Appreciative Inquiry and Positive Deviance
26th in a series of 50 Knowledge Management Components (Slides 34 and 35 in KM 102)
Appreciative inquiry: asking questions that strengthen a system's capacity to apprehend, anticipate, and heighten positive potential – mobilization of inquiry through the crafting of the "unconditional positive question"
Appreciative Inquiry is the co-evolutionary search for the best in people, their organizations, and the relevant world around them. In its broadest focus, it involves systematic discovery of what gives life to a living system when it is most alive, most effective, and most constructively capable in economic, ecological, and human terms.
As a method of change, Appreciative Inquiry differs from traditional problem-solving approaches.?The basic assumption of problem-solving is that people and organizations are fundamentally broken and need to be fixed.?The process usually involves identifying key problems, analyzing the root cause of failure, searching for possible solutions, and developing an action plan.
In contrast, the underlying assumption of Appreciative Inquiry is that people and organizations are evolving and growing.?Appreciative Inquiry focuses the whole organization on identifying its positive core – its greatest assets, capacities, capabilities, resources, and strengths – to create new possibilities for change, action, and innovation.?The steps include discovering the organization's root causes of success, envisioning bold new possibilities for the future, designing the organization for excellence through dialogue, and co-creating the future.
Use Appreciative Inquiry to help make the corporate culture more positive, get the best out of collaboration and communities, and to evolve from problem solving to innovation.?This process can be applied in almost any context, and the philosophy can be applied in communities, training, communications, user assistance, rewards, lessons learned, proven practices, collaboration, and management of change.
Insights
1. A cofounder of Appreciative Inquiry, David Cooperrider of Case Western Reserve University wrote:
In my view, the problem-solving paradigm, while once incredibly effective, is simply out of sync with the realities of today’s virtual worlds. Problem solving is painfully slow (always asking people to look backwards historically to yesterday’s causes); it rarely results in new vision (by definition we say something is a problem because we already implicitly assume some idea, so we are not searching to create new knowledge of better ideals, we are searching how to close gaps), and, in human terms, problem solving approaches are notorious for generating defensiveness (it is not my problem but yours).
2. Jane Watkins defined Appreciative Inquiry as:
A collaborative and highly participative, system-wide approach to seeking, identifying, and enhancing the ‘life-giving’ forces that are present when a system is performing optimally in human, economic and organizational terms.
3. In Appreciative Inquiry and Knowledge Management? No problem. Chris Collison described the four steps of an Appreciative Inquiry:
An approach which combines Reflection, Storytelling, Visioning, Prioritization and Action and generates positive energy for change? Why would I not want to employ that? So if you’re a knowledge professional who hasn’t considered or explored Appreciative Inquiry, let me commend it to you as a valuable mindset to integrate into your KM toolkit.
4. In Creative Strategic Planning: Appreciative Inquiry, Lynne Levesque listed five steps:
Appreciative Inquiry is not only an incredibly useful tool for strategic planning, change management, and resolving challenges.?It is also applicable as a good coaching practice.?Leaders who use probing questions in an appreciative mode that generates collaborative learning will see long-lasting behavior changes.
5. Patrick Lambe guest blogged the following in Cognitive Edge:
Appreciative Inquiry is an interview/dialogue technique which expresses perfectly the positive deviance principle stating that it’s better to look for what is working rather than what is going wrong. It goes a little further than that by also trying to define the aspirations of the actors in a given situation – i.e., what the desirable outcomes will be.
Dave Snowden is particularly scathing about Appreciative Inquiry as a technique, because he sees it practiced in an (in my terms) apocalyptic/bipolar vacuum, in a “happy-clappy,” “fluffy-bunny” denial of the negative that would correspond to the manic phase of bipolar disorder. There’s no engagement with the real problems of real life, and therefore it can be at best distracting and at worst delusional, magical thinking.
6. In Five Theories of Change Embedded in Appreciative Inquiry, Gervase Bushe wrote that AI is based on storytelling:
The key data collection innovation of appreciative inquiry is the collection of people's stories of something at its best.?If we are interested in team development, we collect stories of people’s best team experiences.?If we are interested in the development of an organization, we ask about their peak experience in that organization.?If enhanced leadership is our goal, we collect stories of leadership at its best.?These stories are collectively discussed in order to create new, generative ideas or images that aid in developmental change of the collectivity discussing them. There is something about telling one's story of peak organizational experiences, and listening to others, that can make a group ready to be open about deeply-held desires and yearnings.
7. Jackie Stavros presented:
Appreciative Inquiry is the discovery of the best in people, their organizations, and the relevant world around them.?It is an art and practice of asking the unconditional positive questions that strengthen a system’s capacity to apprehend, anticipate and heighten positive potential.?Instead of negation, criticism and spiraling diagnosis, there is discovery, dream, design and destiny.?It works from accounts of the “positive core”.?AI links the energy of the positive core directly to any change agenda and changes never thought possible are suddenly and democratically mobilized.
AI is a method which attempts to discover “the best of what is” in any organizational or human system. It is both a theory and a practice.
3 Basic Principles
Contrasting Problem Solving and Appreciative Inquiry
1a. Deficit-Based Change
1b. Asset-Based Change
领英推荐
2a. Deficit-Based Thinking
2b. Appreciative Inquiry
Resources
Positive deviance: an approach to change based on the observation that in any community, there are people whose uncommon but successful behaviors or strategies enable them to find better solutions to a problem than their peers, despite facing similar challenges and having no extra resources or knowledge
Positive Deviance (PD) is an asset-based, problem-solving, and community-driven approach. It enables a community to discover successful behaviors and strategies and develop a plan of action to promote their adoption by all concerned.
Positive deviants can be found everywhere. Their special practices, strategies, and behaviors enable them to find better solutions to prevalent problems than their neighbors who have access to the same resources. Study what works and encourage replication by others.
Insights
PD Guiding Principles: The basic components and ingredients that give the PD approach its name:?
PD Methodology: Five basic steps which serve as the backbone of the approach:
The steps are iterative and a basic template to be adapted to the local or social context. In some cases the steps are repeated on an on-going basis throughout the project.
Positive Deviance is a strength-based approach based around five core principles:
3. In The Power of Positive Deviancy, Jerry Sternin and Robert Choo wrote:
Working closely with the residents of several villages in Thanh Hoa province, we first sought out very poor families who had managed to avoid malnutrition. Although the parents in those families had access to no more resources than their neighbors, they somehow found enough food to keep their children healthy. By examining the behavior of these people, the positive deviants in the community, we hoped to find local strategies for combating malnutrition.
And that’s exactly what we did find. It turned out that the mothers in those families were going out every day to nearby rice paddies and collecting tiny shrimps and crabs, which they were adding, along with sweet-potato greens, to their children’s meals. They were also feeding their children three or four times a day, rather than the customary twice a day. The shellfish and greens were both readily available and free for the taking, but the conventional village wisdom held these foods to be inappropriate for young children. It was clear, therefore, that the immediate solution to the malnutrition problem did not require a lot of money or other outside resources; it simply required the community members to change their behavior and to start emulating the positive deviants in their midst.
4. Patrick Lambe guest blogged the following in Cognitive Edge:
Identification and transfer of “best practices” fulfills a classic positive deviance goal, though they might be more appropriately be named “better” or “more successful” practices. Moreover, the adding of a positive deviance frame to “better practice” identification and transfer, gives a greater sensitivity to the context in which the practice is developed and in which it works, and it emphasizes the importance of local origination and ownership of the practice. Not all practices travel well from their native context, and it is this indiscriminate, context-insensitive lifting and re-application that has given best practices in KM their bad name, not to mention the lack of ownership of practice that it instills.
5. Nick Milton blogged about Positive deviance in a business context:
We can apply this approach in business, as part of our Knowledge Management program (perhaps as a KM pilot). It works this way.
Resources
?Books
Architect Practice Manager & Leader (EMEA) - Industry Solutions @Microsoft AI Leader
7 年Rosalind Whitelegg - see this article for your question on appreciative enquiry
Organisation Design | Knowledge Manager | Strategy
8 年Excellent article. The South African not-for-profits I worked were excellent practitioners of appreciative inquiry and positive deviance. An underlying principle of our work and programs was working alongside groups and communities to find their strengths and harness those to strengthen and evolve. Good times ??