhat is something important you learned at this convening?ā and āWhat is one thing we absolutely must keep in mind moving forward?ā provide closure to the gathering. Visit the Converge Network Toolkit to access a list of our favorite Framing Questions for Small Group Conversations
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Create Deeper Experiences
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Incorporate Space
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As you plan out your convening, keep the following considerations in mind: First, things will almost always take longer than you expect. The more people there are, the longer things will take. Introductions will run long, conversations will run long, and breaks will most certainly run long. If they donāt, thatās great! Youāve found yourself a few extra minutes. But to be safe, assume that nearly every part of the agenda will require more time than you initially imagined, and plan accordingly. Second, conversations need space to breathe. Space for conflict, space for tension, space for people to introduce new perspectives. Create enough space so that every person who wants to speak their mind can do so, especially the introverts and people who are usually on the margins of conversations. Rushing a conversation to stay on time is an easy way to shut down creative thinking and frustrate a group. Few things are more annoying than a facilitator cutting off a conversation just as it was getting to the heart of the matter. Third, magic happens in unstructured time. Provide long breaks that allow participants to reflect and recharge. And create social spaces where participants can informally connect and have the conversations they need to haveāon their own terms and in their own time. On countless occasions, weāve seen the most memorable, productive, hilarious, and intimate moments of the day happen after the formal agenda has concluded.
- LocationĀ 1527
-
Infuse Energy into the Network
- LocationĀ 1540
- h5,
Alternate between activities that center the head (conceptual), the heart (relational), and the hands (actionable). Create time for both divergence and convergence. Gather both in the large group and in small groups. Shift back and forth between moments of high intensity and low intensity, balancing interactive activities with periods of reflection and stillness.
- LocationĀ 1546
-
Preparing for Emergence
- LocationĀ 1553
- h4,
In nearly every single one of the convenings Iāve been a part of, the agenda has evolved significantly as we progressed through the day. A huge part of embracing the emergent nature of networks is to be prepared to follow the energy of participants and adapt in real time during facilitation, rather than sticking steadfastly to an agenda that is rapidly becoming obsolete.
- LocationĀ 1555
-
Facilitating Emergent Outcomes
The crux of good facilitation, according to Adam Kahane, author of Facilitating Breakthrough, is not to get people to work together, but to remove the obstacles to connection and collaborationāobstacles like disconnection, debilitating conflict, and other forms of āstuckness.ā13 After all, the Latin translation of the word facilitate is āto make easier.ā Picture a river: while you canāt push a river to move in a certain direction, you can remove rocks and logs impeding its path to allow the water to flow by itself. Good facilitators do not force things forward; they hold space for all points of view to be acknowledged while helping the conversation to flow.
- LocationĀ 1570
-
- [note::Facilitation is about removing obstacles, like taking rocks out of a stream. What other analogies might there be for facilitation?]
As with any facilitation, itās important to set the context for the gathering, ask good questions, and invite divergent perspectives. Facilitators also need to be able to acknowledge and disrupt harmful power dynamics to ensure that people have maximum agency to contribute.
- LocationĀ 1576
-
- [note::This is probably the hardest but most important part of facilitation - addressing behavior that "kills the vibe" and influences others to not contribute as much as they otherwise would.]
Fundamental Practices of Network Facilitation
- LocationĀ 1583
- h4,
Invite divergence
- LocationĀ 1587
-
- [note::This is something I could do more of, especially at EA events where there's an incentive to support "standard" EA ways of thinking.]
Show Up with Your Whole Self
- LocationĀ 1590
- h5,
Frame the Context
- LocationĀ 1596
- h5,
There will inevitably be moments in network convenings when the temperature in the room starts to rise. These are times when the conversation gets tense, people feel on edge, and nobody wants to openly acknowledge it. At this moment, many people will be tempted to retreat into what Robert Solomon and Fernando Flores call ācordial hypocrisyāānice, polite conversations where real issues are swept under the rug.15 The facilitatorās role here is to acknowledge whatās happening, invite people to take a breath, and then hold space so that the real issues can be worked through. Acknowledging what is happening can take the sting out of it, reducing the anxiety that the discomfort brings. Reminding people to stay present in the conversation may help them avoid falling into a stress response of āfight, flight, or freeze.ā These are the moments of truth in networks, the times when groups can either fall back into whatās comfortable or sit in the tension long enough to acknowledge unspoken realities and address critical issues.
- LocationĀ 1606
-
- [note::Could do this a lot more - as a person with a highly avoidant attachment style, I tend to automatically try to ignore or "smooth things over" when the temperature of a conversation rises. I need to be better about acknowledging my observations and allowing time for things to cool down ("I'm noticing the temperature of this conversation rise and would like us all to take a moment and process how we're feeling")]
Hold Space
- LocationĀ 1606
- h5,
Invite Divergence
- LocationĀ 1614
- h5,
As a facilitator, instead of avoiding the disruption, turn to that person with your full attention and ask them to elaborate. Then, check to see if others feel similarly. If nobody does, you still need to validate that personās perspective. It doesnāt matter if you agree or disagree with their opinion; what matters is making the room a safe place for different perspectives to be shared and honored.
- LocationĀ 1618
-
- [note::There's a kind of tension between inviting divergence and maintaining a psychologically safe discussion space. Divergent thinking encourages sharing perspectives that not everyone may agree with.]
If you become stuck when something is going on in the room and youāre not sure what to do, put your faith in small groups or pairs. Quickly break the participants into groups of two to four, and ask them to discuss whatās happening in the room and what they think needs to happen next. Reflections can then be shared in the full group, which may give you a clue as to how to proceed (this might be a great time for a break as you quickly redesign the agenda!). This is one of Peter Blockās favorite tactics. āIn doing this,ā he writes, āwe ask the community to take responsibility for the success of this gathering and express faith in their goodwill, even if they are frustrated with what is happening.Ā .Ā .Ā .Ā Doing this is an acknowledgment that critical wisdom resides in the community.ā
- LocationĀ 1626
-
- [note::Huh - interesting meta-facilitation technique here. Might be useful.]
Stay Emergent with Intention
- LocationĀ 1632
- h5,
Lead with Humility
- LocationĀ 1641
- h5,
The act of facilitating is an act of exercising power. Network facilitators use that power thoughtfully to make the gathering as welcoming, equitable, and open to shared leadership as possible.
- LocationĀ 1643
-
When facilitators are too passive, they fail to fulfill some of the critical responsibilities of the role. āFar from purging a gathering of power,ā passivity creates a power vacuum that others can fill āin a manner inconsistent with your gatheringās purpose,ā writes Priya Parker.19 Instead, we recommend practicing what Parker calls āgenerous authorityā: lead the meeting confidently but also with humility, owning the power youāve been entrusted with while using that power in service to others and to the network as a whole.
- LocationĀ 1648
-
- [note::"Generous authority" - A method of leading marked by kindness, agency, and equitable distribution of power.]
Attending to Power Dynamics
- LocationĀ 1654
- h4,
In healthy networks, power is not used over or against others to force a decision or to gain superior status. Instead, power is used with and among, in support of others and in the pursuit of a common purpose. Power is also accessed within, such that participants feel able to speak, act, and show up as their whole selves.
- LocationĀ 1658
-
- [note::Reminds me of "design with, not for" in the Being a Changemaker book.]
āGetting out from under dominant power relations and mastering power dynamics is perhaps the most essential skill for change agents across all sectors seeking to ignite positive change in the world,ā asserts Cyndi Suarez in The Power Manual
- LocationĀ 1668
-
- [note::Good food for thought. What are the most effective ways of "getting out from under power relations?"]
āPower is not a finite pie,ā write Cynthia Silva Parker, Kelly Bates, and Curtis Ogden of the Interaction Institute for Social Change. āRather, it can be infinite, expanded, and shared among people and leaders.ā
- LocationĀ 1673
- positive-sum games, zero sum games, power,
Some tips for attending to power dynamics in networks follow, building upon the work of Parker, Bates, and Ogden:22 ā¢ Co-create group agreements at the outset of the networkās development. Share responsibility with the group for monitoring agreements and periodically making updates (group agreements are described in more detail in the following chapter). ā¢ Ensure accessibility in all its forms, including visual, auditory, language, physical, and technological. Make sure that everyone has the information, resources, and space they need to contribute. ā¢ Include funders as participants, not as hosts or designers. In gatherings with significant organizational dynamics, you can also try removing professional affiliations from nametags. People can always figure out where they work later. Let them connect as individuals first. ā¢ Normalize discussion and acknowledgment of power. Power exists in all groups, whether or not you talk about it, and avoiding the issue creates a barrier to trust. Acknowledge power dynamics openly in the network, and think together about what issues of power might play out and how the network will work to resolve them. ā¢ Notice if certain people are always the first to speak. Invite others to speak up if they feel moved to do so. During breaks, check in with those who have talked the most to encourage them to make space for others, as well as those who have been the quietest to see if there is anything they want to share but have not yet been able to, or if there is something you can do as a facilitator to support them. ā¢ Have multiple facilitators at network convenings to better observe the room and notice the groupās patterns and energy. Likewise, designate a specific person to take notes so that the primary facilitator is able to fully direct their attention to those in the room. ā¢ Own your mistakes. When you make a misstep as a facilitator, correct it as soon as possible. Showing your openness to feedback contributes to a safe space for all.
- LocationĀ 1675
-
Cultivate Trust
Our tendency, in the absence of trust, is to believe that our assumptions and projections are valid, that we know what others are thinking and feeling without asking them, and that maybe we are the only sane person in the room. Trust increases the likelihood that participants will listen with care, try on new perspectives, and engage with people they might consider to be very different from themselves.
- LocationĀ 1718
-
- [note::*and we know what others KNOW and can CONTRIBUTE]
Weaving Connections
June Holley, author of Network Weaver Handbook, defines network weavers as those who explicitly work to make the networks around them healthier and more inclusive āby helping people identify their interests and challenges, connecting people strategically where thereās potential for mutual benefit, and serving as a catalystā of self-organization.
- LocationĀ 1745
-
Connecting with Participants
- LocationĀ 1754
- h4,
Defining a regular cadence of connection will go a long way toward maintaining a consistent practice of weaving. Sharon Farrell, a leader of the California Landscape Stewardship Network, has adopted the habit of holding time on her calendar on two days each week to call network participants she hasnāt spoken with in a while: āIām a firm believer that if you create time for conversation, one that is an exchange and not just directed in one way, trust begins to build,ā says Farrell.
- LocationĀ 1760
-
- [note::I NEVER do this, but I'd like to.]
A helpful strategy in large networks is to split up the list of participants between multiple weavers. This ensures that each participant has a designated person they can contact at any time with questions or concerns. Each member of the Fire Adapted Communities Learning Network has a specific point person (called their ānetwork liaisonā) who is responsible for checking in with them at least every few months and who they can reach out to at any time. āWe rely on this practice as an important feedback loop for sensing in a complex domain,ā shares Michelle Medley-Daniel, a leader and liaison in the network. āWe adapt network values and offerings based on member feedback, and also adapt our understanding of the complex fire systems and ways to change them based on the information we get through these trusted relationships.ā
- LocationĀ 1768
-
Connecting Participants with One Another
- LocationĀ 1774
- h4,
Deepening Trust
There are four primary ingredients that increase the likelihood that people will choose to trust one another, despite all the uncertainty that relationships bring:9 ā¢ Reliability ā¢ Openness ā¢ Care ā¢ Appreciation
- LocationĀ 1795
-
Ingredients of Trust
- LocationĀ 1795
- h4,
Reliability
- LocationĀ 1800
- h5,
When people help each other by offering support or contributing to a project, it builds a foundation of goodwill. And when people prove their reliability time and time again by continuing to show up, stick around, and follow through, trust grows to a level of resilience that can withstand significant disruption.
- LocationĀ 1801
-
- [note::Group resilience is built through trust]
Without space for āno,ā there is no weight behind ā
- LocationĀ 1805
-
Openness
- LocationĀ 1807
- h5,
In the absence of openness, our true emotions and opinions are often guarded or hidden under a professional mask. We also remain closed to new information, stubbornly holding on to past beliefs and closing off new possibilities.
- LocationĀ 1811
-
By being open, we acknowledge interdependence and invite reciprocity. Itās sometimes assumed that being open with one another comes later, after trust has been developed, but openness is also a great catalyst of trust.
- LocationĀ 1813
-
Care
- LocationĀ 1818
- h5,
Appreciation
- LocationĀ 1854
- h5,
At an individual level, sharing appreciations also helps to get people out of their heads and into a heart-centered space, creating room for deeper connections to form. This is why we often have people offer appreciations at the end of a convening, asking them to reflect on āwho or what are you appreciating right now?ā Sharing appreciations in this way serves to reinforce the prosocial behaviors that the network wants to promote.
- LocationĀ 1861
-
Sharing Stories
- LocationĀ 1864
- h4,
We typically only get to see each otherās external context: what people look like, what they say or do, their title and organization, and their online persona. But in order to form a deeper connection with other people, it is necessary to take the time to get to know their internal context: the why behind their actions, their underlying values and motivations, and the experiences that make them who they are.
- LocationĀ 1866
- social connection,
- [note::Internal v.s. External Context]
In this exercise, participants are evenly distributed into groups of three to five people. They are then asked to sit facing each other and invited to recount a life experience that made them who they are. The particular framing question can be adapted to fit the context. For example, people might be asked to share the story of a particular period of their life, the story of a mentor who had a big influence on them, or the story of how they came to do the work theyāre doing today. Each person has a specific amount of time to tell their story, during which they will be the only one speaking (we usually provide four to seven minutes per story, depending on how much time we have for the exercise). We challenge participants to go as deep as they can without feeling like theyāre oversharing. Then, for the next two minutes, listeners offer their reflections on that storyāwhat resonated with them, what surprised them, and what stood out. Once the first person has finished telling their story and received feedback from their group, the next person tells their story, and the process continues. In total, the exercise takes about 45 minutes. You can access the full instructions for True Stories in the Converge Network Toolkit.
- LocationĀ 1879
-
- [note::True Stories Exercise]
One important consideration in choosing a storytelling activity, as noted above, is to remember that some participants have experienced significant trauma and oppression in their lives. As changemakers and facilitators, we must balance the desire to promote openness among participants with the potential for triggering trauma. In the containers we create, participants always have the option to pass and to choose how deep they go in sharing a personal story.
- LocationĀ 1888
-
- [note::This is something I am prediposed to not acknowledge]
Listening with Care
- LocationĀ 1891
- h4,
The experience of understanding more about another personās inner context through empathetic listening, and simultaneously the experience of being fully heard, bonds people together like almost nothing else.
- LocationĀ 1900
-
Holding Courageous Conversations
Generative conflictāconflict that is constructive rather than destructiveāis central to progress. Great teams, relationships, organizations, and networks create a culture of respect that allows people to safely express disagreement.
- LocationĀ 1905
- conflict,
- [note::"Generative Conflict" - hadn't heard of this term until now. I like it.]
As the writer, poet, and activist James Baldwin understood, āNot everything that is faced can be changed; but nothing can be changed until it is faced.ā
- LocationĀ 1930
-
- [note::Love this quote! New to me. Reminds me of "we do things not because they are easy but because they are hard". I like that this speaks directly to the necessity of persevering through change, which may seem impossible.]
Establishing Group Agreements
- LocationĀ 1932
- h4,
To generate a list of potential agreements, consider asking participants to reflect on the following question: āWhat do you need from the people in this group for you to be able to participate fully?ā26 Start by providing time for personal reflection, and then invite participants to share their thoughts, first in small groups and then in the full group. People might offer statements like āI need to know that the things I share will be kept confidential.ā A corresponding group agreement around confidentiality might be, āTake the lesson, leave the details.ā Others might say that they have a hard time sitting for long periods of time and need to be able to take breaks. A corresponding group agreement might be, āPractice self-care.ā
- LocationĀ 1934
-
- [note::Generating ideas for group agreements.]
Consider building on an existing collection of group guidelines that have worked well in multicultural settings, such as the Jemez Principles for Democratic Organizing,27 conversation guidelines for brave spaces,28 the Living Room Conversations agreements,29 or VISIONS, Inc.ās guidelines for effective cross-cultural dialogue.30 With group agreements, participants are usually more comfortable raising new perspectives, disagreeing with one another, and engaging in the kind of generative conflict that is necessary for good decision-making. Visit the Converge Network Toolkit for a list of our favorite Group Agreements for Networks
- LocationĀ 1940
-
Itās good practice to check in regularly on how well group agreements have been attended to and to provide opportunities for participants to reflect on which group agreements they may want to commit to practicing further. For instance, as the gathering is getting started, you might ask participants to read through the group agreements and pick one in particular that theyād like to lean into over the course of the day. Then, at the end of the day, you can invite them to share in pairs how it went and what they will carry forward from the experience. Similarly, you can prompt the network to reflect as a whole on which agreements it is particularly good at incorporating and which agreements would benefit from greater attention.
- LocationĀ 1947
-
- [note::This seems super important - group norms are useless if members of the group feel like they aren't respected.]
Whatās Love Got to Do with It?
- LocationĀ 1952
- h4,
An orientation toward fear leads to an exploitative and degenerative system. Fear of the unknown prompts people to create rigid rules and procedures in an attempt to establish as much certainty and control as possible.
- LocationĀ 1961
-
- [note::I think fear is what cause managers to micro-manage their employees - will they do the task or carry out the project in the way I envision?
I believe this fear is rooted in inadequacies related to being able to set clear expectations for employees and providing them with the feedback they need to course correct.
You hired them, dummy. Why don't you trust them? Most of the time, it's a manager issue, not an employee issue.]
Coordinate Actions
Itās common for people to want to jump immediately into ambitious plans to change the system. In their eagerness to āget to action,ā they launch new projects before building on the work thatās already underway. And when they encounter inevitable challenges or failures, they become demoralized, and their enthusiasm for the network fades. When this happens, participants might question whether the time theyāre putting into the network is worth their while, and many will choose to disengage. As a result, the networkās full potential is abandoned before it has a chance to mature.
- LocationĀ 1986
-
even if you have ambitions of forming an action network, start by cultivating a robust learning network. After all, the qualities of learning networks are foundational to action networks as well. A key aspect of developing a learning network, and therefore any impact network, is to accelerate the flow of information between participants and foster a culture of reciprocity. In doing so, people begin to coordinate their actions with one another: sharing promising practices, reducing unnecessary duplication, and finding quick wins that demonstrate the immediate value of the network.
- LocationĀ 1992
-
- [note::Learning network -> Action network]
Accelerating Flows
āMost of what goes wrong in systems goes wrong because of biased, late, or missing information,ā writes Donella Meadows in Thinking in Systems. āInformation holds systems together.ā2 A greater circulation of information means that more resources and expertise can be shared across the system. Learning increases as promising practices are disseminated, and unnecessary duplication is reduced as people learn what others are up to. Messaging comes into greater alignment, actions begin to reinforce each other, and as a result the whole system becomes more coordinated and coherent.
- LocationĀ 2002
-
- [note::Yesss - I wish FORT could understand this]
One of the most critical capacities of network leadersāand coordinators in particular, whose role is described in more detail later in this chapterāis enabling and accelerating the flow of information between participants.
- LocationĀ 2008
-
- [note::This goes for project managers, functional managers, community builders, etc.]
Impact networks can accelerate the flow of information in three primary ways: by bringing information in from the network as well as from outside sources, organizing and sending information out to participants and others who are interested, and creating pathways for participants to easily share information across the network with one another.
- LocationĀ 2010
-
- [note::This needs a diagram]
Enabling Information to Flow In, Out, and Across
- LocationĀ 2010
- h4,
Information In
- LocationĀ 2024
- h5,
asset maps, searchable directories, and online databases. An interactive asset map, for instance, provides members with an easy way to identify the available resources, areas of expertise, and geographic regions present across the networkāwhile also helping them to immediately connect with each other to follow through on what they learned. Detailed instructions for Building an Asset Map that also functions as a network directory can be found in the Converge Network Toolkit.
- LocationĀ 2026
-
- [note::Should do this for EA Philly]
subscribe to listserv groups and alerts,
- LocationĀ 2033
-
- [note::Is there a better alternative to listserv?]
Information Out
- LocationĀ 2034
- h5,
Information Across
- LocationĀ 2039
- h5,
Network Coordination
- LocationĀ 2047
- h4,
Keep the Network on Track
- LocationĀ 2054
- h5,
One way to think about coordinators is as air traffic controllers. Air traffic controllers see and understand how all the planes in a given airspace are flowing. They donāt fly the planes, but they are trusted to help each aircraft get to its destination. They regularly communicate with the pilots to understand their plans and needs, and they use that information to help guide the whole system.
- LocationĀ 2055
-
- [note::Network coordinator = Air traffic controller]
They work to integrate many parts into a unified whole. Because of their unique position, coordinators are well equipped to identify and frame emerging issues, collect agenda topics, and support the design of convenings and calls. Embedding evaluation practices, such as those described in chapter 10, helps coordinators to track the networkās development and identify emerging needs and opportunities.
- LocationĀ 2059
-
- [note::Sounds a lot like project management]
Establish and Maintain Network Operations
- LocationĀ 2062
- h5,
Provide Knowledge Management
- LocationĀ 2066
- h5,
Assist Network Teams
- LocationĀ 2069
- h5,
Rather than doing the work of the network, coordinators cultivate the conditions that enable network members to do what they want to do, in service of the networkās purpose and in alignment with its principles.
- LocationĀ 2076
- network stewardship, community stewardship,
Tech Tools for Impact Networks
- LocationĀ 2077
- h4,
Technology is always changing, so rather than sharing specific tools in this book, we have compiled our favorites online in a continually updated list. Visit the Converge Network Toolkit to see our favorite Tech Tools for Impact Networks
- LocationĀ 2082
-
- [note::Should absolutely check this out.]
Whenever we launch a new tech tool into a network, we take a few minutes during a convening or on a network call to introduce it, explain how it is intended to be used, and show the basics of what it can offer. If possible, we also allow a bit of hands-on time for participants to try it out.
- LocationĀ 2087
-
Practicing Reciprocity
Taking the time to deliberately coordinate actions is a great way to serve the self-interests of participants. You can do so by providing space on calls and at convenings for people to share urgent needs and to connect with others who might be able to support their work. We call this activity Rapid Coordination, and we incorporate it into nearly every network convening we lead. The activity begins by inviting participants, one by one, to briefly share something they need help with or a potential collaboration theyād like to explore with others. After the first person shares what they need, others are invited to raise their hands if they believe they can help (by sharing information, having a follow-up conversation, or providing resources). The process continues until everyone has been given a chance to make a request.
- LocationĀ 2097
-
- [note::Reminds me of the lightning talks at EAGxNYC picnic.]
Whereas reciprocity is the practice of exchanging value with another person, generalized reciprocity is the practice of exchanging value with the network. People who practice generalized reciprocity give their gifts without the expectation of immediate return; they give with a sense of trust that their actions will eventually be reciprocated in one form or another by others in the network, although it isnāt clear how or when.
- LocationĀ 2108
-
- [note::i.e. Fostering an bundance mindset in networks]
Responding to Crisis
Collaborate for Systems Change
Making systems workāwhether in health care, education, climate change, making a pathway out of povertyāis the greatest task of our generation. āATUL GAWANDE, āHow Do We Heal Medicine?,ā TED2012
- LocationĀ 2151
-
A system is a group of interacting or interdependent elements forming a unified whole.1 Systems may overlapāfor instance, in the connections between health care and housing. And systems can be nested within other systemsāa classroom is nested within a school, which is nested within a school district, which is nested within a stateās education system.
- LocationĀ 2157
-
Making Sense of the System
Visit the Converge Network Toolkit to access facilitation guides for Constructing a Historical Timeline, Mapping the System, and Exploring Future Scenarios
- LocationĀ 2186
-
Identifying Leverage Points
- LocationĀ 2202
- h4,
FIGURE 9.1. 100Kin10ās system map of the āgrand challengesā facing STEM education today. Each challenge is represented by a node, and links are created when two challenges are related to one another. With this data, social network analysis revealed seven clusters of highly interconnected challenges, which yielded the networkās seven focus areas. For an interactive version of this map and a detailed description of the process used to develop it, visit grandchallenges.100kin10.org
- LocationĀ 2222
-
The effort to identify leverage points also led to an unexpected result: a massive increase in participant engagement. āWhen, as a network, you can choose to focus on a few critical opportunitiesānot because you or I thought they were the right places to focus, or because a panel of experts thought they were the right places, but because the whole community came together to identify themāitās so mobilizing,ā says Milgrom-Elcott.
- LocationĀ 2246
-
Creating Transformation
Fundamentally changing systems, however, requires reformation or transformation. Reformation aims to change the way a system works, altering its rules, structures, beliefs, and behaviors. Transformation is the work of creating a new system altogether.
- LocationĀ 2255
-
Shifting Social Norms
- LocationĀ 2259
- h4,
Research shows that once 25 percent of the actors in a system have adopted a given norm, a tipping point is reached, triggering a shift in the rest of the population.
- LocationĀ 2288
-
Growing a Movement
- LocationĀ 2309
- h4,
Research from Leslie Crutchfield, author of How Change Happens, found that the most successful social movements incorporate a decentralized structure that fosters connection and coordination across the movement, rather than a top-down hierarchical structure that dictates the actions of its chapters. The organizations and leaders most central to the growth of these movements, writes Crutch-field, conceive of themselves ānot as commander at the helm of an army, but rather a coordinator at the center of a network.ā16 They āpurposely push power out to the grassroots, vesting authority in local chapters rather than controlling from the top.ā
- LocationĀ 2310
-
- [note::I feel like CEA tries to be decentralized, but is ultimately perceived as top-down.]
Planting Sequoias
But what often goes unnoticed is that in the process of cultivating a network, the system actually is shifting. When networks are cultivated, people and organizations start engaging with one another in new ways. Information and resources begin to flow as never before. People from opposite sides of issues find creative ways to collaborate. A once-fragmented system becomes interconnected, able to respond quickly to crises. New leaders emerge. Healthier norms start to develop and spread. And local actions may grow into a movement, creating a new system altogether.
- LocationĀ 2363
-
- [note::This is what I want to do with EA. The movement, at least in the US, seems highly fragmented and doesn't invest nearly enough resources into fostering relationships with organizations outside of EA. The reality is that we NEED to collaborate with these existing organizations in order to bring about the systems-level change needed. We can't just dismiss them as "not impactful enough" and do our own thing. We need to learn from them and incorporate them into the conversation, even if it means sacrificing short-term impact for long-term gain.]
As for the future, your task is not to foresee it, but to enable it. āANTOINE DE SAINT-EXUPĆRY, The Wisdom of the Sands
- LocationĀ 2378
-
- [note::Like this. As a network builder, the goal is not to do the change but to setup conditions that allow the change to happen.]
The Enabling Infrastructure
We recommend that networks adopt a minimum viable structureāthe simplest possible structure that will effectively serve its needs, and one that can evolve as the network develops.
- LocationĀ 2382
-
- [note::Seems sensible]
In the 1950s, US cities were designed such that people lived in one part of the city, worked in another, and shopped in yet another. In most cities this is still the case, and it has led to widespread social fragmentation and lengthy daily commutes. As Jacobs observed, this occurred because urban planners designed for what they thought should happen, neglecting the way that humans naturally organize themselves based on their daily lives. A better approach would have been to āacknowledge the city as a living organism in constant mutation, a highly complex network involving a vast number of variablesĀ .Ā .Ā .Ā an open space bursting with overlap and spontaneity, where the natural conditions for creativity, recreation, and cooperation can easily prosper,ā writes Manuel Lima in Visual Complexity, referencing Jacobs.
- LocationĀ 2385
-
- [note::Huh, is this actually true? Seems like an ultra-capitalist, anti-humanist approach to designing cities. "Go to work" -> "Shop" -> "Go Home" -> "Repeat". Big sigh.]
When developing a networkās structure, let form follow function. Let the energies and interests of participants lead the way. Let the networkās natural evolution define its structure according to what it needs most in any given moment. āCollaborative networks donāt require building any structural elements or operational agreements until they are absolutely useful,ā writes Ruth Rominger, a catalyst of the RE-AMP Network. āPutting just enough in place will keep the network connected yet flexible enough to adapt.ā
- LocationĀ 2398
-
Impact networks are commonly organized through four types of teams, each of which appears only when needed. Design teams form to help catalyze a new network and organize network convenings; core teams form to provide governance and advisory support; project teams form to advance collaborative work; and learning circles form to hold conversation and gather information on a topic of interest.
- LocationĀ 2405
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Organizing into Teams
Core Team
- LocationĀ 2410
- h4,
Another difference from traditional hierarchies is that core teams rotate their members regularly. They usually consist of four to seven people, each representing a different participating organization or part of the network, who volunteer for the core team for a specific period of time (often from one convening to the next).
- LocationĀ 2417
-
- [note::Interesting - curious about the cadence of these rotations]
Project Teams
- LocationĀ 2429
- h4,
Project teams (sometimes called working groups, task forces, and action circles) are organized by participants to advance a body of work related to the networkās purpose. When it comes to forming project teams, what participants think should happen is less important than what they will do. As Marvin Weisbord and Sandra Janoff advise, set priorities ābased on willing actors rather than good ideas.ā4
- LocationĀ 2429
-
Learning Circles
- LocationĀ 2441
- h4,
Leading Network Teams
- LocationĀ 2448
- h4,
Questions to form a new team: Anytime a project team or learning circle is formed, it may begin by answering the following questions: ā¢ What is the purpose of this team? ā¢ Who is involved? ā¢ Who will lead this team at least until the next convening? ā¢ What tasks are required between now and the next convening? ā¢ Who is taking responsibility for each task, and by when? ā¢ What do we need from the network, if anything?
- LocationĀ 2454
-
Bounding Participation
We have found it useful to offer four primary levels of engagement to choose from: lead, partner, follow, and honor. These levels of participation can apply to the network as a whole, as well as to specific project teams: ā¢ Lead: āI will take responsibility for making this network/team happen.ā ā¢ Partner: āI will actively work with the leaders to make this network/team happen.ā ā¢ Follow: āI would like to stay informed about how this network/team is progressing.ā ā¢ Honor: āAlthough I appreciate what you are proposing, this network/team is not of particular interest to me at this time.ā When a network is just getting started, we ask participants to share their preferred level of engagement with the network as a whole, to get a better sense of who would like to attend future convenings and be kept in the loop with network communications.
- LocationĀ 2472
-
- [note::Reminds me of a RACI chart, but for preferred engagement level.]
As the network evolves, we ask participants to clarify their intended level of engagement annually to help leaders with planning, coordination, and budgeting.
- LocationĀ 2485
-
One of the responsibilities of network leaders is to provide many different opportunities for leadership, partnership, and followership to emerge, and to allow people to decline altogether. Trust that participants will self-organize to place their energy where they are most inspired to contribute and where they are most needed.
- LocationĀ 2492
-
Establishing Participation Agreements
- LocationĀ 2494
- h4,
In The Art of Community, Charles Vogl identifies āclear boundariesā as one of the core principles of belonging. Vogl notes that for a strong community to develop, people often need to know that being a part of the community means something and that not just anyone can join in on a whim. In other words, boundaries are less about exclusion and more about fostering greater inclusion within the network.
- LocationĀ 2499
-
While this worked at first, over time the lack of boundaries created an unhealthy work environment when some people abused the high-trust atmosphere. As a result, Enspiral was forced to develop clearer agreements for participation, which they captured in their open-source āHandbook.ā8 One of the key insights they took from the experience was that āa community without boundaries is no community at all.ā
- LocationĀ 2505
-
- [note::What does this look like for EA?]
In addition to clarifying expectations, participation agreements serve to provide some stability as a network grows. Participants might be asked to provide sufficient advance notice prior to leaving the network so they have enough time to introduce and integrate a new member of their organization before departing. Networks might also request that two individuals per organization attend convenings, in order to maintain continuity when one member is unavailable. Whatever participation agreements your network defines, remember to provide just enough structure to support the network, but not more. Prioritize relationship building first and foremost, instead of getting bogged down in the details before the network has even had a chance to provide value to participants or create any level of impact in the world.
- LocationĀ 2516
-
Making Collective Decisions
Simply stated, āPower is participation in decision-making,ā writes Cyndi Suarez in The Power Manual
- LocationĀ 2528
-
We prefer an alternative approach: consent-based decision-making, which allows actions in the best interest of the whole to proceed without unanimous agreement. This approach is rooted in the ārange of toleranceā principle borrowed from ecosystem science: when organisms find themselves in contexts that are too hot or too cold, some parts of the system die because the temperature is out of their range of tolerance. With consent-based decision-making, we find a decision that everyone can live with, even if itās not their top preference.
- LocationĀ 2536
-
- [note::I believe The Ready/Brave New Work talks about this - "Zone of Tolerance" in decision-making.]
A Process for Consent-Based Decision-Making
- LocationĀ 2542
- h4,
The consent-based decision-making process has three phases: context, clarification, and call for consent: Context frames the decision to be made: What are the relevant factors? What are the pros and cons that have been considered? What conversations have already taken place? And finally, what is the recommendation moving forward? Context is presented by those who took part in discussions to formulate the proposal. Clarification allows for any further questions or clarity needed by network members prior to voting. Facilitators should help ensure that the conversation doesnāt veer toward evaluation of ideas but stays with clarity on what is being recommended. Participants are encouraged to consider whether proposals are consistent with the networkās purpose and principles, and to think in terms of whatās in the best interest of the network as a whole, as opposed to whatās in the best interest for āmeā as an individual or as a representative of an organization or special interest. Call for consent uses a 0 to 5 voting framework when the full group is ready to make a decision or assess the level of support and need for further discussion. First, the facilitator restates the proposal and asks participants to vote. Then, the participants respond with a number from 0 to 5 (using fingers, pen and paper, or other means) corresponding to their level of support. The process can also be completed digitally with polling tools if confidentiality is required, if voting with fingers or paper isnāt practical, or if detailed records need to be captured. When voting, participants are invited to choose from one of the following options: ā¢ 5āLead: The proposal serves our network well, and I would like to be one of the leaders in implementing it. ā¢ 4āPartner: The proposal serves our network well, and I will partner to support the leaders in implementing it. ā¢ 3āFollow: The proposal may serve our network, but I canāt offer any capacity toward implementation. ā¢ 2āConcern: I have concerns about the proposal and will be tracking as implementationā¦
- LocationĀ 2542
-
- [note::Love how this empowers anyone from the network to lead/support initiatives.]
Embedding Evaluation
Four Fundamentals of Network Evaluation
- LocationĀ 2587
- h4,
We propose four basic components of network evaluation, explained in more detail below, to help ensure that your network is continually learning and evolving in a positive direction: ā¢ Collaborative infrastructure ā¢ Network connectivity ā¢ Participant experience ā¢ Emergent activity
- LocationĀ 2588
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Collaborative Infrastructure
- LocationĀ 2592
- h5,
To assess participation, network leaders can track network size (how many members there are at each tier of participation), representativeness (which groups or interests that current members represent), and growth/turnover (how many people and organizations joined the network and how many left the network in the past year).
- LocationĀ 2594
-
To assess network activities, network leaders can track convenings, including frequency and attendance, as well as other significant functions as applicable, such as participation on calls and subscriptions to the network newsletter. It is also helpful to cross-reference this information against specific participant characteristics (for example, sector, region, and demographic characteristics) to ascertain whether engagement varies across participants and where adjustments might be beneficial to engage all members.
- LocationĀ 2596
-
Network Connectivity
- LocationĀ 2600
- h5,
To help you map and analyze your networkās connectivity as it evolves, we have developed examples of how we have applied SNA in practice, along with a survey template you can adapt to capture the data needed to construct a network map. Visit the Converge Network Toolkit to learn the process of Conducting a Social Network Analysis
- LocationĀ 2615
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- [note::Would be interesting to do this in the larger EA community]
Participant Experience
- LocationĀ 2618
- h5,
A healthy network is one where participants feel they have clarified a shared purpose and a set of shared principles. The network includes a broad cross section of participants who are well suited to address the networkās purpose and actively contribute to its development. Those participants are developing relationships of trust, and they feel they are able to engage in and resolve conflicts with one another. The network has defined whatever structures and agreements are necessary to organize the work and make good decisions. These structures and agreements should be flexible enough to allow the network to stay responsive to changes in the environment without feeling unnecessarily burdensome. Healthy networks have ample coordination such that necessary operational responsibilities are well accounted for. Relevant information is easily accessible and freely shared. Participants also feel that the network has adequate resources to sustain its activities and that funders are supporting the network without controlling its path. And last but not least, participants in healthy networks feel that they are receiving good value from the time they are investing. They feel that they are benefiting personally and professionally as individuals and that their organizations are benefiting from their involvement in the network as well.
- LocationĀ 2621
-
- [note::What makes a healthy network?]
Administering participant surveys at regular intervals provides a good assessment of the core indicators of network health. They offer a regular space for participants to provide feedback, supporting equity and ensuring that network leaders have a good understanding of participantsā perceptions of the network. The survey results help illuminate areas of strength as well as areas that would benefit from additional attention or support.
- LocationĀ 2631
- surveying, network health, network stewardship,
- [note::Same goes for projects!]
Visit the Converge Network Toolkit to access a comprehensive list of Indicators of Network Health to track, along with a generic Network Participant Survey
- LocationĀ 2637
- pink,
Emergent Activity
- LocationĀ 2639
- h5,
The magic of networks lies in their emergent outcomes, which cannot be defined in advance, will not be the same across networks, and therefore cannot be measured with standardized tools. Although the precise nature of these outcomes cannot be predicted in advance, it is still valuable to track them as they emerge. Specifically, tracking the coordinated work and collaborative projects that are sparked among participants is essential to understanding how the network is impacting the broader system. This information will help network leaders and participants advance promising opportunities and potential innovations, as well as tell the story of the networkās influence on the broader system.
- LocationĀ 2640
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More Extensive Evaluation
- LocationĀ 2661
- h5,
Resourcing Networks
Impact networks are typically resourced through one or more of the following sources: ā¢ Philanthropic funding ā¢ Organizational resources ā¢ In-kind contributions ā¢ Participant dues ā¢ Earned revenue from network projects
- LocationĀ 2674
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Pivotal Practices for Network Funders
- LocationĀ 2697
- h4,
As Philip Li, president of the Robert Sterling Clark Foundation, puts it, āThe challenge with networks is that they invite patience and long-term investment. Funders have to understand that you have to release control and let the network define what it wants to achieve. That invites a different kind of relationship between the funder and the network.ā Itās not easy, but it is worth it, says Li. āThe upside potential of a network being in place is really quite profound.ā
- LocationĀ 2698
-
- [note::This is probably the biggest challenge to EAs adopting a network/systems mindset - the outcomes of dollars invested in the network are emergent and thus hard to predict.]
Follow the Networkās Lead
- LocationĀ 2706
- h5,
According to Jennifer Husbands, a senior program officer at the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, this requires that funders āunderstand how to walk a tightrope between providing structure and encouraging organic connections to develop and flourish.ā17 As a network funder, be clear on what you are supporting: you are not funding the fulfillment of a production order or provision of services to a specific number of people; rather, you are supporting the capacity of an ecosystem to engage a spectrum of perspectives, learn together, and self-determine optimal responses to local challenges.
- LocationĀ 2712
-
- [note::Network funders must be okay with uncertainty and risk]
Engage as Peers
- LocationĀ 2717
- h5,
Take the Long View
- LocationĀ 2726
- h5,
Investing in the Future
- LocationĀ 2737
- h4,
Although many recognize the need for greater coordination between organizations, collaboration remains underresourced. As Susan Wolf Ditkoff and Abe Grindle write in Harvard Business Review, āSo few philanthropists meaningfully support or engage in [collaboration], even though most are frustrated with the inefficient proliferation of siloed change efforts.ā
- LocationĀ 2737
-
- [note::How do we incentivize collaboration?]
Conclusion
If you havenāt already, I invite you to visit converge.net to access additional tools and resources in the Converge Network Toolkit. There you can dive deeper into network concepts that didnāt make their way into this book and receive invitations to network leadership learning experiences. You will also find opportunities to connect and share directly with other network leaders.
- LocationĀ 2780
- pink, 1resource, 1action, network stewardship,
Notes
Preface
Diana Scearce, Gabriel Kasper, and Heather McLeod Grant, āWorking Wikily,ā Stanford Social Innovation Review, Summer 2010, https://www2.deloitte.com/content/dam/Deloitte/us/Documents/monitor-institute/us-monitor-institute-working-wikily.pdf
- LocationĀ 2792
-
Jenny Johnson, āFresnoās New Leadership NetworkāCase Study Executive Summary,ā 2015, http://bit.ly/nlncasestudysummary
- LocationĀ 2795
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Introduction
Niall Ferguson, The Square and the Tower: Networks, Hierarchies and the Struggle for Global Power (London: Penguin Books, 2018), xix.
- LocationĀ 2811
-
Anna Muoio and Kaitlin Terry Canver, Shifting a System, Monitor Institute by Deloitte, accessed December 17, 2020, https://www2.deloitte.com/content/dam/insights/us/articles/5139_shifting-a-system/DI_Reimagining-learning.pdf
- LocationĀ 2814
-
June Holley has called them āintentional networksā in Network Weaver Handbook: A Guide to Transformational Networks (Athens, Ohio: Network Weaver Publishing, 2012). Peter Plastrik, Madeleine Taylor, and John Cleveland have called them āgenerative social impact networksā in Connecting to Change the World: Harnessing the Power of Networks for Social Impact (Washington, DC: Island Press, 2014).
- LocationĀ 2817
-
The Web of Change
David Ehrlichman and David Sawyer, āLearn Before You Leap: The Catalytic Power of a Learning Network,ā Stanford Social Innovation Review, July 27, 2018, https://ssir.org/articles/entry/learn_before_you_leap_the_catalytic_power_of_a_learning_network#
- LocationĀ 2827
-
Developed by Valdis Krebs and June Holley, Building Smart Communities Through Network Weaving, 2006, http://www.orgnet.com/BuildingNetworks.pdf. Re-created by Jeff Mohr, āBuilding Intentional Networks That Drive Impact (Part 1),ā In Too Deep, Kumu, July 15, 2016, https://blog.kumu.io/building-intentional-networks-that-drive-impact-part-1-90a7271c7a2a.
- LocationĀ 2830
-
Jane Wei-Skillern, David Ehrlichman, and David Sawyer, āThe Most Impactful Leaders Youāve Never Heard Of,ā Stanford Social Innovation Review, September 16, 2015, https://ssir.org/articles/entry/the_most_impactful_leaders_youve_never_heard_of
- LocationĀ 2848
-
The Network Mindset
Christopher Vitale, Networkologies: A Philosophy of Networks for a Hyperconnected AgeāA Manifesto (Winchester, UK: Zero Books, 2014), 20.
- LocationĀ 2853
-
Otto Scharmer and Katrin Kaufer, Leading from the Emerging Future: From Ego-System to Eco-System Economies (San Francisco, CA: Berrett-Koehler Publishers, 2013), 2.
- LocationĀ 2854
-
Jane Wei-Skillern and Nora Silver, āFour Network Principles for Collaboration Success,ā Foundation Review 5, no. 1 (2013), https://doi.org/10.4087/FOUNDATIONREVIEW-D-12-00018.1
- LocationĀ 2856
-
Rob Cross and Andrew Parker, The Hidden Power of Social Networks: Understanding How Work Really Gets Done in Organizations (Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Press, 2004), 3.
- LocationĀ 2866
-
Making Networks Work
Katrina Pugh and Laurence Prusak, āDesigning Effective Knowledge Networks,ā MIT Sloan Management Review, Fall 2013. https://sloanreview.mit.edu/article/designing-effective-knowledge-networks/
- LocationĀ 2875
- knowledge sharing, knowledge transfer,
Samantha Slade, Going Horizontal: Creating a Non-Hierarchical Organization, One Practice at a Time (Oakland, CA: Berrett-Koehler Publishers, 2018), 56.
- LocationĀ 2878
-
Donella Meadows, āLeverage Points: Places to Intervene in a System,ā Academy for Systems Change, accessed December 18, 2020, http://donellameadows.org/archives/leverage-points-places-to-intervene-in-a-system/
- LocationĀ 2882
-
Network Leadership
Joshua Vial, āMore People Working on Stuff That Matters,ā in Anthony Cabraal and Susan Basterfield, Better Work Together: How the Power of Community Can Transform Your Business (Enspiral Foundation, 2018), 20.
- LocationĀ 2895
-
Henry Mintzberg and James A. Waters, āOf Strategies, Deliberate and Emergent,ā Strategic Management Journal 6, no. 3 (1985): 257ā72, https://doi.org/10.1002/smj.4250060306
- LocationĀ 2900
-
Peter Block, Community: The Structure of Belonging, 2nd ed. (Oakland, CA: Berrett-Koehler Publishers, 2018), 26ā
- LocationĀ 2905
-
Giles Hutchins and Laura Storm, Regenerative Leadership: The DNA of Life-Affirming 21st Century Organizations (Tunbridge Wells, UK: Wordzworth, 2019), 172.
- LocationĀ 2907
-
Daniel Christian Wahl, Designing Regenerative Cultures (Axminster, England: Triarchy Press, 2016), 19.
- LocationĀ 2912
-
Patricia Patrizi, Elizabeth Heid Thompson, Julia Coffman, and Tanya Beer, āEyes Wide Open: Learning as Strategy Under Conditions of Complexity and Uncertainty,ā Foundation Review 5, no. 3 (2013), https://doi.org/10.9707/1944-5660.1170
- LocationĀ 2915
-
Clarify Purpose and Principles
Nick Martlew, Creative Coalitions: A Handbook for Change (Crisis Action, 2017), 43, https://crisisaction.org/handbook/contents/
- LocationĀ 2931
-
Nicholas A. Christakis and James H. Fowler, Connected: The Surprising Power of Our Social Networks and How They Shape Our Lives (New York, NY: Little, Brown and Company, 2011), 17.
- LocationĀ 2936
-
Peggy Holman, Engaging Emergence: Turning Upheaval into Opportunity (San Francisco, CA: Berrett-Koehler Publishers, 2010), 55.
- LocationĀ 2938
-
āSterling Network NYC,ā Robert Sterling Clark Foundation, accessed February 2, 2021, https://www.rsclark.org/sterlingnetworknyc
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100Kin10, accessed December 19, 2020, https://100kin10.org/
- LocationĀ 2942
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Defender Network, Justice in Motion, accessed December 19, 2020, https://www.justiceinmotion.org/defender-network
- LocationĀ 2943
-
āWorkshopping the Worldview,ā Resonance Network, accessed December 23, 2020, https://resonance-network.org/workshopping-the-worldview/
- LocationĀ 2955
-
adrienne maree brown, Emergent Strategy: Shaping Change, Changing Worlds (Chico, CA: AK Press, 2017), 221.
- LocationĀ 2962
-
Convene the People
A. Stinchcombe, āSocial Structure and Organizations,ā in J. G. March, ed., Handbook of Organizations (Chicago, IL: Rand McNally, 1965), 132ā
- LocationĀ 2979
-
Vu Le, āThe Problem with Everything Being All about Relationships,ā Nonprofit AF, February 9, 2020, https://nonprofitaf.com/2020/02/the-problem-with-everything-being-all-about-relationships/
- LocationĀ 2981
-
James Currier, āThe Network Effects Manual: 13 Different Network Effects (and Counting),ā NFX, Medium, January 9, 2018, https://medium.com/@nfx/the-network-effects-manual-13-different-network-effects-and-counting-a3e07b23017d
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-
Priya Parker, The Art of Gathering: How We Meet and Why It Matters (New York, NY: Riverhead Books, 2018), 51.
- LocationĀ 2994
-
Drake Baer, āWhy You Need to Unplug Every 90 Minutes,ā Fast Company, June 19, 2013, https://www.fastcompany.com/3013188/why-you-need-to-unplug-every-90-minutes
- LocationĀ 2996
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Adam Kahane, Facilitating Breakthrough: How to Remove Obstacles, Bridge Differences, and Move Forward Together (Oakland, CA: Berrett-Koehler Publishers, 2020).
- LocationĀ 3002
-
Craig Neal and Patricia Neal, The Art of Convening: Authentic Engagement in Meetings, Gatherings, and Conversations (San Francisco, CA: Berrett-Koehler Publishers, 2011), 55.
- LocationĀ 3004
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Robert C. Solomon and Fernando Flores, Building Trust: In Business, Politics, Relationships, and Life (New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 2001), 13.
- LocationĀ 3006
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Marvin Weisbord and Sandra Janoff, Donāt Just Do Something, Stand There!: Ten Principles for Leading Meetings That Matter (San Francisco, CA: Berrett-Koehler Publishers, 2007), 104ā
- LocationĀ 3008
-
Sam Kaner, Facilitatorās Guide to Participatory Decision-Making, 3rd ed. (San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass, 2014).
- LocationĀ 3011
-
Cyndi Suarez, The Power Manual: How to Master Complex Power Dynamics (Gabriola Island, BC, Canada: New Society Publishers, 2018), back cover.
- LocationĀ 3014
-
Kelly Bates, Cynthia Silva Parker, and Curtis Ogden, āPower Dynamics: The Hidden Element to Effective Meetings,ā Interaction Institute for Social Change, July 11, 2018, http://interactioninstitute.org/power-dynamics-the-hidden-element-to-effective-meetings/
- LocationĀ 3016
-
Cultivate Trust
Peter Plastrik, Madeleine Taylor, and John Cleveland, Connecting to Change the World: Harnessing the Power of Networks for Social Impact (Washington, DC: Island Press, 2014), 90.
- LocationĀ 3029
-
Bill Traynor, āVertigo and the Intentional Inhabitant: Leadership in a Connected World,ā Nonprofit Quarterly, February 23, 2018, https://nonprofitquarterly.org/vertigo-and-the-intentional-inhabitant-leadership-in-a-connected-world/
- LocationĀ 3031
-
āTaking Accountability: How Do We Change Violence?ā in Creative Interventions Toolkit: A Practical Guide to Stop Interpersonal Violence (Creative Interventions, 2012), 311ā96, https://www.creative-interventions.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/CI-Toolkit-Final-ENTIRE-Aug-2020.pdf
- LocationĀ 3039
-
āThe Ladder of Inference: How to Avoid Jumping to Conclusions,ā MindTools, accessed February 6, 2021, https://www.mind-tools.com/pages/article/newTMC_91.htm
- LocationĀ 3053
-
Frances Dunn Butterfoss, Coalitions and Partnerships in Community Health (San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass, 2007), 186.
- LocationĀ 3065
-
āJemez Principles for Democratic Organizing,ā December 1996, https://www.ejnet.org/ej/jemez.pdf
- LocationĀ 3075
-
Kristi Clemens, āFrom Safe Spaces to Brave Spaces: A New Way to Frame Dialogue around Diversity and Social Justice,ā in The Art of Effective Facilitation: Reflections from Social Justice Educators, ed. Lisa M. Landreman (Sterling, VA: Stylus Publishing, 2013), 135ā
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āConversation Agreements,ā Living Room Conversations, accessed December 23, 2020, https://www.livingroomconversations.org/conversation_agreements/
- LocationĀ 3081
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āGuidelines for Effective Cross-Cultural Dialogue,ā VISIONS, Inc., accessed December 22, 2020, https://fusn.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/Guidelines-for-Effective-Cross-Cultural-Dialogue.doc-1.pdf
- LocationĀ 3084
-
Coordinate Actions
Curtis Ogden, āGetting with the Flows: āNet Workā as Change,ā Network Weaver, September 23, 2019, https://networkweaver.com/getting-with-the-flows-net-work-as-change/
- LocationĀ 3097
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Donella H. Meadows, Thinking in Systems: A Primer, ed. Diana Wright (White River Junction, VT: Chelsea Green Publishing, 2008), 173.
- LocationĀ 3100
-
Jessica Conrad, āHow Collaborative Networks Lead Through CrisisāPart II,ā Garfield Foundation, Medium, May 20, 2020, https://medium.com/@garfield_foundation/how-collaborative-networks-lead-through-crisis-part-ii-6d609d599d26
- LocationĀ 3106
-
Collaborate for Systems Change
āInfluencing Complex Systems Change,ā Change Elemental, accessed December 23, 2020, https://changeelemental.org/influencing-complex-systems-change/
- LocationĀ 3120
-
This process has been called āsensemaking,ā a term first introduced by organizational theorist Karl E. Weick. See Karl E. Weick, Sensemaking in Organizations (Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications, 1995).
- LocationĀ 3122
-
found at systems.geofunders.org/tools-resources, as well as in Peggy Holman, Tom Devane, and Steven Cady, eds., The Change Handbook: The Definitive Resource on Todayās Best Methods for Engaging Whole Systems, 2nd ed. (San Francisco, CA: Berrett-Koehler Publishers, 2007).
- LocationĀ 3126
-
Farrell, Kelly, et al., āEquity as Common Cause,ā Othering and Belonging Journal no. 2.
- LocationĀ 3129
-
Talia Milgrom-Elcott and Eric L. Berlow, āEnding Teacher Shortages with Network Mapping,ā Stanford Social Innovation Review, April 25, 2018, https://ssir.org/articles/entry/ending_teacher_shortages_with_network_mapping
- LocationĀ 3130
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100Kin10, āField Guide for Catalyzing Change,ā accessed February 22, 2021, https://2019annualreport.100kin10.org/
- LocationĀ 3133
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Steve Waddell, Change for the Audacious: A Doerās Guide (Boston, MA: NetworkingAction Publishing, 2016), 15.
- LocationĀ 3135
-
Damon Centola, How Behavior Spreads: The Science of Complex Contagions (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2018), 2.
- LocationĀ 3142
- behavior change,
Leslie R. Crutchfield, How Change Happens: Why Some Social Movements Succeed While Others Donāt (Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2018), 58.
- LocationĀ 3148
- 1resource, social change,
Leslie Crutchfield, āWhy the Best Leaders Give Their Power Away,ā Fortune, May 12, 2018, https://fortune.com/2018/05/12leadership-parkland-shooting-nra-gun-control-laws/
- LocationĀ 3150
-
Mark Engler and Paul Engler, This Is an Uprising: How Nonviolent Revolt Is Shaping the Twenty-First Century (New York, NY: Nation Books, 2016), 71.
- LocationĀ 3152
-
The Enabling Infrastructure
Manuel Lima, Visual Complexity: Mapping Patterns of Information (New York, NY: Princeton Architectural Press, 2011), 48.
- LocationĀ 3167
-
Ruth Rominger, āSystems Principles for Collaborative Networks,ā Medium, Garfield Foundation, March 11, 2020, https://garfield-foundation.medium.com/systems-principles-for-collaborative-networks-d86fb3f22a2a
- LocationĀ 3170
-
Charles Vogl, The Art of Community: Seven Principles for Belonging (Oakland, CA: Berrett-Koehler Publishers, 2016), 33.
- LocationĀ 3180
-
Enspiral, Enspiral Handbook, accessed February 16, 2021, https://handbook.enspiral.com/
- LocationĀ 3181
-
Itās important to keep in mind that social network analysis provides a representation of how participants perceive their connections with one another at a given point in time, but it is not a true reflection of reality. This is both because connections are changing all the time, so the data is never perfect, and because different people are likely to have different interpretations of how they would score their connections with others on the survey.
- LocationĀ 3188
-
David Nee and Curtis Ogden, āDistributing Leadership, Promoting Stewardship,ā Stanford Social Innovation Review, September 30, 2015, https://ssir.org/network_entrepreneurs/entry/distributing_leadership_promoting_stewardship
- LocationĀ 3199
-
Embracing Complexity: Towards a Shared Understanding of Funding Systems Change, Ashoka, Catalyst 2030, Co-Impact, Echoing Green, Schwab Foundation, Skoll Foundation, January 2020, https://www.ashoka.org/sites/default/files/2020-01/Embracing+Complexity_Full+Report_final.pdf
- LocationĀ 3205
-
Susan Wolf Ditkoff and Abe Grindle, āAudacious Philanthropy,ā Harvard Business Review, SeptemberāOctober 2017, https://hbr.org/2017/09/audacious-philanthropy
- LocationĀ 3210
-
Glossary
Network Terms
Networks: Webs of relationships connecting people or things.
- LocationĀ 3216
-
Nodes: Individual parts of a network. Also known as elements or actors
- LocationĀ 3217
-
Links: Connections between the parts of a network. Also known as edges or ties
- LocationĀ 3218
-
Clusters: Groups of people or nodes that are much more connected with each other than they are with others.
- LocationĀ 3219
-
Bridges: Connections between two clusters, networks, or parts of a system that would otherwise be disconnected. Wide bridges feature multiple connections, while narrow bridges feature a single connection. Those who create bridges are known as bridgers, brokers, or boundary spanners
- LocationĀ 3220
-
Hubs: Highly connected nodes in a network.
- LocationĀ 3223
-
Core: The most densely connected part of a network, often appearing at the center.
- LocationĀ 3223
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Periphery: The less-connected part of a network surrounding the core.
- LocationĀ 3224
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Network Forms
Impact network: A network that brings individuals and organizations together for learning and collaborative action for a shared purpose.
- LocationĀ 3225
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Learning network: A form of impact network that primarily facilitates the flow of information or knowledge.
- LocationĀ 3226
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Action network: A form of impact network that facilitates connection and learning in service of coordinated action.
- LocationĀ 3228
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Movement network: A form of impact network that connects many other impact networks together, creating a network-of-networks.
- LocationĀ 3229
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Network Leadership
Network mindset: A worldview that embraces the reality that everything is connected. Those who adopt a network mindset see themselves as a part of a larger web of activity (not always as the central hub) and seek to develop stronger connections to create impact through collaboration.
- LocationĀ 3230
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Catalyzing: A network leadership role that brings people together to explore and launch a new impact network, and that fosters opportunities to expand the networkās impact.
- LocationĀ 3233
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Coordination: A network leadership role that provides operational support to sustain network activities and develop the networkās ability to share information, capture learnings, and coordinate actions.
- LocationĀ 3234
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Facilitation: A network leadership role that guides participants through group processes to find common ground and advance collaborative action.
- LocationĀ 3236
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Weaving: A network leadership role that nurtures connection to foster new relationships.
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Network Teams
Core team: A group of participants who volunteer or are elected to help guide the work andā¦
- LocationĀ 3239
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Design team: A group of diverse representatives from across a system who work to collectively clarify why an impact network is needed, who needs to be involved initially,ā¦
- LocationĀ 3240
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Learning circles: Groups of participants who gather together to hold conversations, share knowledge, and collectā¦
- LocationĀ 3242
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Project teams: Groups of participants who collaborate to advance a specific body of work relatedā¦
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Creatingā¦
Convenings: Gatherings that bring all network members together simultaneously,ā¦
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Emergence: The process of something new arising from learningā¦
- LocationĀ 3245
- 1todo evernote, emergence,
Leverage points: Places where targeted intervention can produce outsized impactsā¦
- LocationĀ 3246
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Resilience: The ability to withstand disruption and adapt asā¦
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System: A group of interacting or interdependent parts that togetherā¦
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Systems change: The process of reforming or transforming the structures, relationships, policies, power dynamics, narratives, and norms in a given system to createā¦
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Selectedā¦
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BarabĆ”si, Albert-LĆ”szlĆ³. Linked: The New Science of Networks. Cambridge, MA:ā¦
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Bartlett, Richard D. Patterns for Decentralised Organisingā¦
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Block, Peter. Community: The Structure of Belonging. 2nd ed. Oakland, CA:ā¦
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Brafman, Ori, and Rod A. Beckstrom. The Starfish and the Spider: The Unstoppable Power of Leaderless Organizations. Newā¦
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-
brown, adrienne maree. Emergent Strategy: Shaping Change, Changing Worlds. Chicoā¦
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Butterfoss, Frances Dunn. Coalitions and Partnerships in Community Health. San Francisco,ā¦
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Cabraal, Anthony, and Susan Basterfield. Better Work Together: How the Power of Community Can Transform Yourā¦
- LocationĀ 3268
-
Centola, Damon. How Behavior Spreads: The Science of Complex Contagions. Princeton, NJ:ā¦
- LocationĀ 3270
-
Christakis, Nicholas A., and James H. Fowler. Connected: The Surprising Power of Our Social Networks and How They Shape Our Lives. New York,ā¦
- LocationĀ 3271
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Coyle, Daniel. The Culture Code: The Secrets of Highly Successful Groups. New York,ā¦
- LocationĀ 3274
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Cross, Rob, and Andrew Parker. The Hidden Power of Social Networks: Understanding How Work Really Gets Done in Organizations. Boston, MA:ā¦
- LocationĀ 3275
-
Crutchfield, Leslie R. How Change Happens: Why Some Social Movements Succeed While Others Donāt. Hoboken, NJ:ā¦
- LocationĀ 3277
-
Engler, Mark, and Paul Engler. This Is an Uprising: How Nonviolent Revolt Is Shaping the Twenty-First Century. Newā¦
- LocationĀ 3278
-
Ferguson, Niall. The Square and the Tower: Networks, Hierarchies, and the Struggle for Global Power.ā¦
- LocationĀ 3280
-
Goldsmith, Stephen, and William D. Eggers. Governing by Network: The New Shape of the Public Sector. Washington, D.C.: Brookings Institution Press, 2004.
- LocationĀ 3285
-
Heifetz, Ronald A., Marty Linsky, and Alexander Grashow. The Practice of Adaptive Leadership: Tools and Tactics for Changing Your Organization and the World. Boston, MA: Harvard Business Press, 2009.
- LocationĀ 3288
-
Holley, June. Network Weaver Handbook: A Guide to Transformational Networks. Athens, OH: Network Weaver Publishing, 2012.
- LocationĀ 3290
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Holman, Peggy. Engaging Emergence: Turning Upheaval into Opportunity. San Francisco, CA: Berrett-Koehler Publishers, 2010.
- LocationĀ 3291
-
Holman, Peggy, Tom Devane, and Steven Cady, eds. The Change Handbook: The Definitive Resource on Todayās Best Methods for Engaging Whole Systems. 2nd ed. San Francisco, CA: Berrett-Koehler Publishers, 2007.
- LocationĀ 3292
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Huxham, Chris, and Siv Vangen. Managing to Collaborate: The Theory and Practice of Collaborative Advantage. New York, NY: Routledge, 2005.
- LocationĀ 3296
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JƤrvensivu, Timo. Managing (in) Networks: Learning, Working and Leading Together. Helsinki, Finland: Books on Demand, 2020.
- LocationĀ 3297
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Jay, Jason, and Gabriel Grant. Breaking Through Gridlock: The Power of Conversation in a Polarized World. Oakland, CA: Berrett-Koehler Publishers, 2017.
- LocationĀ 3299
-
Johansen, Bob, and Karl Ronn. The Reciprocity Advantage: A New Way to Partner for Innovation and Growth. San Francisco, CA: Berrett-Koehler Publishers, 2014.
- LocationĀ 3300
-
Kahane, Adam. Collaborating with the Enemy: How to Work with People You Donāt Agree with or Like or Trust. Oakland, CA: Berrett-Koehler Publishers, 2017.
- LocationĀ 3304
-
Facilitating Breakthrough: How to Remove Obstacles, Bridge Differences, and Move Forward Together. Oakland, CA: Berrett-Koehler Publishers, 2021.
- LocationĀ 3305
-
Solving Tough Problems: An Open Way of Talking, Listening, and Creating New Realities. San Francisco, CA: Berrett-Koehler Publishers, 2004.
- LocationĀ 3307
- community deliberation, problem solving, community engagement, group facilitation,
Kaner, Sam. Facilitatorās Guide to Participatory Decision-Making. 3rd ed. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass, 2014.
- LocationĀ 3308
-
Laloux, Frederic. Reinventing Organizations: A Guide to Creating Organizations Inspired by the Next Stage of Human Consciousness. Brussels, Belgium: Nelson Parker, 2014.
- LocationĀ 3312
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Laloux, Frederic, and Etienne Appert. Reinventing Organizations: An Illustrated Invitation to Join the Conversation on Next-Stage Organizations. Brussels, Belgium: Nelson Parker, 2016.
- LocationĀ 3314
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Landreman, Lisa M., ed. The Art of Effective Facilitation: Reflections from Social Justice Educators. Sterling, VA: Stylus Publishing, 2013.
- LocationĀ 3316
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Lima, Manuel. Visual Complexity: Mapping Patterns of Information. New York, NY: Princeton Architectural Press, 2011.
- LocationĀ 3317
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Markova, Dawna, and Angie McArthur. Collaborative Intelligence: Thinking with People Who Think Differently. New York, NY: Random House, 2016.
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Martlew, Nick. Creative Coalitions: A Handbook for Change. Crisis Action, 2017. https://crisisaction.org/handbook/contents/
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McChrystal, Stanley, Tantum Collins, David Silverman, and Chris Fussell. Team of Teams: New Rules of Engagement for a Complex World. New York, NY: Penguin Publishing Group, 2015.
- LocationĀ 3321
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Meadows, Donella H. Thinking in Systems: A Primer. Edited by Diana Wright. White River Junction, VT:ā¦
- LocationĀ 3323
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Neal, Craig, and Patricia Neal. The Art of Convening: Authentic Engagement in Meetings, Gatherings, and Conversations. San Francisco, CAā¦
- LocationĀ 3324
-
Newman, Mark. Networks. 2nd ed. Oxford, UK: Oxfordā¦
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Parker, Priya. The Art of Gathering: How We Meet and Why It Matters. New York, NY:ā¦
- LocationĀ 3330
-
Pentland, Alex. Social Physics: How Good Ideas SpreadāThe Lessons from a New Science. New York,ā¦
- LocationĀ 3332
- 1resource/book, network science,
Pflaeging, Niels. Organize for Complexity: How to Get Life Back into Work to Build the High-Performance Organization. 3rd ed. Wiesbaden,ā¦
- LocationĀ 3334
-
Plastrik, Peter, Madeleine Taylor, and John Cleveland. Connecting to Change the World: Harnessing the Power of Networks for Social Impact.ā¦
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-
Rainie, Lee, and Barry Wellman. Networked: The New Social Operating System. Cambridgeā¦
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Robertson, Brian J. Holacracy: The New Management System for a Rapidly Changing World. New York, NY:ā¦
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Scharmer, C. Otto. Theory U: Leading from the Future as It Emerges. Oakland, CA:ā¦
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-
Scharmer, Otto, and Katrin Kaufer. Leading from the Emerging Future: From Ego-System to Eco-System Economies. San Francisco, CA:ā¦
- LocationĀ 3342
- economics, 1resource/book, futurism, leadership,
Slade, Samantha. Going Horizontal: Creating a Non-Hierarchical Organization, One Practice at a Time. Oakland, CA:ā¦
- LocationĀ 3345
-
Solomon, Robert C., and Fernando Flores. Building Trust: In Business, Politics, Relationships, and Life. New York, NY:ā¦
- LocationĀ 3346
-
Suarez, Cyndi. The Power Manual: How to Master Complexā¦
- LocationĀ 3350
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Gabriola Island, BC, Canada: New Society Publishers, 2018. Tapscott, Don, and Anthony D. Williams. Wikinomics: How Mass Collaboration Changes Everything.ā¦
- LocationĀ 3351
-
Vitale, Christopher. Networkologies: A Philosophy of Networks for a Hyperconnected AgeāA Manifesto.ā¦
- LocationĀ 3354
-
Vogl, Charles. The Art of Community: Seven Principles for Belonging. Oakland, CA:ā¦
- LocationĀ 3355
-
Waddell, Steve. Change for the Audacious: A Doerās Guide. Boston, MA:ā¦
- LocationĀ 3356
-
Global Action Networks: Creating Our Future Together. New York, NY:ā¦
- LocationĀ 3358
-
Wahl, Daniel Christian. Designing Regenerative Cultures. Axminster, England:ā¦
- LocationĀ 3359
-
Watts, Duncan J. Six Degrees: The Science of a Connected Age. New York, NY: W. W.ā¦
- LocationĀ 3360
-
Weisbord, Marvin, and Sandra Janoff. Donāt Just Do Something, Stand There!: Ten Principles for Leading Meetings That Matter. San Francisco,ā¦
- LocationĀ 3361
-
West, Geoffrey. Scale: The Universal Laws of Life, Growth, and Death in Organisms, Cities, and Companies. Newā¦
- LocationĀ 3363
-
About the Author
David Ehrlichman is cofounder and coordinator of Converge (converge.net). With his colleagues, he has supported the development of dozens of impact networks taking action on issues as diverse as economic mobility, human rights, access to science, and health care reform. Prior to catalyzing Converge, David was a consultant with Monitor Institute, where he was first introduced to the power of networks.
- LocationĀ 3975
- 1resource/person, 1action,
- [note::I'd like to follow this guy]
You can reach David at ehrlichman@converge.net
- LocationĀ 3981
-
dg-publish: true
created: 2024-07-01
modified: 2024-07-01
title: Impact Networks
source: kindle
@tags:: #litā/šbook/highlights
@links:: community, community building, networks, network stewardship,
@ref:: Impact Networks
@author:: David Ehrlichman
=this.file.name
Reference
=this.ref
Notes
Preface
This book is about how to cultivate impact networks that enable diverse groups of people to connect, coordinate, and collaborate within and across organizations to do more together than is possible alone.
- LocationĀ 85
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Collaborative networks may be called many things: associations, alliances, coalitions, collaborations, collective impact initiatives, consortia, and more.
- LocationĀ 93
- collaborative networks,
- [note::"Interested in collaborative networks" - I'd like to include this in my website bio/mission statement"]
Monitor Institute, the social sector wing of a global management consulting firm.
- LocationĀ 101
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Building Smart Communities through Network Weaving, by Valdis Krebs and June Holley, a white paper about how we can strengthen our communities by recognizing and cultivating the networks of connections that underlie them.
- LocationĀ 105
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handbook Net Gains, by Peter Plastrik and Madeleine Taylor, an early resource for network builders seeking social change.
- LocationĀ 107
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RE-AMP Network, a massive collaboration of more than one hundred organizations working to reduce greenhouse gas emissions across the midwestern United States;
- LocationĀ 108
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We have been fortunate to partner with more than fifty different impact networks in the past ten years, and through these experiences we started to notice consistent patterns among networks, even when their context and focus varied widely. While the whys and whats were unique to each network, the howsāthe principles and processes used to create themāwere quite consistent.
- LocationĀ 138
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Introduction
Our Complex World
The Cynefin framework is helpful in differentiating simple, complicated, complex, and chaotic issues:2 Simple issues can be definitively solved, with a clear beginning and end, such as cooking a meal. Complicated issues involve many moving parts, but they can be defined and understood. They are technical in nature, with predictable solutions that can be implemented effectively by people with the right expertise.3 Planning and implementing the logistical operations for an event is complicated but not complex. Complex issues are difficult to define, as they have no clear beginning or end. They also have no readily apparent solution, and we cannot accurately predict the path ahead. Consequently, we have to be able to adapt to changing circumstances and modify strategies as we learn what works and what does not. An example of a complex challenge is equitably eliminating greenhouse gas emissions across a large region. We will return to this issue later. Chaotic issues, like their complex counterparts, cannot be accurately predicted or controlled. They are also turbulent, dangerous, and rapidly evolving. Chaotic situationsāsuch as a humanitarian disasterāoften require that we act quickly to save lives or tend to emergencies before working to establish some sense of order. They call for a rapid response to distribute information and resources to where they are needed most, before addressing the underlying issues.
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Most people love the idea of collaborationĀ .Ā .Ā .Ā as long as it promises to do exactly what they want it to do. But that is not how collaboration works. Collaboration (as we talk about it) is not forced or coerced. It requires you to give up control. And because itās not predetermined, it requires you to give up certainty.
- LocationĀ 197
- collaboration, 1socialpost-queue,
We need collaborative structures that are flexible enough to shift on a momentās notice, that are resilient enough to withstand turbulence and disruption, and that bring people together as equals to share leadership and decision-making.
- LocationĀ 204
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Organizing for Complexity
RE-AMP Network, a collection of more than 140 organizations and foundations working across sectors to equitably eliminate greenhouse gas emissions across nine midwestern states by 2050.
- LocationĀ 227
- 1action, network stewardship, 1resource/network,
- [note::In what ways do they organize themselves?]
100Kin10 is a massive collaborative effort that is bringing together more than three hundred academic institutions, nonprofits, foundations, businesses, and government agencies to train and support one hundred thousand science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) teachers across the United States in ten years.
- LocationĀ 231
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- [note::In what ways do they organize themselves?]
Justice in Motion Defender Network is a collection of human rights defenders and organizations in Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador, and Nicaragua that have joined together to help migrants quickly obtain legal assistance across borders.
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-
- [note::In what ways do they organize themselves?]
the Clean Electronics Production Network (CEPN). CEPN brings together many of the worldās top technology suppliers and brands with labor and environmental advocates, governments, and other leading experts to move toward elimination of workersā exposure to toxic chemicals in electronics production.
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-
- [note::In what ways do they organize themselves?]
Impact networks build on the life force of communityāshared principles, resilience, self-organization, and trustāwhile leveraging the advantages of an effective organization, including a common aim, an operational backbone, and a bias for action. Through this unique blend of qualities, impact networks increase the flow of information, reduce waste, and align strategies across entire systemsāall while liberating the energy of multiple actors operating at a variety of scales.
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In the Pages Ahead
You can find all these and more in the Converge Network Toolkit, hosted at converge.net. There you will find a library of free tools and facilitation guides, color versions of the network maps contained in this book, invitations to learning experiences, and opportunities to connect and share with other network leaders.
- LocationĀ 259
- 1resource, network stewardship,
Part 1, āWorking Through Networks,ā provides an overview of what networks are and how they work. Chapter 1, āThe Web of Change,ā introduces the different forms of impact networks and explores two case studies illustrating how networks develop and grow their impact over time. Chapter 2, āThe Network Mindset,ā defines the core tenets of the network approach, how networks and hierarchies are distinct yet related, and how working through networks changes the way we think of leadership and strategy. Chapter 3, āMaking Networks Work,ā expands further on the primary forms of impact networks, with diagrams explaining how they are structured. It also summarizes the process of cultivating impact networks, outlining five core activities that are expanded in detail in part 2. Chapter 4, āNetwork Leadership,ā describes four network leadership roles along with four fundamental principles of network leadership: foster self-organization, promote emergence, embrace change, and hold dynamic tensions. Part 2, āCultivating Impact Networks,ā dives deeply into five core activities of impact networks, offering a practical guide for network leaders. Chapter 5, āClarify Purpose and Principles,ā describes how to catalyze a new impact network, find common purpose, and define shared principles to guide networks as they evolve. Chapter 6, āConvene the People,ā explores who to bring together and offers key considerations for designing and facilitating transformative network gatherings. Chapter 7, āCultivate Trust,ā provides practices for weaving connections, deepening trust, and holding courageous conversations. Chapter 8, āCoordinate Actionsā contains tactics for accelerating the flow of information across a network, practicing reciprocity, and responding to moments of crisis. Chapter 9, āCollaborate for Systems Change,ā describes practices for making sense of a system and identifying high-potential areas for action. It also presents pathways for catalyzing systemic change, including shifting social norms and growing a movement. Chapter 10, āThe Enabling Infrastructure,ā concludes the body of the book with practical advice on how to structure an impact network, how to craft agreements for participation, how to make decisions collectively, how to embed evaluation to generate key learnings that will inform the networkās development, and how to resource networks, including pivotal practices for network funders.
- LocationĀ 263
-
- [note::Chapter topics]
working through networks
The Web of Change
Impact networks take three primary forms: learning networks, action networks, and movement networks. Each form is best suited for a particular function. Learning networks are focused on connection and learning. They are formed to facilitate the flow of information or knowledge to advance collective learning on a particular issue. Action networks are focused on connection, learning, and action. They are formed to facilitate connection and learning in service of coordinated action. Movement networks link many other learning and action networks together, creating a network-of-networks. While they often function much like a learning or action network at their core, movement networks also facilitate information sharing and coordinate actions among multiple different networks for a common aim.
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Networks for Impact
Relationships: The Heart of Networks
Relationships are at the heart of everything that impact networks accomplish. From two decades of research on networks and other multistakeholder collaborations, Jane Wei-Skillern of the Haas School of Business at the University of California, Berkeley, finds that āthe single most important factor behind all successful collaborations is trust-based relationships among participants. Many collaborative efforts ultimately fail to reach their full potential because they lack a strong relational foundation.ā
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In the absence of relationships, effective collaboration is not possible.
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The Network Mindset
The network mindset is captured most succinctly by four principles championed by Jane Wei-Skillern.3 Leaders who have adopted a network mindset focus on the following: ā¢ Scaling impact, not growing their organization or function ā¢ Being part of an interconnected system, not the center of it ā¢ Sharing leadership and credit with peers, not hoarding power or trying to be a hero ā¢ Building trust-based relationships, not systems of control
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The Hierarchical Mindset
hierarchical structures are a poor choice for multistakeholder collaborations. By holding on to control, the people at the top of hierarchies limit the self-organizing potential of the rest of the system. By maintaining a rigid structure that ranks some people over others, hierarchies create unequal access to information and power, which erodes trust. And in collaborative environments, there is often no central authority or shared governing body capable of directing the many diverse stakeholder groups involved. Or worse, there is a single point of command whose response imposes too much bureaucracy and fails to incorporate the diverse perspectives required to navigate complexity.
- LocationĀ 530
-
- [note::Shortcomings of hierarchical structures. What are the strengths? Decision-making agility?]
Networks and Hierarchies, Together
In a heterarchy, formal power and decision-making is distributedānobody has a baked-in, structural advantage over others. At the same time, some people may have more influence than others on specific issues based on their knowledge, experience, or role.
- LocationĀ 577
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Making the Mindset Shift
Hierarchical Mindset Network Mindset Mechanistic worldview Living systems worldview System seen as a hierarchical pyramid System seen as a web of interactions Organization at the center of focus Purpose at the center of focus Top-down, directive leadership Distributed, servant leadership Centralized decision-making Collective decision-making Impulse to command and control Impulse to connect and collaborate Information restricted Information shared Task oriented Relationship oriented Bias toward deliberate strategy Embrace of emergent strategy Distinctions between the hierarchical mindset and the network mindset.
- LocationĀ 593
-
Self-organizing happens when people are invited to notice and act on opportunities based on their own judgment. When people are free to try new things, initiate experiments, and connect and collaborate with others from across the system, networks become āleader-ful.
- LocationĀ 628
-
self-organizing potential of a network is fostered by servant leaders (to borrow a term coined by Robert Greenleaf11) who cultivate the conditions for connection, learning, and action to arise.
- LocationĀ 636
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Making Networks Work
Primary Forms of Impact Networks
Learning Networks
- LocationĀ 662
- h4,
(the process of determining participation criteria is known as bounding a network
- LocationĀ 672
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Participants may also form learning circles, gathering together to hold conversations, share knowledge, and collect information on a specific topic related to the networkās purpose.
- LocationĀ 673
-
Action Networks
- LocationĀ 679
- h4,
Action networks have been called many things, including alliances, coalitions, collective impact initiatives, consortiums, innovation networks, and more.
- LocationĀ 698
-
Movement Networks
- LocationĀ 708
- h4,
Core Activities of Impact Networks
The work of cultivating and sustaining impact networks involves five core activities. For ease of reference, they are referred to as the āFive Csā: ā¢ Clarify purpose and principles ā¢ Convene the people ā¢ Cultivate trust ā¢ Coordinate actions ā¢ Collaborate for systems change
- LocationĀ 726
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I. Clarify Purpose and Principles
- LocationĀ 738
- h4,
Due to their self-organizing nature, impact networks cannot be controlled. They can, however, be oriented toward a shared purpose. This is how they stay coherent even as they grow. Purpose is āthe invisible leader,ā writes Samantha Slade, author of Going Horizontal
- LocationĀ 740
-
II. Convene the People
- LocationĀ 748
- h4,
III. Cultivate Trust
- LocationĀ 756
- h4,
Although it is widely accepted that trusting relationships are beneficial when it comes to collaboration, the common assumption is that trust is a by-product of other activities and that it takes a long time to develop. Rather than deliberately building trust, the norm is to focus on getting to action and letting relationships develop naturally over time. However, we have consistently found that trust is the single most important factor behind successful impact networks; networks move at the speed of trust.4 Therefore, trust should be deliberately nurtured from the outset of a networkās development.
- LocationĀ 764
-
IV. Coordinate Actions
- LocationĀ 769
- h4,
V. Collaborate for Systems Change
- LocationĀ 776
- h4,
The puzzle metaphor exemplifies three conditions that make a network approach so valuable: ā¢ Local knowledge: People are engaged with different parts of the system, with expertise in their piece of the puzzle. ā¢ Separation: People are disconnected and unable or unwilling to share knowledge and resources with one another. ā¢ Complexity: The system is more complex than anyone can grasp on their own. Only by bringing the pieces together can groups make sense of the whole puzzle.
- LocationĀ 784
-
- [note::Why networks matter]
Cultivating the Conditions for Networks to Thrive
- LocationĀ 793
- h4,
To answer this question, itās helpful to think of networks as like a garden. Unlike machines, which can be built to exact specifications, gardens cannot be forced to grow in a certain way. No two gardens are exactly the same, because every plant grows in relationship with its neighbors, soil, and climate. Itās also not possible to grow a garden overnight: it takes time for the plants to develop, no matter how much attention you give them.
- LocationĀ 794
-
- [note::Same analogy used in "Cultivating Community"]
Network Leadership
Network leadership is rooted in trusting relationships, collaboration, and shared power; it is adaptive, facilitative, and grounded in the wisdom of living systems. Network leadership is also distributedāanyone can demonstrate network leadership, from wherever they are, in many different ways. This more inclusive understanding of leadership inspires self-organization and provides a source of creative potential that makes networks such a powerful vehicle for innovation and change.
- LocationĀ 815
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- [note::Characteristics of network leadership.]
Network Leadership Roles
we see four primary leadership roles that appear at different moments in a networkās life cycle: catalyzing, facilitation, weaving, and coordination: ā¢ Catalyzing is the art of crafting a vision and inspiring action. Catalysts are particularly instrumental in forming new networks: they bring people together for the first time to explore the potential and get the effort off the ground. Once a network is launched, catalyzing continues to be needed to organize new project teams, raise resources, and foster new opportunities to expand the networkās impact. ā¢ Facilitation is about guiding participants through group processes to find common ground and collaborate with one another. Facilitators design and lead convenings, hold space for different points of view, and help conversations flow. ā¢ Weaving involves fostering new connections and deepening relationships. Weavers engage with participants to gather input, introduce participants to each other to inspire self-organization, and build bridges with new communities to help the network grow. ā¢ Coordination is the work of organizing the networkās internal systems and structures to enable participants to share information and advance collective work. Coordinators establish and maintain network operations, support knowledge management, and assist network teams.
- LocationĀ 830
-
- [note::I'd like to diagram this.]
Principles of Network Leadership
Following are four principles of network leadership we have experienced and observed across impact networks at every scale: ā¢ Foster self-organization ā¢ Promote emergence ā¢ Embrace change ā¢ Hold dynamic tensions
- LocationĀ 851
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Foster Self-Organization
- LocationĀ 856
- h4,
One of the primary responsibilities of network leaders, then, is to cultivate the conditions for greater levels of self-organization to arise. Network leaders have the humility to step back and follow the lead of others. In Converge we follow the maxim of the Enspiral network: āNo one should lead all the time, and everyone should lead some of the time.ā5 This is what distributed leadership is all about.
- LocationĀ 880
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Promote Emergence
- LocationĀ 883
- h4,
Management theorist Henry Mintzberg writes that all strategy is both deliberate and emergent.7 Deliberate strategies set their sights on accomplishing a series of planned actions to realize a set of well-defined outcomes. At the same time, strategy also tends to emerge over time as planned activities collide with reality and are then adapted to accommodate a changing experience. Emergent approaches to strategy recognize that we simply cannot predict the future, and that it is often necessaryāparticularly in the face of complexityāto learn your way into what needs to be done and how to do it.
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Or as E. L. Doctorow said about the process of writing a book, āItās like driving a car at night. You never see further than your headlights, but you can make the whole trip that way.ā
- LocationĀ 898
-
- [note::Useful analogy for agile project management or network leadership]
Prioritize Connection
- LocationĀ 913
- h5,
As activist and educator Grace Lee Boggs has said, āIn this exquisitely connected world, itās never a question of ācritical mass.ā Itās always about critical connections.ā
- LocationĀ 918
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Sense into the Future
- LocationĀ 920
- h5,
Engage in Experimentation
- LocationĀ 928
- h5,
Embrace Change
- LocationĀ 934
- h4,
We prefer to use the term resilience, defined by the Stockholm Resilience Center as āthe capacity of a system, be it an individual, a forest, a city or an economy, to deal with change and continue to develop.ā15 Resilience is a measure of how well a system can absorb shocks and use disturbances to spur renewal and innovation.
- LocationĀ 937
-
Two approaches for increasing a networkās resilience are to decentralize connections and create redundancies.
- LocationĀ 942
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Decentralize Connections
- LocationĀ 943
- h5,
Create Redundancies
- LocationĀ 949
- h5,
Creating redundancies in networks through wide bridges allows resources and information to continue flowing even when certain individuals are unresponsive or unavailable.
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Hold Dynamic Tensions
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- h4,
As impact networks evolve, they are bound to face a number of dynamic tensions: ādynamicā because they are always in flux, ātensionsā to signify a relationship between ideas or qualities with seemingly conflicting demands or implications. If managed effectively, these tensions, also known as polarities, can be a powerful source of energy. Having āno tension in a system signifies no aliveness, no learning, no evolution,ā write Giles Hutchins and Laura Storm in Regenerative Leadership
- LocationĀ 971
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- [note::Where there is no conflict, there is no innovation.
First time coming across this topic - might have to engage more.]
different tensions could arise as networks develop, but we have seen six in particular that show up time and time again: ā¢ Building trust and taking action ā¢ Participation and pace ā¢ Self-interest and shared interest ā¢ The parts and the whole ā¢ Planning and emergence ā¢ Divergence and convergence
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Dynamic tensions arenāt problems to be solved; they are polarities to be aware of, integrated, and held with care throughout the life cycle of a network.
- LocationĀ 990
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Building Trust and Taking Action
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- h5,
Participation and Pace
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- h5,
Self-Interest and Shared Interest
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- h5,
altruistic concerns alone are rarely enough to justify participantsā continued engagement in a network, given busy schedules and competing priorities. For people to continue participating over the long term, the network will also need to advance their self-interests in some wayāfor instance, by facilitating valuable connections, generating new learnings, or advancing individual and organizational priorities.
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The Parts and the Whole
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- h5,
Planning and Emergence
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āDeliberate process, emergent results.ā
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Divergence and Convergence
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- h5,
FIGURE 4.2. Divergence (expressing different perspectives) allows for convergence (bringing ideas together), which leads to emergence (discovering new possibilities).
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To quote the prolific writer Seth Godin, āYou are more prepared than you realize. You probably arenāt ready, and you canāt be ready, not if youāre doing something worthwhile.ā
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cultivating impact networks
Clarify Purpose and Principles
Catalyzing a New Network
Exploring the Potential for a Network
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- h4,
1. Make Sense of the System, and Build on What Already Exists
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- h5,
Start by doing your homework to understand whatās really going on. This means having conversations with lots of different people who are engaged in the issue. Where is there common ground? Where is there disagreement? Is there a shared purpose that can bring people together? Do the people doing the work see the need or opportunity for greater connectivity and collaboration? Examine the work through an equity lens. Why is the system the way it is? Who has power, and who doesnāt? What needs to be centered in this work? Which people and perspectives are historically or currently underrepresented or marginalized?
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2. Organize an Exploratory Gathering
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- h5,
At that exploratory gathering, discuss the following questions:3 ā¢ Why should we start this network? ā¢ Why should we not start this network? ā¢ What are the possible issues we would work on? ā¢ Who else should be at the table? Then, toward the end of the gathering, ask: ā¢ Should we proceed? ā¢ If so, to what degree are you interested in participating? (See chapter 10 for four levels of engagement that people can choose from.)
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3. Form a Design Team
- LocationĀ 1142
- h5,
4. Organize an Initial Convening, and Begin Cycling through the Five Cs
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- h5,
Finding Common Purpose
Integrating Multiple Levels of Purpose
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- h4,
Sharing personal motivations also helps to humanize participants when they are used to seeing each other in a purely professional context. One particular exercise we use to accomplish this is called Purpose Stands. In this exercise, each participant delivers a one-minute timed speech that answers a central question: Why do I do what I do? This question reveals a personās mission in the world, which may or may not align with the responsibilities of their day job. These one-minute speeches donāt focus on the practical what but on the personal why that defines oneās work. The full instructions for leading Purpose Stands can be found online in the Converge Network Toolkit (visit converge.net to access this and other tools referenced in the pages ahead).
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Shifting Focus from Problems to Possibilities
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- h4,
Envisioning the Future
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- h4,
After more time for ideation, participants were asked to consider a shortened time horizon: āFor that fifty-year vision to happen, where do we have to be in twenty-five years?ā With each step, participants were challenged to bring their vision closer and closer to the present day, identifying potential strategies that could be transformational over the long term. Working backward in time, people were asked, āWhere do we have to be in two years?ā and finally, āWhere do we have to be, right now?ā
- LocationĀ 1262
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- [note::This seems like a useful exercise - "chronological ideation"]
Crafting a Collective Purpose
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- h4,
Defining Shared Principles
Capturing Agreements in a Charter
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- h4,
Charters typically include context for why the network was formed, the networkās purpose and principles, and a high-level summary of who is involved. Charters may also include the networkās priorities or focus areas. Additional operating agreements can be captured in a corresponding document, including governance and decision-making processes, operational structure, and participation agreements (see chapter 10 for more information on establishing participation agreements). Visit the Converge Network Toolkit to access a Network Charter Template containing section headings, sample content, and prompts for developing a charter.
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Evolving Purpose and Principles
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- h4,
Convene the People
The world doesnāt change one person at a time. It changes as networks of relationships form among people who discover they share a common cause and vision of whatās possible. āMARGARET WHEATLEY AND DEBORAH FRIEZE, āUsing Emergence to Take Social Innovations to Scale
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People often join a network because they are inspired by its purpose, but they stay because of who is involved. Who is part of a network may be just as important, if not more important, than why the network exists.
- LocationĀ 1378
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- [note::"Start with Who"]
Inviting Co-creation
Identifying Who to Convene
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- h4,
writes Vu Le, author of the popular Nonprofit AF blog. āMarginalized people and communities donāt have the same access to relationships: Relationships are not equitably distributed.ā3 Therefore, one important step that network leadersāand catalysts in particularācan take to avoid replicating patterns of inequity is to center people who are affected by the issue at hand, as well as those who typically are excluded from networksāfrom the very beginning. This doesnāt mean āletting them participate,ā it means listening and following their leadership.
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Deciding How Many to Convene
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- h4,
āthe network effectā tells us that networks become more valuable as more people are connected to them.5 But this phenomenon holds up only to a point. Human and biological networks (like the networks of neurons in our brains) in particular have been shown to have a ābreakpoint,ā above which the network effect no longer rings true. This is the point at which further growth is no longer beneficial and the network begins a pruning process, shrinking until it reaches an equilibriumāthe ideal size for the network at that time. Ultimately, as Jeff Stibel, author of Breakpoint, attests, the quality of a networkās connections is much more important than its size.
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We have found that most groups are able to hold a single conversation with up to about twenty-four people, though it requires a thoughtful design, well-planned room setup, and skilled facilitation. Other experts in the field agree: ā12 is large enough to offer a diversity of opinion and large enough that it allows for a certain quotient of mystery and intrigue, of constructive unfamiliarity,ā writes Priya Parker in The Art of Gathering
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adrienne maree brown uses a guideline that the amount of time needed for a meaningful full-group conversation is about five minutes per person.8 Given that the average person can only pay attention for about 90 to 120 minutes at a time before their eyes completely glaze over,9 a group of twenty-four people at five minutes each brings you right up to the upper limit.
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However, networks that grow too large may lose their sense of intimacy and take too many resources to sustain. āIf inclusion is the purpose and identity of the gathering, a porous boundary is fine, even perhaps necessary,ā writes Parker. āBut gatherings with many other, wholly admirable purposes can suffer from over-inclusion.ā If youāre unsure how to proceed, ask yourself, āWho is this network for first
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Designing Meaningful Gatherings
And an assortment of in-person and online activities provide spaces for people to engage around shared interests, such as network calls and webinars, site visits, learning journeys, meals organized around a conversation topic, professional development opportunities, and peer assists. Network leaders are always looking for opportunities to facilitate connection and accelerate the flow of information.
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- [note::Ideas for facilitating connection]
Key Considerations for Designing Convenings
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- h4,
But we are convinced that the designāincluding agenda and structureāis even more responsible for a conveningās ultimate success. Though every convening should be customized to fit the particular context of the network, we have learned a few key lessons that inform each one of our designs: ā¢ Put relationships first ā¢ Embrace the magic of small groups ā¢ Focus on the framing questions ā¢ Cultivate deeper experiences ā¢ Incorporate space ā¢ Infuse energy into the network
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Put Relationships First
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- h5,
Far too many meetings are designed primarily around content. But the most valuable resource at any gathering is the people who attend. The rare opportunity of having people together at one time is too often wasted with presentations that could be recorded and broadcast online instead. We recommend moving far away from the āsage on the stageā approach, where so-called experts are the only ones talking and everyone else is passively listening. Recognize that everyone in the room is an expert about something. Everyone has something to contribute. Draw on the wisdom of the crowd, and create spaces where people are regularly interacting with one another, learning from one another, and finding ways to support each otherās work.
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- [note::YES. Lol'd at "sage on a stage".]
Embrace the Magic of Small Groups
- LocationĀ 1495
- h5,
For people to engage most fully, they need to be in small enough groups that they can see and interact with each other simulta neously. Small groups are uniquely powerful as sites of practice; they function as fractals, microcosms of the whole. As Peter Block writes, āThe small group is the unit of transformation and the container for the experience of belonging.ā
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As a general guideline, think of the full group as a place for framing and summarizing, and use small groups to dig into content and discussions.
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- [note::Useful dilution]
Focus on the Framing Questions
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- h5,
Getting the framing questions right is the key to this equation. The right questions help groups focus their attention on what matters most. Otherwise, conversations might range widely from group to group, creating a lack of cohesion across the convening. We spend as much time in our designs crafting thoughtful framing questions as anything else. The best questions get to the heart of the matter. They invite people to bring their own meaning forward, based on their own experiences. They have an edge that creates palpable energy when people offer their response. Often the most important piece of the design is to get the questions right, put them in the right sequence, and then pair each question with a group size and amount of time to do it justice.
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One of our favorite techniques is to rotate people through a series of quick pairs or small groups with a set of framing questions. At the beginning of a session, questions such as āWhy does this work matter to you?ā and āWhat are your hopes for our time today?ā help to set the context for the work ahead. At the end of a session, questions like āWhat is something important you learned at this convening?ā and āWhat is one thing we absolutely must keep in mind moving forward?ā provide closure to the gathering. Visit the Converge Network Toolkit to access a list of our favorite Framing Questions for Small Group Conversations
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Create Deeper Experiences
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- h5,
Incorporate Space
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- h5,
As you plan out your convening, keep the following considerations in mind: First, things will almost always take longer than you expect. The more people there are, the longer things will take. Introductions will run long, conversations will run long, and breaks will most certainly run long. If they donāt, thatās great! Youāve found yourself a few extra minutes. But to be safe, assume that nearly every part of the agenda will require more time than you initially imagined, and plan accordingly. Second, conversations need space to breathe. Space for conflict, space for tension, space for people to introduce new perspectives. Create enough space so that every person who wants to speak their mind can do so, especially the introverts and people who are usually on the margins of conversations. Rushing a conversation to stay on time is an easy way to shut down creative thinking and frustrate a group. Few things are more annoying than a facilitator cutting off a conversation just as it was getting to the heart of the matter. Third, magic happens in unstructured time. Provide long breaks that allow participants to reflect and recharge. And create social spaces where participants can informally connect and have the conversations they need to haveāon their own terms and in their own time. On countless occasions, weāve seen the most memorable, productive, hilarious, and intimate moments of the day happen after the formal agenda has concluded.
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Infuse Energy into the Network
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- h5,
Alternate between activities that center the head (conceptual), the heart (relational), and the hands (actionable). Create time for both divergence and convergence. Gather both in the large group and in small groups. Shift back and forth between moments of high intensity and low intensity, balancing interactive activities with periods of reflection and stillness.
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Preparing for Emergence
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- h4,
In nearly every single one of the convenings Iāve been a part of, the agenda has evolved significantly as we progressed through the day. A huge part of embracing the emergent nature of networks is to be prepared to follow the energy of participants and adapt in real time during facilitation, rather than sticking steadfastly to an agenda that is rapidly becoming obsolete.
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Facilitating Emergent Outcomes
The crux of good facilitation, according to Adam Kahane, author of Facilitating Breakthrough, is not to get people to work together, but to remove the obstacles to connection and collaborationāobstacles like disconnection, debilitating conflict, and other forms of āstuckness.ā13 After all, the Latin translation of the word facilitate is āto make easier.ā Picture a river: while you canāt push a river to move in a certain direction, you can remove rocks and logs impeding its path to allow the water to flow by itself. Good facilitators do not force things forward; they hold space for all points of view to be acknowledged while helping the conversation to flow.
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- [note::Facilitation is about removing obstacles, like taking rocks out of a stream. What other analogies might there be for facilitation?]
As with any facilitation, itās important to set the context for the gathering, ask good questions, and invite divergent perspectives. Facilitators also need to be able to acknowledge and disrupt harmful power dynamics to ensure that people have maximum agency to contribute.
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- [note::This is probably the hardest but most important part of facilitation - addressing behavior that "kills the vibe" and influences others to not contribute as much as they otherwise would.]
Fundamental Practices of Network Facilitation
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- h4,
Invite divergence
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- [note::This is something I could do more of, especially at EA events where there's an incentive to support "standard" EA ways of thinking.]
Show Up with Your Whole Self
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- h5,
Frame the Context
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- h5,
There will inevitably be moments in network convenings when the temperature in the room starts to rise. These are times when the conversation gets tense, people feel on edge, and nobody wants to openly acknowledge it. At this moment, many people will be tempted to retreat into what Robert Solomon and Fernando Flores call ācordial hypocrisyāānice, polite conversations where real issues are swept under the rug.15 The facilitatorās role here is to acknowledge whatās happening, invite people to take a breath, and then hold space so that the real issues can be worked through. Acknowledging what is happening can take the sting out of it, reducing the anxiety that the discomfort brings. Reminding people to stay present in the conversation may help them avoid falling into a stress response of āfight, flight, or freeze.ā These are the moments of truth in networks, the times when groups can either fall back into whatās comfortable or sit in the tension long enough to acknowledge unspoken realities and address critical issues.
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- [note::Could do this a lot more - as a person with a highly avoidant attachment style, I tend to automatically try to ignore or "smooth things over" when the temperature of a conversation rises. I need to be better about acknowledging my observations and allowing time for things to cool down ("I'm noticing the temperature of this conversation rise and would like us all to take a moment and process how we're feeling")]
Hold Space
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- h5,
Invite Divergence
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- h5,
As a facilitator, instead of avoiding the disruption, turn to that person with your full attention and ask them to elaborate. Then, check to see if others feel similarly. If nobody does, you still need to validate that personās perspective. It doesnāt matter if you agree or disagree with their opinion; what matters is making the room a safe place for different perspectives to be shared and honored.
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- [note::There's a kind of tension between inviting divergence and maintaining a psychologically safe discussion space. Divergent thinking encourages sharing perspectives that not everyone may agree with.]
If you become stuck when something is going on in the room and youāre not sure what to do, put your faith in small groups or pairs. Quickly break the participants into groups of two to four, and ask them to discuss whatās happening in the room and what they think needs to happen next. Reflections can then be shared in the full group, which may give you a clue as to how to proceed (this might be a great time for a break as you quickly redesign the agenda!). This is one of Peter Blockās favorite tactics. āIn doing this,ā he writes, āwe ask the community to take responsibility for the success of this gathering and express faith in their goodwill, even if they are frustrated with what is happening.Ā .Ā .Ā .Ā Doing this is an acknowledgment that critical wisdom resides in the community.ā
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- [note::Huh - interesting meta-facilitation technique here. Might be useful.]
Stay Emergent with Intention
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- h5,
Lead with Humility
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- h5,
The act of facilitating is an act of exercising power. Network facilitators use that power thoughtfully to make the gathering as welcoming, equitable, and open to shared leadership as possible.
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When facilitators are too passive, they fail to fulfill some of the critical responsibilities of the role. āFar from purging a gathering of power,ā passivity creates a power vacuum that others can fill āin a manner inconsistent with your gatheringās purpose,ā writes Priya Parker.19 Instead, we recommend practicing what Parker calls āgenerous authorityā: lead the meeting confidently but also with humility, owning the power youāve been entrusted with while using that power in service to others and to the network as a whole.
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- [note::"Generous authority" - A method of leading marked by kindness, agency, and equitable distribution of power.]
Attending to Power Dynamics
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- h4,
In healthy networks, power is not used over or against others to force a decision or to gain superior status. Instead, power is used with and among, in support of others and in the pursuit of a common purpose. Power is also accessed within, such that participants feel able to speak, act, and show up as their whole selves.
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- [note::Reminds me of "design with, not for" in the Being a Changemaker book.]
āGetting out from under dominant power relations and mastering power dynamics is perhaps the most essential skill for change agents across all sectors seeking to ignite positive change in the world,ā asserts Cyndi Suarez in The Power Manual
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- [note::Good food for thought. What are the most effective ways of "getting out from under power relations?"]
āPower is not a finite pie,ā write Cynthia Silva Parker, Kelly Bates, and Curtis Ogden of the Interaction Institute for Social Change. āRather, it can be infinite, expanded, and shared among people and leaders.ā
- LocationĀ 1673
- positive-sum games, zero sum games, power,
Some tips for attending to power dynamics in networks follow, building upon the work of Parker, Bates, and Ogden:22 ā¢ Co-create group agreements at the outset of the networkās development. Share responsibility with the group for monitoring agreements and periodically making updates (group agreements are described in more detail in the following chapter). ā¢ Ensure accessibility in all its forms, including visual, auditory, language, physical, and technological. Make sure that everyone has the information, resources, and space they need to contribute. ā¢ Include funders as participants, not as hosts or designers. In gatherings with significant organizational dynamics, you can also try removing professional affiliations from nametags. People can always figure out where they work later. Let them connect as individuals first. ā¢ Normalize discussion and acknowledgment of power. Power exists in all groups, whether or not you talk about it, and avoiding the issue creates a barrier to trust. Acknowledge power dynamics openly in the network, and think together about what issues of power might play out and how the network will work to resolve them. ā¢ Notice if certain people are always the first to speak. Invite others to speak up if they feel moved to do so. During breaks, check in with those who have talked the most to encourage them to make space for others, as well as those who have been the quietest to see if there is anything they want to share but have not yet been able to, or if there is something you can do as a facilitator to support them. ā¢ Have multiple facilitators at network convenings to better observe the room and notice the groupās patterns and energy. Likewise, designate a specific person to take notes so that the primary facilitator is able to fully direct their attention to those in the room. ā¢ Own your mistakes. When you make a misstep as a facilitator, correct it as soon as possible. Showing your openness to feedback contributes to a safe space for all.
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Cultivate Trust
Our tendency, in the absence of trust, is to believe that our assumptions and projections are valid, that we know what others are thinking and feeling without asking them, and that maybe we are the only sane person in the room. Trust increases the likelihood that participants will listen with care, try on new perspectives, and engage with people they might consider to be very different from themselves.
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- [note::*and we know what others KNOW and can CONTRIBUTE]
Weaving Connections
June Holley, author of Network Weaver Handbook, defines network weavers as those who explicitly work to make the networks around them healthier and more inclusive āby helping people identify their interests and challenges, connecting people strategically where thereās potential for mutual benefit, and serving as a catalystā of self-organization.
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Connecting with Participants
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- h4,
Defining a regular cadence of connection will go a long way toward maintaining a consistent practice of weaving. Sharon Farrell, a leader of the California Landscape Stewardship Network, has adopted the habit of holding time on her calendar on two days each week to call network participants she hasnāt spoken with in a while: āIām a firm believer that if you create time for conversation, one that is an exchange and not just directed in one way, trust begins to build,ā says Farrell.
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- [note::I NEVER do this, but I'd like to.]
A helpful strategy in large networks is to split up the list of participants between multiple weavers. This ensures that each participant has a designated person they can contact at any time with questions or concerns. Each member of the Fire Adapted Communities Learning Network has a specific point person (called their ānetwork liaisonā) who is responsible for checking in with them at least every few months and who they can reach out to at any time. āWe rely on this practice as an important feedback loop for sensing in a complex domain,ā shares Michelle Medley-Daniel, a leader and liaison in the network. āWe adapt network values and offerings based on member feedback, and also adapt our understanding of the complex fire systems and ways to change them based on the information we get through these trusted relationships.ā
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Connecting Participants with One Another
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- h4,
Deepening Trust
There are four primary ingredients that increase the likelihood that people will choose to trust one another, despite all the uncertainty that relationships bring:9 ā¢ Reliability ā¢ Openness ā¢ Care ā¢ Appreciation
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Ingredients of Trust
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- h4,
Reliability
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- h5,
When people help each other by offering support or contributing to a project, it builds a foundation of goodwill. And when people prove their reliability time and time again by continuing to show up, stick around, and follow through, trust grows to a level of resilience that can withstand significant disruption.
- LocationĀ 1801
-
- [note::Group resilience is built through trust]
Without space for āno,ā there is no weight behind ā
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Openness
- LocationĀ 1807
- h5,
In the absence of openness, our true emotions and opinions are often guarded or hidden under a professional mask. We also remain closed to new information, stubbornly holding on to past beliefs and closing off new possibilities.
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By being open, we acknowledge interdependence and invite reciprocity. Itās sometimes assumed that being open with one another comes later, after trust has been developed, but openness is also a great catalyst of trust.
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Care
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- h5,
Appreciation
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- h5,
At an individual level, sharing appreciations also helps to get people out of their heads and into a heart-centered space, creating room for deeper connections to form. This is why we often have people offer appreciations at the end of a convening, asking them to reflect on āwho or what are you appreciating right now?ā Sharing appreciations in this way serves to reinforce the prosocial behaviors that the network wants to promote.
- LocationĀ 1861
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Sharing Stories
- LocationĀ 1864
- h4,
We typically only get to see each otherās external context: what people look like, what they say or do, their title and organization, and their online persona. But in order to form a deeper connection with other people, it is necessary to take the time to get to know their internal context: the why behind their actions, their underlying values and motivations, and the experiences that make them who they are.
- LocationĀ 1866
- social connection,
- [note::Internal v.s. External Context]
In this exercise, participants are evenly distributed into groups of three to five people. They are then asked to sit facing each other and invited to recount a life experience that made them who they are. The particular framing question can be adapted to fit the context. For example, people might be asked to share the story of a particular period of their life, the story of a mentor who had a big influence on them, or the story of how they came to do the work theyāre doing today. Each person has a specific amount of time to tell their story, during which they will be the only one speaking (we usually provide four to seven minutes per story, depending on how much time we have for the exercise). We challenge participants to go as deep as they can without feeling like theyāre oversharing. Then, for the next two minutes, listeners offer their reflections on that storyāwhat resonated with them, what surprised them, and what stood out. Once the first person has finished telling their story and received feedback from their group, the next person tells their story, and the process continues. In total, the exercise takes about 45 minutes. You can access the full instructions for True Stories in the Converge Network Toolkit.
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- [note::True Stories Exercise]
One important consideration in choosing a storytelling activity, as noted above, is to remember that some participants have experienced significant trauma and oppression in their lives. As changemakers and facilitators, we must balance the desire to promote openness among participants with the potential for triggering trauma. In the containers we create, participants always have the option to pass and to choose how deep they go in sharing a personal story.
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- [note::This is something I am prediposed to not acknowledge]
Listening with Care
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- h4,
The experience of understanding more about another personās inner context through empathetic listening, and simultaneously the experience of being fully heard, bonds people together like almost nothing else.
- LocationĀ 1900
-
Holding Courageous Conversations
Generative conflictāconflict that is constructive rather than destructiveāis central to progress. Great teams, relationships, organizations, and networks create a culture of respect that allows people to safely express disagreement.
- LocationĀ 1905
- conflict,
- [note::"Generative Conflict" - hadn't heard of this term until now. I like it.]
As the writer, poet, and activist James Baldwin understood, āNot everything that is faced can be changed; but nothing can be changed until it is faced.ā
- LocationĀ 1930
-
- [note::Love this quote! New to me. Reminds me of "we do things not because they are easy but because they are hard". I like that this speaks directly to the necessity of persevering through change, which may seem impossible.]
Establishing Group Agreements
- LocationĀ 1932
- h4,
To generate a list of potential agreements, consider asking participants to reflect on the following question: āWhat do you need from the people in this group for you to be able to participate fully?ā26 Start by providing time for personal reflection, and then invite participants to share their thoughts, first in small groups and then in the full group. People might offer statements like āI need to know that the things I share will be kept confidential.ā A corresponding group agreement around confidentiality might be, āTake the lesson, leave the details.ā Others might say that they have a hard time sitting for long periods of time and need to be able to take breaks. A corresponding group agreement might be, āPractice self-care.ā
- LocationĀ 1934
-
- [note::Generating ideas for group agreements.]
Consider building on an existing collection of group guidelines that have worked well in multicultural settings, such as the Jemez Principles for Democratic Organizing,27 conversation guidelines for brave spaces,28 the Living Room Conversations agreements,29 or VISIONS, Inc.ās guidelines for effective cross-cultural dialogue.30 With group agreements, participants are usually more comfortable raising new perspectives, disagreeing with one another, and engaging in the kind of generative conflict that is necessary for good decision-making. Visit the Converge Network Toolkit for a list of our favorite Group Agreements for Networks
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Itās good practice to check in regularly on how well group agreements have been attended to and to provide opportunities for participants to reflect on which group agreements they may want to commit to practicing further. For instance, as the gathering is getting started, you might ask participants to read through the group agreements and pick one in particular that theyād like to lean into over the course of the day. Then, at the end of the day, you can invite them to share in pairs how it went and what they will carry forward from the experience. Similarly, you can prompt the network to reflect as a whole on which agreements it is particularly good at incorporating and which agreements would benefit from greater attention.
- LocationĀ 1947
-
- [note::This seems super important - group norms are useless if members of the group feel like they aren't respected.]
Whatās Love Got to Do with It?
- LocationĀ 1952
- h4,
An orientation toward fear leads to an exploitative and degenerative system. Fear of the unknown prompts people to create rigid rules and procedures in an attempt to establish as much certainty and control as possible.
- LocationĀ 1961
-
- [note::I think fear is what cause managers to micro-manage their employees - will they do the task or carry out the project in the way I envision?
I believe this fear is rooted in inadequacies related to being able to set clear expectations for employees and providing them with the feedback they need to course correct.
You hired them, dummy. Why don't you trust them? Most of the time, it's a manager issue, not an employee issue.]
Coordinate Actions
Itās common for people to want to jump immediately into ambitious plans to change the system. In their eagerness to āget to action,ā they launch new projects before building on the work thatās already underway. And when they encounter inevitable challenges or failures, they become demoralized, and their enthusiasm for the network fades. When this happens, participants might question whether the time theyāre putting into the network is worth their while, and many will choose to disengage. As a result, the networkās full potential is abandoned before it has a chance to mature.
- LocationĀ 1986
-
even if you have ambitions of forming an action network, start by cultivating a robust learning network. After all, the qualities of learning networks are foundational to action networks as well. A key aspect of developing a learning network, and therefore any impact network, is to accelerate the flow of information between participants and foster a culture of reciprocity. In doing so, people begin to coordinate their actions with one another: sharing promising practices, reducing unnecessary duplication, and finding quick wins that demonstrate the immediate value of the network.
- LocationĀ 1992
-
- [note::Learning network -> Action network]
Accelerating Flows
āMost of what goes wrong in systems goes wrong because of biased, late, or missing information,ā writes Donella Meadows in Thinking in Systems. āInformation holds systems together.ā2 A greater circulation of information means that more resources and expertise can be shared across the system. Learning increases as promising practices are disseminated, and unnecessary duplication is reduced as people learn what others are up to. Messaging comes into greater alignment, actions begin to reinforce each other, and as a result the whole system becomes more coordinated and coherent.
- LocationĀ 2002
-
- [note::Yesss - I wish FORT could understand this]
One of the most critical capacities of network leadersāand coordinators in particular, whose role is described in more detail later in this chapterāis enabling and accelerating the flow of information between participants.
- LocationĀ 2008
-
- [note::This goes for project managers, functional managers, community builders, etc.]
Impact networks can accelerate the flow of information in three primary ways: by bringing information in from the network as well as from outside sources, organizing and sending information out to participants and others who are interested, and creating pathways for participants to easily share information across the network with one another.
- LocationĀ 2010
-
- [note::This needs a diagram]
Enabling Information to Flow In, Out, and Across
- LocationĀ 2010
- h4,
Information In
- LocationĀ 2024
- h5,
asset maps, searchable directories, and online databases. An interactive asset map, for instance, provides members with an easy way to identify the available resources, areas of expertise, and geographic regions present across the networkāwhile also helping them to immediately connect with each other to follow through on what they learned. Detailed instructions for Building an Asset Map that also functions as a network directory can be found in the Converge Network Toolkit.
- LocationĀ 2026
-
- [note::Should do this for EA Philly]
subscribe to listserv groups and alerts,
- LocationĀ 2033
-
- [note::Is there a better alternative to listserv?]
Information Out
- LocationĀ 2034
- h5,
Information Across
- LocationĀ 2039
- h5,
Network Coordination
- LocationĀ 2047
- h4,
Keep the Network on Track
- LocationĀ 2054
- h5,
One way to think about coordinators is as air traffic controllers. Air traffic controllers see and understand how all the planes in a given airspace are flowing. They donāt fly the planes, but they are trusted to help each aircraft get to its destination. They regularly communicate with the pilots to understand their plans and needs, and they use that information to help guide the whole system.
- LocationĀ 2055
-
- [note::Network coordinator = Air traffic controller]
They work to integrate many parts into a unified whole. Because of their unique position, coordinators are well equipped to identify and frame emerging issues, collect agenda topics, and support the design of convenings and calls. Embedding evaluation practices, such as those described in chapter 10, helps coordinators to track the networkās development and identify emerging needs and opportunities.
- LocationĀ 2059
-
- [note::Sounds a lot like project management]
Establish and Maintain Network Operations
- LocationĀ 2062
- h5,
Provide Knowledge Management
- LocationĀ 2066
- h5,
Assist Network Teams
- LocationĀ 2069
- h5,
Rather than doing the work of the network, coordinators cultivate the conditions that enable network members to do what they want to do, in service of the networkās purpose and in alignment with its principles.
- LocationĀ 2076
- network stewardship, community stewardship,
Tech Tools for Impact Networks
- LocationĀ 2077
- h4,
Technology is always changing, so rather than sharing specific tools in this book, we have compiled our favorites online in a continually updated list. Visit the Converge Network Toolkit to see our favorite Tech Tools for Impact Networks
- LocationĀ 2082
-
- [note::Should absolutely check this out.]
Whenever we launch a new tech tool into a network, we take a few minutes during a convening or on a network call to introduce it, explain how it is intended to be used, and show the basics of what it can offer. If possible, we also allow a bit of hands-on time for participants to try it out.
- LocationĀ 2087
-
Practicing Reciprocity
Taking the time to deliberately coordinate actions is a great way to serve the self-interests of participants. You can do so by providing space on calls and at convenings for people to share urgent needs and to connect with others who might be able to support their work. We call this activity Rapid Coordination, and we incorporate it into nearly every network convening we lead. The activity begins by inviting participants, one by one, to briefly share something they need help with or a potential collaboration theyād like to explore with others. After the first person shares what they need, others are invited to raise their hands if they believe they can help (by sharing information, having a follow-up conversation, or providing resources). The process continues until everyone has been given a chance to make a request.
- LocationĀ 2097
-
- [note::Reminds me of the lightning talks at EAGxNYC picnic.]
Whereas reciprocity is the practice of exchanging value with another person, generalized reciprocity is the practice of exchanging value with the network. People who practice generalized reciprocity give their gifts without the expectation of immediate return; they give with a sense of trust that their actions will eventually be reciprocated in one form or another by others in the network, although it isnāt clear how or when.
- LocationĀ 2108
-
- [note::i.e. Fostering an bundance mindset in networks]
Responding to Crisis
Collaborate for Systems Change
Making systems workāwhether in health care, education, climate change, making a pathway out of povertyāis the greatest task of our generation. āATUL GAWANDE, āHow Do We Heal Medicine?,ā TED2012
- LocationĀ 2151
-
A system is a group of interacting or interdependent elements forming a unified whole.1 Systems may overlapāfor instance, in the connections between health care and housing. And systems can be nested within other systemsāa classroom is nested within a school, which is nested within a school district, which is nested within a stateās education system.
- LocationĀ 2157
-
Making Sense of the System
Visit the Converge Network Toolkit to access facilitation guides for Constructing a Historical Timeline, Mapping the System, and Exploring Future Scenarios
- LocationĀ 2186
-
Identifying Leverage Points
- LocationĀ 2202
- h4,
FIGURE 9.1. 100Kin10ās system map of the āgrand challengesā facing STEM education today. Each challenge is represented by a node, and links are created when two challenges are related to one another. With this data, social network analysis revealed seven clusters of highly interconnected challenges, which yielded the networkās seven focus areas. For an interactive version of this map and a detailed description of the process used to develop it, visit grandchallenges.100kin10.org
- LocationĀ 2222
-
The effort to identify leverage points also led to an unexpected result: a massive increase in participant engagement. āWhen, as a network, you can choose to focus on a few critical opportunitiesānot because you or I thought they were the right places to focus, or because a panel of experts thought they were the right places, but because the whole community came together to identify themāitās so mobilizing,ā says Milgrom-Elcott.
- LocationĀ 2246
-
Creating Transformation
Fundamentally changing systems, however, requires reformation or transformation. Reformation aims to change the way a system works, altering its rules, structures, beliefs, and behaviors. Transformation is the work of creating a new system altogether.
- LocationĀ 2255
-
Shifting Social Norms
- LocationĀ 2259
- h4,
Research shows that once 25 percent of the actors in a system have adopted a given norm, a tipping point is reached, triggering a shift in the rest of the population.
- LocationĀ 2288
-
Growing a Movement
- LocationĀ 2309
- h4,
Research from Leslie Crutchfield, author of How Change Happens, found that the most successful social movements incorporate a decentralized structure that fosters connection and coordination across the movement, rather than a top-down hierarchical structure that dictates the actions of its chapters. The organizations and leaders most central to the growth of these movements, writes Crutch-field, conceive of themselves ānot as commander at the helm of an army, but rather a coordinator at the center of a network.ā16 They āpurposely push power out to the grassroots, vesting authority in local chapters rather than controlling from the top.ā
- LocationĀ 2310
-
- [note::I feel like CEA tries to be decentralized, but is ultimately perceived as top-down.]
Planting Sequoias
But what often goes unnoticed is that in the process of cultivating a network, the system actually is shifting. When networks are cultivated, people and organizations start engaging with one another in new ways. Information and resources begin to flow as never before. People from opposite sides of issues find creative ways to collaborate. A once-fragmented system becomes interconnected, able to respond quickly to crises. New leaders emerge. Healthier norms start to develop and spread. And local actions may grow into a movement, creating a new system altogether.
- LocationĀ 2363
-
- [note::This is what I want to do with EA. The movement, at least in the US, seems highly fragmented and doesn't invest nearly enough resources into fostering relationships with organizations outside of EA. The reality is that we NEED to collaborate with these existing organizations in order to bring about the systems-level change needed. We can't just dismiss them as "not impactful enough" and do our own thing. We need to learn from them and incorporate them into the conversation, even if it means sacrificing short-term impact for long-term gain.]
As for the future, your task is not to foresee it, but to enable it. āANTOINE DE SAINT-EXUPĆRY, The Wisdom of the Sands
- LocationĀ 2378
-
- [note::Like this. As a network builder, the goal is not to do the change but to setup conditions that allow the change to happen.]
The Enabling Infrastructure
We recommend that networks adopt a minimum viable structureāthe simplest possible structure that will effectively serve its needs, and one that can evolve as the network develops.
- LocationĀ 2382
-
- [note::Seems sensible]
In the 1950s, US cities were designed such that people lived in one part of the city, worked in another, and shopped in yet another. In most cities this is still the case, and it has led to widespread social fragmentation and lengthy daily commutes. As Jacobs observed, this occurred because urban planners designed for what they thought should happen, neglecting the way that humans naturally organize themselves based on their daily lives. A better approach would have been to āacknowledge the city as a living organism in constant mutation, a highly complex network involving a vast number of variablesĀ .Ā .Ā .Ā an open space bursting with overlap and spontaneity, where the natural conditions for creativity, recreation, and cooperation can easily prosper,ā writes Manuel Lima in Visual Complexity, referencing Jacobs.
- LocationĀ 2385
-
- [note::Huh, is this actually true? Seems like an ultra-capitalist, anti-humanist approach to designing cities. "Go to work" -> "Shop" -> "Go Home" -> "Repeat". Big sigh.]
When developing a networkās structure, let form follow function. Let the energies and interests of participants lead the way. Let the networkās natural evolution define its structure according to what it needs most in any given moment. āCollaborative networks donāt require building any structural elements or operational agreements until they are absolutely useful,ā writes Ruth Rominger, a catalyst of the RE-AMP Network. āPutting just enough in place will keep the network connected yet flexible enough to adapt.ā
- LocationĀ 2398
-
Impact networks are commonly organized through four types of teams, each of which appears only when needed. Design teams form to help catalyze a new network and organize network convenings; core teams form to provide governance and advisory support; project teams form to advance collaborative work; and learning circles form to hold conversation and gather information on a topic of interest.
- LocationĀ 2405
-
Organizing into Teams
Core Team
- LocationĀ 2410
- h4,
Another difference from traditional hierarchies is that core teams rotate their members regularly. They usually consist of four to seven people, each representing a different participating organization or part of the network, who volunteer for the core team for a specific period of time (often from one convening to the next).
- LocationĀ 2417
-
- [note::Interesting - curious about the cadence of these rotations]
Project Teams
- LocationĀ 2429
- h4,
Project teams (sometimes called working groups, task forces, and action circles) are organized by participants to advance a body of work related to the networkās purpose. When it comes to forming project teams, what participants think should happen is less important than what they will do. As Marvin Weisbord and Sandra Janoff advise, set priorities ābased on willing actors rather than good ideas.ā4
- LocationĀ 2429
-
Learning Circles
- LocationĀ 2441
- h4,
Leading Network Teams
- LocationĀ 2448
- h4,
Questions to form a new team: Anytime a project team or learning circle is formed, it may begin by answering the following questions: ā¢ What is the purpose of this team? ā¢ Who is involved? ā¢ Who will lead this team at least until the next convening? ā¢ What tasks are required between now and the next convening? ā¢ Who is taking responsibility for each task, and by when? ā¢ What do we need from the network, if anything?
- LocationĀ 2454
-
Bounding Participation
We have found it useful to offer four primary levels of engagement to choose from: lead, partner, follow, and honor. These levels of participation can apply to the network as a whole, as well as to specific project teams: ā¢ Lead: āI will take responsibility for making this network/team happen.ā ā¢ Partner: āI will actively work with the leaders to make this network/team happen.ā ā¢ Follow: āI would like to stay informed about how this network/team is progressing.ā ā¢ Honor: āAlthough I appreciate what you are proposing, this network/team is not of particular interest to me at this time.ā When a network is just getting started, we ask participants to share their preferred level of engagement with the network as a whole, to get a better sense of who would like to attend future convenings and be kept in the loop with network communications.
- LocationĀ 2472
-
- [note::Reminds me of a RACI chart, but for preferred engagement level.]
As the network evolves, we ask participants to clarify their intended level of engagement annually to help leaders with planning, coordination, and budgeting.
- LocationĀ 2485
-
One of the responsibilities of network leaders is to provide many different opportunities for leadership, partnership, and followership to emerge, and to allow people to decline altogether. Trust that participants will self-organize to place their energy where they are most inspired to contribute and where they are most needed.
- LocationĀ 2492
-
Establishing Participation Agreements
- LocationĀ 2494
- h4,
In The Art of Community, Charles Vogl identifies āclear boundariesā as one of the core principles of belonging. Vogl notes that for a strong community to develop, people often need to know that being a part of the community means something and that not just anyone can join in on a whim. In other words, boundaries are less about exclusion and more about fostering greater inclusion within the network.
- LocationĀ 2499
-
While this worked at first, over time the lack of boundaries created an unhealthy work environment when some people abused the high-trust atmosphere. As a result, Enspiral was forced to develop clearer agreements for participation, which they captured in their open-source āHandbook.ā8 One of the key insights they took from the experience was that āa community without boundaries is no community at all.ā
- LocationĀ 2505
-
- [note::What does this look like for EA?]
In addition to clarifying expectations, participation agreements serve to provide some stability as a network grows. Participants might be asked to provide sufficient advance notice prior to leaving the network so they have enough time to introduce and integrate a new member of their organization before departing. Networks might also request that two individuals per organization attend convenings, in order to maintain continuity when one member is unavailable. Whatever participation agreements your network defines, remember to provide just enough structure to support the network, but not more. Prioritize relationship building first and foremost, instead of getting bogged down in the details before the network has even had a chance to provide value to participants or create any level of impact in the world.
- LocationĀ 2516
-
Making Collective Decisions
Simply stated, āPower is participation in decision-making,ā writes Cyndi Suarez in The Power Manual
- LocationĀ 2528
-
We prefer an alternative approach: consent-based decision-making, which allows actions in the best interest of the whole to proceed without unanimous agreement. This approach is rooted in the ārange of toleranceā principle borrowed from ecosystem science: when organisms find themselves in contexts that are too hot or too cold, some parts of the system die because the temperature is out of their range of tolerance. With consent-based decision-making, we find a decision that everyone can live with, even if itās not their top preference.
- LocationĀ 2536
-
- [note::I believe The Ready/Brave New Work talks about this - "Zone of Tolerance" in decision-making.]
A Process for Consent-Based Decision-Making
- LocationĀ 2542
- h4,
The consent-based decision-making process has three phases: context, clarification, and call for consent: Context frames the decision to be made: What are the relevant factors? What are the pros and cons that have been considered? What conversations have already taken place? And finally, what is the recommendation moving forward? Context is presented by those who took part in discussions to formulate the proposal. Clarification allows for any further questions or clarity needed by network members prior to voting. Facilitators should help ensure that the conversation doesnāt veer toward evaluation of ideas but stays with clarity on what is being recommended. Participants are encouraged to consider whether proposals are consistent with the networkās purpose and principles, and to think in terms of whatās in the best interest of the network as a whole, as opposed to whatās in the best interest for āmeā as an individual or as a representative of an organization or special interest. Call for consent uses a 0 to 5 voting framework when the full group is ready to make a decision or assess the level of support and need for further discussion. First, the facilitator restates the proposal and asks participants to vote. Then, the participants respond with a number from 0 to 5 (using fingers, pen and paper, or other means) corresponding to their level of support. The process can also be completed digitally with polling tools if confidentiality is required, if voting with fingers or paper isnāt practical, or if detailed records need to be captured. When voting, participants are invited to choose from one of the following options: ā¢ 5āLead: The proposal serves our network well, and I would like to be one of the leaders in implementing it. ā¢ 4āPartner: The proposal serves our network well, and I will partner to support the leaders in implementing it. ā¢ 3āFollow: The proposal may serve our network, but I canāt offer any capacity toward implementation. ā¢ 2āConcern: I have concerns about the proposal and will be tracking as implementationā¦
- LocationĀ 2542
-
- [note::Love how this empowers anyone from the network to lead/support initiatives.]
Embedding Evaluation
Four Fundamentals of Network Evaluation
- LocationĀ 2587
- h4,
We propose four basic components of network evaluation, explained in more detail below, to help ensure that your network is continually learning and evolving in a positive direction: ā¢ Collaborative infrastructure ā¢ Network connectivity ā¢ Participant experience ā¢ Emergent activity
- LocationĀ 2588
-
Collaborative Infrastructure
- LocationĀ 2592
- h5,
To assess participation, network leaders can track network size (how many members there are at each tier of participation), representativeness (which groups or interests that current members represent), and growth/turnover (how many people and organizations joined the network and how many left the network in the past year).
- LocationĀ 2594
-
To assess network activities, network leaders can track convenings, including frequency and attendance, as well as other significant functions as applicable, such as participation on calls and subscriptions to the network newsletter. It is also helpful to cross-reference this information against specific participant characteristics (for example, sector, region, and demographic characteristics) to ascertain whether engagement varies across participants and where adjustments might be beneficial to engage all members.
- LocationĀ 2596
-
Network Connectivity
- LocationĀ 2600
- h5,
To help you map and analyze your networkās connectivity as it evolves, we have developed examples of how we have applied SNA in practice, along with a survey template you can adapt to capture the data needed to construct a network map. Visit the Converge Network Toolkit to learn the process of Conducting a Social Network Analysis
- LocationĀ 2615
-
- [note::Would be interesting to do this in the larger EA community]
Participant Experience
- LocationĀ 2618
- h5,
A healthy network is one where participants feel they have clarified a shared purpose and a set of shared principles. The network includes a broad cross section of participants who are well suited to address the networkās purpose and actively contribute to its development. Those participants are developing relationships of trust, and they feel they are able to engage in and resolve conflicts with one another. The network has defined whatever structures and agreements are necessary to organize the work and make good decisions. These structures and agreements should be flexible enough to allow the network to stay responsive to changes in the environment without feeling unnecessarily burdensome. Healthy networks have ample coordination such that necessary operational responsibilities are well accounted for. Relevant information is easily accessible and freely shared. Participants also feel that the network has adequate resources to sustain its activities and that funders are supporting the network without controlling its path. And last but not least, participants in healthy networks feel that they are receiving good value from the time they are investing. They feel that they are benefiting personally and professionally as individuals and that their organizations are benefiting from their involvement in the network as well.
- LocationĀ 2621
-
- [note::What makes a healthy network?]
Administering participant surveys at regular intervals provides a good assessment of the core indicators of network health. They offer a regular space for participants to provide feedback, supporting equity and ensuring that network leaders have a good understanding of participantsā perceptions of the network. The survey results help illuminate areas of strength as well as areas that would benefit from additional attention or support.
- LocationĀ 2631
- surveying, network health, network stewardship,
- [note::Same goes for projects!]
Visit the Converge Network Toolkit to access a comprehensive list of Indicators of Network Health to track, along with a generic Network Participant Survey
- LocationĀ 2637
- pink,
Emergent Activity
- LocationĀ 2639
- h5,
The magic of networks lies in their emergent outcomes, which cannot be defined in advance, will not be the same across networks, and therefore cannot be measured with standardized tools. Although the precise nature of these outcomes cannot be predicted in advance, it is still valuable to track them as they emerge. Specifically, tracking the coordinated work and collaborative projects that are sparked among participants is essential to understanding how the network is impacting the broader system. This information will help network leaders and participants advance promising opportunities and potential innovations, as well as tell the story of the networkās influence on the broader system.
- LocationĀ 2640
-
More Extensive Evaluation
- LocationĀ 2661
- h5,
Resourcing Networks
Impact networks are typically resourced through one or more of the following sources: ā¢ Philanthropic funding ā¢ Organizational resources ā¢ In-kind contributions ā¢ Participant dues ā¢ Earned revenue from network projects
- LocationĀ 2674
-
Pivotal Practices for Network Funders
- LocationĀ 2697
- h4,
As Philip Li, president of the Robert Sterling Clark Foundation, puts it, āThe challenge with networks is that they invite patience and long-term investment. Funders have to understand that you have to release control and let the network define what it wants to achieve. That invites a different kind of relationship between the funder and the network.ā Itās not easy, but it is worth it, says Li. āThe upside potential of a network being in place is really quite profound.ā
- LocationĀ 2698
-
- [note::This is probably the biggest challenge to EAs adopting a network/systems mindset - the outcomes of dollars invested in the network are emergent and thus hard to predict.]
Follow the Networkās Lead
- LocationĀ 2706
- h5,
According to Jennifer Husbands, a senior program officer at the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, this requires that funders āunderstand how to walk a tightrope between providing structure and encouraging organic connections to develop and flourish.ā17 As a network funder, be clear on what you are supporting: you are not funding the fulfillment of a production order or provision of services to a specific number of people; rather, you are supporting the capacity of an ecosystem to engage a spectrum of perspectives, learn together, and self-determine optimal responses to local challenges.
- LocationĀ 2712
-
- [note::Network funders must be okay with uncertainty and risk]
Engage as Peers
- LocationĀ 2717
- h5,
Take the Long View
- LocationĀ 2726
- h5,
Investing in the Future
- LocationĀ 2737
- h4,
Although many recognize the need for greater coordination between organizations, collaboration remains underresourced. As Susan Wolf Ditkoff and Abe Grindle write in Harvard Business Review, āSo few philanthropists meaningfully support or engage in [collaboration], even though most are frustrated with the inefficient proliferation of siloed change efforts.ā
- LocationĀ 2737
-
- [note::How do we incentivize collaboration?]
Conclusion
If you havenāt already, I invite you to visit converge.net to access additional tools and resources in the Converge Network Toolkit. There you can dive deeper into network concepts that didnāt make their way into this book and receive invitations to network leadership learning experiences. You will also find opportunities to connect and share directly with other network leaders.
- LocationĀ 2780
- pink, 1resource, 1action, network stewardship,
Notes
Preface
Diana Scearce, Gabriel Kasper, and Heather McLeod Grant, āWorking Wikily,ā Stanford Social Innovation Review, Summer 2010, https://www2.deloitte.com/content/dam/Deloitte/us/Documents/monitor-institute/us-monitor-institute-working-wikily.pdf
- LocationĀ 2792
-
Jenny Johnson, āFresnoās New Leadership NetworkāCase Study Executive Summary,ā 2015, http://bit.ly/nlncasestudysummary
- LocationĀ 2795
-
Introduction
Niall Ferguson, The Square and the Tower: Networks, Hierarchies and the Struggle for Global Power (London: Penguin Books, 2018), xix.
- LocationĀ 2811
-
Anna Muoio and Kaitlin Terry Canver, Shifting a System, Monitor Institute by Deloitte, accessed December 17, 2020, https://www2.deloitte.com/content/dam/insights/us/articles/5139_shifting-a-system/DI_Reimagining-learning.pdf
- LocationĀ 2814
-
June Holley has called them āintentional networksā in Network Weaver Handbook: A Guide to Transformational Networks (Athens, Ohio: Network Weaver Publishing, 2012). Peter Plastrik, Madeleine Taylor, and John Cleveland have called them āgenerative social impact networksā in Connecting to Change the World: Harnessing the Power of Networks for Social Impact (Washington, DC: Island Press, 2014).
- LocationĀ 2817
-
The Web of Change
David Ehrlichman and David Sawyer, āLearn Before You Leap: The Catalytic Power of a Learning Network,ā Stanford Social Innovation Review, July 27, 2018, https://ssir.org/articles/entry/learn_before_you_leap_the_catalytic_power_of_a_learning_network#
- LocationĀ 2827
-
Developed by Valdis Krebs and June Holley, Building Smart Communities Through Network Weaving, 2006, http://www.orgnet.com/BuildingNetworks.pdf. Re-created by Jeff Mohr, āBuilding Intentional Networks That Drive Impact (Part 1),ā In Too Deep, Kumu, July 15, 2016, https://blog.kumu.io/building-intentional-networks-that-drive-impact-part-1-90a7271c7a2a.
- LocationĀ 2830
-
Jane Wei-Skillern, David Ehrlichman, and David Sawyer, āThe Most Impactful Leaders Youāve Never Heard Of,ā Stanford Social Innovation Review, September 16, 2015, https://ssir.org/articles/entry/the_most_impactful_leaders_youve_never_heard_of
- LocationĀ 2848
-
The Network Mindset
Christopher Vitale, Networkologies: A Philosophy of Networks for a Hyperconnected AgeāA Manifesto (Winchester, UK: Zero Books, 2014), 20.
- LocationĀ 2853
-
Otto Scharmer and Katrin Kaufer, Leading from the Emerging Future: From Ego-System to Eco-System Economies (San Francisco, CA: Berrett-Koehler Publishers, 2013), 2.
- LocationĀ 2854
-
Jane Wei-Skillern and Nora Silver, āFour Network Principles for Collaboration Success,ā Foundation Review 5, no. 1 (2013), https://doi.org/10.4087/FOUNDATIONREVIEW-D-12-00018.1
- LocationĀ 2856
-
Rob Cross and Andrew Parker, The Hidden Power of Social Networks: Understanding How Work Really Gets Done in Organizations (Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Press, 2004), 3.
- LocationĀ 2866
-
Making Networks Work
Katrina Pugh and Laurence Prusak, āDesigning Effective Knowledge Networks,ā MIT Sloan Management Review, Fall 2013. https://sloanreview.mit.edu/article/designing-effective-knowledge-networks/
- LocationĀ 2875
- knowledge sharing, knowledge transfer,
Samantha Slade, Going Horizontal: Creating a Non-Hierarchical Organization, One Practice at a Time (Oakland, CA: Berrett-Koehler Publishers, 2018), 56.
- LocationĀ 2878
-
Donella Meadows, āLeverage Points: Places to Intervene in a System,ā Academy for Systems Change, accessed December 18, 2020, http://donellameadows.org/archives/leverage-points-places-to-intervene-in-a-system/
- LocationĀ 2882
-
Network Leadership
Joshua Vial, āMore People Working on Stuff That Matters,ā in Anthony Cabraal and Susan Basterfield, Better Work Together: How the Power of Community Can Transform Your Business (Enspiral Foundation, 2018), 20.
- LocationĀ 2895
-
Henry Mintzberg and James A. Waters, āOf Strategies, Deliberate and Emergent,ā Strategic Management Journal 6, no. 3 (1985): 257ā72, https://doi.org/10.1002/smj.4250060306
- LocationĀ 2900
-
Peter Block, Community: The Structure of Belonging, 2nd ed. (Oakland, CA: Berrett-Koehler Publishers, 2018), 26ā
- LocationĀ 2905
-
Giles Hutchins and Laura Storm, Regenerative Leadership: The DNA of Life-Affirming 21st Century Organizations (Tunbridge Wells, UK: Wordzworth, 2019), 172.
- LocationĀ 2907
-
Daniel Christian Wahl, Designing Regenerative Cultures (Axminster, England: Triarchy Press, 2016), 19.
- LocationĀ 2912
-
Patricia Patrizi, Elizabeth Heid Thompson, Julia Coffman, and Tanya Beer, āEyes Wide Open: Learning as Strategy Under Conditions of Complexity and Uncertainty,ā Foundation Review 5, no. 3 (2013), https://doi.org/10.9707/1944-5660.1170
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Clarify Purpose and Principles
Nick Martlew, Creative Coalitions: A Handbook for Change (Crisis Action, 2017), 43, https://crisisaction.org/handbook/contents/
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Nicholas A. Christakis and James H. Fowler, Connected: The Surprising Power of Our Social Networks and How They Shape Our Lives (New York, NY: Little, Brown and Company, 2011), 17.
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Peggy Holman, Engaging Emergence: Turning Upheaval into Opportunity (San Francisco, CA: Berrett-Koehler Publishers, 2010), 55.
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āSterling Network NYC,ā Robert Sterling Clark Foundation, accessed February 2, 2021, https://www.rsclark.org/sterlingnetworknyc
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100Kin10, accessed December 19, 2020, https://100kin10.org/
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Defender Network, Justice in Motion, accessed December 19, 2020, https://www.justiceinmotion.org/defender-network
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āWorkshopping the Worldview,ā Resonance Network, accessed December 23, 2020, https://resonance-network.org/workshopping-the-worldview/
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adrienne maree brown, Emergent Strategy: Shaping Change, Changing Worlds (Chico, CA: AK Press, 2017), 221.
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Convene the People
A. Stinchcombe, āSocial Structure and Organizations,ā in J. G. March, ed., Handbook of Organizations (Chicago, IL: Rand McNally, 1965), 132ā
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Vu Le, āThe Problem with Everything Being All about Relationships,ā Nonprofit AF, February 9, 2020, https://nonprofitaf.com/2020/02/the-problem-with-everything-being-all-about-relationships/
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James Currier, āThe Network Effects Manual: 13 Different Network Effects (and Counting),ā NFX, Medium, January 9, 2018, https://medium.com/@nfx/the-network-effects-manual-13-different-network-effects-and-counting-a3e07b23017d
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Priya Parker, The Art of Gathering: How We Meet and Why It Matters (New York, NY: Riverhead Books, 2018), 51.
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Drake Baer, āWhy You Need to Unplug Every 90 Minutes,ā Fast Company, June 19, 2013, https://www.fastcompany.com/3013188/why-you-need-to-unplug-every-90-minutes
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Adam Kahane, Facilitating Breakthrough: How to Remove Obstacles, Bridge Differences, and Move Forward Together (Oakland, CA: Berrett-Koehler Publishers, 2020).
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Craig Neal and Patricia Neal, The Art of Convening: Authentic Engagement in Meetings, Gatherings, and Conversations (San Francisco, CA: Berrett-Koehler Publishers, 2011), 55.
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Robert C. Solomon and Fernando Flores, Building Trust: In Business, Politics, Relationships, and Life (New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 2001), 13.
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Marvin Weisbord and Sandra Janoff, Donāt Just Do Something, Stand There!: Ten Principles for Leading Meetings That Matter (San Francisco, CA: Berrett-Koehler Publishers, 2007), 104ā
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Sam Kaner, Facilitatorās Guide to Participatory Decision-Making, 3rd ed. (San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass, 2014).
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Cyndi Suarez, The Power Manual: How to Master Complex Power Dynamics (Gabriola Island, BC, Canada: New Society Publishers, 2018), back cover.
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Kelly Bates, Cynthia Silva Parker, and Curtis Ogden, āPower Dynamics: The Hidden Element to Effective Meetings,ā Interaction Institute for Social Change, July 11, 2018, http://interactioninstitute.org/power-dynamics-the-hidden-element-to-effective-meetings/
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Cultivate Trust
Peter Plastrik, Madeleine Taylor, and John Cleveland, Connecting to Change the World: Harnessing the Power of Networks for Social Impact (Washington, DC: Island Press, 2014), 90.
- LocationĀ 3029
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Bill Traynor, āVertigo and the Intentional Inhabitant: Leadership in a Connected World,ā Nonprofit Quarterly, February 23, 2018, https://nonprofitquarterly.org/vertigo-and-the-intentional-inhabitant-leadership-in-a-connected-world/
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āTaking Accountability: How Do We Change Violence?ā in Creative Interventions Toolkit: A Practical Guide to Stop Interpersonal Violence (Creative Interventions, 2012), 311ā96, https://www.creative-interventions.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/CI-Toolkit-Final-ENTIRE-Aug-2020.pdf
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āThe Ladder of Inference: How to Avoid Jumping to Conclusions,ā MindTools, accessed February 6, 2021, https://www.mind-tools.com/pages/article/newTMC_91.htm
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Frances Dunn Butterfoss, Coalitions and Partnerships in Community Health (San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass, 2007), 186.
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āJemez Principles for Democratic Organizing,ā December 1996, https://www.ejnet.org/ej/jemez.pdf
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Kristi Clemens, āFrom Safe Spaces to Brave Spaces: A New Way to Frame Dialogue around Diversity and Social Justice,ā in The Art of Effective Facilitation: Reflections from Social Justice Educators, ed. Lisa M. Landreman (Sterling, VA: Stylus Publishing, 2013), 135ā
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āConversation Agreements,ā Living Room Conversations, accessed December 23, 2020, https://www.livingroomconversations.org/conversation_agreements/
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āGuidelines for Effective Cross-Cultural Dialogue,ā VISIONS, Inc., accessed December 22, 2020, https://fusn.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/Guidelines-for-Effective-Cross-Cultural-Dialogue.doc-1.pdf
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-
Coordinate Actions
Curtis Ogden, āGetting with the Flows: āNet Workā as Change,ā Network Weaver, September 23, 2019, https://networkweaver.com/getting-with-the-flows-net-work-as-change/
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Donella H. Meadows, Thinking in Systems: A Primer, ed. Diana Wright (White River Junction, VT: Chelsea Green Publishing, 2008), 173.
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Jessica Conrad, āHow Collaborative Networks Lead Through CrisisāPart II,ā Garfield Foundation, Medium, May 20, 2020, https://medium.com/@garfield_foundation/how-collaborative-networks-lead-through-crisis-part-ii-6d609d599d26
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-
Collaborate for Systems Change
āInfluencing Complex Systems Change,ā Change Elemental, accessed December 23, 2020, https://changeelemental.org/influencing-complex-systems-change/
- LocationĀ 3120
-
This process has been called āsensemaking,ā a term first introduced by organizational theorist Karl E. Weick. See Karl E. Weick, Sensemaking in Organizations (Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications, 1995).
- LocationĀ 3122
-
found at systems.geofunders.org/tools-resources, as well as in Peggy Holman, Tom Devane, and Steven Cady, eds., The Change Handbook: The Definitive Resource on Todayās Best Methods for Engaging Whole Systems, 2nd ed. (San Francisco, CA: Berrett-Koehler Publishers, 2007).
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Farrell, Kelly, et al., āEquity as Common Cause,ā Othering and Belonging Journal no. 2.
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Talia Milgrom-Elcott and Eric L. Berlow, āEnding Teacher Shortages with Network Mapping,ā Stanford Social Innovation Review, April 25, 2018, https://ssir.org/articles/entry/ending_teacher_shortages_with_network_mapping
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100Kin10, āField Guide for Catalyzing Change,ā accessed February 22, 2021, https://2019annualreport.100kin10.org/
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Steve Waddell, Change for the Audacious: A Doerās Guide (Boston, MA: NetworkingAction Publishing, 2016), 15.
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Damon Centola, How Behavior Spreads: The Science of Complex Contagions (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2018), 2.
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- behavior change,
Leslie R. Crutchfield, How Change Happens: Why Some Social Movements Succeed While Others Donāt (Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2018), 58.
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- 1resource, social change,
Leslie Crutchfield, āWhy the Best Leaders Give Their Power Away,ā Fortune, May 12, 2018, https://fortune.com/2018/05/12leadership-parkland-shooting-nra-gun-control-laws/
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Mark Engler and Paul Engler, This Is an Uprising: How Nonviolent Revolt Is Shaping the Twenty-First Century (New York, NY: Nation Books, 2016), 71.
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The Enabling Infrastructure
Manuel Lima, Visual Complexity: Mapping Patterns of Information (New York, NY: Princeton Architectural Press, 2011), 48.
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-
Ruth Rominger, āSystems Principles for Collaborative Networks,ā Medium, Garfield Foundation, March 11, 2020, https://garfield-foundation.medium.com/systems-principles-for-collaborative-networks-d86fb3f22a2a
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Charles Vogl, The Art of Community: Seven Principles for Belonging (Oakland, CA: Berrett-Koehler Publishers, 2016), 33.
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Enspiral, Enspiral Handbook, accessed February 16, 2021, https://handbook.enspiral.com/
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-
Itās important to keep in mind that social network analysis provides a representation of how participants perceive their connections with one another at a given point in time, but it is not a true reflection of reality. This is both because connections are changing all the time, so the data is never perfect, and because different people are likely to have different interpretations of how they would score their connections with others on the survey.
- LocationĀ 3188
-
David Nee and Curtis Ogden, āDistributing Leadership, Promoting Stewardship,ā Stanford Social Innovation Review, September 30, 2015, https://ssir.org/network_entrepreneurs/entry/distributing_leadership_promoting_stewardship
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-
Embracing Complexity: Towards a Shared Understanding of Funding Systems Change, Ashoka, Catalyst 2030, Co-Impact, Echoing Green, Schwab Foundation, Skoll Foundation, January 2020, https://www.ashoka.org/sites/default/files/2020-01/Embracing+Complexity_Full+Report_final.pdf
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-
Susan Wolf Ditkoff and Abe Grindle, āAudacious Philanthropy,ā Harvard Business Review, SeptemberāOctober 2017, https://hbr.org/2017/09/audacious-philanthropy
- LocationĀ 3210
-
Glossary
Network Terms
Networks: Webs of relationships connecting people or things.
- LocationĀ 3216
-
Nodes: Individual parts of a network. Also known as elements or actors
- LocationĀ 3217
-
Links: Connections between the parts of a network. Also known as edges or ties
- LocationĀ 3218
-
Clusters: Groups of people or nodes that are much more connected with each other than they are with others.
- LocationĀ 3219
-
Bridges: Connections between two clusters, networks, or parts of a system that would otherwise be disconnected. Wide bridges feature multiple connections, while narrow bridges feature a single connection. Those who create bridges are known as bridgers, brokers, or boundary spanners
- LocationĀ 3220
-
Hubs: Highly connected nodes in a network.
- LocationĀ 3223
-
Core: The most densely connected part of a network, often appearing at the center.
- LocationĀ 3223
-
Periphery: The less-connected part of a network surrounding the core.
- LocationĀ 3224
-
Network Forms
Impact network: A network that brings individuals and organizations together for learning and collaborative action for a shared purpose.
- LocationĀ 3225
-
Learning network: A form of impact network that primarily facilitates the flow of information or knowledge.
- LocationĀ 3226
-
Action network: A form of impact network that facilitates connection and learning in service of coordinated action.
- LocationĀ 3228
-
Movement network: A form of impact network that connects many other impact networks together, creating a network-of-networks.
- LocationĀ 3229
-
Network Leadership
Network mindset: A worldview that embraces the reality that everything is connected. Those who adopt a network mindset see themselves as a part of a larger web of activity (not always as the central hub) and seek to develop stronger connections to create impact through collaboration.
- LocationĀ 3230
-
Catalyzing: A network leadership role that brings people together to explore and launch a new impact network, and that fosters opportunities to expand the networkās impact.
- LocationĀ 3233
-
Coordination: A network leadership role that provides operational support to sustain network activities and develop the networkās ability to share information, capture learnings, and coordinate actions.
- LocationĀ 3234
-
Facilitation: A network leadership role that guides participants through group processes to find common ground and advance collaborative action.
- LocationĀ 3236
-
Weaving: A network leadership role that nurtures connection to foster new relationships.
- LocationĀ 3237
-
Network Teams
Core team: A group of participants who volunteer or are elected to help guide the work andā¦
- LocationĀ 3239
-
Design team: A group of diverse representatives from across a system who work to collectively clarify why an impact network is needed, who needs to be involved initially,ā¦
- LocationĀ 3240
-
Learning circles: Groups of participants who gather together to hold conversations, share knowledge, and collectā¦
- LocationĀ 3242
-
Project teams: Groups of participants who collaborate to advance a specific body of work relatedā¦
- LocationĀ 3243
-
Creatingā¦
Convenings: Gatherings that bring all network members together simultaneously,ā¦
- LocationĀ 3244
-
Emergence: The process of something new arising from learningā¦
- LocationĀ 3245
- 1todo evernote, emergence,
Leverage points: Places where targeted intervention can produce outsized impactsā¦
- LocationĀ 3246
-
Resilience: The ability to withstand disruption and adapt asā¦
- LocationĀ 3248
-
System: A group of interacting or interdependent parts that togetherā¦
- LocationĀ 3248
-
Systems change: The process of reforming or transforming the structures, relationships, policies, power dynamics, narratives, and norms in a given system to createā¦
- LocationĀ 3249
-
Selectedā¦
Baker, Mila N. Peer to Peer Leadership: Why the Network Is the Leader. San Francisco, CA:ā¦
- LocationĀ 3255
-
BarabĆ”si, Albert-LĆ”szlĆ³. Linked: The New Science of Networks. Cambridge, MA:ā¦
- LocationĀ 3256
-
Bartlett, Richard D. Patterns for Decentralised Organisingā¦
- LocationĀ 3258
-
Block, Peter. Community: The Structure of Belonging. 2nd ed. Oakland, CA:ā¦
- LocationĀ 3261
-
Brafman, Ori, and Rod A. Beckstrom. The Starfish and the Spider: The Unstoppable Power of Leaderless Organizations. Newā¦
- LocationĀ 3265
-
brown, adrienne maree. Emergent Strategy: Shaping Change, Changing Worlds. Chicoā¦
- LocationĀ 3266
-
Butterfoss, Frances Dunn. Coalitions and Partnerships in Community Health. San Francisco,ā¦
- LocationĀ 3267
-
Cabraal, Anthony, and Susan Basterfield. Better Work Together: How the Power of Community Can Transform Yourā¦
- LocationĀ 3268
-
Centola, Damon. How Behavior Spreads: The Science of Complex Contagions. Princeton, NJ:ā¦
- LocationĀ 3270
-
Christakis, Nicholas A., and James H. Fowler. Connected: The Surprising Power of Our Social Networks and How They Shape Our Lives. New York,ā¦
- LocationĀ 3271
-
Coyle, Daniel. The Culture Code: The Secrets of Highly Successful Groups. New York,ā¦
- LocationĀ 3274
-
Cross, Rob, and Andrew Parker. The Hidden Power of Social Networks: Understanding How Work Really Gets Done in Organizations. Boston, MA:ā¦
- LocationĀ 3275
-
Crutchfield, Leslie R. How Change Happens: Why Some Social Movements Succeed While Others Donāt. Hoboken, NJ:ā¦
- LocationĀ 3277
-
Engler, Mark, and Paul Engler. This Is an Uprising: How Nonviolent Revolt Is Shaping the Twenty-First Century. Newā¦
- LocationĀ 3278
-
Ferguson, Niall. The Square and the Tower: Networks, Hierarchies, and the Struggle for Global Power.ā¦
- LocationĀ 3280
-
Goldsmith, Stephen, and William D. Eggers. Governing by Network: The New Shape of the Public Sector. Washington, D.C.: Brookings Institution Press, 2004.
- LocationĀ 3285
-
Heifetz, Ronald A., Marty Linsky, and Alexander Grashow. The Practice of Adaptive Leadership: Tools and Tactics for Changing Your Organization and the World. Boston, MA: Harvard Business Press, 2009.
- LocationĀ 3288
-
Holley, June. Network Weaver Handbook: A Guide to Transformational Networks. Athens, OH: Network Weaver Publishing, 2012.
- LocationĀ 3290
-
Holman, Peggy. Engaging Emergence: Turning Upheaval into Opportunity. San Francisco, CA: Berrett-Koehler Publishers, 2010.
- LocationĀ 3291
-
Holman, Peggy, Tom Devane, and Steven Cady, eds. The Change Handbook: The Definitive Resource on Todayās Best Methods for Engaging Whole Systems. 2nd ed. San Francisco, CA: Berrett-Koehler Publishers, 2007.
- LocationĀ 3292
-
Huxham, Chris, and Siv Vangen. Managing to Collaborate: The Theory and Practice of Collaborative Advantage. New York, NY: Routledge, 2005.
- LocationĀ 3296
-
JƤrvensivu, Timo. Managing (in) Networks: Learning, Working and Leading Together. Helsinki, Finland: Books on Demand, 2020.
- LocationĀ 3297
-
Jay, Jason, and Gabriel Grant. Breaking Through Gridlock: The Power of Conversation in a Polarized World. Oakland, CA: Berrett-Koehler Publishers, 2017.
- LocationĀ 3299
-
Johansen, Bob, and Karl Ronn. The Reciprocity Advantage: A New Way to Partner for Innovation and Growth. San Francisco, CA: Berrett-Koehler Publishers, 2014.
- LocationĀ 3300
-
Kahane, Adam. Collaborating with the Enemy: How to Work with People You Donāt Agree with or Like or Trust. Oakland, CA: Berrett-Koehler Publishers, 2017.
- LocationĀ 3304
-
Facilitating Breakthrough: How to Remove Obstacles, Bridge Differences, and Move Forward Together. Oakland, CA: Berrett-Koehler Publishers, 2021.
- LocationĀ 3305
-
Solving Tough Problems: An Open Way of Talking, Listening, and Creating New Realities. San Francisco, CA: Berrett-Koehler Publishers, 2004.
- LocationĀ 3307
- community deliberation, problem solving, community engagement, group facilitation,
Kaner, Sam. Facilitatorās Guide to Participatory Decision-Making. 3rd ed. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass, 2014.
- LocationĀ 3308
-
Laloux, Frederic. Reinventing Organizations: A Guide to Creating Organizations Inspired by the Next Stage of Human Consciousness. Brussels, Belgium: Nelson Parker, 2014.
- LocationĀ 3312
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Laloux, Frederic, and Etienne Appert. Reinventing Organizations: An Illustrated Invitation to Join the Conversation on Next-Stage Organizations. Brussels, Belgium: Nelson Parker, 2016.
- LocationĀ 3314
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Landreman, Lisa M., ed. The Art of Effective Facilitation: Reflections from Social Justice Educators. Sterling, VA: Stylus Publishing, 2013.
- LocationĀ 3316
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Lima, Manuel. Visual Complexity: Mapping Patterns of Information. New York, NY: Princeton Architectural Press, 2011.
- LocationĀ 3317
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Markova, Dawna, and Angie McArthur. Collaborative Intelligence: Thinking with People Who Think Differently. New York, NY: Random House, 2016.
- LocationĀ 3318
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Martlew, Nick. Creative Coalitions: A Handbook for Change. Crisis Action, 2017. https://crisisaction.org/handbook/contents/
- LocationĀ 3320
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McChrystal, Stanley, Tantum Collins, David Silverman, and Chris Fussell. Team of Teams: New Rules of Engagement for a Complex World. New York, NY: Penguin Publishing Group, 2015.
- LocationĀ 3321
-
Meadows, Donella H. Thinking in Systems: A Primer. Edited by Diana Wright. White River Junction, VT:ā¦
- LocationĀ 3323
-
Neal, Craig, and Patricia Neal. The Art of Convening: Authentic Engagement in Meetings, Gatherings, and Conversations. San Francisco, CAā¦
- LocationĀ 3324
-
Newman, Mark. Networks. 2nd ed. Oxford, UK: Oxfordā¦
- LocationĀ 3326
-
Parker, Priya. The Art of Gathering: How We Meet and Why It Matters. New York, NY:ā¦
- LocationĀ 3330
-
Pentland, Alex. Social Physics: How Good Ideas SpreadāThe Lessons from a New Science. New York,ā¦
- LocationĀ 3332
- 1resource/book, network science,
Pflaeging, Niels. Organize for Complexity: How to Get Life Back into Work to Build the High-Performance Organization. 3rd ed. Wiesbaden,ā¦
- LocationĀ 3334
-
Plastrik, Peter, Madeleine Taylor, and John Cleveland. Connecting to Change the World: Harnessing the Power of Networks for Social Impact.ā¦
- LocationĀ 3335
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Rainie, Lee, and Barry Wellman. Networked: The New Social Operating System. Cambridgeā¦
- LocationĀ 3337
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Robertson, Brian J. Holacracy: The New Management System for a Rapidly Changing World. New York, NY:ā¦
- LocationĀ 3338
-
Scharmer, C. Otto. Theory U: Leading from the Future as It Emerges. Oakland, CA:ā¦
- LocationĀ 3341
-
Scharmer, Otto, and Katrin Kaufer. Leading from the Emerging Future: From Ego-System to Eco-System Economies. San Francisco, CA:ā¦
- LocationĀ 3342
- economics, 1resource/book, futurism, leadership,
Slade, Samantha. Going Horizontal: Creating a Non-Hierarchical Organization, One Practice at a Time. Oakland, CA:ā¦
- LocationĀ 3345
-
Solomon, Robert C., and Fernando Flores. Building Trust: In Business, Politics, Relationships, and Life. New York, NY:ā¦
- LocationĀ 3346
-
Suarez, Cyndi. The Power Manual: How to Master Complexā¦
- LocationĀ 3350
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Gabriola Island, BC, Canada: New Society Publishers, 2018. Tapscott, Don, and Anthony D. Williams. Wikinomics: How Mass Collaboration Changes Everything.ā¦
- LocationĀ 3351
-
Vitale, Christopher. Networkologies: A Philosophy of Networks for a Hyperconnected AgeāA Manifesto.ā¦
- LocationĀ 3354
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Vogl, Charles. The Art of Community: Seven Principles for Belonging. Oakland, CA:ā¦
- LocationĀ 3355
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Waddell, Steve. Change for the Audacious: A Doerās Guide. Boston, MA:ā¦
- LocationĀ 3356
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Global Action Networks: Creating Our Future Together. New York, NY:ā¦
- LocationĀ 3358
-
Wahl, Daniel Christian. Designing Regenerative Cultures. Axminster, England:ā¦
- LocationĀ 3359
-
Watts, Duncan J. Six Degrees: The Science of a Connected Age. New York, NY: W. W.ā¦
- LocationĀ 3360
-
Weisbord, Marvin, and Sandra Janoff. Donāt Just Do Something, Stand There!: Ten Principles for Leading Meetings That Matter. San Francisco,ā¦
- LocationĀ 3361
-
West, Geoffrey. Scale: The Universal Laws of Life, Growth, and Death in Organisms, Cities, and Companies. Newā¦
- LocationĀ 3363
-
About the Author
David Ehrlichman is cofounder and coordinator of Converge (converge.net). With his colleagues, he has supported the development of dozens of impact networks taking action on issues as diverse as economic mobility, human rights, access to science, and health care reform. Prior to catalyzing Converge, David was a consultant with Monitor Institute, where he was first introduced to the power of networks.
- LocationĀ 3975
- 1resource/person, 1action,
- [note::I'd like to follow this guy]
You can reach David at ehrlichman@converge.net
- LocationĀ 3981
-