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12:42 pm | 0 recommendations | 2 comments

On Collaboration

| posted by Gautam Ghosh

Jeffrey Cufaude makes a great point when he points out that collaboration is now de riguer for success, both at an organizational level as well at a personal level.

The problem seems to be in our mindset that we still view dealing with others as a place where we have to "win" over them. This "them" could refer to anyone outside the group, from competitors, to suppliers, to customers and even (gasp!) shareholders.

This "them" also manifests itself within organizations, between teams, between departments, between business units, branches.

Primarily, this is driven by a feeling of shortage ("there's only so much budget we have, our group has to get the maximum", or "there are only so many customers for this product, we have to get them before our competitor").

The key for a facilitator, within or without, working with teams with such an attitude is to try to expand their horizons, to redefine what is the "product, the business, the community" that they are serving. The manager and facilitator has to battle entrenched mindsets and can often be a self-defeating exercise.

But the good thing is, when it succeeds, those few times can often be the moments that working seems to be the pleasure it is meant to be, one transcends the barriers of the mundane and goes back feeling "today we made a difference."

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Recent Comments | 2 Total

August 9, 2005 at 11:05am

Klas K.

In my experience competition is fierce when something is not growing, be it a company or a market segment. On the other hand if something is growing the best way to succeed is to collaborate. There is room for several individuals or companies.

August 11, 2005 at 10:38am

Olivier

Hi Gaut,

Well, I do not hold an MBA and didn't do my studies in economics. However, I never remember having heard that capitalism and liberalism were economic systems encouraging a fair distribution of resources/wealth available on our planet like in a socialist system. I rather remember a system encouraging competition of forces during which the strong will win and the weak will lose... some will tell this is life!
In that context, even collaboration comes down to answering the key personal question : 'What's in it for me? What's in it for them?'. The answer people will find to this one question will define whether or not they are willing to collaborate. If you don't find the Win/Win between all involved parties, there are actually limited chances any collaboration is going to take place at least below the surface.

Cheers, Olivier