To succeed these days your organization must create amazing results.
Your employees and teams may be quite capable of handling their specific areas of focus, but unless you get them to work together, your products, services, and profits will suffer. While progress has been made, maximizing collaboration is still a challenge for many companies. They need a new approach.
Over the last quarter century, California’s Silicon Valley has become synonymous with building complex, successful businesses. Companies and leaders there have succeeded because they did more than apply existing business models—they created a new model for collaboration.
Dr. Thea Singer Spitzer has combined her longstanding expertise on this subject with innovative thinking, research, and focused interviews with Silicon Valley leaders to create a practical framework for the next epoch of collaboration. The Power of Collaboration shows how any company, anywhere, can adapt to achieve its goals. This cutting-edge title features:
Narratives about collaboration from top leaders in Silicon Valley.
A sensible, straightforward collaboration framework.
Positive, realistic hints for adapting that framework to your organization.
With The Power of Collaboration as your guide, those amazing results will be surprisingly easy to achieve.
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Many of the amazing things that have defined us were created by people in collaboration with others. The United States Constitution was crafted by 39 men working together. Marie and Pierre Curie won a Nobel Prize for their discoveries regarding radiation. James Watson and Francis Crick worked with Maurice Wilkins and Rosalind Franklin to decode the secrets of DNA. On another note, John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison, and Ringo Starr came together and changed popular music forever.
Collaboration in business is just as important. For instance, it made an enormous difference in the launching and running of LinkedIn. Reid Hoffman could have started the company on his own, but knew it would be more likely to be a game-changer if he teamed up with several colleagues. He did, and today, LinkedIn boasts more than 500 million members globally. Collaboration is still a defining feature of how their employees perform their work.1
Imagine our world without these and many other discoveries that came about because people were able to blend their individual expertise into collective intelligence to accomplish amazing things.
It is in our nature as human beings to collaborate. Evidence from the earliest agricultural era, 10,000 years ago, confirms that people lived in communities and combined their efforts. Even back then, people were better off pooling their talent and resources with others, rather than going it alone.
Although people have known about and used collaboration for a long time, our search for ways to make it more effective in work-places is fairly recent. Since the latter half of the 20th century, corporate leaders have been trying to bring employees together more effectively. This doesnât mean doing everything as a team or discussing things ad nauseam until complete consensus is reached. It simply means coming together when it adds value and produces better outcomes than we can achieve on our own.
THE BUSINESS IMPERATIVE
The question is not âIs your company doing well?â Rather, it is âCould you be doing even better?â There are very few companies that can honestly answer that question in the negative. However successful a company is, most could be even more successful.
The demand for innovations that delight customers is constant. What does that have to do with collaboration? As marketing expert John Ward put it, âInnovation and collaboration go together like . . . well, like Batman and Robin. Just like that dynamic duo . . . innovation and collaboration are more powerful together.â2
This example might seem too far-fetched to actually happen in a workplace. Yet itâs all too accurate a description of things that have occurred over the decades, and still do happen. Picture how different that dinner could have been if those chefs had the chance to chat and decide on courses that not only tasted wonderful on their own, but also fit well together. As some of them realized that their recipe didnât fit the theme they would have prepared something else for the good of the dinner.
Study after study reports that staff believe their company would benefit if employees worked together better. In a 2005 McKinsey Quarterly study, 80 percent of senior executives said they knew that successful collaboration across product, functional, and geographic lines was crucial. Yet, only 25 percent of them rated their own company effective in this regard.3
Much has been learned about fostering collaboration since that study. Yet we still have plenty of room for improvement. In a 2015 survey, senior leaders at a variety of companies still cited poor collaboration between employees as one of the biggest threats to their companyâs success.4
The good news is that most people now recognize the need for collaboration. Businesses see that the failure to collaborate hurts them, and theyâve acted on it. Most leaders are trying to bring employees together when it makes sense. They are doing much better at this than they did in the past. For instance, engineers, sales and marketing professionals, and finance and other experts increasingly come together to design, manufacture, and sell products that thrill customers.
The challenge is that just bringing staff together doesnât guarantee that they will automatically be able to leverage their collective intelligence. There is opportunity to help those people be even more effective when they come together. When it works well, something astonishing happens. Individuals actually start to âinteract as components of a larger mind . . . you [create] a communal brain.â5 That creation of communal brain is at the heart of truly effective collaboration.
DEFINING COLLABORATION
How do you define collaboration? Give some thought to this question before you read on.
Now letâs look at how some Silicon Valley leaders defined it when they spoke with me:
âItâs how we work together when weâre not directed to; when we are contributing as a group of people.â
âLeaders and employees all engaged together, sharing information, ideas, goals, pretty much everything. . . . Transparency is really importantâallowing people to see the bigger picture and the details. When thereâs a problem or challenge, working together to solve it, instead of playing the blame game.â
âCooperating; not only within our functional group. Working up, down, within, and outside. . . . Being holistic in our view and in how we communicate it. Figuring out how to knock down walls that are getting in the way. How to foster great ideas rather than kill them.â
âAsking myself: âHow can I help you?â versus âWhat am I going to get out of this for myself?â. . . . âHow can I help build trust quicker?â â
âSharing in a way that moves the team forward effectively, creatively, with better results.â
One secret of Silicon Valleyâs success starts with a nuanced understanding of what it means to work together. Employees across the organization see the value of collaborating and combining their knowledge.
Accordingly, the definition for collaboration throughout this book is: âBeing willing and able to blend our ideas and efforts into a âcommunal brainâ to create better results by working together than we could on our own.â
There are times when working with others will yield much better results. At other times working on our own is the better option. When working with others is optimal, we need to harness the strengths of everyone involved in ways that will help us achieve our shared goals.
INTERACTIVE NATURE OF THIS BOOK
The purpose of this book is not just to communicate concepts but also to facilitate your use of them. To help you achieve that goal, at various points throughout the chapters, I will suggest activities to assist you in applying the concepts. When you see the word application in a shaded box, you will know that youâre at one of those points. I encourage you to create a dedicated workbook or journal to record your responses.
When you get to Chapter 14, I will help you translate your thoughts into a description of the current state of collaboration at your company. I will also share initial steps you can take to help âmove the needleâ and assist your firm in fostering even better collaboration. Constructive change is often initiated by employees who have a vision for how things could be better and a passion for helping to bring about that change. By observing and insightfully piecing together what might be, you can help your company leverage employee intelligence even more successfully.
APPLICATION
Now that I have shared Silicon Valleyâs definition of collaboration and the definition that will be used throughout this book, itâs time for your first activity. Ask five colleagues how collaboration is currently defined at your organization. Ask a variety of folks, not just your friends or people who think as you do. Try to engage people at different levels of management as well as non-management employees.
Once you have done that, note the responses from those colleagues in your workbook as your first entry. How did each of them define collaboration? Were they unified in their responses? What do their responses say about the prevailing notions at your firm regarding collaboration? Do those prevailing notions help people work together well or impede them?
AN EXAMPLE OF A TOUGH COLLABORATION CHALLENGE
One of the business leaders I interviewed told me about a tough product development challenge at a company where he previously worked. This company had great success selling an educational electronic toy for children and was anxious to create their next flagship product.
A cross-functional team was formed to design that next toy. After some research and experimentation, we came up with an idea we felt had a lot of potential. It was presented to the executives, who loved it. So everyone was surprised when the consumer feedback to the prototype was negative.
Mothers felt the product was too expensive. They also felt the wand children used to interface with the toy looked too much like a gun. And they shared several other dissatisfactions. Despite this feedback, the executives felt the toy had much potential. We spent much time reconfiguring the wand. Disappointingly, the next round of consumer feedback remained negative.
Serious conversations were held, but management was still convinced the concept could work. The team made more adjustments and even brought in a consultant. The negative feedback continued. Eventually, we realized there was a bigger problem: The executives had been so vested in making the toy work that they hadnât heard moms say the product was not worth the price. Tough conversations were held, the product was killed, and the company moved on. This process consumed two years.
HOW IT MIGHT HAVE HAPPENED
Great workplace collaborations sometimes result in that next amazing product. At other times, success is realizing that a certain direction isnât working and persuading the team to move in a new direction. The executives at this toy company conveyed that the teamâs only job was to make this toy successful. The leaders called the shots. The team felt it wasnât their place to convince the executives that the price for the toy couldnât workâuntil it became painfully obvious.
Picture that design team reacting very differently to the first set of negative consumer feedback. What if they had been empowered and had grasped that the consumersâ objection to the price was an insurmountable problem? A basic philosophy of this company had always been to pack as many learning features as possible into every toy. That viewpoint had worked well in the past and it guided this design process. But packing a large number of educational features into this particular toy had raised the price beyond what consumers were willing to pay.
If the team had felt empowered to step back, they could have figured out which features would most appeal to parents. From that, they could have created a toy that was more likely to produce a reasonable profit for the company at a price that consumers were willing to pay. Then, they might have created the next blockbuster. Improving the effectiveness of collaboration at your company increases the chance that you may come up with better ideas and more sound solutions than they were able to at this toy company.
Now, letâs explore how companies in vastly different industries make use of collaboration.
COLLABORATION HELPS ACHIEVE GOALS IN EVERY INDUSTRY
Many people believe that the industry your company is in determines whether collaboration is a useful tool for you. That actually is not the case. Regardless of your industry, there are areas where employee collaboration can help you achieve your goals even better. As you read about these three groupings of industries, locate your company in one of them.
INDUSTRIES WITH HIGH NEED FOR CONTROL
Some companies produce products and services that must meet strict safety standards. Most...
Table of contents
Cover
Praise for The Power of Collaboration
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Acknowledgments
Contents
Introduction: Harmonizing Employee Efforts
Chapter 1: The Power of Collaboration
Chapter 2: Characteristics of Silicon Valley Collaborators
Chapter 3: Stories of Successful Collaborations
Chapter 4: The Silicon Valley Approach to Collaboration
Chapter 5: Individual Skills that Enhance Collaboration
Chapter 6: The First Two Individual Skills: Being True to Yourself and True to Others
Chapter 7: The Other Individual Skills: Being True to the Work and True to the Company
Chapter 8: Agile Work Process: Anyplace, Anytime
Chapter 9: Other Vital Team Tools that Boost Collaboration
Chapter 10: Architecting Your Management Practices
Chapter 11: Employee Incentives
Chapter 12: Access Enables Collaboration
Chapter 13: Collaborative Ethos: The Secret Sauce in the SVAC