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How We Might View OrganisationsWhile browsing the Actionable Sense Wiki (see right hand side) I came across this statement of mine, that I scribbled down some weeks ago: Organisations are clusters of relationships between people. |
Putting this into an image you would get something like these. What happens when an organisation is first founded? Is it individuals joining (their networks) together, or is it a box to be filled with employees? ![]() Organisations as a clustering of relationships between people
Comments
Ton: That might be something like the Open Space Organization... Have a look at Michael Herman's ideas of the Inviting Organization as well at http://www.globalchicago.net What the Inviting Organization does for me is that it starts with the intrinsic motivations for people to aggregate into structures. The results look something like what you've drawn, but the origins, the role of the founder, you might say, all come back to an invitation. In these kinds of organizations where structures evolve and dissolve as they are needed, the anchor for me is the invitation that is issued. We gather around it, work with each other and then go our seperate ways when it's over...issueing new invitations all along the way. I'll post this at Parking Lot for more discussion too. Posted by: Chris Corrigan at March 16, 2004 8:04 PMInviting Organization is at this link. Posted by: Chris Corrigan at March 16, 2004 8:09 PMInspiring observations. I read an article recently that had similar type diagrams, and indicated that the network connected behind the individual is usually hidden behind a veil, or disregarded entirely. The network-as-organization has a more organic structure, more like molecular structure. John Peters and other writers on corporate behaviour suggested that need to in a speeded up world to make associations loose, able to be created and collapse on demand. Those models include assumptions about how intellectual capital is owned/maintanined by a core "head" group, however. I wonder how "accumulated value" is to be properly modeled. Any thoughts on this? Hi John, Would these be the diagrams you saw before?: Yup. That was you! I took the liberty of adding the link to your company John. Best, Ton One of my favourite exercises to do with groups looking at their structure is to have them haul out the org chart, grab a transparency and a pen and ask them how things really get done in the organization. We pick a project and follow the basic steps for how it got approved, what made it work, what critical interventions saved it. In short, we map the pathway to success that the project took in th eorganization and then we lift the transparency away from the page and BINGO! you have a mess. Or more precisely a network. And it starts looking alot like the diagrams you have been drawing because that is how people really relate to each other at work. Posted by: Chris Corrigan at March 17, 2004 9:51 AMHmm. You're ignoring the fact that organizations are self-perpetuating emergent phenomena in their own right, and resist their own dismantling. In other words, the primary pupose of most organizations *is* their own continuity, because all the other organizations have already been dismantled and assimilated into the survivors. Posted by: Michael Bernstein at March 17, 2004 6:26 PMMichael - having trouble with your point. Orgs are hard to dismantle - no argument there. But orgs as resistent or having a primary purpose? I see organizations as being what we make of them, they are non existent things that we ascribe attributes to. hello ton, a better version of InvitingOrganizationEmerges is here. your lines around the people remind me of what i heard from mark pixley in hong kong once. i asked, unencumbered by any real historical memory, how it was that little tiny taiwan could talk so tough to big fat china. he began... "well, a country's only a country because we say it's a country." all in the story... org can be real or dissolve. before the network, there is the story, and before the story, the tellers. the people as you say. and then the relationships as told by them. then the org and network. my two cents. maybe three. Posted by: michael herman at March 23, 2004 1:33 AMPost a comment
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