first, to paul, yes i've definitely done as you say.  was a very small
group of us, not a conference but a "team meeting" held too late in the day
and made everyone ripe for some harmless mutiny.  i led the charge or made
the suggestion, and the next day we did the team meeting in open space.  we
put up 8 issues, discussed only 3, and the next weekly meeting looked like
all the previous ones, except that the team leader's agenda was really just
an ongoing updating of our original 8 issues, which were the answer to "how
do we get this project finished successfully?"  mission accomplished.

next, to the main question...

some years ago, ted ernst (who some here will remember) and some other
friends got excited about wiki websites.  they met up in portland, drove to
seattle to pick up others, then drove all the way to san diego, using
*part* of the minivan windshield as an open space bulletin board,
discussing all the way, to a symposium called wikisym.

when they got there, this merry band made themselves stickers that said
"ask me about open space."  as they met folks, they told the story and made
more stickers.  pretty soon everyone knew about open space, a bulletin
board was created on a wall in a hallway, sessions went up and started
happening.  the conference organizers came to the merry band and asked them
nicely not to wreck the conference.  since wrecking was not the intention,
it was all worked out.

part of that is that the organizers asked ted to facilitate open space at
the next symposium and make it official, so to speak.  another part was
that some of the merry band, having been teased by these first attempts,
wanted to see what happened in a full-blown 2.5 days.  so they organized
"recent changes camp" which itself sparked a bunch of other gatherings.

gerard muller can maybe say more about the follow-on from the wikisym in
open space, as it was in denmark or nearby and i think he ended up working
with ted on that one.

m


--

Michael Herman
Michael Herman Associates
312-280-7838 (mobile)

http://MichaelHerman.com
http://OpenSpaceWorld.org


On Tue, Nov 11, 2014 at 9:32 PM, John Baxter via OSList <
oslist@lists.openspacetech.org> wrote:

> I hosted an 'Elephants' Gathering' at a conference once upon a time.
>
> I knew there were people there I wanted to talk to, but the program was of
> little interest.
>
> I didn't try to compete with the mainstream agenda, I put it in the
> evening.
>
> Nobody had any intent on the formalities of Open Space, but it was indeed
> an open space, and the right people came (far less than I thought would
> come, but all the ones I wanted to talk to!).
>
> Someone (Eisenstein?) wrote a post recently, I think posted here, about
> trying to subvert the structure of a conference and being beaten down.  My
> interpretation of events obviously...
>
> The right people can always be found in the cracks (at the bar, the coffee
> station etc).  Some of them might need an invitation.
>
> I don't think it's appropriate to force Open Space on the others in a
> gathering who have little interest.
> Good on anyone that makes the call that Open Space is right for everyone
> and goes with it.  But I fear that may likely more driven by ego than care
> (e.g the above dramatisation).
>
> Good discussion!
>
>
> *John Baxter*
> *Cocreation Consultant & ​Co​Create Adelaide Facilitator*
> CoCreateADL.com​ <http://cocreateadl.com/localgov%E2%80%8B> |
> jsbaxter.com.au <http://www.jsbaxter.com.au/>
> 0405 447 829
> ​ | ​
> @jsbaxter_ <http://twitter.com/jsbaxter_>
>
> *Thank you to everyone who came, helped or spread the good word about City
> Grill!*
> *Summary and links: cocreateadl.com/localgov/grill-summary
> <http://cocreateadl.com/localgov/grill-summary>*
>
>
> On Wed, Nov 12, 2014 at 1:55 PM, Skye Hirst via OSList <
> oslist@lists.openspacetech.org> wrote:
>
>> yeah,  indeed flash mob Open Space always a great  possibility.  Thanks,
>> Skye
>>
>> On Tue, Nov 11, 2014 at 4:09 PM, Royle, Karl via OSList <
>> oslist@lists.openspacetech.org> wrote:
>>
>>>  Great!
>>>
>>> Sent by iPhone
>>> Karl Royle
>>> Head of Enterprise and Commercial Development
>>>
>>>  Faculty of Education Health and Wellbeing
>>> University of Wolverhampton
>>> 01902323006
>>> 07815416698
>>> @karlroyle. On Twitter
>>> Karlr61 Skype
>>>  Www.academia.edu/karlroyle
>>>
>>> On 11 Nov 2014, at 20:51, "paul levy via OSList" <
>>> oslist@lists.openspacetech.org> wrote:
>>>
>>>   <http://rationalmadness.files.wordpress.com/2009/11/w3.jpg>
>>>
>>> I wonder if anyone reading this has experiences to share of what I am
>>> about to describe. Most published stories of open space tend to go by the
>>> book. The book is often referred to as the *user *
>>> <http://www.openspaceworld.com/users_guide.htm>*guide*
>>> <http://www.openspaceworld.com/users_guide.htm>“, and it tends towards
>>> a process that is largely based on an* instruction manual*
>>> <http://elementaleducation.com/wp-content/uploads/temp/OpenSpaceTechnology--UsersGuide.pdf>.
>>> Dogmatic application manual can then lead, in my humble opinion, not to one
>>> less thing to do, but often one more thing to do. These are “guides” not
>>> rules, and that is the spirit in which they were written. In many cases,
>>> the user guide proves remarkably resilient and applicable. Yet there is
>>> always the next moment, the new story, the moment that needs something
>>> playful.
>>>
>>> There’s a lot in the manual (and the many trainings that have come into
>>> being from it) about sponsors and invitations, and the things that need to
>>> be done before an Open Space to ensure the open spacer er… opens space. I
>>> have no difficulty with the manual. It’s full of good advice and is the
>>> foundation you might just need to open some space. But, hey, what about
>>> this… I’m at a company away day that is looking at product innovation. It
>>> is business critical, and it is floundering. Powerpoint after Powerpoint
>>> has resulted in a stifled audience, and when they get to breakout sessions,
>>> the flipcharts look empty, the energy is low, and it all looks a bit too
>>> quiet. There’s a feeling in the room that the event is dying on its feet.
>>> Several sessions are lost in badly facilitated action planning. I am on the
>>> team and the lead facilitator looks to me for any ideas. It must be because
>>> I am silent and looking knowing and wise.
>>>
>>> Actually I’m seething inside at this over-facilitated, over-designed,
>>> overplanned conference crash. Do you mind if I… I ask, a bit pompously and
>>> the lead facilitator is up for whatever help he can get. I leap up, and
>>> step into the mess. I have a loud voice and it can’t get any worse than
>>> this. An idea has just occurred to me and I decide to hurl it into the
>>> cluttered room. “Er, hey.” I roar. “Why don’t we open some space?” I’m
>>> loud. It goes silent.
>>>
>>> This is what I say: “This is crap isn’t it?” Silence. “Can everyone
>>> bring their chairs and let’s get into a big circle. Tuts, irritation, doubt
>>> and mostly relief. Two minutes later there’s a big circle.
>>>
>>> I introduce open space in about four minutes and quickly crab some flip
>>> chart paper and tack it to the wall, creating four corners at new breakout
>>> spaces.
>>>
>>> I ask people to take their chairs with them and, within about ten
>>> minutes we have a whole bunch of different sessions, many based around
>>> action.
>>>
>>> The bosses in the room are gobsmacked.
>>>
>>> We have a two hour open space until wrap up and there’s a huge buzz in
>>> the room from this pop-up open space.
>>>
>>> The invite was improvised and spontaneous.
>>>
>>> The space opened because it wanted and needed to. It popped up and out
>>> as if it were the most natural thing in the world. It transformed the day
>>> and sent the clutter fleeing for cover. It was done without fuss and chairs
>>> from the main circle quickly went into breakout and back again. The
>>> facilitator team were edgy because they felt they were supposed to be doing
>>> something and I dragged them away for coffee. We chatted a bit about
>>> “emergence” and I was looked on as if I’d done some kind of magic. I was
>>> young and enjoyed the attention. I was also looked as as if I was a bit
>>> weird. Well, I am a bit weird. I do wonder if pop-up open space could and
>>> should happen a lot more.
>>>
>>> A lot of open spacers I know loved improvisation and spontaneity, yet
>>> when it comes to open space are a bit locked in the process in the book of
>>> instructions – the manual that tends to overplay the “prep” for the event.
>>> So, I’m waving a flag for pop-up, guerilla open space. Why not open some
>>> space even for the process of open space? Let’s shimmy it a little and see
>>> what falls out.
>>>
>>> “Flash mob” open space has, I think, a big future. My intuition tells me
>>> a fair number of facilitators have done it, and a fair few of them haven’t
>>> reported it, telling instead there more “responsible” by-the-book open
>>> space stories. But why not? Why not open some space on the spur of the
>>> moment? The invite is still there -it just takes a hell of a lot shorter.
>>> The opportunity is always there where an over-organised event is
>>> disappearing up its own proverbial…
>>>
>>> It is also there in an event that has some inbuilt flexibility. Why not
>>> throw some open space into the flexible mix? But best of all, why not open
>>> space when space is there to be open? Self-organisation is often crying out
>>> for a chance in the midst of failing over-organisation.
>>>
>>> So, here’s to some more pop-up open space…
>>> On 11 Nov 2014 19:59, "Peggy Holman via OSList" <
>>> oslist@lists.openspacetech.org> wrote:
>>>
>>>> Hi all,
>>>>
>>>>  I got the query below from my friend Tom Atlee. It seemed like a
>>>> great question for the list. Since Tom isn’t on it, I told him that I’d
>>>> forward any responses.
>>>>
>>>>  appreciatively,
>>>> Peggy
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>   Begin forwarded message:
>>>>
>>>> *From: *Tom Atlee <c...@igc.org>
>>>>  *Date: *November 10, 2014 at 12:51:54 PM PST
>>>>  *Subject: **Guerilla Open Space?*
>>>>  *To: *Peggy Holman <pe...@peggyholman.com>
>>>>
>>>> Hi Peggy,
>>>>
>>>> Thinking about the NCDD conference, I got the idea for "guerilla Open
>>>> Space" to be used in conferences where you want to open the space in the
>>>> middle of a too-organized gathering.  It would involve a central website
>>>> with instructions on what to do and why.  It would involve passing out
>>>> cards with messages like "Is there something that you'd really like to talk
>>>> about or do here that the agenda here is preventing you from talking about
>>>> or doing?"  "Would you like to be learning, contributing, and having more
>>>> fun here?" with the web address on it.  Tweets might also be used.  Then,
>>>> on the main website it would tell people about how to do a guerilla open
>>>> space, referring them perhaps to meetup.com to arrange places to talk.
>>>>
>>>> Or something like that.  Have you heard of such  thing before?  Do you
>>>> have any thoughts/responses?
>>>>
>>>> Hugs,
>>>> Tom
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>  _________________________________
>>>> Peggy Holman
>>>> Executive Director
>>>> Journalism that Matters
>>>> 15347 SE 49th Place
>>>> Bellevue, WA  98006
>>>> 425-746-6274
>>>> www.journalismthatmatters.net
>>>> www.peggyholman.com
>>>> Twitter: @peggyholman
>>>> JTM Twitter: @JTMStream
>>>>
>>>> Enjoy the award winning Engaging Emergence: Turning Upheaval into
>>>> Opportunity <http://www.engagingemergence.com>
>>>> Check out my series on what's emerging in the news & information
>>>> ecosystem
>>>> <http://www.journalismthatmatters.net/the_emerging_news_and_information_eco_system>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> _______________________________________________
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>>
>>
>> --
>> *Skye Hirst, PhD*
>> President - The Autognomics Institute
>> *Conversations in Radical Self-Knowing*
>> www.autognomics.org
>> @autognomics
>>
>> New Phone Number:
>> 207-593-8074
>>
>>
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>
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