The Surprising Power of Liberating Structures: Simple Rules to Unleash A Culture of Innovation (39 page)

BOOK: The Surprising Power of Liberating Structures: Simple Rules to Unleash A Culture of Innovation
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Heard, Seen, Respected (HSR)

Practice Deeper Listening and Empathy with Colleagues (35 min.)

“Empathy removes the blocks to action in a way that is inclusive. It creates power through partnership and cocreation, resolving what appears to be knotted and bound.” Dominic Barter

What is made possible?
You can foster the empathetic capacity of participants to “walk in the shoes” of others. Many situations do not have immediate answers or clear resolutions. Recognizing these situations and responding with empathy can improve the “cultural climate” and build trust among group members.
HSR
helps individuals learn to respond in ways that do not overpromise or overcontrol. It helps members of a group notice unwanted patterns and work together on shifting to more productive interactions. Participants experience the practice of more compassion and the benefits it engenders.

FIVE STRUCTURAL ELEMENTS—MIN SPECS

1. Structuring Invitation

  • Invite participants to tell a story to a partner about a time when they felt that they were not heard, seen, or respected.
  • Ask the listeners to avoid any interruptions other than asking questions like “What else?” or “What happened next?”

2. How Space Is Arranged and Materials Needed

  • Chairs facing each other, a few inches between knees
  • No tables

3. How Participation Is Distributed


  
Everyone has an equal amount of time, in turn, to participate in each role, as a storyteller and a listener

4. How Groups Are Configured

  • In pairs for the storytelling
  • Then foursomes for reflecting on what happened

5. Sequence of Steps and Time Allocation

  • Introduce the purpose of
    HSR
    : to practice listening without trying to fix anything or make any judgments. 3 min.
  • One at a time, each person has 7 minutes to share a story about NOT being heard, seen, or respected. 15 min.
  • Partners
    share with one another the experiences of listening and storytelling: “What did it feel like to tell my story; what did it feel like to listen to your story?” 5 min.
  • In a foursome, participants share reflections using 1-2-4, asking, “What patterns are revealed in the stories? What importance do you assign to the pattern?” 5 min.
  • As a whole group, participants reflect on the questions, “How could
    HSR
    be used to address challenges revealed by the patterns? What other Liberating Structures could be used?” 5 min.

WHY? PURPOSES

  • Reveal how common it is for people to experience not being heard, seen, or respected
  • Reveal how common it is for people to behave in a way that makes other people feel they are not being heard, seen, or respected
  • Improve listening, tuning, and empathy among group members
  • Notice how much can be accomplished simply by listening
  • Rely on each other more when facing confusing or new situations
  • Offer catharsis and healing after strains in relationships
  • Help managers discern when listening is more effective than trying to solve a problem

TIPS AND TRAPS (for introducing HSR)

  • Say, “Your partner may be ready before you. The first story that pops into mind is often the best.”
  • Make it safe by saying, “You may not want to pick the most painful story that comes to mind.”
  • Make it safe by saying, “Protect carefully the privacy of the storyteller. Ask what parts, if any, you can share with others.”
  • Suggest, “When you are the listener, notice when you form a judgment (about what is right or wrong) or when you get an idea about how you can help, then
    let it go
    .”

RIFFS AND VARIATIONS

  • If you are feeling brave, replace the word “respected” with “loved” (i.e., the
    agape
    form of love—seeking the highest good in others without motive for personal gain.)
  • String
    HSR
    together with other Liberating Structures that help to mend relationships:
    Troika Consulting, Helping Heuristics, Generative Relationships STAR, Appreciative Interviews, Conversation Café

EXAMPLES

  • For regular meetings to improve the quality of listening and tuning in to each other
  • For transition periods when questions about the future are unanswerable (e.g., post-merger integration, market disruptions, social upheaval) and empathetic listening is what is needed
  • When individuals or groups have suffered a loss and need a forum to share their grief or despair
  • To improve one-on-one reporting relationships up and down in an organization

ATTRIBUTION

Liberating Structure developed by Henri Lipmanowicz and Keith McCandless. Inspired by Seeds of Compassion practitioners and consultant Mark Jones.

COLLATERAL MATERIAL

Below: presentation materials we use to introduce
HSR

Drawing Together

Reveal Insights and Paths Forward Through Nonverbal Expression (40 min.)

“A vivid imagination compels the whole body to obey.” Aristotle

What is made possible?
You can help people access hidden knowledge such as feelings, attitudes, and patterns that are difficult to express with words. When people are tired, their brains are full, and they have reached the limits of logical thinking, you can help them evoke ideas that lie outside logical, step-by-step understanding of what is possible. Stories about individual or group transformations can be told with five easy-to-draw symbols that have universal meanings. The playful spirit of drawing together signals that more is possible and many new answers are expected.
Drawing Together
cuts through the culture of overreliance on what people say and write that constrains the emergence of novelty. It also provides a new avenue of expression for some people whose ideas would otherwise not surface.

FIVE STRUCTURAL ELEMENTS—MIN SPECS

1. Structuring Invitation


  
Invite participants to tell a story about a challenge they face, or a common challenge, using only five symbols and no words

2. How Space Is Arranged and Materials Needed

  • An open wall with tapestry paper or easels with blank pages in flip charts
  • Water-based markers; soft pastels if you are feeling colorful

3. How Participation Is Distributed

  • Everyone is included since the five symbols are easy for everyone to draw
  • All participants make their individual drawings simultaneously

4. How Groups Are Configured

  • Individually to practice the drawing of the symbols
  • Individually to make first and second drafts of their drawings
  • Small groups of 1–4 others to interpret the drawings
  • Whole group for debrief (using
    1-2-4-All
    for large groups)

5. Sequence of Steps and Time Allocation


  
Introduce the idea of drawing together by drawing and describing the meaning of each symbol. 5 min.

― Circle = wholeness;

― Rectangle = support;

― Triangle = goal;

― Spiral = change;

― Star person [equidistant cross] = relationship

  • Invite participants to practice drawing the five symbols: circle, rectangle, triangle, spiral, star person. 5 min.
  • Invite participants to combine the symbols to create the first draft of a story, working individually and without words, about “the journey” of working on a challenge or an innovation. 10 min.
  • Invite participants to create a second draft, in which they refine their story by dramatizing the size, placement, and color of the symbols. 10 min.
  • Ask participants to invite another individual or their small group to interpret their drawings. Remind them that the person who has done the drawing does not speak. 5 min.
  • Ask the whole group, “Together, what do the drawings reveal?” Use
    1-2-4-All
    with larger groups. 5 min.

Below: visual stories created in 40-minute
Drawing Together
sessions

WHY? PURPOSES

  • Reveal insight or understanding not accessible with verbal or linear methods
  • Tap all the sources of knowledge for innovation (explicit, tacit, latent/emergent)
  • Signal that a quest or journey in search of new discoveries is under way
  • Develop and deepen shared understanding of a vision or complex dynamics
  • Create closer connections among group members

TIPS AND TRAPS

  • Remind participants that the drawing is not the object by saying, “Refined drawing skills are not required—get over your need for perfection! Childlike drawing looks playful and captures the imagination of others!”
  • Don’t help too much with drawing skills
  • Help participants accept whatever emerges in the drawings (there are often surprises)
  • Draw or present an example of a story that helps others make a leap of understanding
  • Record the participants drawing with cameras and video recorders
  • Return to the drawings when you reconvene as a group
  • Remember that drawing can be powerfully therapeutic; be prepared for emotional responses

RIFFS AND VARIATIONS

  • One person can visually map conversations during a meeting (add words if you must)
  • Start small: use a single sheet of 8½ ” by 11” paper to get started
  • Computer tablets can be used instead of paper for participants to learn how to tell a story with the five symbols on their tablets
  • Use the Hero’s Journey as a template for the stories
  • Use as a template a progression from status quo, through call to novelty, discovery, validation, early adoption, and spread

EXAMPLES

  • For a refreshing change of pace in a long meeting when a creative burst is needed
  • When there are strong differences in perspective and the group is in a rut
  • For visual facilitation of a meeting or conference, where drawings are created as the conversation unfolds
  • For revealing obscure or hidden relationships when working on a complex project (e.g., one doctoral student had a eureka moment via
    Drawing Together
    )
  • For helping a vision statement come to life (particularly for visually oriented people)
  • For individual work, to visualize tacit or latent approaches to a challenge

ATTRIBUTION

Liberating Structure developed by Henri Lipmanowicz and Keith McCandless. Inspired by David Sibbet (The Grove,
www.thegrove.com
) and Angeles Arrien (see
Signs of Life
).

Design StoryBoards—Basic

Define Step-by-Step Elements for Bringing Meetings to Productive Endpoints (25–70 min.)

What is made possible?
The most common causes of dysfunctional meetings can be eliminated: unclear purpose or lack of a common one, time wasters, restrictive participation, absent voices, groupthink, and frustrated participants. The process of designing a storyboard draws out a purpose that becomes clearer as it is matched with congruent microstructures. It reveals who needs to be included for successful implementation. Storyboards invite design participants to carefully define all the micro-organizing elements needed to achieve their purpose: a structuring invitation, space, materials, participation, group configurations, and facilitation and time allocations. Storyboards prevent people from starting and running meetings without an explicit design. Good designs yield better-than-expected results by uncovering tacit and latent sources of innovation.

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