« Orkut and the failure of social networking platforms | Main | Orkut Offline »

Open Space

A week ago I had the pleasure of attending a meeting of the Medinge Group, the world's leading think tank on branding. The meeting took place in Amsterdam and was organized in an Open Space format. John Moore, Denzil Meyers and Malcolm Allan were the facilitators. I've heard of, and read about OS methods before, but this was my first hands-on experience with it.

I liked the method very much. It works very good for a group of people with diverse backgrounds and interests and passions. Also the fact that in the end a list of concrete actions was formulated including who would take those actions was a pleasant surprise at the end of a very pleasant day. I think that is what summarizes it best: a pleasant day where a lot of work was done. I was impressed with the relaxed and stress-free climate of it all, even if the people were engaged and passionate, and even while a lot of work was done.

Don't be fooled when someone says Open Space builds on the absence of structure. It is in fact very much structured.
The structures just don't become barriers at any time. (And if they were perceived to be barriers it would be easy to change them on the spot)
And the structures never interfere with the content/topics of discussion, they really are just structures of format.

Open Space, devised by Howard Owen, works by 5 rules of thumb:

  • whoever comes is the right people
  • whatever happens is the only thing that could have
  • it starts when it starts
  • whenever it's over it's over
  • two-feet principle: if you find yourself in a situation where you are neither learning nor contributing, move somewhere where you can.

    The basic out-line of the day was:

    In stead of traditional agenda-setting:

  • short conversations in groups of 2 or 3 about what you wanted to do that day, and how to achieve it.
  • short summarizing of those conversations in the whole group
  • people picking a conversational topic and inviting others interested to join them in one of the corners of the venue

    In stead of traditional workshop sessions and minute-taking:

  • different conversations taking place, conversations spinning off into others, people cross-fertilizing conversations by walking around
  • ideas, questions, issues from all conversations posted on post-its on a door/clear surface
  • people starting conversations based on post-its
  • people trying to rearrange post-its looking for emergent patterns

    In stead of traditional plenary sessions where workshops results are presented:

  • a few people explaining the patterns they see in the post-its
  • new conversations around these patterns with new post-its resulting with suggestions for concrete actions
  • one or two people arranging the proposed actions in groups

    In stead of deciding on the next steps and agenda by group consensus:

  • people picking actions and committing to its execution
  • people pledging support to actions

    In stead of ending the meeting and evaluate during drinks:

  • a plenary conversation, acknowledging things learned, expressing appreciation for others, describing whether or not prior expectations have been met, reflecting on the process
  • drinks and dinner, where there is no need to reflect on the day, but new conversations can start.

    I've suggested using Open Space for an upcoming brainstorming meeting between our company and a close partner for future joint initiatives, and I think it might be useful for the first Blogwalk meeting as well. If we could devise a way to do an Open Space meeting on-line (with multiple chatrooms perhaps, and a combination of other media?) it might be something for Actionable Sense as well.

    For more information on Open Space see the Open Space wiki (via Chris Corrigan) and OpenSpaceTech-Wiki.

    Permalink

    Conversational Space
    Excerpt: "If you find yourself in a situation where you are neither learning nor contributing, (use your two feet to) move somewhere where you can"
    Weblog: Your Guess Is As Good As Mine
    Tracked: January 25, 2004 11:59 PM

    Nice observations on the myth of the "structureless" Open Sapce meeting. I like to say that OST is infact intricately structured, with structures arising and dissolving exactly as we need them. They fulfill their purposes and then dissolve into something else.

    This is the essence of self-organization.

    Posted by: Chris Corrigan at January 28, 2004 01:14 AM

    Glad you've learned about OS, Ton. It is elegantly powerful in its simplicity - and yes, there is very much a structure - provided by the central question, and passion bounded by responsibility.

    There is a facility for OS online - were you aware of that ? And I guess in a lot of ways wikis operate like OS, actually.

    Posted by: Jon Husband at January 31, 2004 08:16 PM

    OS methodology is very attractive. I agree with Jon, it has many common points with wikis. In particular the Law of Two Feet is very obvious in both.

    (BTW I think the founder's name is Harrison, not Howard Owen.)

    Posted by: Seb at February 9, 2004 12:37 PM

    Post a comment










    Remember personal info?






  • About

    ton2small.jpg Weblog by Ton Zijlstra,
    Enschede, Netherlands
    I write about knowledge work and management, and the tools and strategies that help us navigate the networked world.
    Contacting me is easy and appreciated:
    E-mail, Skype, MSN

    Syndication:
    Full posts
    Excerpts

    Interdependent Thoughts in Dutch and German:
    RSS Nederlands
    RSS Deutsch

    Where I am

    MSN: MSN Online Status Indicator
    Yahoo: Yahoo Online Status Indicator
    Skype:
    AIM: AIM Online Status Indicator
    ICQ: ICQ Online Status Indicator
    Plazes: Where is Ton?

    Archives


    May 2007
    April 2007
    March 2007
    February 2007
    January 2007
    December 2006
    November 2006
    October 2006
    September 2006
    August 2006
    July 2006
    June 2006
    May 2006
    April 2006
    March 2006
    February 2006
    January 2006
    December 2005
    November 2005
    October 2005
    September 2005
    August 2005
    July 2005
    June 2005
    May 2005
    April 2005
    March 2005
    February 2005
    January 2005
    December 2004
    November 2004
    October 2004
    September 2004
    August 2004
    July 2004
    June 2004
    May 2004
    April 2004
    March 2004
    February 2004
    January 2004
    December 2003
    November 2003
    October 2003
    September 2003
    August 2003
    July 2003
    June 2003
    May 2003
    April 2003
    March 2003
    February 2003
    January 2003
    December 2002
    November 2002

    Bookblog


    (last 2 entries) (rss)

    Books I read


    Authentic voices


    Lilia Efimova *
    Martin Roell *

    Gary Murphy
    Seb Paquet *

    Sebastian Fiedler *
    Frank Patrick

    Thomas Burg *
    Ross Mayfield

    Terry Frazier
    David Weinberger *

    Dina Mehta *
    Rick Klau

    Stuart Henshall *
    Elizabeth Lawley

    Spike Hall
    Andy Boyd *

    Phil Wolff *
    Matt Mower *

    Jim McGee
    Olaf Brugman *

    David Gurteen *
    Johnnie Moore *

    Elmine Wijnia *
    David Pollard

    Julian Elvé
    David Buchan

    Denham Grey
    Judith Meskill

    Ian Glendinning
    George Por *

    Paul Goodison
    Jack Yan

    * met face to face


    Miscellaneous

    Technorati Profile

    Powered by Movable Type and Qumana
    i_use_qumana.png



    Creative Commons License
    This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License.