From the Drafts: Felt Accountability

Notes about accountability on a flip chart: behaviors, bureaucracy, organizing and sharing

From the draft archives, 2012. This post from Bob Sutton came out of his frustrations with an airline, and led him to consider factors of felt accountability. I loved rereading his post as it spoke to this time of strong individualism here in the US. Do we have any felt accountability? I’ve snipped in the four aspects of felt accountability, but go read the post!

Felt Accountability: Some Emerging Thoughts – Bob Sutton.

Authorship…  That feeling that not only am I obligated to do the right thing, but that I am the person responsible for designing and making it as great as I can…

Mutual Obligation…David Novak, CEO of Yum! brands, argues that this should be the goal of a great leader, to create a place where it feels like you own it and it owns you.   …there is palpable weight on people, they feel pressure to do the right thing even when no one is looking, as the old saying goes. And they pressure others to do so as well.   

Indifference…Think of the average hair salon, where each stylist rents a chair.  Or a group dental practice, where dentists share a common receptionist and a few services and little else. Some organizations are designed this way and can be quite effective. The mutual dependence is weak, it is a “we don’t do much for you, so you don’t have to do much for us” situation.   

Mutual  Contempt… everyone seems to despise everyone else.  I hope I am wrong about this, but the awful stories rolled in from so many sources that it seems as if all the years of cost-cutting, all the battles with unions, all the management changes, all the stress that customers have endured over the years have conspired to bring the organization — at least most it — to this dark place.  

Archives: ROSVIZ 2012 Video Harvest

From the Draft Archives, Summer 2012, the RosViz graphic facilitation workshop with Michelle Laurie. Just. Plain. Imperfect. Fun. The always creative Jason Toal produced. Never underestimate the amount of fun people can have when let loose. I think this is a thread as I reflect back on these old blog drafts!
#MondayVideos

For a slightly more polished harvest video, also from the 2012 archives, take a look at what these kindergartners did for THEIR harvest! https://www.samchaltain.com/this-is-what-student-learning-looks-like

Happiness in Networks and Community Indicators

Picture of a flyer for the Swinomish Indian Community Two Spirit gathering on purple paper, held by my fingers.

From the Archives, 2012: Years ago I had a category in my blog, Community Indicators. I have always been interested in developmentally understanding (and maybe even evaluating) the health of groups, communities and networks. These happiness indicators below from June Holley still ring true. (The image I added does as well, a little card the Swinomish Indian Community made to support Two-Spirit/LGBTQ+ folks in our area.)

Here are just a few of many possible measurable happiness indicators in networks.

  • Expressions of gratitude and appreciation
  • Sharing of success, progress, and dream stories
  • Closing triangles and expanding circles through personal introductions
  • Random acts of kindness and generosity
  • People learning and discovering new things together
  • Planned and unplanned open invite entertainment and celebration events
  • Online spaces making resource location and collaboration easier

via Network Weaving: Why Happiness Matters in Networks.

Community Management is Not New AND it always evolves…

A picture of Nancy and her grandperson making funny faces.
Nancy and her Grandperson, making funny faces.

Community Management is Not New » ManagingCommunities.com.

From the draft archives, 2012: It is just down right fun and funny to read this post by Patrick O’Keef from 2012. Some of you reading this know what I’m grinning at. ‘Nuff said.

What is your design approach for facilitated events?

From the Blog Draft Archives, 2012. I’m leaving this one as is with a short reflection from today at the end.

Stories…

The 2012 Draft:
I am designing and facilitating a lot of face to face gatherings lately.  People ask me “how do you do this work?” and I realized that I was acting as an unconscious practitioner some of the time. So it was worth stepping back and asking myself the question, “what is my design approach for facilitated events?” With a little reflection, I realize I DO have an approach. Here is a quick description. I hope in the comments you might share your approaches!

  1. Purpose, Purpose Purpose
  2. Outcomes
  3. Process options
  4. Pacing, consistency and variety
  5. Harvest

Or, as John Smith calls it “memory practices.”

The 2022 addition. Those five things are pretty mundane. It is the stories we tell about them that holds the key. So the thing that remains most salient for me from the draft today is the idea of “memory practices.”

What is this? A quick search found something from Geoffrey Bowker’s book Memory Practices in the Sciences. “How the way we hold knowledge about the past—in books, in file folders, in databases—affects the kind of stories we tell about the past.” As I’ve been reviewing old blog drafts and creating new ones, the way I’m telling stories is changing. My memory practices are changing. I find that fascinating!