Elwin – Annette Zera (see previous) said it perfectly, I thought. When a group 
shines and the advanced notice says they were all zeros – that is when I get 
sad. Clearly they are much better than their press.

 

ho 

 

Harrison Owen

7808 River Falls Dr.

Potomac, MD 20854

USA

 

189 Beaucaire Ave. (summer)

Camden, Maine 04843

 

Phone 301-365-2093

(summer)  207-763-3261

 

www.openspaceworld.com 

www.ho-image.com (Personal Website)

To subscribe, unsubscribe, change your options, view the archives of OSLIST Go 
to: <http://lists.openspacetech.org/listinfo.cgi/oslist-openspacetech.org> 
http://lists.openspacetech.org/listinfo.cgi/oslist-openspacetech.org

 

From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Elwin and Joan
Sent: Sunday, January 13, 2013 6:19 PM
To: World wide Open Space Technology email list
Subject: Re: [OSList] Afterwards...

 


Harrison,

Would you elaborate a bit on " But I also noted a sense of sadness, maybe even 
tragedy. I have felt such feelings before, but never quite so strongly."  

Perhaps this comment provoked your "after-work". yes?

Elwin Guild
Future Development International
Portland, Connecticut
--- On Sat, 1/12/13, Harrison Owen <[email protected]> wrote:


From: Harrison Owen <[email protected]>
Subject: [OSList] Afterwards...
To: "'World wide Open Space Technology email list'" 
<[email protected]>
Date: Saturday, January 12, 2013, 5:08 PM

Well, the Open Space, previously noted, is over. For the client it was a raging 
success, or so they said. For myself it was indeed marvelous, albeit just 
another day in Open Space. But I also noted a sense of sadness, maybe even 
tragedy. I have felt such feelings before, but never quite so strongly. I had 
been told that the participants constituted a dysfunctional organization, low 
on morale, and lacking in communication abilities. But when we opened space, 
you surely couldn’t see any of that. Charged up, charging on – with purpose, 
clarity, respect, and humor. What’s not to like about that? But more to the 
point, how could the client been so wrong? The client in this case is a duo 
(Chief and Deputy). Both are competent, sensitive, energetic, bright – truly 
good folks. But the fact remains that the very same people (“the employees”) 
who had been described as dysfunctional, dis-spirited, and un-communicative… 
simply took fire! I believe this raises some questions that we need to ask 
ourselves, and most especially our clients. In what follows, you will see my 
attempt, appropriately redacted to cover the innocent. I guess you could call 
this “After-work.”

 

(An Afterwards email to my client)

 

Given your initial description of the situation, it appears that some good 
things may have happened. As I recall, the organization was described as 
“dysfunctional with serious morale and communications issues.” Those may not 
have been precisely the words, but pretty close. I heard what was said, and was 
prepared for the worst, but to be perfectly honest with you, there was nothing 
that I saw during our two days together that would lead me to such a judgment. 
What I did see was a committed group of professionals deeply and passionately 
engaged in their mission and with each other. To be sure there were arguments 
and disagreements, but so far as I could see all of that took place in a 
respectful manner. Above everything else they were genuine, warm, people. Nice 
folks. With the exception of a few moments of trepidation at the very start, 
which seemed to pass quickly (20 min?), it all flowed as a marvelous tapestry 
of human endeavor. 

 

Assuming that my natural (and doubtless prejudiced) optimism didn’t get the 
better of me, it is reasonable to ask, What happened? One might suspect “The 
magic of Open Space,” but I think that would be a false conclusion. A more 
accurate one would be, The Magic of the People. And that magic seemed to appear 
almost instantaneously – well, after 20 minutes or so. All of which could lead 
to a deeper and more interesting conclusion: The people didn’t actually change 
at all, they simply showed up as they really were.  And a follow-on question: 
What was different? Same people, same issues, same general constraints ( 
Washington is still Washington, and Africa remains its enchanting, maddening 
self). To be sure, we were in an “offsite conference center,” but I can tell 
you that had the space been available in the office, the results would have 
been comparable.  What was different?

 

As you wander on down the road, there will be a natural tendency to assess the 
impact of our two days together in terms of the number of 
projects/fixes/changes that are followed up on, and implemented. Natural, but 
superficial, I think. Some proposals will be dealt with, some won’t be, some 
never should be. Indeed the world may radically change tomorrow so that just 
about everything we talked about, thought about, and planned is irrelevant. The 
question then will be, can The People demonstrate the same level of 
professional competence, commitment, passion and responsibility as they did 
over the past two days, and effectively deal with that new world? I believe you 
have now set a new high bar for yourselves, and based on the demonstrated 
performance, I believe the odds are really good. No guarantees, of course, but 
one thing is very clear, The XXXX Bureau is NOT essentially a tattered 
collection of dysfunctional people, out of steam, and out of spirit.

 

And now we come to a really hard question – the pointy end of the stick, as it 
were. What are you doing, by way of doing business, that creates an environment 
in which good people appear as dysfunctional, with morale at snake belly low,  
and incapable of meaningful communication? I don’t think for a moment that the 
original assessment was wrong, but I do think there are alternatives. Short 
take: Keep your space open. I do think you can apply some of the lessons 
learned from Open Space so that good people can effectively maneuver in tight 
quarters. 

 

 

Harrison

 

  

 

Harrison Owen

7808 River Falls Dr.

Potomac, MD 20854

USA

 

189 Beaucaire Ave. (summer)

Camden, Maine 04843

 

Phone 301-365-2093

(summer)  207-763-3261

 

www.openspaceworld.com 

www.ho-image.com (Personal Website)

To subscribe, unsubscribe, change your options, view the archives of OSLIST Go 
to:http://lists.openspacetech.org/listinfo.cgi/oslist-openspacetech.org

 


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