87

collaboration

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: collaboration
Page 2: collaboration

Collaboration in Organisations: Theories, Tools, Principles, and Practices

by Paola Di Maio

IEEE/DEST DIGITAL ECOSYSTEMSTUTORIAL PISANULOK, THAILAND26 FEBRUARY 2008

Page 3: collaboration

OVERVIEW

Definition and classification Theories Benefits Principles Tools Practices Open Clinic

Page 4: collaboration

COLLABORATION/COMMUNICATION ARE ESSENTIAL TO:

TRANSFORMATION AGILITY INFORMATION CONVERGENCE PROCESS INTEGRATION RESOURCES OPTIMIZATION LEAN MANAGEMENT

Page 5: collaboration

DEFINITION:

“collaboration” = Latin “colaborare” — “to labor together.”

a process by which entities (people, organizations, and organisms) work together to accomplish a common goal.

Page 6: collaboration

CLASSIFICATION 1/1

Esther Dyson “Framework for Groupware” focused on three

different types of “locus of control,” based on the entity that will be

benefiting from the groupware: 1. User-centered 2. Work- or object-centered 3. Process-centered

Page 7: collaboration

CLASSIFICATION 2/

1. Tools — these would be the most granular layer; for example,

documents, messages, file

2. Channels — channels allow transfer of information among users, like communication exchange including repositories with multiple user access.

3. Structures — structures have the capability to add additional layers of meaning or information; anything that would allow the modification of tools is a collaboration structure.

4. Process — this is the collaboration layer where group decisions can be made and implemented; this would include anything from brainstorming to project management tools.

Page 8: collaboration

TYPES: INTERNAL VS EXTERNAL

Typically, collaboration can be internal or external; in contemporary extended organizations, however, these firm boundaries are increasingly flexible. For example, economies today rely heavily on outsourcing, and therefore all processes must allow for some degree of external collaboration. This is also true when considering the importance of collaboration in the supply chain and the adoption of service-oriented architectures (SOAs) in general.

Page 9: collaboration

1. Improving communication flow and knowledge exchange 2. Making organizational processes more efficient 3. Effectively leveraging and making use of the social capital;

that is, the hidden network of resources that is available to any organization via the social networks but that too often is tacit and hidden due to lack of social knowledge and communication

Transcending the boundaries ( ORGANIZATIONAL/INFORMATION)

BENEFITS OF COLLABORATION

Page 10: collaboration

THEORIES

Page 11: collaboration

A Dynamic Theory of Collaboration, Laura Black

Collaboration, knowledge, and trust are actually part of a wider and complex dynamic model. There they assert that “the domain of IT inherently crosses boundary, therefore requires a high degree of collaboration.”

Proceedings of the 36th Hawaii International Conference on System

Sciences, 2002 (http://csdl.computer org/comp/proceedings/hicss/2003/

1874/03/187430092c.pdf

Page 12: collaboration

THEORY OF PERMUTATION OF ACTION

Social worlds theory — one of the foundations of collaboration

theory, where social worlds are units of collective action and

working spheres characterized by fluid boundaries, diverse, and

multiple components — is in turn based on Anselm Strauss’Theory

of Continual Permutation of Action, as an analytical framework to

understand and explore the interwoven nature of mutually

dependent actions of collaborating actors. This idea is still

contemporary in our age of digital, interactive communication.

Page 13: collaboration
Page 14: collaboration

CO-EVOLUTION

Page 15: collaboration

EVOLUTION OF INTERACTION

Page 16: collaboration
Page 17: collaboration

GROUP PSYCHOLOGY

Page 18: collaboration
Page 19: collaboration
Page 20: collaboration

SOCIAL THEORY/SOCIAL NETWORKSPEOPLE+RELATIONSHIPS+TECHNOLOGY

Page 21: collaboration

SOCIAL SYSTEMS ARE COMPLEX

Complex systems share at least two common traits:

(1) system components can change internal states by interacting with other components

(2) the rules of behavior change dynamically following interaction. The complexity of open, flexible social systems is increased by a

higher number of participants, with each participant covering multiple roles, heterogeneous environments, different languages, and cultures. Given a social system formed by an unlimited number of actors, which in turn have unlimited interaction potential, the resulting picture looks somewhat chaotic.

Page 22: collaboration

LEVELS OF COLLABORATION

networking, coordination, cooperation, collaboration

Cooperation and collaboration do not differ in terms ofwhether or not the

task is distributed, but by virtueof the way in which it is divided; in

cooperation thetask is split (hierarchically) into independent subtasks;in

collaboration cognitive processes may be (heterarchically) divided into

intertwined layers. Dillenbourg et al.

Page 23: collaboration
Page 24: collaboration

TRANSCENDING THE ORGANIZATIONAL BOUNDARIES

Boundaries Aristotelian logic, which prevails in Western thinking,

teaches us to separate to discern. In Western logic, boundaries

are necessary to make systems work

in Eastern logic, a lot of importance is attached to the connecting space between entities that is considered essential for closed systems to expand.

Page 25: collaboration

ORGANISATIONAL BOUNDARY

Page 26: collaboration

MORE BOUNDARIES

osiris.sund.ac.uk/~cs0gco/IFIP/img001.GIF

Page 27: collaboration

BA

“Ba” is a Japanese word meaning “space” and, in knowledge management, is used to indicate a “shared context in motion where knowledge is created, shared and used.”

Page 28: collaboration

Where Does Collaboration Belong?

Where do we place this issue?

Whose job is this?

How does it fit in our chart?

What weight should it have on our budgets?

What priority should it have in our schedules?

Is collaboration more a business or a technology issue?

Should it be the responsibility of the human resources or

the IT manager?

Page 29: collaboration

PERSPECTIVES

From the business viewpoint, collaboration consists mainly of a

set of behaviors and practices that can shape the technological infrastructure and impact the entire process chain.

From the technology viewpoint, collaboration refers to a set of

tools and IT services, as well as new types of open architectures

and innovative system designs devised to support a connected

and dynamic organization. Collaboration is a driver in pro-

moting a shift in thinking where the question is no longer about

setting boundaries but rather about transcending them.

Page 30: collaboration

BEHAVIOURS

Collaboration is a driver in promoting a shift in thinking where the question is no longer about setting boundaries but rather about transcending them.

This leads to another fact that is becoming obvious across all sciences: the blurring of cognitive boundaries as they have been imposed by “conventional” value systems. It’s becoming accepted that, realistically, nothing simply fits a single category anymore; everything is in a state of flux and changing fast.

Page 31: collaboration

INTERDISCIPLINARITY

Disciplinary: Epistemologies, assumptions, knowledge, skills, methods within the boundary of a discipline. g.  Physics; History; Psychology

Multidisciplinary: Using the knowledge/understanding of more than one discipline. eg Physics and History; Biology and Architecture

Interdisciplinary: Using the epistemologies/methods of one discipline within another. g. Biochemistry; Ecophilosophy; Astrophysics

Transdisciplinary: Focus on an issue such as pollution or hunger both within and beyond discipline boundaries with the possibility of new perspectives

www.hent.org/transdisciplinary.htm

Page 32: collaboration

KNOWLEDGE TREE

Page 33: collaboration

TECHNOLOGY, MANAGEMENT, POLICY - MIT

Page 34: collaboration

INTERDISCIPLINARITY

Page 35: collaboration

PRINCIPLES

Page 36: collaboration

10 PRINCIPLES OF COLLABORATION

Nonaka, Toyama, Scharmer describe 10 principles of dynamic configuration of places for maximum knowledge exchange, as

Page 37: collaboration
Page 38: collaboration
Page 39: collaboration

TOOLS

Page 40: collaboration

GROUPWARE

http://www.ead.anl.gov/project/images/pa/47.gif

Page 41: collaboration

SOCIAL NETWORK VISUALIZATIONS

Page 42: collaboration

Social Network

Source: www.ymatsuo.com/papers/foafws04/asada/

Page 43: collaboration
Page 44: collaboration

PEOPLE NETWORKS USING FOAF Source: kengo.preston-net.com/archives/foaf_semaview.jpg

Page 45: collaboration
Page 46: collaboration

Source:myunderstanding.wordpress.com

Collaborative Tagging

Page 47: collaboration
Page 48: collaboration
Page 49: collaboration
Page 50: collaboration
Page 51: collaboration
Page 52: collaboration

COMPONENTS OF THE SSD

Page 53: collaboration

THE VISION

Page 54: collaboration

http://www.collectiveintelligence.info/

Page 55: collaboration
Page 56: collaboration

novaspivack.typepad.com/nova_spivacks_weblog

Page 57: collaboration

http://mikeg.typepad.com/perceptions/2007/05/index.html

Page 58: collaboration

REALITY CHECKS

ONTOLOGY SEMANTIC CONSISTENCY INTELLIGENT SYSTEMS SELF ORGANISING SYSTEMS

Page 59: collaboration
Page 60: collaboration
Page 61: collaboration

COLLABORATIVE ONTOLOGY

professional-learning.eu

Page 62: collaboration

IMPACT ON THE ORGANISATION

Thanks also to increased speed and quantity of information exchanged among individuals — the faster the interaction between members of a community, the faster it transforms — organizations have started recognizing that departments should not necessarily be viewed separately.

Page 63: collaboration

ENTERPRISE INTEGRATION

Page 64: collaboration

HIERARCHY

Page 65: collaboration

HOLARCHY

weblogs.asp.net/ralfw/archive/2005/06.aspx

Page 66: collaboration

HOLONS

A holon (Greek: holos, "whole") is something that is simultaneously a whole and a part. The word was coined by Arthur Koestler in his book The Ghost in the Machine (1967, p. 48).

Page 67: collaboration

HOLONS

Page 68: collaboration

HOLONIC ARCHITECTURES

Page 69: collaboration

HOLONIC INFORMATION NETWORK

www.lboro.ac.uk/.../Holonic-Small-Enterprise.jpg

Page 70: collaboration

HOLONIC ARCHITECTURES

weblogs.asp.net/ralfw/archive/2005/06.aspx

Page 71: collaboration

CONNECTORS BETWEEN LEVELS

weblogs.asp.net/ralfw/archive/2005/06.aspx

Page 72: collaboration

MORE HOLONIC INTEGRATION

weblogs.asp.net/ralfw/archive/2005/06.aspx

Page 73: collaboration

IN PRACTICE

Page 74: collaboration
Page 75: collaboration

BARRIERS TO COLLABORATION 1. Lack of unplanned contact 2. Knowing who to contact about what 3. Difficulty in initiating contact 4. Inability to communicate effectively 5. Lack of trust and willingness to communicate openly

David Atkins from Oregon University discusses lessons learned in a global collaboration effort at Lucent Bell Labs and identifies the following five main obstacles to collaboration:

Page 76: collaboration

TOP 10 COLLABORATION FEARS

Technological (levels of security and access, efficiency

of retrieval, IT skills)

Cultural (how can company policy be enforced?; what are the legal risks of handling spontaneous content?; how productive really is the use of the new technology?; how are we going to manage all this unstructured information?; what’s the ROI?).

Page 77: collaboration

The Seven Pillars of Collaboration, Michael Sampson

1. Shared access to team data 2. Location-independent access to team data, people, and

applications 3. Real-time joint editing and review 4. Coordinating schedules with team-aware scheduling

software 5. Building social engagement through presence, blogs, and IM 6. Enterprise action management 7. Broadening the network through automatic discovery

services

Page 78: collaboration

CONDITIONS:

A collaborative culture develops when two conditions are true:

(1) individuals feel free to express themselves creatively without fear of judgment,

(2) individuals feel free to modify and evolve what has been expressed by others without fear of disrupting anything. Freedom and lack of fear are seldom present in the workplace

Page 79: collaboration

EXAMPLE: Open Source Philosophy

The most prominent contemporary school and best example of

collaborative practice is the open source movement. Open source does not apply just to intellectual property or code development but also — and perhaps more importantly — to a cognitive model where every piece of output, be it physical and/or knowledge, can be used and reused by others to produce additional transformations. In social worlds, intelligence and creativity are incremental; they exist and develop thanks to aggregation. In order to facilitate this, collaboration must be enabled and supported. Exciting new project frameworks like open research, (OpenCourseWare at MIT, Creative Commons)

Page 80: collaboration

GOALS SETTING? (SOME)

Define specific goals and document the anticipated value-added of collaboration to those goals.

Ensure alignment of goals with organizational culture. Obtain buy-in to goals from all participants. Define metrics to gauge progress toward goals. Define schedule or ongoing mechanism to realign goals based

on system evolution.

Page 81: collaboration

Integration of Collaborati on Processes

Deconflict collaborative processes with existing work paradigms. Define who needs to be online to achieve collaboration goals. Specify criteria for system access. Define types and classification level of data to be on the system. Integrate groupware into existing systems and data flow. Define and document roles and responsibilities. Designate responsibility and process for content management. Define and document the role of facilitators within the system. Support evolving needs of users and organizations. Ensure availability of data and personnel resources.

http://collaboration.mitre.org/prail/IC_Collaboration_Baseline_Study_Final_Report/3_0.htm

Page 82: collaboration

COLLABORATION IN PRACTICE“for on-line collaboration to be most effective, participants must:

(1) see the value of expending the (considerable) effort required,

(2) be comfortable with and trust the medium,

(3) be comfortable with and trust their instructor (or facilitator) and their fellow collaborators,

(4) feel as though they are immersed in a rich, engaging, and rewarding social experience.”

Sandra C. Hughes et al.

Page 83: collaboration

Beyond Teams: Building the collaborative Organization, 10 principles

1. Focus collaboration on achieving business results 2. Align organizational supportsystems to promote ownership 3. Articulate and enforce “a few strict rules” 4. Exploit the rhythm of convergence and divergence 5. Manage complex tradeoffs on a timely basis 6. Create higher standards for discussions, dialogue, and information sharing 7. Foster personal accountability 8. Align authority, information, and decision making 9. Treat collaboration as a disciplined process 10. Design and promote flexible organizations

Page 84: collaboration

COLLABORATION CULTURE

Page 85: collaboration

Study - suggests that high performance tea ms believe seven things:

1) That each member of the team is accountable 2) trustworthy & competent, 3) willing to give & take, 4) honest and open, 5) willing to share credit & responsibility for the results, 6) optimistic about the outcome of the project, and

7) that their collective mission is important.

Page 86: collaboration

GETTING STARTED

Foster a collaboration culture Identify and remove barriers to adoption Explore all horizons but don’t necessarily set fixed goals Provide training if necessary Highlight and promote professional and organizational benefits Reward innovation Set up regular “open” brainstorming sessions and follow up plans and ideas by

using virtual collaboration tools Manage by letting it happen Measure unquantifiable parameters Be ready for long-term organizational change Provide organisational support and skills Set aside play time Prepare for change management/conflict resolution

Page 87: collaboration

QUESTIONS AND DISCUSSION

Contact: [email protected]