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My Favorite Book on "Collaboration"

10/17/2009

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Recently I read a few books on the general topic of collaboration.  The one that was most informative for me was Morten Hansen’s book entitled “Collaboration.”  Published by  Harvard Business Press and written by an INSEAD/Berkeley professor, it is naturally very business focused.  It emphasizes the importance of cultural issues, it suggests several best practices, and it provides many case studies.

Hansen begins by enumerating several collaboration “traps”:
     -collaborating in hostile territory (some organizations aren’t set up to collaborate)
     -overcollaborating (it is refreshing for an author to suggest that his thesis and the title to his book isn’t universally applicable)
     -overshooting the potential value
     -underestimating costs
     -misdiagnosing the problem
     -implementing the wrong solution
  
He suggests that the solution to these traps is “disciplined collaboration … the leadership practice of properly assessing when to collaborate (and when not to) and instilling in people both the willingness and ability to collaborate when required”

The three steps in disciplined collaboration is to:
     1)evaluate opportunities for collaboration
     2)spot barriers to collaborate
     3)tailor collaboration solutions
  
In general, his case for collaboration is that it provides:  
     -better innovation
     -better sales 
     -better operations
which all can lead to sales growth, cost savings, and asset efficiency.
  
The four barriers to successful collaboration are: 
     -not invented here syndrome  (insular culture, status gap, self-reliance, fear of revealing shortcomings)
     -hoarding (competition with colleagues/units, narrow incentives (for own goals), too busy, fear (loss of power))
      -search problems (company size, physical distance, information overload, poverty of networks)
      -transfer issues (tacit knowledge (difficult to transfer), no common frame (don’t know how to work together), weak ties (no strong relations to ease transfer)
  
The three levers to tear down these barriers are:

Lever 1: Unify People - reduce motivational barriers and get buy-in toward a common goal
     One way to do this is to create unifying goals that must
          -create common fate
          -be simple and concrete
          -stir passion
          -put competition on outside
     
     Another is for leaders to emphasize the value of teamwork.  However as they do this, they need to be aware of three “sins” that can happen. 
          sin #1 – small team work kills collaboration. In other words small teams only collaborate among themselves.
          sin #2 – "everyone do teamwork now (except those of us up here)"
          sin #3 – teamwork becomes the point of it all
     
     A language of cooperation also needs to be created.  However, as he has warned earlier, unification or collaboration can be overdone. 

Lever 2: Encourage T-shaped management that rewards both independent results and cross-unit contributions. For example when BP merged with Amoco managers were expected to spend 15%-20% time on cross unit collaboration activities.

     Companies get to this T-shaped management by selection and change:  encourage the belief in T-shaped management, promote and hire those who exhibit this behavior (and selectively fire those who don’t), use pay and bonuses, and provide leadership coaching.

     Collaboration must be measured. SAP has 3 observable degrees of behavior:  “needs development” (misses opportunity to collaborate); “satisfactory” (involves others), “highly effective” (ensures involvement). This data must be must be collected, measured, and have consequences. Employees need to be coached on this behavior, they must be given a way to do it. Performance pay needs to be based on a mixture of individual, business unity, and corporate performance.

Lever 3: Create nimble, not bloated networks across organizations that deliver results
     1)build outward (not inward)
     2) build diversity, not size
     3) build weak ties, not strong ones
     4) use bridges, not familiar faces
     5) swarm the target, don’t go it alone
     6) switch to strong ties, don’t rely on weak ones

Finally the author discusses how you grow to be a collaborative leader
     -put personal goals and interests second
     -involve others (from autocractic to inclusive)
     -be open to people, alternatives, and debate 
     -be accountable

 
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"The Culture of Collaboration"

10/17/2009

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While "Collaboration" by Hansen is my current favorite collaboration book, “The Cultural of Collaboration” by Evan Rosen provides several important insights.

Rosen says that an increased demand for collaboration is being fueled by technology, economic, cultural, and regulatory trends.  He also says that the elements that are typically present when collaboration work include: 
     -a culture that values, trust, sharing, communication, and innovation
     -an organization with common goals
     -a well-design physical and virtual environment
     -the existence of some collaborative chaos
     -the room for constructive confrontation
     -a sense of community
     -an ability to create value with collaboration
 
When discussing the advantages of a culture of collaboration, Rosen states that “Internal competition delivers results short term, but collaboration builds long term value.”  A collaborative culture increases the likelihood of spontaneous interactions which are valuable for an organization.  It also increases knowledge sharing and mentoring.

Overall, the common attributes of a collaborative culture includes:
     -frequent, cross-functional interaction
     -leadership and power spread around an organization
     -people being accessible regardless of their level
     -reduced fear of failure
     -broad input into decisions
     -cross-pollination of people
     -spontaneous or unscheduled interaction

     -less structured interaction
     -formal or informal mentoring
     -tools that fit work styles

A culture of collaboration enables lifestyles and workstyles such as mobile and deskless workers.  It also enables three modes of work: process, project, and incident and breaks down organizational silos.   

However beware of how collaboration is promoted in a company. "Too often organizations introduce collaboration approaches, processes, and tools without linking them to organizational principles. This confuses users and stalls integration into work styles.”  As demonstrated by Toyota:  culture + process + tools = collaboration

Rosen provides a good list of communication and collaboration tools and discusses how to choose the right tools for the right situation.  He also discusses how compliance drives and complicates collaboration.

A company can create a culture of collaboration by
     -establishing a mentoring system
     -inviting constructive confrontation
     -integrating collaborative tools into work styles
     -facilitating cross-functional brainstorming
     -rewarding people for gaining broad input
     -rewarding people for sharing information
     -incentivizing people to innovate
     -promoting collaborators
     -practicing collaborative leadership
     -using collaborative voice tone
     -avoiding internal competition trap
     -creating open physical environments and virtual environments
   
A good example of a global collaborative enterprise example is Boeing which went from linear to concurrent design by using:
     -low-level collaboration  (text discussions, some video/web conferencing synchronous)
     -mid-level collaboration with partner companies via a web-enabled consortium
      -high-level collaboration or design work between global partners (designing parts, plans, tools)
  
In general, a global collaborative enterprise:
     -recruits the best talent regardless of location
     -develops products and services in real time
     -leverages mirror zones (teams in opposite time zones)
     -exploits global work and job sharing
     -capitalizes on input from multiple regional cultures
     -capitalizes on input from multiple organizational cultures
     -recognizes interdependency among business partners
     -provides dedicated collaborative spaces
     -integrates collaborative tools and capabilities into work styles
     -uses visualization tools when doing design

 
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