Description
Many leaders try to create a collaborative organizational culture, but they lead and design their organizations in a way that undermines the culture they seek to create.
Roger Schwarz is an organizational psychologist and president of Roger Schwarz &
Associates (www.schwarzassociates.com), a consulting ?rm that helps people get bet-
ter business results and build stronger relationships, often in ways they didn’t think
possible. He teaches, consults, and writes about facilitation, leadership, managing
change and con?ict, and developing effective work groups. For more than twenty-?ve
years, Schwarz has served as facilitator and consultant to Fortune 500 corporations;
federal, state, and local government agencies; and nonpro?t organizations. Distin-
guished consultants, executives, and academics have called his book The Skilled Facil-
itator: A Comprehensive Resource for Consultants, Facilitators, Managers, Trainers and
Coaches (Jossey-Bass, 2002) a standard reference on facilitation. He is also lead author
of The Skilled Facilitator Fieldbook: Tips, Tools, and Tested Methods, for Consultants, Fa-
cilitators, Managers, Trainers and Coaches (Jossey-Bass, 2005). Formerly an associate
professor of public management at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill,
Schwarz left his tenured position in 1996 to found Roger Schwarz & Associates. He
earned his master of arts degree and doctorate in organizational psychology at the
University of Michigan and his master of education degree at Harvard University.
Schuman.c14 7/10/06 11:29 AM Page 280
281
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
USING THE FACILITATIVE LEADER
APPROACH TO CREATE AN
ORGANIZATIONAL CULTURE
OF COLLABORATION
Roger Schwarz
Y
M
any leaders try to create a collaborative organizational culture, but
they lead and design their organizations in a way that undermines the
culture they seek to create. In this chapter, I describe how this occurs and de-
scribe the Facilitative Leader approach and how it can be used to create an
organizational culture of collaboration. When leaders use this approach, they
generate several outcomes: (1) increased quality of decisions or results, (2) in-
creased commitment to implementing the results, (3) reduced time for effec-
tive implementation, (4) improved working relationships, (5) increased
organizational learning, and (6) enhanced personal satisfaction. Several of
these outcomes are particularly important to sustaining collaboration. From
a task perspective, individuals consider collaboration more desirable to the
extent that the results it produces are of higher quality than the parties could
produce alone. From a process perspective, individuals ?nd collaboration
more desirable to the extent that it increases commitment to the outcomes
This chapter is adapted from “The Facilitative Leader” in The Skilled Facilitator: A Comprehensive Re-
source for Consultants, Facilitators, Managers, Trainers, and Coaches, new and revised edition, by Roger Schwarz
(San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2002), and The Skilled Facilitator Fieldbook: Tips, Tools, and Tested Methods
for Consultants, Facilitators, Managers, Trainers, and Coaches, by Roger Schwarz, Anne Davidson, Peg Carlson,
and Sue McKinney (San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2005).
Schuman.c14 7/10/06 11:29 AM Page 281
from Creating a Culture of Collaboration. Edited by Sandy Schuman.
Published by Jossey-Bass, 2006.
and increases the quality of their working relationships and their personal
satisfaction.
Culture and Collaboration De?ned
Organizational culture is the set of fundamental values and assumptions that
members of an organization share and that guide their behavior (Schwarz,
2002). Although organizational culture is manifested in the artifacts it pro-
duces—including individual and group behaviors, organization activities,
policies, processes, and structures—it stems from shared mental models. Con-
sequently, to create and sustain a culture of collaboration, it is necessary for
members to share a set of values and assumptions congruent with collabora-
tion and to generate behaviors and structures that embody the values and as-
sumptions. In this chapter, I will explore both behavioral and structural
challenges to creating a collaborative culture, both of which arise from the
mental models that individuals use to guide their behavior.
Chrislip and Larson (1994) de?ne collaboration as “mutually bene?cial
relationships between two or more parties who work together toward com-
mon goals by sharing responsibility, authority, and accountability for achiev-
ing results” (p. 5). They distinguish it from communication, which is sharing
knowledge and information, and from cooperation and coordination, a rela-
tionship that helps each party achieve its own goals. As they de?ne it, “The
purpose of collaboration is to create a shared vision and joint strategies to ad-
dress concerns that go beyond the purview of any particular party” (p. 5).
For genuine collaboration to occur, parties must be able to learn from and
with each other, especially in dif?cult situations, and must be able to jointly
design the process by which they collaborate. Consequently, I de?ne collabo-
ration as a mutually bene?cial relationship between two or more individuals,
groups, or organizations who jointly design ways to work together to meet their
related interests and who learn with and from each other, sharing responsi-
bility, authority, and accountability for achieving results.
Adapting the terminology of Argyris and Schön (1974), I distinguish
between espoused and genuine collaboration. In an espoused collaboration,
the parties declare their relationship to be a collaboration. In a genuine col-
laboration, the parties act in ways that are congruent with the de?nition of
282 Creating a Culture of Collaboration
Schuman.c14 7/10/06 11:29 AM Page 282
collaboration. Although sometimes espoused collaborations are genuine col-
laborations, often they are not.
What Makes Collaboration So Dif?cult?
Why is it so dif?cult to create and sustain genuine collaboration, even among
people who ostensibly have similar goals? Creating a culture of collaboration
requires changing two interactive factors: (1) the conversations by which peo-
ple interact and (2) the structures that shape these interactions. Both of these
factors are determined by individuals’ mental models. We will examine each
of these separately, beginning with how mental models determine process.
The research of Argyris and Schön (1974) and my more than twenty-?ve
years working with leaders offer a basic explanation about why collaboration
is so dif?cult: to effectively collaborate requires people to shift their mind-set
(or mental models) from one of control to one of learning. But collaboration
is often psychologically threatening because it requires us, among other things,
to give up our preconceived ideas of what the solutions should be in order to
?nd solutions that take full advantage of the collaboration itself. And under
conditions of psychological threat, we cling to the very mind-set that makes
effective collaboration less likely. In short, our thinking undermines the out-
comes we say we want.
Consider the real-life example presented in Exhibit 14.1. Jonathan and
Parker are investment partners and developers in a very large, complex real
estate development that uses principles of traditional neighborhood develop-
ment (TND), a high-density mixture of residential, commercial, of?ce, and
retail space in a tight pattern of pedestrian-oriented streets. The men’s work
relationship ?ts the de?nition of collaboration: they share a vision of invest-
ment through TND, each has knowledge and skills that the other lacks, and
both are responsible and accountable to each other for maximizing their re-
turn on investment. In their conversation, about maximizing the return on in-
vestment, Jonathan wants porches on the houses and Parker wants brick
houses without porches. Jonathan submitted this example at a workshop of
mine as part of his effort to increase his effectiveness with his partner. The
conversation between Jonathan and Parker appears in the right column;
Jonathan’s thoughts and feelings appear in the left column.
Using the Facilitative Leader Approach 283
Schuman.c14 7/10/06 11:29 AM Page 283
284 Creating a Culture of Collaboration
EXHIBIT 14.1. MAKING THE CASE FOR PORCHES.
Jonathan’s Thoughts and Feelings The Conversation
Parker: Let me tell you, where I grew up we
associate porches with poverty. Look at
the poor parts of Washington. Very few
of the houses built in the last 40 years
have porches.
Jonathan: Porches have made a huge comeback
in recent years. Virtually every TND has
porches and I understand porches are
starting to bring a premium to builders.
Parker: Well, builders have told us that they will
not build both brick and porches. It’s too
expensive to do both. It’s either brick or
porches and I want to have mostly brick.
Jonathan: Yes, I know the builders have told us that.
The reason why the architect’s plan works
so well in my opinion is that they have
taken that into consideration. They have
come up with a plan that balances brick
and porches, putting brick townhouses
with no porches where they are most
prominent and using siding on the houses
whose facades are mostly covered up by a
full porch.
Parker: Let me tell you, we are headed for disaster
if we do not have more brick. I’ve been a
builder in this region for more than 40
years. Residents expect brick. It gives them
a sense of having a good solid house. If we
don’t have a preponderance of brick the
builders will never be able to successfully
sell these townhouses for the prices they
need to get.
This argument was used by critics
when TNDs ?rst started, but no one
except Parker has used it in the last
four years.
Where is the hard evidence when I
need it?
Can’t he ?nd a way to use language
to indicate that there is some mid-
dle ground? How can we reach a
compromise when he needs to
state his case in black and white.
The architect’s plan is so logical.
What is it he does not get about it?
He states everything as a “fact.” He
just does not give an inch.
Schuman.c14 7/10/06 11:29 AM Page 284
The Unilateral Control Model
What is going on in this example? It is a simple instance of collaboration be-
tween two people in the same organization. By analyzing Jonathan’s conversa-
tion and his thoughts and feelings, it is possible to infer the mind-set Jonathan
adopted to approach this high-stakes conversation with his partner and iden-
tify the strategies and consequences that followed from this mind-set, which is
a common one. In dif?cult situations—ones in which we feel some potential
threat or embarrassment, including situations where our stake in the outcome
is high—most of us operate from a set of values and assumptions that we are
unaware that we’re using but almost always lead to these consequences. This
approach is called the unilateral control model (illustrated in Figure 14.1), which
consists of three parts: values and assumptions, which together you use to gener-
ate strategies or behaviors, which in turn lead to consequences.
Core Values. Beginning with values, you try to achieve your goal as you de-
?ned it before the conversation. You see the conversation as a contest in which
you seek to win, not lose. Every comment that someone makes that is consis-
tent with your goal is a small win; every comment that introduces information
that may challenge your goal is a loss. You try to minimize the expression of
Using the Facilitative Leader Approach 285
EXHIBIT 14.1. MAKING THE CASE FOR PORCHES, Cont’d.
Jonathan’s Thoughts and Feelings The Conversation
Jonathan: I really respect that you have been at this
a lot longer than I have, but I have spent
the last two years studying this new con-
cept of TDN. It is very new and there is
not a lot of hard evidence of its value. At
the same time many of the developers and
designers I have talked with say that there
are all kinds of details that are critical to
the success of a TND but we do not have
absolute evidence of what is critical and
what is not. From everything I have read,
all new urbanists agree that porches are
critical.
His apartment buildings that he
built look like an engineer designed
and built them. They have no re-
deeming architectural quality,
though they provide him with a
healthy cash ?ow.
Schuman.c14 7/10/06 11:29 AM Page 285
negative feelings, believing that if people start expressing negative feelings, it
will only make things worse. Finally, you act rational. You think that the way
you are approaching the issue is perfectly logical. And if it isn’t completely log-
ical, you should act as if it is. People use a mix of these core values, to differ-
ent degrees.
In our example, Jonathan is seeking to achieve his goal of including
porches. He frames the conversation as a contest in which he needs better
evidence to win his case. His private question about what Parker doesn’t “get”
about the architect’s logical plan illustrates the value acting rational. He has
concerns about Parker’s approach to design but withholds them. And he sees
his reasoning for porches as ?awless.
Core Assumptions. You operate from a matching set of assumptions. You as-
sume that you understand the situation and anyone who disagrees doesn’t. In
this model, other people can’t understand the situation and so see things dif-
ferently. Consequently, you are right and others are wrong. You often question
286 Creating a Culture of Collaboration
FIGURE 14.1. UNILATERAL CONTROL MODEL.
Source: Models derived from the work of Argyris and Schön (1974), who originally labeled them
as Model I and Model II, and adaptations by Putnam, Smith, and MacArthur at Action Design
(1997), who refer to them as the Unilateral Control and Mutual Learning models. Action design is
an organization and management development ?rm that has built on the work of Argyris and
Schön. Putnam and Smith are the coauthors with Argyris of Action Science (1985).
Core Values and Assumptions
• Achieve my goal
through unilateral
control
• Win, don’t lose
• Minimize expressing
negative feelings
• Act rational
• I understand the
situation; those
who see it
differently do not
• I am right; those
who disagree
are wrong
• I have pure motives;
those who disagree
have questionable
motives
• My feelings are
justified
Strategies
• Advocate my
position
• Keep my
reasoning private
• Don’t ask others
about their
reasoning
• Ease in
• Save face
Consequences
• Misunderstanding,
unproductive
conflict,
defensiveness
• Mistrust
• Self-fulfilling,
self-sealing
processes
• Limited learning
• Reduced
effectiveness
• Reduced quality
of work life
Schuman.c14 7/10/06 11:29 AM Page 286
the motives of those with different views while believing that your motives are
pure; you see yourself as a steward for the organization, while others are try-
ing to advance their careers or otherwise meet their own needs. Finally, you
assume that your feelings are justi?ed. If you get angry, you have a right to be
angry; others don’t understand, are wrong, and have questionable motives.
Remember that all this is at best at the edges of your awareness: you usually
don’t realize you are holding these values and assumptions in the moment.
Jonathan assumes that he is correct about the porches and doesn’t enter-
tain the notion that Parker’s views may be valid. He attributes to Parker the
sole motive of pursuing a healthy cash ?ow without attention to architectural
quality.
Strategies. This combination of values and assumptions leads you to design
strategies that seek to control the conversation and win. You don’t fully explain
your point of view because it might lead others to question and challenge it.
You don’t ask others to explain their points of view (except to shoot holes in
them) because they may consider things that you hadn’t, which would put your
goals in jeopardy. To minimize people expressing negative emotions, you may
ease in. Easing in is asking questions or making statements in a way that is de-
signed to get the others to understand what you are privately thinking with-
out your having to say it. It includes asking rhetorical questions starting “Don’t
you think that . . .” or asking leading questions so others will “see the light”
and think that they have come up with the ideas that you want them to im-
plement. If someone raises negative points, you may say they are irrelevant or
unproductive or may suggest addressing them at a later time (privately think-
ing that the right time will be “never”). Because you assume that you under-
stand the situation, you act as if your reasoning is foolproof without bothering
to test whether your assumptions and data are accurate. Together, these strate-
gies enable you to unilaterally control the situation and protect yourself and
others. Through all of this, you keep your strategy for controlling the conver-
sation private because divulging it would thwart the strategy or, even more
likely, because you are not really aware of the strategy you are using.
Jonathan continues to advocate his point of view that porches are the so-
lution. To his credit, he does not ease in. He does admit that there is not a lot
of hard evidence to support his view, but he still continues to advocate it. He
privately wonders what it is about the architect’s logical plan that Parker
doesn’t get and does not ask Parker to explain his view. Because Jonathan has
Using the Facilitative Leader Approach 287
Schuman.c14 7/10/06 11:29 AM Page 287
assumed that his view about Parker’s favoring a healthy cash ?ow over re-
deeming architectural quality is valid, he does not ask Parker’s view on the
matter. Finally, Jonathan does not turn to a collaborative process to resolve
their disagreement; instead, he tries to resolve it using a unilateral strategy.
Consequences. Ironically, by trying to control a situation, you contribute to
creating the consequences you are trying to avoid. You create misunder-
standing because you assume that the situation is as you see it, and you base
your actions on untested assumptions about others. If you make negative as-
sumptions about others’ motives and do not test them, you build up your own
mistrust of others and theirs of you. This leads them to be wary and cautious
in their responses, which you perceive as defensive. In this way, you create a
self-ful?lling process, generating the very consequences you set out to avoid.
You also create a self-sealing process when you do not inquire into another
person’s defensive reaction because you believe it will only generate more de-
fensiveness. Consequently, you seal off the opportunity for learning how your
own behavior may be contributing to the collaboration’s reduced effectiveness.
All of this reduces the collaboration’s ability to learn, its effectiveness, and
quality of work life. It can be stressful when you cannot say what you are think-
ing without negative consequences. A great deal of mental energy gets tied up
in trying to withhold what you are thinking or carefully craft what you are say-
ing to dress up your intentions. The quality of decisions decreases, the amount
of time needed to implement decisions increases, the commitment to those
decisions decreases, and the quality of relationships suffers.
You can see the beginning of these consequences in Jonathan’s case as he
starts to make negative attributions about Parker’s motives. By continuing to
advocate his point of view and not be curious about Parker’s views, Jonathan
contributes to escalating the con?ict, which he then uses as evidence to support
his notion that Parker is not willing to compromise. They ?nd themselves at an
impasse, without a strategy for jointly learning which of their assumptions, if
any, are valid. There is no commitment to a common course of action.
The Give-Up-Control Model: A Variation of Unilateral Control
When people recognize that they use the unilateral control model, they often
want to change. Unfortunately, they often shift from one form of control to
another—the give-up-control model, which I think of as a variant of the uni-
lateral control model.
288 Creating a Culture of Collaboration
Schuman.c14 7/10/06 11:29 AM Page 288
The core values of the give-up-control model are as follows: (1) everyone
participates in de?ning the purpose, (2) everyone wins and no one loses, (3) you
express your feelings, and (4) you suppress your intellectual reasoning (Argyris,
1979; Argyris, Putnam, and Smith, 1985). A key assumption is that for peo-
ple to learn and be involved and committed, they must come to the right an-
swer by themselves. Of course, the right answer is the one you have already
decided on. When others don’t see the answer that you prefer, a common
strategy is to ease in or ask leading questions to help the people get the an-
swer by themselves. The results of the give-up-control model are the same as
those of the unilateral control model: increased misunderstanding, unpro-
ductive con?ict and defensiveness, and reduced learning, effectiveness, and
quality of work life.
People often move back and forth between the unilateral control model
and its give-up-control variant. This commonly occurs when a manager seeks
to empower his employees. After recognizing that he has been micromanag-
ing and unilaterally controlling the group, the manager shifts to letting his
group make decisions. He delegates an important decision to the group. How-
ever, in an effort not to in?uence his employees, he withholds relevant infor-
mation he has, including criteria that the solution must meet. When the group
proudly returns with a solution, the manager rejects it because it does not meet
the criteria (which he did not communicate) or does not take into account the
information he withheld. As a result, the group infers that the manager doesn’t
want to give up control and that he thinks the group is not ready to be em-
powered. The manager responds by shifting back to a unilaterally controlling
approach. The give-up-control model is thus a variant form of unilateral con-
trol because it is imposed unilaterally.
Unilateral Control as Organizational Culture
When I describe these models to people involved in collaborative efforts, they
often smile; they recognize themselves in the picture and the way their orga-
nization often operates. When I described it to one group of leaders, they told
me that not only was unilateral control the model they often used but that their
organization had been rewarding them for this behavior for years. They were
trying to change but didn’t have another approach to replace it with. Unfor-
tunately, people are usually unaware that they are using the unilateral control
model, although others can clearly see it. Fortunately, with practice, you can
identify it for yourself and begin to learn a more effective approach.
Using the Facilitative Leader Approach 289
Schuman.c14 7/10/06 11:29 AM Page 289
The Facilitative Leader Approach: Creating Collaborative
Outcomes by Changing Your Mind-Set
What would it look like if you approached challenging collaborative situations
without using some form of the unilateral control model? In Jonathan’s ex-
ample, Jonathan might begin by saying, “Parker, let’s discuss our views re-
garding the use of porches and brick. It looks like we disagree about whether
porches will increase the value of the homes and, if they do, whether it is pos-
sible to have porches and brick together. Do you see our disagreement differ-
ently?” If Parker agrees that this is the disagreement, Jonathan can continue,
“Rather than trying to convince each other, how about if together we ?gure
out a way to ?nd out whether porches will increase the value of the homes
and, if they do, whether it is possible to have porches and bricks together? I’m
open to the fact that I might be missing some key information. We would agree
beforehand on what data we need to look at, what assumptions we want to
make, and whom to talk with. What do you think? Do you have any concerns
about doing it this way?”
The Mutual Learning Model
The example just given illustrates the Facilitative Leader approach. At the
heart of this approach is the mutual learning model (see Figure 14.2), which can
generate long-term positive results that the unilateral control model or give-
up-control model cannot. You do not have to be in a formal leadership role
to be a facilitative leader; team members and even individual contributors
serve as facilitative leaders by virtue of using the core values and assumptions,
principles, and techniques. In short, the Facilitative Leader approach enables
you to lead collaboratively from any position. Although it can be easier to es-
tablish collaborative relationships when all the parties understand the Facili-
tative Leader approach, it is not necessary.
Like the unilateral control model, the mutual learning model has a set of
values and assumptions, strategies, and consequences. As its name indicates,
the model values learning and shared control rather than winning and uni-
lateral control.
Core Values. The mutual learning model has four core values. First, you seek
to collect and share valid information. Valid information includes all the rel-
290 Creating a Culture of Collaboration
Schuman.c14 7/10/06 11:29 AM Page 290
evant information you have on the subject (whether it supports your position
or not). Ideally, others can independently validate the information you share.
Effective collaboration requires that you create a common pool of data and
shared meaning. Second, you seek to encourage free and informed choice so
that people agree to do things because they have the relevant information and
because they believe the decision makes sense, not because they feel manipu-
lated or coerced into it. You seek internal commitment to the decisions, which
often ?ows from the ?rst two values—with this level of motivation, people will
do whatever is necessary to implement the decisions.
Finally, you value compassion, which means temporarily suspending judg-
ment in order to appreciate others’ perspectives. It means having empathy for
others and for yourself in a way that still holds people accountable for their
Using the Facilitative Leader Approach 291
FIGURE 14.2. MUTUAL LEARNING MODEL.
Sources: Adapted from Argyris and Schön’s Model II (1974) and Putnam, Smith, and MacArthur’s
Mutual Learning Model (1997).
Core Values and Assumptions
• Valid information
• Free and informed
choice
• Internal
commitment
• Compassion
• I have some
information; others
have other
information
• Each of us may see
things the others
do not
• Differences are
opportunities for
learning
• People are trying to
act with integrity
given their situations
Strategies
• Test assumptions
and inferences
• Share all relevant
information
• Use specific
examples and
agree on
important words
• Explain reasoning
and intent
• Focus on interests,
not positions
• Combine advocacy
and inquiry
• Jointly design
the approach
• Discuss
undiscussables
• Use a decision-
making rule that
generates the
commitment
needed
Consequences
• Increased
understanding,
reduced unproductive
conflict, reduced
defensiveness
• Increased trust
• Reduced self-fulfilling,
self-sealing
processes
• Increased learning
• Increased
effectiveness
• Increased quality
of work life
Schuman.c14 7/10/06 11:29 AM Page 291
actions rather than unilaterally protecting others or yourself. When you act
with compassion, you infuse the other core values with your intent to under-
stand, empathize with, and help others. Compassion literally means “suffering
with,” although it is sometimes mistakenly thought of as having pity for others.
The kind of compassion I have in mind enables you to have empathy for oth-
ers and for yourself in a way that still holds you and others accountable for
your actions. This kind of compassion does not involve unilateral protection
and enhances the other core values, rather than diminishing them. Compas-
sion comes from the heart. If you act out of compassion rather than out of
fear and guilt, you are able to move beyond defensiveness and be open and
vulnerable. This enables you to engage in conversations in which you can mu-
tually learn with others how to increase your effectiveness.
Core Assumptions. As a facilitative leader, you assume that you have some in-
formation and that others have other information and therefore that other
people may see things you have missed and vice versa. In other words, you
know that you don’t know all that you need to know. This includes recognizing
that you may inadvertently be contributing to problems. This leads you to be
curious and to ask about the ways in which others see you as contributing to
the problems.
You assume that differences are opportunities for learning rather than con-
?icts to be avoided or contests in which you must show that you’re right and
others are wrong. And you assume that people are trying to act with integrity,
given their situations. If people are acting in ways that do not make sense to
you or that you think you understand but disapprove of, you do not conclude
that they are acting that way out of some dubious motive. Instead, you begin
from the assumption that people are striving to do the right thing; part of your
task becomes understanding the reasons for their actions and then evaluating
them accordingly.
You see these interactions as an intriguing puzzle—everyone has some
pieces to offer, and the task is to complete the puzzle together. By exploring
how people see things differently, you can help the group reach a common un-
derstanding that enables you all to move forward in a way that everyone can
support. You are eager to explore differences because you see them as possi-
ble routes to greater understanding and solutions that integrate multiple per-
spectives. Compare these core values and assumptions with those of the
unilateral control model.
292 Creating a Culture of Collaboration
Schuman.c14 7/10/06 11:29 AM Page 292
Principles. Several key principles are associated with the mutual learning core
values and assumptions.
Curiosity is a desire to learn more about something. It motivates you to ?nd
out what information others have that you might be missing and to explore
how others came to a different conclusion rather than simply trying to per-
suade others that their conclusions are wrong.
Transparency is the quality of sharing all relevant information, including
your strategies, in a way that is timely and valid. It includes divulging your
strategy for discussion with the other participants so that together you can
make free and informed choices about your collaboration. Transparency is
dif?cult when you are acting unilaterally because revealing your strategy would
render it ineffective. But being transparent when using a mutual learning ap-
proach actually increases the effectiveness of your strategy, which is now to
learn together rather than to control the situation.
Joint accountability means that you share responsibility for the current situ-
ation, including the eventual consequences. Being accountable means that you
are responsible for addressing your problems with others directly rather than
avoiding them or asking others to do this for you. Instead of seeking to blame
others, you recognize that because you are part of a system, your actions con-
tribute to maintaining the system or changing it.
These three principles—curiosity, transparency, and joint accountability—
are interwoven with the core values and assumptions of the mutual learning
model. Together they are put into action in the strategies that follow.
Strategies. The strategies that facilitative leaders use to implement their core
values and assumptions are also known as the ground rules for effective groups (for
more information, see “Ground Rules for Effective Groups,” by Roger
Schwarz, published by Roger Schwarz & Associates,http://www.schwarzas-
sociates.com). Many of these ground rules are designed to generate valid in-
formation. For example, you test whether the assumptions that you are making
about others are valid before you act on them as if they are true. You share
all the relevant information you have about an issue (whether or not it sup-
ports your position) by using speci?c examples, by explaining the reasoning
that leads to your conclusions, and by stating the underlying needs, interests,
or criteria that are important for you to meet. You create learning opportuni-
ties for yourself and others by asking others to identify things you may have
overlooked after you have shared your thinking. To increase free and informed
Using the Facilitative Leader Approach 293
Schuman.c14 7/10/06 11:29 AM Page 293
choice and internal commitment, you jointly design next steps with others.
And you raise the undiscussable issues that have been keeping the team from
increasing its effectiveness. Using these strategies does not mean that you have
to make decisions by consensus. Although that is an option in the Facilitative
Leader approach, it’s not a requirement.
Consequences. Leaders who use this approach make several outcomes pos-
sible, including increased quality of decisions or results, increased commit-
ment to implementing the results, reduced time for effective implementation,
improved working relationships, increased organizational learning, and en-
hanced personal satisfaction. These outcomes are generated through the fol-
lowing consequences.
Increased Understanding, Reduced Unproductive Con?ict, and Reduced Defensiveness. With
the mutual learning approach, you increase understanding because you test
assumptions and assemble valid information. You also assume that others have
information you do not have and that they may see things you have overlooked.
By assuming that people are striving to act with integrity, you reduce the
negative attributions you make about others. You test attributions you do make
with the people about whom you are making them. By doing so, you reduce
the unproductive con?icts that arise from acting on untested, inaccurate as-
sumptions and the defensive behaviors associated with them. Similarly, you in-
crease trust. Using a mutual learning approach does not ensure that others will
respond nondefensively; however, it does reduce the chance that you will pro-
voke or contribute to others’ defensive reactions.
Reduced Self-Ful?lling, Self-Sealing Processes. Acting on untested, inaccurate as-
sumptions is the ?rst step in self-ful?lling and self-sealing processes. By testing
out your assumptions, you reduce the likelihood of such processes. Even if you
do create a self-ful?lling process, your openness to learning how you created
the problem will reduce the chance that it becomes self-sealing.
Increased Learning, Effectiveness, and Quality of Work Life. All of this information
enables you and others to develop shared meaning that increases learning op-
portunities for yourself and the group. This includes learning how you and
group members each contribute to the group’s effectiveness and ineffective-
ness. Together these results increase the group’s effectiveness—its performance,
294 Creating a Culture of Collaboration
Schuman.c14 7/10/06 11:29 AM Page 294
its process, and the satisfaction of group members’ personal needs. The mu-
tual learning values and assumptions enable you to increase understanding
and trust and reduce defensive behavior. This reduces feelings of anxiety, fear,
and anger that create stress.
How You Think Is How You Lead
When I introduce the Facilitative Leader approach and the mutual learning
model to people, it often seems like common sense to people, and sometimes
they say, “I already do this.” Not until they examine their own speci?c situa-
tions (often with help from others) do they begin to see the gap between how
they think they lead and how they really lead.
The challenge in becoming a facilitative leader is not understanding the
approach or even learning the strategies; it is learning to think differently. It
means unlearning years of employing a unilateral control mind-set that you
used skillfully and effortlessly. Here’s why. If you only learn to apply the strate-
gies of the mutual learning model, you will end up using them with a unilat-
eral control model set of values and assumptions, which will generate the
same negative consequences you’ve gotten in the past. That’s because it’s your
core values and assumptions that drive your strategies and their eventual
consequences.
How Unilateral Control Reduces Collaborative
Structures and Outcomes
To develop a sustainable culture of collaboration, it is not enough to create
conversations congruent with the mutual learning model.
*
Even when individ-
uals have the ability to engage in mutual learning conversations, if group or
organizational structures have unilateral control elements in them, they can
have a powerfully negative effect on organizational members’ ability to collab-
orate. (Borrowing from Allport, 1967, I de?ne structure simply as a stable re-
curring process that results from individuals interacting with each other in certain
ways. Using this de?nition, policies and procedures are forms of structure.)
Using the Facilitative Leader Approach 295
*Portions of this discussion are adapted from Schwarz and Davidson (2005).
Schuman.c14 7/10/06 11:29 AM Page 295
Unfortunately, the unilateral control model that leaders use and that gener-
ates dysfunctional conversations and relationships also leads them to design
team and organizational structures that have unilateral core values and as-
sumptions embedded in them. This is predictable. Leaders use their theory in
use (or mental model) to design group and organizational structures. Given
that many of these structures are designed to avoid some past or potential
threat and that almost everyone uses a unilateral control approach under con-
ditions of threat, you can expect to ?nd unilateral elements embedded in many
of these structures.
Examples of Unilateral Structures
Here are two examples of unilateral structures in client organizations and how
they reduce genuine collaboration.
Managing Performance Problems in Teams. Many organizations tout the
importance of their teams and at the same time set up structures that reduce
teams’ ability to tackle their own challenges. In many organizations, if a team
member is not performing adequately and the supervisor is taking progressive
disciplinary action to address the performance, the supervisor can’t share with
other team members that she has taken these actions or what they are. She
can state only that she is “handling the issue.” This is true even if the other
team members initially raised the performance issue with the entire team and
team leader present and if the team members continue to provide the member
and leader with feedback about that team member’s performance. This pol-
icy protects that employee’s privacy and reduces the risk of liability associated
with possible violations of privacy. It is also based on the unilateral value of
minimizing the expression of negative feelings and the strategy of saving face.
It potentially avoids dif?cult conversations that the manager might have to have
with other employees who want to know what the manager is doing about the
situation. Team members are left making inferences about whether and how
the supervisor is addressing the team member who is having a problem. It
makes undiscussable the poor performance that team members were likely to
have not only seen but also brought to the attention of the leader. Essentially,
it creates a situation in which team members can no longer work together to
support the member having a problem. Removing this support increases the
chance that the person will be moved or ?red. The message implicit in this
structure is that when situations get dif?cult, team collaboration and support
296 Creating a Culture of Collaboration
Schuman.c14 7/10/06 11:29 AM Page 296
are inappropriate. And the structure is the direct result of leaders’ using a uni-
lateral control model.
Establishing Organizational Budgets. Many CEOs exhort their executives
to collaborate to enhance organizational performance and learning rather
than simply focus on their own organizational areas. At the same time, the
budgeting process is often designed so that executives each seek to win out over
the others and hence share and withhold information strategically.
In one organization, department heads prepare their annual budget re-
quests independently and then submit them to the ?nance director. Each ad-
vocates for as much as possible, knowing that there will be subsequent cuts.
The ?nance director consolidates the requests and takes them to the COO,
along with recommendations for cuts. The COO and ?nance director then
go back to each department head individually to tell each one how much (and
in some cases, where) to cut their budgets. Department heads never see one
another’s requests or detailed line-item breakdowns. Most feel that the process
is unfair and assume that cuts are based in part on favoritism, so they try to
outmaneuver one another by the way they present and justify their budgets.
They sometimes make tenuous or questionable links to the COO’s or ?nance
director’s favored initiatives. This process of competition, in?ated requests,
and hidden agendas is commonly referred to as “the budget game.”
Not only does this kind of budget process encourage the withholding of
information, but it also prevents department heads—key organizational lead-
ers—from learning about critical organizational issues and opportunities. It
reinforces the traditional “silo” mentality that often causes leaders to work at
cross-purposes and limits their understanding of interdependence. They are
subsequently blamed by those above and below them in the organization for
not thinking systemically when in fact they lack important information that
would lead them to see key interrelationships in different ways. The structure
itself is designed to reduce collaboration. And the structure is typically estab-
lished using the unilateral control model as a template.
Redesigning Structures for Collaboration
Unless you are working in a relatively new organization, yours probably has
many structures (perhaps too many) for dealing with various issues. Conse-
quently, the task in your organization is likely to be one of redesigning existing
Using the Facilitative Leader Approach 297
Schuman.c14 7/10/06 11:29 AM Page 297
structures so they generate the outcomes of learning and collaboration with-
out leading to unintended consequences. Ultimately, designing collaborative
structures (like designing collaborative conversations) requires leaders who can
operate from a mutual learning model or who are willing to work with some-
one who can help them rigorously re?ect on their mental models. In either
case, there are several steps you can take to redesign structures to make them
collaborative.
Identify the Source
Find out whether the structure (policy, procedure) in question stems from a
law, a generally accepted industry or professional practice, a formal or informal
organizational policy, or a norm in the organization. A policy that originates in
law is obviously more dif?cult to change than a policy developed indepen-
dently by your organization or a policy that is a norm.
Identify Elements That Are Within Your Control
If a structure is actually a norm or a guideline that you have discretion to
adapt, consider amending it so that it reduces unintended consequences. One
client organization has adopted a collaborative budget process in which every-
one involved sits down together at the same time each year and develops an
organizational budget. Department heads frequently offer funding priority to
other departments with more critical needs. All feel responsible for devising a
fair and realistic budget that re?ects organizational rather than departmental
priorities. After several years of collaborative budgeting, these leaders say they
no longer play the budget game, the budget-making process is faster overall,
they engage in better long-range planning and capital budgeting, and the role
of the ?nance and budget staff has moved from control of others to support
and involvement in decision making. The department heads see themselves as
partners rather than competitors.
Similarly, some clients have created teams in which the entire team ad-
dresses problems of team member performance that affect the team. To im-
plement this fundamental change, team members reframed their idea of what
it meant to be accountable to other team members. This included the as-
sumption that if you have relevant information to share about someone on
the team, withholding it or not sharing it in a straightforward manner pre-
298 Creating a Culture of Collaboration
Schuman.c14 7/10/06 11:29 AM Page 298
vents the team from identifying the issues and understanding how various
members may have contributed to the problem. By reframing what it means to
be accountable, team members were able to solve problems that had previ-
ously gone unsolved and increased the ability to work together as a team.
Understand Exactly What the Structure Says and Does Not Say
If it is a written structure such as a policy, examine it and learn ?rsthand what
it says and does not say. If the structure is based on law, explore whether it is
more restrictive than the law requires. If it seems more restrictive than your
understanding of the law on which it is based, ?nd out whether that is the in-
tent. If it’s not, you may have more freedom to redesign it. If the structure is
unwritten, explore with the people responsible for it what it requires. Do not
assume that a practice is a formal policy or law simply because someone tells
you it is. Verify the information; ask the relevant people to document the de-
tails. In my experience, organizational members sometimes cite something as
policy or law because they have been told it is policy or law, yet when asked
to do so, no one is able to produce any evidence to that effect.
Explore the assumptions, values, and interests that the designers used to
generate the structure. Share your assumptions, values, interests, and the un-
intended consequences you see of the current structure. Structures are solu-
tions that leaders design to address perceived problems or opportunities.
Interests are needs that the structure takes into account or criteria that the
structure needs to meet. For example, a typical interest or criterion for any
performance feedback system is that it be designed in a way that provides the
recipients with accurate and usable information. Be curious about the inter-
ests that generated a particular structure. Identify interests that are not being
met by the current structure, and ask for reactions from relevant parties.
Leaders also use their own values and assumptions to design structures—
and this is how structures often become embedded with unilateral control ele-
ments. For example, using the unilateral control core value of minimizing
expression of negative feelings, leaders usually structure performance feedback
to be anonymous (unless it comes directly from the boss). Similarly, using the
unilateral control assumption of “I’m right and anyone who disagrees is wrong,”
leaders design the structure so that when a manager gives a direct report feed-
back, the performance rating is already established and is rarely open to being
changed. These core values and assumptions lead to the misunderstanding,
Using the Facilitative Leader Approach 299
Schuman.c14 7/10/06 11:29 AM Page 299
defensiveness, and limited learning associated with the unilateral control out-
comes. Helping leaders explore the unintended consequences of their core
values and assumptions is a crucial step in redesign.
Explore Redesigns in Accordance with the Mutual Learning Model
Explore whether and how a structure or policy can be designed and imple-
mented so that it re?ects the values and assumptions of the mutual learning
model and also addresses the interests you have identi?ed. In one learning or-
ganization I know of, when policies come up for review (because they are not
meeting organization needs or are perceived as being inconsistent with the
values), the leadership team or a selected group of employees is given the task
of reviewing the policy and identifying the interests that a new policy must
satisfy. When a new policy is written, the interests that it is attempting to meet
are stated in the ?rst paragraph. Then the guidelines are given. There are usu-
ally several acceptable ways to meet the stated interests, and providing choices
signi?cantly increases commitment to following desired practices.
In the case of performance feedback, new solutions become possible with
the shift from unilateral control to mutual learning values and assumptions.
For example, if the person giving feedback does not assume that he or she is
necessarily right, the feedback conversation becomes a setting in which both
parties can be genuinely curious about how to work more effectively together,
which includes the possibility of the manager’s changing his or her behavior.
By rigorously examining organizational and team structures and re-
designing them when appropriate, leaders create structures that foster genuine
collaboration and learning.
Conclusion
Creating a culture of collaboration requires that all parties involved jointly de-
sign ways to work together to meet their related interests and learn with and
from each other, sharing responsibility, authority, and accountability for achiev-
ing results. Sustaining a culture of collaboration involves facilitating collabo-
ration conversation and supporting structures that make collaborative behavior
possible. The Facilitative Leader approach, which has the mutual learning
model at its core, is one successful approach to creating an organizational cul-
ture of collaboration.
300 Creating a Culture of Collaboration
Schuman.c14 7/10/06 11:29 AM Page 300
References
Allport, F. H. “A Theory of Enestruence (Event Structure Theory): Report of Progress.”
American Psychologist, 1967, 22, 1–24.
Argyris, C. “Re?ecting on Laboratory Education from a Theory of Action Perspective.”
Journal of Applied Behavioral Science, 1979, 15, 296–310.
Argyris, C., Putnam, R. W,, and Smith, D. M. Action Science: Concepts, Methods, and Skills for
Research and Intervention. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 1985.
Argyris, C., and Schön, D. A. Theory in Practice: Increasing Professional Effectiveness. San
Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 1974.
Chrislip, D. D., and Larson, C. E. Collaborative Leadership: How Citizens and Civic Leaders
Can Make a Difference. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 1994.
Putnam, R. W., Smith, D. M., and MacArthur, P. Workshop Materials. Newton, Mass.:
Action Design, 1997.
Schwarz, R. The Skilled Facilitator: A Comprehensive Resource for Consultants, Facilitators, Man-
agers, Trainers, and Coaches. (rev. ed.) San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2002.
Schwarz, R., and Davidson, A. “Integrating the Skilled Facilitator Approach with Orga-
nizational Policies and Procedures.” In R. Schwarz, A. Davidson, P. Carlson, and S.
McKinney, The Skilled Facilitator Fieldbook: Tips, Tools, and Tested Methods for Consultants,
Facilitators, Managers, Trainers, and Coaches. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2005.
Using the Facilitative Leader Approach 301
Schuman.c14 7/10/06 11:29 AM Page 301
doc_429609492.pdf
Many leaders try to create a collaborative organizational culture, but they lead and design their organizations in a way that undermines the culture they seek to create.
Roger Schwarz is an organizational psychologist and president of Roger Schwarz &
Associates (www.schwarzassociates.com), a consulting ?rm that helps people get bet-
ter business results and build stronger relationships, often in ways they didn’t think
possible. He teaches, consults, and writes about facilitation, leadership, managing
change and con?ict, and developing effective work groups. For more than twenty-?ve
years, Schwarz has served as facilitator and consultant to Fortune 500 corporations;
federal, state, and local government agencies; and nonpro?t organizations. Distin-
guished consultants, executives, and academics have called his book The Skilled Facil-
itator: A Comprehensive Resource for Consultants, Facilitators, Managers, Trainers and
Coaches (Jossey-Bass, 2002) a standard reference on facilitation. He is also lead author
of The Skilled Facilitator Fieldbook: Tips, Tools, and Tested Methods, for Consultants, Fa-
cilitators, Managers, Trainers and Coaches (Jossey-Bass, 2005). Formerly an associate
professor of public management at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill,
Schwarz left his tenured position in 1996 to found Roger Schwarz & Associates. He
earned his master of arts degree and doctorate in organizational psychology at the
University of Michigan and his master of education degree at Harvard University.
Schuman.c14 7/10/06 11:29 AM Page 280
281
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
USING THE FACILITATIVE LEADER
APPROACH TO CREATE AN
ORGANIZATIONAL CULTURE
OF COLLABORATION
Roger Schwarz
Y
M
any leaders try to create a collaborative organizational culture, but
they lead and design their organizations in a way that undermines the
culture they seek to create. In this chapter, I describe how this occurs and de-
scribe the Facilitative Leader approach and how it can be used to create an
organizational culture of collaboration. When leaders use this approach, they
generate several outcomes: (1) increased quality of decisions or results, (2) in-
creased commitment to implementing the results, (3) reduced time for effec-
tive implementation, (4) improved working relationships, (5) increased
organizational learning, and (6) enhanced personal satisfaction. Several of
these outcomes are particularly important to sustaining collaboration. From
a task perspective, individuals consider collaboration more desirable to the
extent that the results it produces are of higher quality than the parties could
produce alone. From a process perspective, individuals ?nd collaboration
more desirable to the extent that it increases commitment to the outcomes
This chapter is adapted from “The Facilitative Leader” in The Skilled Facilitator: A Comprehensive Re-
source for Consultants, Facilitators, Managers, Trainers, and Coaches, new and revised edition, by Roger Schwarz
(San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2002), and The Skilled Facilitator Fieldbook: Tips, Tools, and Tested Methods
for Consultants, Facilitators, Managers, Trainers, and Coaches, by Roger Schwarz, Anne Davidson, Peg Carlson,
and Sue McKinney (San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2005).
Schuman.c14 7/10/06 11:29 AM Page 281
from Creating a Culture of Collaboration. Edited by Sandy Schuman.
Published by Jossey-Bass, 2006.
and increases the quality of their working relationships and their personal
satisfaction.
Culture and Collaboration De?ned
Organizational culture is the set of fundamental values and assumptions that
members of an organization share and that guide their behavior (Schwarz,
2002). Although organizational culture is manifested in the artifacts it pro-
duces—including individual and group behaviors, organization activities,
policies, processes, and structures—it stems from shared mental models. Con-
sequently, to create and sustain a culture of collaboration, it is necessary for
members to share a set of values and assumptions congruent with collabora-
tion and to generate behaviors and structures that embody the values and as-
sumptions. In this chapter, I will explore both behavioral and structural
challenges to creating a collaborative culture, both of which arise from the
mental models that individuals use to guide their behavior.
Chrislip and Larson (1994) de?ne collaboration as “mutually bene?cial
relationships between two or more parties who work together toward com-
mon goals by sharing responsibility, authority, and accountability for achiev-
ing results” (p. 5). They distinguish it from communication, which is sharing
knowledge and information, and from cooperation and coordination, a rela-
tionship that helps each party achieve its own goals. As they de?ne it, “The
purpose of collaboration is to create a shared vision and joint strategies to ad-
dress concerns that go beyond the purview of any particular party” (p. 5).
For genuine collaboration to occur, parties must be able to learn from and
with each other, especially in dif?cult situations, and must be able to jointly
design the process by which they collaborate. Consequently, I de?ne collabo-
ration as a mutually bene?cial relationship between two or more individuals,
groups, or organizations who jointly design ways to work together to meet their
related interests and who learn with and from each other, sharing responsi-
bility, authority, and accountability for achieving results.
Adapting the terminology of Argyris and Schön (1974), I distinguish
between espoused and genuine collaboration. In an espoused collaboration,
the parties declare their relationship to be a collaboration. In a genuine col-
laboration, the parties act in ways that are congruent with the de?nition of
282 Creating a Culture of Collaboration
Schuman.c14 7/10/06 11:29 AM Page 282
collaboration. Although sometimes espoused collaborations are genuine col-
laborations, often they are not.
What Makes Collaboration So Dif?cult?
Why is it so dif?cult to create and sustain genuine collaboration, even among
people who ostensibly have similar goals? Creating a culture of collaboration
requires changing two interactive factors: (1) the conversations by which peo-
ple interact and (2) the structures that shape these interactions. Both of these
factors are determined by individuals’ mental models. We will examine each
of these separately, beginning with how mental models determine process.
The research of Argyris and Schön (1974) and my more than twenty-?ve
years working with leaders offer a basic explanation about why collaboration
is so dif?cult: to effectively collaborate requires people to shift their mind-set
(or mental models) from one of control to one of learning. But collaboration
is often psychologically threatening because it requires us, among other things,
to give up our preconceived ideas of what the solutions should be in order to
?nd solutions that take full advantage of the collaboration itself. And under
conditions of psychological threat, we cling to the very mind-set that makes
effective collaboration less likely. In short, our thinking undermines the out-
comes we say we want.
Consider the real-life example presented in Exhibit 14.1. Jonathan and
Parker are investment partners and developers in a very large, complex real
estate development that uses principles of traditional neighborhood develop-
ment (TND), a high-density mixture of residential, commercial, of?ce, and
retail space in a tight pattern of pedestrian-oriented streets. The men’s work
relationship ?ts the de?nition of collaboration: they share a vision of invest-
ment through TND, each has knowledge and skills that the other lacks, and
both are responsible and accountable to each other for maximizing their re-
turn on investment. In their conversation, about maximizing the return on in-
vestment, Jonathan wants porches on the houses and Parker wants brick
houses without porches. Jonathan submitted this example at a workshop of
mine as part of his effort to increase his effectiveness with his partner. The
conversation between Jonathan and Parker appears in the right column;
Jonathan’s thoughts and feelings appear in the left column.
Using the Facilitative Leader Approach 283
Schuman.c14 7/10/06 11:29 AM Page 283
284 Creating a Culture of Collaboration
EXHIBIT 14.1. MAKING THE CASE FOR PORCHES.
Jonathan’s Thoughts and Feelings The Conversation
Parker: Let me tell you, where I grew up we
associate porches with poverty. Look at
the poor parts of Washington. Very few
of the houses built in the last 40 years
have porches.
Jonathan: Porches have made a huge comeback
in recent years. Virtually every TND has
porches and I understand porches are
starting to bring a premium to builders.
Parker: Well, builders have told us that they will
not build both brick and porches. It’s too
expensive to do both. It’s either brick or
porches and I want to have mostly brick.
Jonathan: Yes, I know the builders have told us that.
The reason why the architect’s plan works
so well in my opinion is that they have
taken that into consideration. They have
come up with a plan that balances brick
and porches, putting brick townhouses
with no porches where they are most
prominent and using siding on the houses
whose facades are mostly covered up by a
full porch.
Parker: Let me tell you, we are headed for disaster
if we do not have more brick. I’ve been a
builder in this region for more than 40
years. Residents expect brick. It gives them
a sense of having a good solid house. If we
don’t have a preponderance of brick the
builders will never be able to successfully
sell these townhouses for the prices they
need to get.
This argument was used by critics
when TNDs ?rst started, but no one
except Parker has used it in the last
four years.
Where is the hard evidence when I
need it?
Can’t he ?nd a way to use language
to indicate that there is some mid-
dle ground? How can we reach a
compromise when he needs to
state his case in black and white.
The architect’s plan is so logical.
What is it he does not get about it?
He states everything as a “fact.” He
just does not give an inch.
Schuman.c14 7/10/06 11:29 AM Page 284
The Unilateral Control Model
What is going on in this example? It is a simple instance of collaboration be-
tween two people in the same organization. By analyzing Jonathan’s conversa-
tion and his thoughts and feelings, it is possible to infer the mind-set Jonathan
adopted to approach this high-stakes conversation with his partner and iden-
tify the strategies and consequences that followed from this mind-set, which is
a common one. In dif?cult situations—ones in which we feel some potential
threat or embarrassment, including situations where our stake in the outcome
is high—most of us operate from a set of values and assumptions that we are
unaware that we’re using but almost always lead to these consequences. This
approach is called the unilateral control model (illustrated in Figure 14.1), which
consists of three parts: values and assumptions, which together you use to gener-
ate strategies or behaviors, which in turn lead to consequences.
Core Values. Beginning with values, you try to achieve your goal as you de-
?ned it before the conversation. You see the conversation as a contest in which
you seek to win, not lose. Every comment that someone makes that is consis-
tent with your goal is a small win; every comment that introduces information
that may challenge your goal is a loss. You try to minimize the expression of
Using the Facilitative Leader Approach 285
EXHIBIT 14.1. MAKING THE CASE FOR PORCHES, Cont’d.
Jonathan’s Thoughts and Feelings The Conversation
Jonathan: I really respect that you have been at this
a lot longer than I have, but I have spent
the last two years studying this new con-
cept of TDN. It is very new and there is
not a lot of hard evidence of its value. At
the same time many of the developers and
designers I have talked with say that there
are all kinds of details that are critical to
the success of a TND but we do not have
absolute evidence of what is critical and
what is not. From everything I have read,
all new urbanists agree that porches are
critical.
His apartment buildings that he
built look like an engineer designed
and built them. They have no re-
deeming architectural quality,
though they provide him with a
healthy cash ?ow.
Schuman.c14 7/10/06 11:29 AM Page 285
negative feelings, believing that if people start expressing negative feelings, it
will only make things worse. Finally, you act rational. You think that the way
you are approaching the issue is perfectly logical. And if it isn’t completely log-
ical, you should act as if it is. People use a mix of these core values, to differ-
ent degrees.
In our example, Jonathan is seeking to achieve his goal of including
porches. He frames the conversation as a contest in which he needs better
evidence to win his case. His private question about what Parker doesn’t “get”
about the architect’s logical plan illustrates the value acting rational. He has
concerns about Parker’s approach to design but withholds them. And he sees
his reasoning for porches as ?awless.
Core Assumptions. You operate from a matching set of assumptions. You as-
sume that you understand the situation and anyone who disagrees doesn’t. In
this model, other people can’t understand the situation and so see things dif-
ferently. Consequently, you are right and others are wrong. You often question
286 Creating a Culture of Collaboration
FIGURE 14.1. UNILATERAL CONTROL MODEL.
Source: Models derived from the work of Argyris and Schön (1974), who originally labeled them
as Model I and Model II, and adaptations by Putnam, Smith, and MacArthur at Action Design
(1997), who refer to them as the Unilateral Control and Mutual Learning models. Action design is
an organization and management development ?rm that has built on the work of Argyris and
Schön. Putnam and Smith are the coauthors with Argyris of Action Science (1985).
Core Values and Assumptions
• Achieve my goal
through unilateral
control
• Win, don’t lose
• Minimize expressing
negative feelings
• Act rational
• I understand the
situation; those
who see it
differently do not
• I am right; those
who disagree
are wrong
• I have pure motives;
those who disagree
have questionable
motives
• My feelings are
justified
Strategies
• Advocate my
position
• Keep my
reasoning private
• Don’t ask others
about their
reasoning
• Ease in
• Save face
Consequences
• Misunderstanding,
unproductive
conflict,
defensiveness
• Mistrust
• Self-fulfilling,
self-sealing
processes
• Limited learning
• Reduced
effectiveness
• Reduced quality
of work life
Schuman.c14 7/10/06 11:29 AM Page 286
the motives of those with different views while believing that your motives are
pure; you see yourself as a steward for the organization, while others are try-
ing to advance their careers or otherwise meet their own needs. Finally, you
assume that your feelings are justi?ed. If you get angry, you have a right to be
angry; others don’t understand, are wrong, and have questionable motives.
Remember that all this is at best at the edges of your awareness: you usually
don’t realize you are holding these values and assumptions in the moment.
Jonathan assumes that he is correct about the porches and doesn’t enter-
tain the notion that Parker’s views may be valid. He attributes to Parker the
sole motive of pursuing a healthy cash ?ow without attention to architectural
quality.
Strategies. This combination of values and assumptions leads you to design
strategies that seek to control the conversation and win. You don’t fully explain
your point of view because it might lead others to question and challenge it.
You don’t ask others to explain their points of view (except to shoot holes in
them) because they may consider things that you hadn’t, which would put your
goals in jeopardy. To minimize people expressing negative emotions, you may
ease in. Easing in is asking questions or making statements in a way that is de-
signed to get the others to understand what you are privately thinking with-
out your having to say it. It includes asking rhetorical questions starting “Don’t
you think that . . .” or asking leading questions so others will “see the light”
and think that they have come up with the ideas that you want them to im-
plement. If someone raises negative points, you may say they are irrelevant or
unproductive or may suggest addressing them at a later time (privately think-
ing that the right time will be “never”). Because you assume that you under-
stand the situation, you act as if your reasoning is foolproof without bothering
to test whether your assumptions and data are accurate. Together, these strate-
gies enable you to unilaterally control the situation and protect yourself and
others. Through all of this, you keep your strategy for controlling the conver-
sation private because divulging it would thwart the strategy or, even more
likely, because you are not really aware of the strategy you are using.
Jonathan continues to advocate his point of view that porches are the so-
lution. To his credit, he does not ease in. He does admit that there is not a lot
of hard evidence to support his view, but he still continues to advocate it. He
privately wonders what it is about the architect’s logical plan that Parker
doesn’t get and does not ask Parker to explain his view. Because Jonathan has
Using the Facilitative Leader Approach 287
Schuman.c14 7/10/06 11:29 AM Page 287
assumed that his view about Parker’s favoring a healthy cash ?ow over re-
deeming architectural quality is valid, he does not ask Parker’s view on the
matter. Finally, Jonathan does not turn to a collaborative process to resolve
their disagreement; instead, he tries to resolve it using a unilateral strategy.
Consequences. Ironically, by trying to control a situation, you contribute to
creating the consequences you are trying to avoid. You create misunder-
standing because you assume that the situation is as you see it, and you base
your actions on untested assumptions about others. If you make negative as-
sumptions about others’ motives and do not test them, you build up your own
mistrust of others and theirs of you. This leads them to be wary and cautious
in their responses, which you perceive as defensive. In this way, you create a
self-ful?lling process, generating the very consequences you set out to avoid.
You also create a self-sealing process when you do not inquire into another
person’s defensive reaction because you believe it will only generate more de-
fensiveness. Consequently, you seal off the opportunity for learning how your
own behavior may be contributing to the collaboration’s reduced effectiveness.
All of this reduces the collaboration’s ability to learn, its effectiveness, and
quality of work life. It can be stressful when you cannot say what you are think-
ing without negative consequences. A great deal of mental energy gets tied up
in trying to withhold what you are thinking or carefully craft what you are say-
ing to dress up your intentions. The quality of decisions decreases, the amount
of time needed to implement decisions increases, the commitment to those
decisions decreases, and the quality of relationships suffers.
You can see the beginning of these consequences in Jonathan’s case as he
starts to make negative attributions about Parker’s motives. By continuing to
advocate his point of view and not be curious about Parker’s views, Jonathan
contributes to escalating the con?ict, which he then uses as evidence to support
his notion that Parker is not willing to compromise. They ?nd themselves at an
impasse, without a strategy for jointly learning which of their assumptions, if
any, are valid. There is no commitment to a common course of action.
The Give-Up-Control Model: A Variation of Unilateral Control
When people recognize that they use the unilateral control model, they often
want to change. Unfortunately, they often shift from one form of control to
another—the give-up-control model, which I think of as a variant of the uni-
lateral control model.
288 Creating a Culture of Collaboration
Schuman.c14 7/10/06 11:29 AM Page 288
The core values of the give-up-control model are as follows: (1) everyone
participates in de?ning the purpose, (2) everyone wins and no one loses, (3) you
express your feelings, and (4) you suppress your intellectual reasoning (Argyris,
1979; Argyris, Putnam, and Smith, 1985). A key assumption is that for peo-
ple to learn and be involved and committed, they must come to the right an-
swer by themselves. Of course, the right answer is the one you have already
decided on. When others don’t see the answer that you prefer, a common
strategy is to ease in or ask leading questions to help the people get the an-
swer by themselves. The results of the give-up-control model are the same as
those of the unilateral control model: increased misunderstanding, unpro-
ductive con?ict and defensiveness, and reduced learning, effectiveness, and
quality of work life.
People often move back and forth between the unilateral control model
and its give-up-control variant. This commonly occurs when a manager seeks
to empower his employees. After recognizing that he has been micromanag-
ing and unilaterally controlling the group, the manager shifts to letting his
group make decisions. He delegates an important decision to the group. How-
ever, in an effort not to in?uence his employees, he withholds relevant infor-
mation he has, including criteria that the solution must meet. When the group
proudly returns with a solution, the manager rejects it because it does not meet
the criteria (which he did not communicate) or does not take into account the
information he withheld. As a result, the group infers that the manager doesn’t
want to give up control and that he thinks the group is not ready to be em-
powered. The manager responds by shifting back to a unilaterally controlling
approach. The give-up-control model is thus a variant form of unilateral con-
trol because it is imposed unilaterally.
Unilateral Control as Organizational Culture
When I describe these models to people involved in collaborative efforts, they
often smile; they recognize themselves in the picture and the way their orga-
nization often operates. When I described it to one group of leaders, they told
me that not only was unilateral control the model they often used but that their
organization had been rewarding them for this behavior for years. They were
trying to change but didn’t have another approach to replace it with. Unfor-
tunately, people are usually unaware that they are using the unilateral control
model, although others can clearly see it. Fortunately, with practice, you can
identify it for yourself and begin to learn a more effective approach.
Using the Facilitative Leader Approach 289
Schuman.c14 7/10/06 11:29 AM Page 289
The Facilitative Leader Approach: Creating Collaborative
Outcomes by Changing Your Mind-Set
What would it look like if you approached challenging collaborative situations
without using some form of the unilateral control model? In Jonathan’s ex-
ample, Jonathan might begin by saying, “Parker, let’s discuss our views re-
garding the use of porches and brick. It looks like we disagree about whether
porches will increase the value of the homes and, if they do, whether it is pos-
sible to have porches and brick together. Do you see our disagreement differ-
ently?” If Parker agrees that this is the disagreement, Jonathan can continue,
“Rather than trying to convince each other, how about if together we ?gure
out a way to ?nd out whether porches will increase the value of the homes
and, if they do, whether it is possible to have porches and bricks together? I’m
open to the fact that I might be missing some key information. We would agree
beforehand on what data we need to look at, what assumptions we want to
make, and whom to talk with. What do you think? Do you have any concerns
about doing it this way?”
The Mutual Learning Model
The example just given illustrates the Facilitative Leader approach. At the
heart of this approach is the mutual learning model (see Figure 14.2), which can
generate long-term positive results that the unilateral control model or give-
up-control model cannot. You do not have to be in a formal leadership role
to be a facilitative leader; team members and even individual contributors
serve as facilitative leaders by virtue of using the core values and assumptions,
principles, and techniques. In short, the Facilitative Leader approach enables
you to lead collaboratively from any position. Although it can be easier to es-
tablish collaborative relationships when all the parties understand the Facili-
tative Leader approach, it is not necessary.
Like the unilateral control model, the mutual learning model has a set of
values and assumptions, strategies, and consequences. As its name indicates,
the model values learning and shared control rather than winning and uni-
lateral control.
Core Values. The mutual learning model has four core values. First, you seek
to collect and share valid information. Valid information includes all the rel-
290 Creating a Culture of Collaboration
Schuman.c14 7/10/06 11:29 AM Page 290
evant information you have on the subject (whether it supports your position
or not). Ideally, others can independently validate the information you share.
Effective collaboration requires that you create a common pool of data and
shared meaning. Second, you seek to encourage free and informed choice so
that people agree to do things because they have the relevant information and
because they believe the decision makes sense, not because they feel manipu-
lated or coerced into it. You seek internal commitment to the decisions, which
often ?ows from the ?rst two values—with this level of motivation, people will
do whatever is necessary to implement the decisions.
Finally, you value compassion, which means temporarily suspending judg-
ment in order to appreciate others’ perspectives. It means having empathy for
others and for yourself in a way that still holds people accountable for their
Using the Facilitative Leader Approach 291
FIGURE 14.2. MUTUAL LEARNING MODEL.
Sources: Adapted from Argyris and Schön’s Model II (1974) and Putnam, Smith, and MacArthur’s
Mutual Learning Model (1997).
Core Values and Assumptions
• Valid information
• Free and informed
choice
• Internal
commitment
• Compassion
• I have some
information; others
have other
information
• Each of us may see
things the others
do not
• Differences are
opportunities for
learning
• People are trying to
act with integrity
given their situations
Strategies
• Test assumptions
and inferences
• Share all relevant
information
• Use specific
examples and
agree on
important words
• Explain reasoning
and intent
• Focus on interests,
not positions
• Combine advocacy
and inquiry
• Jointly design
the approach
• Discuss
undiscussables
• Use a decision-
making rule that
generates the
commitment
needed
Consequences
• Increased
understanding,
reduced unproductive
conflict, reduced
defensiveness
• Increased trust
• Reduced self-fulfilling,
self-sealing
processes
• Increased learning
• Increased
effectiveness
• Increased quality
of work life
Schuman.c14 7/10/06 11:29 AM Page 291
actions rather than unilaterally protecting others or yourself. When you act
with compassion, you infuse the other core values with your intent to under-
stand, empathize with, and help others. Compassion literally means “suffering
with,” although it is sometimes mistakenly thought of as having pity for others.
The kind of compassion I have in mind enables you to have empathy for oth-
ers and for yourself in a way that still holds you and others accountable for
your actions. This kind of compassion does not involve unilateral protection
and enhances the other core values, rather than diminishing them. Compas-
sion comes from the heart. If you act out of compassion rather than out of
fear and guilt, you are able to move beyond defensiveness and be open and
vulnerable. This enables you to engage in conversations in which you can mu-
tually learn with others how to increase your effectiveness.
Core Assumptions. As a facilitative leader, you assume that you have some in-
formation and that others have other information and therefore that other
people may see things you have missed and vice versa. In other words, you
know that you don’t know all that you need to know. This includes recognizing
that you may inadvertently be contributing to problems. This leads you to be
curious and to ask about the ways in which others see you as contributing to
the problems.
You assume that differences are opportunities for learning rather than con-
?icts to be avoided or contests in which you must show that you’re right and
others are wrong. And you assume that people are trying to act with integrity,
given their situations. If people are acting in ways that do not make sense to
you or that you think you understand but disapprove of, you do not conclude
that they are acting that way out of some dubious motive. Instead, you begin
from the assumption that people are striving to do the right thing; part of your
task becomes understanding the reasons for their actions and then evaluating
them accordingly.
You see these interactions as an intriguing puzzle—everyone has some
pieces to offer, and the task is to complete the puzzle together. By exploring
how people see things differently, you can help the group reach a common un-
derstanding that enables you all to move forward in a way that everyone can
support. You are eager to explore differences because you see them as possi-
ble routes to greater understanding and solutions that integrate multiple per-
spectives. Compare these core values and assumptions with those of the
unilateral control model.
292 Creating a Culture of Collaboration
Schuman.c14 7/10/06 11:29 AM Page 292
Principles. Several key principles are associated with the mutual learning core
values and assumptions.
Curiosity is a desire to learn more about something. It motivates you to ?nd
out what information others have that you might be missing and to explore
how others came to a different conclusion rather than simply trying to per-
suade others that their conclusions are wrong.
Transparency is the quality of sharing all relevant information, including
your strategies, in a way that is timely and valid. It includes divulging your
strategy for discussion with the other participants so that together you can
make free and informed choices about your collaboration. Transparency is
dif?cult when you are acting unilaterally because revealing your strategy would
render it ineffective. But being transparent when using a mutual learning ap-
proach actually increases the effectiveness of your strategy, which is now to
learn together rather than to control the situation.
Joint accountability means that you share responsibility for the current situ-
ation, including the eventual consequences. Being accountable means that you
are responsible for addressing your problems with others directly rather than
avoiding them or asking others to do this for you. Instead of seeking to blame
others, you recognize that because you are part of a system, your actions con-
tribute to maintaining the system or changing it.
These three principles—curiosity, transparency, and joint accountability—
are interwoven with the core values and assumptions of the mutual learning
model. Together they are put into action in the strategies that follow.
Strategies. The strategies that facilitative leaders use to implement their core
values and assumptions are also known as the ground rules for effective groups (for
more information, see “Ground Rules for Effective Groups,” by Roger
Schwarz, published by Roger Schwarz & Associates,http://www.schwarzas-
sociates.com). Many of these ground rules are designed to generate valid in-
formation. For example, you test whether the assumptions that you are making
about others are valid before you act on them as if they are true. You share
all the relevant information you have about an issue (whether or not it sup-
ports your position) by using speci?c examples, by explaining the reasoning
that leads to your conclusions, and by stating the underlying needs, interests,
or criteria that are important for you to meet. You create learning opportuni-
ties for yourself and others by asking others to identify things you may have
overlooked after you have shared your thinking. To increase free and informed
Using the Facilitative Leader Approach 293
Schuman.c14 7/10/06 11:29 AM Page 293
choice and internal commitment, you jointly design next steps with others.
And you raise the undiscussable issues that have been keeping the team from
increasing its effectiveness. Using these strategies does not mean that you have
to make decisions by consensus. Although that is an option in the Facilitative
Leader approach, it’s not a requirement.
Consequences. Leaders who use this approach make several outcomes pos-
sible, including increased quality of decisions or results, increased commit-
ment to implementing the results, reduced time for effective implementation,
improved working relationships, increased organizational learning, and en-
hanced personal satisfaction. These outcomes are generated through the fol-
lowing consequences.
Increased Understanding, Reduced Unproductive Con?ict, and Reduced Defensiveness. With
the mutual learning approach, you increase understanding because you test
assumptions and assemble valid information. You also assume that others have
information you do not have and that they may see things you have overlooked.
By assuming that people are striving to act with integrity, you reduce the
negative attributions you make about others. You test attributions you do make
with the people about whom you are making them. By doing so, you reduce
the unproductive con?icts that arise from acting on untested, inaccurate as-
sumptions and the defensive behaviors associated with them. Similarly, you in-
crease trust. Using a mutual learning approach does not ensure that others will
respond nondefensively; however, it does reduce the chance that you will pro-
voke or contribute to others’ defensive reactions.
Reduced Self-Ful?lling, Self-Sealing Processes. Acting on untested, inaccurate as-
sumptions is the ?rst step in self-ful?lling and self-sealing processes. By testing
out your assumptions, you reduce the likelihood of such processes. Even if you
do create a self-ful?lling process, your openness to learning how you created
the problem will reduce the chance that it becomes self-sealing.
Increased Learning, Effectiveness, and Quality of Work Life. All of this information
enables you and others to develop shared meaning that increases learning op-
portunities for yourself and the group. This includes learning how you and
group members each contribute to the group’s effectiveness and ineffective-
ness. Together these results increase the group’s effectiveness—its performance,
294 Creating a Culture of Collaboration
Schuman.c14 7/10/06 11:29 AM Page 294
its process, and the satisfaction of group members’ personal needs. The mu-
tual learning values and assumptions enable you to increase understanding
and trust and reduce defensive behavior. This reduces feelings of anxiety, fear,
and anger that create stress.
How You Think Is How You Lead
When I introduce the Facilitative Leader approach and the mutual learning
model to people, it often seems like common sense to people, and sometimes
they say, “I already do this.” Not until they examine their own speci?c situa-
tions (often with help from others) do they begin to see the gap between how
they think they lead and how they really lead.
The challenge in becoming a facilitative leader is not understanding the
approach or even learning the strategies; it is learning to think differently. It
means unlearning years of employing a unilateral control mind-set that you
used skillfully and effortlessly. Here’s why. If you only learn to apply the strate-
gies of the mutual learning model, you will end up using them with a unilat-
eral control model set of values and assumptions, which will generate the
same negative consequences you’ve gotten in the past. That’s because it’s your
core values and assumptions that drive your strategies and their eventual
consequences.
How Unilateral Control Reduces Collaborative
Structures and Outcomes
To develop a sustainable culture of collaboration, it is not enough to create
conversations congruent with the mutual learning model.
*
Even when individ-
uals have the ability to engage in mutual learning conversations, if group or
organizational structures have unilateral control elements in them, they can
have a powerfully negative effect on organizational members’ ability to collab-
orate. (Borrowing from Allport, 1967, I de?ne structure simply as a stable re-
curring process that results from individuals interacting with each other in certain
ways. Using this de?nition, policies and procedures are forms of structure.)
Using the Facilitative Leader Approach 295
*Portions of this discussion are adapted from Schwarz and Davidson (2005).
Schuman.c14 7/10/06 11:29 AM Page 295
Unfortunately, the unilateral control model that leaders use and that gener-
ates dysfunctional conversations and relationships also leads them to design
team and organizational structures that have unilateral core values and as-
sumptions embedded in them. This is predictable. Leaders use their theory in
use (or mental model) to design group and organizational structures. Given
that many of these structures are designed to avoid some past or potential
threat and that almost everyone uses a unilateral control approach under con-
ditions of threat, you can expect to ?nd unilateral elements embedded in many
of these structures.
Examples of Unilateral Structures
Here are two examples of unilateral structures in client organizations and how
they reduce genuine collaboration.
Managing Performance Problems in Teams. Many organizations tout the
importance of their teams and at the same time set up structures that reduce
teams’ ability to tackle their own challenges. In many organizations, if a team
member is not performing adequately and the supervisor is taking progressive
disciplinary action to address the performance, the supervisor can’t share with
other team members that she has taken these actions or what they are. She
can state only that she is “handling the issue.” This is true even if the other
team members initially raised the performance issue with the entire team and
team leader present and if the team members continue to provide the member
and leader with feedback about that team member’s performance. This pol-
icy protects that employee’s privacy and reduces the risk of liability associated
with possible violations of privacy. It is also based on the unilateral value of
minimizing the expression of negative feelings and the strategy of saving face.
It potentially avoids dif?cult conversations that the manager might have to have
with other employees who want to know what the manager is doing about the
situation. Team members are left making inferences about whether and how
the supervisor is addressing the team member who is having a problem. It
makes undiscussable the poor performance that team members were likely to
have not only seen but also brought to the attention of the leader. Essentially,
it creates a situation in which team members can no longer work together to
support the member having a problem. Removing this support increases the
chance that the person will be moved or ?red. The message implicit in this
structure is that when situations get dif?cult, team collaboration and support
296 Creating a Culture of Collaboration
Schuman.c14 7/10/06 11:29 AM Page 296
are inappropriate. And the structure is the direct result of leaders’ using a uni-
lateral control model.
Establishing Organizational Budgets. Many CEOs exhort their executives
to collaborate to enhance organizational performance and learning rather
than simply focus on their own organizational areas. At the same time, the
budgeting process is often designed so that executives each seek to win out over
the others and hence share and withhold information strategically.
In one organization, department heads prepare their annual budget re-
quests independently and then submit them to the ?nance director. Each ad-
vocates for as much as possible, knowing that there will be subsequent cuts.
The ?nance director consolidates the requests and takes them to the COO,
along with recommendations for cuts. The COO and ?nance director then
go back to each department head individually to tell each one how much (and
in some cases, where) to cut their budgets. Department heads never see one
another’s requests or detailed line-item breakdowns. Most feel that the process
is unfair and assume that cuts are based in part on favoritism, so they try to
outmaneuver one another by the way they present and justify their budgets.
They sometimes make tenuous or questionable links to the COO’s or ?nance
director’s favored initiatives. This process of competition, in?ated requests,
and hidden agendas is commonly referred to as “the budget game.”
Not only does this kind of budget process encourage the withholding of
information, but it also prevents department heads—key organizational lead-
ers—from learning about critical organizational issues and opportunities. It
reinforces the traditional “silo” mentality that often causes leaders to work at
cross-purposes and limits their understanding of interdependence. They are
subsequently blamed by those above and below them in the organization for
not thinking systemically when in fact they lack important information that
would lead them to see key interrelationships in different ways. The structure
itself is designed to reduce collaboration. And the structure is typically estab-
lished using the unilateral control model as a template.
Redesigning Structures for Collaboration
Unless you are working in a relatively new organization, yours probably has
many structures (perhaps too many) for dealing with various issues. Conse-
quently, the task in your organization is likely to be one of redesigning existing
Using the Facilitative Leader Approach 297
Schuman.c14 7/10/06 11:29 AM Page 297
structures so they generate the outcomes of learning and collaboration with-
out leading to unintended consequences. Ultimately, designing collaborative
structures (like designing collaborative conversations) requires leaders who can
operate from a mutual learning model or who are willing to work with some-
one who can help them rigorously re?ect on their mental models. In either
case, there are several steps you can take to redesign structures to make them
collaborative.
Identify the Source
Find out whether the structure (policy, procedure) in question stems from a
law, a generally accepted industry or professional practice, a formal or informal
organizational policy, or a norm in the organization. A policy that originates in
law is obviously more dif?cult to change than a policy developed indepen-
dently by your organization or a policy that is a norm.
Identify Elements That Are Within Your Control
If a structure is actually a norm or a guideline that you have discretion to
adapt, consider amending it so that it reduces unintended consequences. One
client organization has adopted a collaborative budget process in which every-
one involved sits down together at the same time each year and develops an
organizational budget. Department heads frequently offer funding priority to
other departments with more critical needs. All feel responsible for devising a
fair and realistic budget that re?ects organizational rather than departmental
priorities. After several years of collaborative budgeting, these leaders say they
no longer play the budget game, the budget-making process is faster overall,
they engage in better long-range planning and capital budgeting, and the role
of the ?nance and budget staff has moved from control of others to support
and involvement in decision making. The department heads see themselves as
partners rather than competitors.
Similarly, some clients have created teams in which the entire team ad-
dresses problems of team member performance that affect the team. To im-
plement this fundamental change, team members reframed their idea of what
it meant to be accountable to other team members. This included the as-
sumption that if you have relevant information to share about someone on
the team, withholding it or not sharing it in a straightforward manner pre-
298 Creating a Culture of Collaboration
Schuman.c14 7/10/06 11:29 AM Page 298
vents the team from identifying the issues and understanding how various
members may have contributed to the problem. By reframing what it means to
be accountable, team members were able to solve problems that had previ-
ously gone unsolved and increased the ability to work together as a team.
Understand Exactly What the Structure Says and Does Not Say
If it is a written structure such as a policy, examine it and learn ?rsthand what
it says and does not say. If the structure is based on law, explore whether it is
more restrictive than the law requires. If it seems more restrictive than your
understanding of the law on which it is based, ?nd out whether that is the in-
tent. If it’s not, you may have more freedom to redesign it. If the structure is
unwritten, explore with the people responsible for it what it requires. Do not
assume that a practice is a formal policy or law simply because someone tells
you it is. Verify the information; ask the relevant people to document the de-
tails. In my experience, organizational members sometimes cite something as
policy or law because they have been told it is policy or law, yet when asked
to do so, no one is able to produce any evidence to that effect.
Explore the assumptions, values, and interests that the designers used to
generate the structure. Share your assumptions, values, interests, and the un-
intended consequences you see of the current structure. Structures are solu-
tions that leaders design to address perceived problems or opportunities.
Interests are needs that the structure takes into account or criteria that the
structure needs to meet. For example, a typical interest or criterion for any
performance feedback system is that it be designed in a way that provides the
recipients with accurate and usable information. Be curious about the inter-
ests that generated a particular structure. Identify interests that are not being
met by the current structure, and ask for reactions from relevant parties.
Leaders also use their own values and assumptions to design structures—
and this is how structures often become embedded with unilateral control ele-
ments. For example, using the unilateral control core value of minimizing
expression of negative feelings, leaders usually structure performance feedback
to be anonymous (unless it comes directly from the boss). Similarly, using the
unilateral control assumption of “I’m right and anyone who disagrees is wrong,”
leaders design the structure so that when a manager gives a direct report feed-
back, the performance rating is already established and is rarely open to being
changed. These core values and assumptions lead to the misunderstanding,
Using the Facilitative Leader Approach 299
Schuman.c14 7/10/06 11:29 AM Page 299
defensiveness, and limited learning associated with the unilateral control out-
comes. Helping leaders explore the unintended consequences of their core
values and assumptions is a crucial step in redesign.
Explore Redesigns in Accordance with the Mutual Learning Model
Explore whether and how a structure or policy can be designed and imple-
mented so that it re?ects the values and assumptions of the mutual learning
model and also addresses the interests you have identi?ed. In one learning or-
ganization I know of, when policies come up for review (because they are not
meeting organization needs or are perceived as being inconsistent with the
values), the leadership team or a selected group of employees is given the task
of reviewing the policy and identifying the interests that a new policy must
satisfy. When a new policy is written, the interests that it is attempting to meet
are stated in the ?rst paragraph. Then the guidelines are given. There are usu-
ally several acceptable ways to meet the stated interests, and providing choices
signi?cantly increases commitment to following desired practices.
In the case of performance feedback, new solutions become possible with
the shift from unilateral control to mutual learning values and assumptions.
For example, if the person giving feedback does not assume that he or she is
necessarily right, the feedback conversation becomes a setting in which both
parties can be genuinely curious about how to work more effectively together,
which includes the possibility of the manager’s changing his or her behavior.
By rigorously examining organizational and team structures and re-
designing them when appropriate, leaders create structures that foster genuine
collaboration and learning.
Conclusion
Creating a culture of collaboration requires that all parties involved jointly de-
sign ways to work together to meet their related interests and learn with and
from each other, sharing responsibility, authority, and accountability for achiev-
ing results. Sustaining a culture of collaboration involves facilitating collabo-
ration conversation and supporting structures that make collaborative behavior
possible. The Facilitative Leader approach, which has the mutual learning
model at its core, is one successful approach to creating an organizational cul-
ture of collaboration.
300 Creating a Culture of Collaboration
Schuman.c14 7/10/06 11:29 AM Page 300
References
Allport, F. H. “A Theory of Enestruence (Event Structure Theory): Report of Progress.”
American Psychologist, 1967, 22, 1–24.
Argyris, C. “Re?ecting on Laboratory Education from a Theory of Action Perspective.”
Journal of Applied Behavioral Science, 1979, 15, 296–310.
Argyris, C., Putnam, R. W,, and Smith, D. M. Action Science: Concepts, Methods, and Skills for
Research and Intervention. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 1985.
Argyris, C., and Schön, D. A. Theory in Practice: Increasing Professional Effectiveness. San
Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 1974.
Chrislip, D. D., and Larson, C. E. Collaborative Leadership: How Citizens and Civic Leaders
Can Make a Difference. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 1994.
Putnam, R. W., Smith, D. M., and MacArthur, P. Workshop Materials. Newton, Mass.:
Action Design, 1997.
Schwarz, R. The Skilled Facilitator: A Comprehensive Resource for Consultants, Facilitators, Man-
agers, Trainers, and Coaches. (rev. ed.) San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2002.
Schwarz, R., and Davidson, A. “Integrating the Skilled Facilitator Approach with Orga-
nizational Policies and Procedures.” In R. Schwarz, A. Davidson, P. Carlson, and S.
McKinney, The Skilled Facilitator Fieldbook: Tips, Tools, and Tested Methods for Consultants,
Facilitators, Managers, Trainers, and Coaches. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2005.
Using the Facilitative Leader Approach 301
Schuman.c14 7/10/06 11:29 AM Page 301
doc_429609492.pdf