Bridging the Divide
Simon Dowling
Leadership Team Facilitator | Author of "Work with Me" | Helping leaders unleash the hidden potential in their teams through great conversations that create real value
Following on from last month's video about the importance of getting people out of their lanes and into the messy intersections (in the context of collaboration), I had a great conversation with one senior leader about why this is so challenging. “It seems crazy,” she observed, “but even in smaller organisations, people experience stranger danger. I mean, everyone is polite to one another, but it’s hard to trust people when you don’t really know them.” Or, to quote The Doors:
"People are strange when you're a stranger."
4 sure-fire ways to not be the stranger...
If you want people to collaborate, then you have to foster a strong sense of social connection. Collaborative leadership starts with an understanding of the boundaries and divides that exist between different parts of the business, and then taking steps to bridge them – well in advance of trying to initiate a collaborative endeavour.
What does that mean in practice? I approach this through the lens of 4 ‘S’s – and collaborative leadership is about keeping initiatives alive on all 4 fronts:
- Socialise: How do you foster meaningful opportunities for people to spend time in one another’s company – no agenda, just to get to know one another? Think beyond Friday-night drinks (so many of us really just want to go home and spend time with our families). Instead, look to initiatives such as randomised coffee conversations that ritualise the idea of having coffee with a stranger. Or make a habit of inviting people from other teams as a guest to your own team’s morning team or daily quiz ritual. The key here is to make ‘invite a stranger’ a regular practice.
- Showcase: How do we let other people in to our world? How easy is it for people to get a clear sight of your team’s strategy, key projects, major lessons and biggest needs? One company I work with places posters up in all the bathrooms throughout the office, featuring Q&A interviews that showcase different people across the business. These change each month – and over my various visits, I feel like I’ve learned lots about different folks in a... well, captive environment!
- Scout: How do we make a deliberate effort to get out and find out about other teams, and bring back that learning to our own team? Even better, can we go and find people from the business to invite to our team meetings to share some insights about their work? Again, no agenda other than bridging divides and forging connection.
- Switch: Where can we find opportunities to let people come and sit in our own seat, while we sit in theirs? In one team I know, if the manager is away, their role is filled by someone from another team, as an opportunity to cross-pollinate ideas and learning. But if switching seems too hard, then its twin ‘S’ is Shadowing – where we look for ways to sit alongside someone in the business to get a sense of their world. “Hey, I’d love to get a first hand sense of what you do. Can I tag along to one of your partner briefing meetings – just for the insight?”
You know what I love most of all about all these ‘S’s? It’s that they’re simple and don’t need an organisational design workshop – or fancy collaboration platforms – to make them happen. All it takes is for leaders to regularly ask their teams a simple question: what can we do this week to forge connection and bridge divides? Would love to know what works best for you - just leave me a comment here.
Have you secured your spot...?
While I'm in your inbox, a quick reminder about my upcoming public workshop, Positive Influence: the gentle art of buy-in. It’s happening in Melbourne on Wednesday 23 October, and you can read all about it here. If you need to get other people on board with important ideas and initiatives - without relying on authority – then this is the workshop for you. There's only a small number of tickets available, and they're selling fast - I'd love to see you there!
Catch you soon
Simon
Photo credit: Haut Risque on Unsplash
Co-Founder/Exec Creative Director @ The Bite Project ? Australian Small Event Agency of the Year
5 年Yes, great ways to foster collaboration but there also must be a fundamental level of respect within the organization for anything to work.
Creative Director | Snr Copywriter | Creative Strategy | Brand Transformation
5 年Kate Richardson
Husband, Dad, CEO, Author, Speaker & Podcast Host: RoadFS Detail Memoirs, FathersFyre
5 年A smile could open the door to an amazing friendship!
Charity CEO / Founder Young and Healthy 2019 Trust / Health and wellbeing tech designer / Workplace wellbeing pioneer/ Passionate health and wellbeing professional / Avid netball player, coach and spectator / Speaker
5 年I always do!
I have just started reading Malcolm Gladwell's new book Talking to Strangers and I reckon the skills you mention here are just as applicable in life as they are at work.