Collaboration is Not Enough: 6 Opportunities for You and Your Team to Add More Value
One of the things I hear senior executive leaders say a lot is: “We’ve got to have more collaboration!... especially cross-functional collaboration. The problems we face today are too complex for any one function to figure out the solutions.”
It’s true that in today’s unpredictable world, if you and your team are going to contribute real value to?your organization, you have to work closely together and engage directly with your stakeholders. But leaders often also feel frustrated that even though we are having lots of meetings “together”….with lots of smart people, ….we are not contributing as much value as we know we are capable of.
This is because “collaboration” is not enough.
Collaboration is generally thought of as “having a meeting, or working with others in a good relationship, or trying to cooperate”. This way of viewing collaboration may have worked in the past when business was simpler and less complex. But that way of working is not nearly enough for today’s fast-paced, ever-changing interconnected business environment.
The leadership shift needed is to go beyond “collaboration” to “Co-creation”.
Co-creation is more than collaboration, and it is how successful leaders today contribute added value and impactful results.
What does it mean to truly Co-create?
The problems that you, as a leader, face today are not just complex, they are also brand new; in many cases never existed before. So this requires real and meaningful help from your stakeholders to find solutions. For example: I was coaching an SVP who was leading the company in new product development. I asked if he was satisfied that he was co-creating with colleagues in order to get the best solutions. He said: “Oh sure, I am already co-creating. My team and I checked all the boxes. We set up meetings with our different stakeholders and presented a full slide deck on the product we created. We asked each stakeholder group to react to our deck, and give feedback.”
He thought he was co-creating.
But the subtlety that he and his team missed is that their busy stakeholders took in their slide deck presentation as “work that was already complete”, and was maybe open to a few comments or suggestions…However, that is a far cry from actually creating something together with stakeholders from a blank sheet of paper.
We often mistakenly think of co-creation as gathering input from stakeholders and generally having a good relationship with them. But it’s only co-creation if the stakeholder or customer actually plays an active role in providing upfront input and plays a key role in the creation of value, at many points in the process; and it is a continuous, repeated process of mutual benefit. (Based on a definition from?authors Jansen and Pieters).
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So, even one good co-creating meeting with stakeholders is not cause for a victory lap; it is just the beginning. Co-creation needs to become a practice, an ongoing endeavor, a way of working with stakeholders and customers to continually create new solutions “with them”, not just “for them”. It’s inviting your stakeholders to help you define what value is, and doing that several times during the project, not just once when you have your proposal all tied up in a bow with 30 beautiful slides. Co-creation is more than just having a good relationship; it’s having a proactive, engaged, outcome-producing relationship. That is how we innovate and create real value for our organizations.
Why does Co-creation matter?
Aside from creating greater value, co-creation impacts engagement.?When people help create something (not just comment on what you created for them), there is a level of commitment and personal investment in the outcome.?It can also be quite motivating and inspirational.?Importantly, something created with a continuous and repeated process involving the right stakeholders ensures a high level of quality output.
To unlock real impact requires co-creation.?If you have ever questioned whether or not you could be creating significantly more value, as most executives have, it’s time to reexamine.
What are some of the reasons why you and your team may not be going beyond “collaborating” to truly “co-creating”??
6 reasons why you may not be Co-creating….and missing opportunities to add more value.
These are 6 opportunities for demonstrating greater leadership and more impact: 6 things you and your team can change, so that you co-create and produce much more value.
If you can see any of these 6 opportunities in your own team, …what action could you take to lead your team to shift beyond collaboration to true Co-creation? And then what new value could you contribute to your organization?
For more insight on co-creation with stakeholders, check out my new book?Even More Impact. Now also an Audiobook, available at Amazon.
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1 年Val Williams, MCC , such good insights. Co creation is the way to go.
As always, outstanding insights & profound advice.
Senior Manager - Compliance & Ethics | Legal Operations Management | SOP Implementation | Process Automation
1 年Great article Val. Such a logical next step action plan: co-create .
Marketing Director | Grow brands and revenue via Data-driven Marketing | xUnilever GSK Novartis | Consumer Healthcare | FMCG | Health & Wellness I Global Brand Strategy
1 年Love the concept of Co-creation as an upgrade of collaboration. Val Williams, MCC thanks for sharing. The leadership shift needed to go to “Co-creation” - more output focussed vs collaboration.