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26 January 2010- 08:47 AM
Understanding the Nature of Self-Organizing Teamsby Jim Highsmith, Director and FellowA spider is an eight-legged arachnid that has a head attached to a central body. Pull a leg off a spider and most can still walk, even if a little lopsided. Cut off the head, and the spider dies. Not so the starfish. While many people know that if you cut off a starfish’s leg, it will grow back, most don’t know that a starfish’s major organs are replicated throughout its body. One species, Linckia, can regenerate an entire starfish from each of its severed parts. A starfish is a decentralized network. A final interesting factoid — “for the starfish to move, one of the arms must convince the other arms that it’s a good idea to do so.” Talk about an excuse for uncoordination: “but I can’t get my limbs to work together.” These facts about, and the first quote, come from a delightful little book titled The Starfish and Spider: The Unstoppable Power of Leaderless Organizations, by Ori Brafman and Rod Beckstrom. Agilists proclaim the power and desirability of self-organizing teams, and this book offers some insight into what decentralized (the term the authors use rather than self-organizing) teams can accomplish. One point they make is that decentralized teams may not make “better” decisions, but they will be “faster” decisions. One fascinating part of the book lists 10 questions that are indicators of the degree of “starfish-ness.” While some of these indicators seem a little farfetched for the business world, others may help you decide how decentralized you are, or aren’t.
I won’t bother to give examples with the last five questions, as you can probably come up with your own examples, or read the book. If we asked a yes/no response to each of these questions in looking at a well-constructed, self-organized team, there would be, in my opinion, four yes and six no responses (you can take the quiz yourself). So these questions aren’t all relevant for evaluating the degree of self-organization in a team, but they might form the basis for developing a relevant one. Anything that helps us understand the sometime fuzzy nature of self-organizing teams is appreciated.
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