Plexus Institute
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Transcript of Plexus Institute
LIBERATING STRUCTURESUsing the Science of Change
Lisa [email protected]
MinneapolisApril 12, 2012
MNODN 1
Plexus Institute
www.plexusinstitute.org
Structure of Speed Networking
1. Space– Open– Standing face to face
2. Participation– Everybody at once
and at the same time + equal time for all
3. Configurations– Pairs– Strangers preferably
4. Time allocation– 2 minutes per person– 3 rounds
5. Conceptual Framework– 1 issue question– 1 solution question
Components of all Structures
1. Space: physical arrangements2. Participation: who is included, how,
when and how much3. Configurations: sizes and composition
of groups4. Time allocation: time spent in each
configuration5. Conceptual framework: a concept, a
question or a purpose that informs the interaction
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“….the next century will be the century of complexity.”(Steven Hawking, 20th Century)
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What is Complexity Science?
• Science that attempts to:– Understand and explain the
behavior and dynamics of systems composed of many interacting elements
– Uncover the principles and processes that explain how order, change and innovation emerge in these systems
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Before Complexity
• Scientists believed the future was knowable given enough data points
• Dissecting discrete parts would reveal how everything -- the whole system -- works
• Phenomena can be reduced to simple cause & effect relationships
• The role of scientists, technology, & leaders was to predict and control the future
• Increasing levels of control over nature would improve our quality of life
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Newton & the Machine Metaphor
• In science– the search for the basic building blocks
• In society– The whole is no more or no less than the sum
of parts, so focus on the parts (e.g. functions, detailed plans, disciplines)
– Organizations, health systems and people are implicitly viewed as machines (or machine parts)
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From Physics Envy To Biology Envy
Simple Complex
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Interdependent Attributes
Embedded
Systems
AdaptableElementsSelf-Organization
& Emergence
Order & Disorde
r
Non-Linearity
Diversity Distributed Control
The appearance of control is always an illusion. – Gayle Pergamit & Chris Peterson
Confusion is a word we have invented
for an order that is not yet understood. – Henry Miller
Problems & Opportunities Awareness Iceberg
4% known to top leaders
9% known to middle managers
74% known to supervisors
100% known to the front line
Internationally acclaimed study conducted by Sidney Yoshida, initially presented at the International Quality Symposium
Action unleashed @ the front line
The Importance of Engagement
• Widens the circle of involvement• Involves the whole system• Increases commitment and energy• Connects people to each other and to ideas• Generates better solutions• Creates communities for action• Turns meetings into working sessions• Speeds up implementation
New Option for Transformation
→ Same people→ Same incentives→ Same organizational structure→ NEW CONVERSATIONS
Relationships and CONVERSATIONS
Decentralized, Small Talk
• Fully autonomous• Unconnected• Unstable
relationships• Diverse or Uniform• Random growth
Polite Conversation
Centralized, Ordered Discussion
• Largely dependent• Connected by
power/permission• Fixed relationships• Uniform• Growth from center
out
Facilitated, Bureaucratic Talk
Distributed, Generative Talk
• Largely autonomous contributions
• Connected by simple rules that guide local relationships
• Diverse and uniform participation
• Growth from any point in any direction
• Order arises out of local interaction & conversation
Messy, Loose, Complex & Creative
Methods that shift interactions• Stories versus PPT• Listening, Silence• Big Questions• Improvising• Diversity of formats:
pairs, small groups, large groups
• Focus on purpose• Inviting participation,
minimizing status differences
• Rapid learning & prototyping cycles
• Feedback loops• Network weaving• Innovative ways to harvest
output• Natural environment• Movement, Fun• Social elements, mixing
participants
Liberating Structures Some examples of an expanding, adaptable mash-up of open source methods
1. Appreciative Interviews2. Agreement / Uncertainty Matrix3. Creative Destruction via TRIZ4. Wicked Questions5. Min Specs6. Chunking via Rapid Prototyping7. Improv8. 15% Solutions9. Open Space Technology 10. Ecocycle Sifting & Gathering11. Panarchy: Cross-Scale Change12. Conversation Café Dialogue13. Discovery & Action Dialogue14. Wise Crowds Group
Consultation
15. Smart Network Mapping16. Generative Relationships17. Purpose-To-Practice Design18. Scenario Planning Critical
Uncertainties19. Impromptu Speed Networking20.1-2-4-Whole Group21.Troika Consulting22.Fishbowl Sessions – “What I
Need From You”23.Celebrity Interview24.5 Whys & 10 Hows25. Storyboarding Agendas26. Positive Deviance
We search for the minimum structure to liberate the maximum innovation
Attributes of LS MethodsWhat Other Methods Come To Mind?
• Simple & fast to learn• Requires very little
explanation or theory• Draws out insight from
interaction• Works with groups, units,
or the whole organization• Focuses attention on
relationship patterns• Minimally structured for
maximum liberation• Generates surprises &
novelty without central control (light coordination only)
• Invites seriously-playful participation
• Appeals to people in diverse roles
• Generates very short- and long-term results
• Illuminates an edge or paradoxical territory
• Identifies and builds on assets that exist now
• Invites inclusion & more diverse voices
• Works with internal and external customers
Liberating Structures Workshop• 30 + different methods• Single organization: all layers
together, top to bottom• Community with shared
interests• Ideal 2.5 days + 2 days of
coaching sessions• Experiential, “try it NOW”• Intense, Rapid Cycles• Fun, Seriously!• Complexity Theory – little or
none, adjustable to interests• Focus on real challenges,
mundane and sublime
Typical Workshop AgendaDAY I – 8:30am-5:00pm DAY II – 8:30am-5:00pm DAY III – 8:30am-1:30pm
Welcome and Purpose[] Impromptu NetworkingQuick Rounds of Conversation With “Strangers” [20][] Introducing LS and Purpose[] Appreciative InterviewsCreating Momentum by Building On and Designing With “What Works Right Now” [45] twist: flip a problem into an appreciative search for solutions[] Agreement)(Certainty Matching MatrixMatching Simple, Complicated, & Complex Approaches to Specific Challenges [30] self-reflection, then pairs, then place challenges on BIG wall chart. Group review.[] Ecocycle PlanningEngaging Groups in Growing and Sifting Their Portfolio of Activities [60] What do you notice about the distribution? Any surprises in the Poverty or Rigidity Traps?[] 15% SolutionsNoticing and Using the Influence, Discretion and Power Individuals Have Right Now Twist: move one challenge (from the Ecocycle) forward with a 15% Solution, then Troika consult[] Lunch [] Making Space with TRIZDesigning a Perfectly Adverse System to Make Space [45-60] Themes: important customer or patient interaction[] Flocking CAS [15] How do innovations spread?[] Work-In-Progress Group Consultation Tapping the “Wisdom of Crowds” To Solve Problems Together [60] Possibilities: a big launch, coordination across silos or boundaries, a chronic/messy problem[] Design Party Debrief SessionReflecting on Your Design-In-Progress and Making Adjustments-As-You-Go (what? so what? now what? among a small group in the front of the room… link to ladder of inference)[] Social Time and Dinner Together
[] Conversation Café DialogueMaking Sense of and Forming Consensual Hunches about Big Challenges [60] Themes: using LS in your work…[] Graphic StoryBoardingIllustrating a Design Process for Key Meetings [10] [] Wicked Questions Framing a Paradoxical Challenge That Engages Everyone’s Imagination [30] Link to Café: how can we confidently use Liberating Structures without knowing what will unfold?[] Positive Deviance: Discovery & Action Dialogue Self-Discovering Solutions To Big Challenges Hidden Right Before Your Eyes [60-90] Theme: effective meetings or…[] Min Specs/Simple RulesUnleashing Innovation & Action by Specifying only “Must-do’s” & “Must-not-do’s” [30] Start with why, why, why… to clarify purpose, then sift activities. Theme to be selected… [] Smart NetworksWeaving Social Connections and Informal Networks To Develop & Advance Practice [20] draw personal maps by hand, review SmartMaps, then Webbing: who do you go to for expertise… inspiration… permission?...[] Lunch[] Work-In-Progress Group Consultation Tapping the “Wisdom of Crowds” To Solve Problems Together [60] recruit 2nd storyteller, focus on consulting skills[] Chunking, User Research, PrototypingTapping Tacit and Latent Knowledge in Seriously-Playful Rapid Cycles [80] Improv theme: difficult conversation with key client or peer [] Design Party Debrief SessionsReflecting on Your Design-In-Progress and Making Adjustments-As-You-Go [20][] Social Time and Dinner Together
[] Open Space TechnologyLiberating Inherent Creativity and Leadership In Large Groups with an Action-Orientation [120] Application of Liberating Structures to an important challenges for ABC organization[] Generative RelationshipsUnderstanding Patterns in Relationships that Create Surprising, New Sources of Value Pick a key group you are in right now and apply the STAR self-assessment… then action steps. [] Mad Tea PartyPaired Self-Reflection in Fast Cycles [20] in Spanish, English, Swedish, and Portuguese. Use when energy gets low.[] Lunch Together and Closing
Optional “improv” activities & simulations:Flocking CASWebbing or CoPsLeader/Follower F L O WBlocking/Accepting Offers~ ~ ~ ~ ~
Day IV and VOne-to-One Coaching Sessions as requestedPost Workshop design debrief
Workshop Objectives~ Experience how Liberating Structures transform interactions with your peers, students, patients~ Begin preparing next steps for ongoing use in everyday practice with customers, peers, and suppliers~ Discover how Liberating Structures are congruent with the emerging sciences of complex and/or biological systems
Learning Approach
• Experiential learning with a minimal amount of “telling” and a maximum of self-discovery
• Methods are introduced and woven into interactions around key challenges selected by participants
• We draw out and build on the direct experience of everyone in the room
• Goal: Everyone walks out thinking, “I can do this myself!”
• We search for the minimum structure to liberate the maximum innovation
Power in Combining Elements!
Immersion in a large # of simple self-organizing methods
A mix of top, middle & front line participants (+ customers) Invitation to try many
simple methods to your challenges immediately
Focus on complex challenges that require diverse participation to make progress
Rapid cycles jointly shaping solutions & insights in-the-moment
One on one coaching to launch immediate use in local context
Why So Many, So Fast?
• Every person is likely to find two or three LS they like and want to start using. (A few people will find many)
• LS are modular. They can be mashed-up and spur new inventions very quickly.
• Participants see patterns across the LS and gain confidence with experience.
• Quickly using them demonstrates LS are forgiving. You can get great results without tight fidelity.
• Rapid cycles show that ideas/answers come from many sources and levels, not all from the top.
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What is Complexity Science?
• Science that attempts to:– Understand and explain the
behavior and dynamics of systems composed of many interacting elements
– Uncover the principles and processes that explain how order, change and innovation emerge in these systems
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Surprising Convergence: We Stand on the Shoulders of Giants
Complex Adaptive Systems
((( Murray Gell-Mann )))The Quark & the Jaguar
((( Stuart Kaufmann )))At Home in the Universe
((( John Holland )))Emergence
((( Brian Arthur )))Increasing Returns
ChemistryIlya Prigogine, Order Out of Chaos
SociologyRobert Alexrod, Complexity of Cooperation
MeteorologyEdward Lorenz, The Butterfly Effect
PhysiologyAry Goldberger, Cardiac Research
PhysicsDavid Bohm, Wholeness
& the Implicate Order
Computer ScienceChristopher Langton
MathematicsMandlebrot, Fractals
Socio-BiologyE.O. Wilson Consilience
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Before Complexity
• Scientists believed the future was knowable given enough data points
• Dissecting discrete parts would reveal how everything -- the whole system -- works
• Phenomena can be reduced to simple cause & effect relationships
• The role of scientists, technology, & leaders was to predict and control the future
• Increasing levels of control over nature would improve our quality of life
37
Newton & the Machine Metaphor
• In science– the search for the basic building blocks
• In management– The whole is no more or no less than the sum
of parts, so focus on the parts (e.g. functions, disciplines)
– Organizations and people are implicitly viewed as machines (or machine parts)
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From Physics Envy To Biology Envy
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Focus on Systems
• Study of Complex Adaptive Systems (CAS)– Patterns of interactions within them– Outcomes that emerge from them– How systems actually behave, not how we
think or expect them to behave
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What is a Complex Adaptive System?
• System implies:– Multiple Agents– Agents are
Interdependent and Connected
• Complex implies:– Diversity– Many Elements– Large Number of
Connections • Adaptive implies:
– Capacity to Alter or Change
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Properties of CAS
• Embeddedness: Each CAS made up of other CAS and is part of (embedded in) a larger CAS
• Diversity: A CAS has many different elements. This enables a CAS to change
NURSE
UNIT
HOSPITAL
HEALTH SYSTEM
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Properties of CAS
• Distributed Control: In a CAS control is shared by many elements, rather than centralized in a single command center
• Coexistence of Order and Disorder: In a healthy adaptive system, order and disorder coexist
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Properties of CAS
• Because CAS are Nonlinear, a small change may produce a large effect, or a large change may produce a small or no effect
• Inability to Predict: Outcomes are unpredictable
The Butterfly Effect
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Properties of CAS
• Emergence: In a CAS outcomes emerge through a process of Self-Organization rather than through centrally planned or directed processes
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Interdependent Attributes
Embedded
Systems
AdaptableElementsSelf-Organization
& Emergence
Order & Disorde
r
Non-Linearity
Diversity Distributed Control
“After several other conference sessions with one or two individuals dominating the talk and focusing on their issues onlywe were able to accomplish much more in a day, than in the previous two days prior.”
- Division Chief, US Army Cadet Command
ResultsLiberating Structures help groups liberate energy, tap into collective intelligence, be creatively adaptable, and build on each other's ideas to get results.
Bias for Action“I didn’t think we were going to be able to pull together so many different departments that had not been at the same meeting before without spending hours making presentations to explain what we were all doing. I was amazed that we just got right to work! By the end of the day we were on the same page and had a way forward on things it would have taken us weeks of meetings to accomplish.”
- Program Manager, DC Office of the State Superintendant of
Education
The process designs come from theories and principles about self-organization, diffusion of innovation, and change.
Liberating Structures Defined NO
• Best practices imported
• Top-down, outside-in
• Deficit based “What’s wrong here?”
• Technical, analytic “expert” training
• “Mountain-top” personal development
• Buy-in and alignment strategies to overcome resistance in sub-groups
YES• Self-discovery in groups
• Down-up, inside-out
• Asset based “What’s right here?”
• Simple methods for mundane & sublime challenges
• Personal development within a complex social milieu
• Attracting and inviting ownership + unleashing the wisdom of diverse crowds