Following is a summary of my reservations about sociocracy
(aka Dynamic Governance) as a governance system for cooperative groups—especially ones depending on
voluntary participation. I'm just not that excited about it.
In this monograph I am paying particular attention to how
this contrasts with consensus, which is the main horse that sociocracy is
stalking. (Do not assign any meaning to the order in which I’ve presented my
points.)
1.
Does not address emotional input
One of
my main concerns with this system is that there is no mention in its
articulation of how to understand or work with emotions. As I see this as an essential component of group dynamics,
this is a serious flaw.
I even had one advocate tell me once that when you use
sociocracy no one gets upset. Puleeease! If you have a system that only works
well when everyone is thinking and behaving rationally then you have an
unstable equilibrium. This is not a system; it's a fragment.
2.
Double linking of committees (or “circles” in sociocratic parlance)
When a
group is large enough (probably anything past 12, and maybe smaller) it makes
sense to create a committee structure to delegate tasks. While people can serve
on more than one committee, it’s naturally important to have a clear
understanding of how each committee relates to each other, and to the whole.
While
the above paragraph is Organizational Structure 101, in sociocracy there is the
added wrinkle that committees regularly working together (as when one oversees
the other, or when two committees are expected to collaborate regularly) are
asked to place a representative in each related committee. These reps (one each
way) serve as liaisons and communications links from one committee to the
other, helping to ensure that messages and their nuances are more accurately
transmitted.
While
this sounds good in theory (and may work well in practice in the corporate
environment for which sociocracy was originally created), it runs smack into a
chronic problem in cooperative groups that are highly dependent on committee
slots filled by volunteers: too many slots and too few people to fill them
well. In 27 years as a process consultant for cooperative groups, I don’t
recall ever having encountered a group that reported being able to easily fill
all of its committee and manager positions. Sociocracy blithely asks that
groups add an additional layer of responsibility to what they already have in
place, which means even more committee assignments. It’s unworkable.
3.
Selection process calls for surfacing candidate concerns on the spot
One of
the trickier aspects of cooperative group dynamics is handling critical
feedback well. That includes several non-trivial challenges:
o Creating a culture in which critical
feedback relative to group function is valued and encouraged.
o Helping people find the courage to say
hard things.
o Helping people with critical things to
say to sort out (and process separately) any upset or reactivity they are
carrying in association with the critique, so that they don’t unload on the
person when offering feedback.
o Helping recipients respond to critical feedback openly, not
defensively.
Even
though the goal is worthy, none of these is necessarily easy to do, and my
experience in the field has taught me the value of giving people choices in
how best to give and receive critical feedback. (For some it's absolutely excruciating to be criticized in public.)
In the
case of sociocracy, the model calls for selecting people to fill positions
(such as a managership or committee seat) in an up-tempo process where you call
for nominations, discuss candidate suitability, and make a decision all in one
go.
While
that is admirable for its efficiency, you cannot convince me that this promotes
full disclosure of reservations, complete digestion of critical statements
(without dyspepsia), or thoughtful consideration of flawed candidates. While I
can imagine this approach working fine in a group comprised wholly of mature,
self-aware individuals, how many groups like that do you know? Me neither.
4.
The concepts of “paramount” concerns, and “consent” versus “consensus”
Sociocracy
makes a large deal out of participants only expressing: a) preferences about
what should be taken into account; or b) reservations about proposals, if they
constitute “paramount” concerns. Unfortunately, the term “paramount” is
undefined and results in considerable confusion about what
the standard represents. I believe that this maps well onto the basic consensus
principle that you should be voicing what you believe is best for the group—as
distinct from personal preferences—and that you should only speak if your
concern is non-trivial. In short, I have not found this principle to be
illuminating, or distinctive from consensus thinking.
The
second piece of confusing rhetoric is insisting that sociocracy is about
seeking “consent” rather than “consensus.” I believe that the aim in this
attempt it to encourage an atmosphere of “is it good enough,” in contrast with
“is it perfect”?
To be sure, there is
anxiety among consensus users about being held hostage by an obstinate minority
that may be unwilling to let a proposal go forward because they see how bad
results are possible and are afraid of being stuck with them. This leads to
paralysis. While it shouldn’t be hard to change an ineffective agreement (once
experience with its application has exposed its weaknesses), I believe a better
way to manage tyranny-of-the-minority dynamics is by educating participants
(read consensus training) and developing a high-trust culture characterized by
good listening, and proposal development that takes into account all views.
In the
end, sociocracy’s “consent” is not significantly different from “consensus”;
it’s just playing with words.
5.
Rounds are not always the best format
Sociocracy
is in love with Rounds, where everyone has a protected chance to offer comments
on the matter at hand. While it’s laudable to protect everyone’s opportunity
for input, this is only one of many choices available for how to solicit input
on topics (others include open discussion, sharing circles, individual writing,
small group breakout, silence, guided visualization, fishbowls). Each has their
purpose, as well as their advantages and liabilities.
While
Rounds are great at protecting talking time for those more timid about pushing
their way into an open discussion, and serve as an affective muzzle for those
inclined to take up more than their share of air time, they tend to be slow
and repetitive. If you speed them up (Lightning Rounds) this addresses time
use, yet at the expense of bamboozling those who find speaking in group
daunting, or are naturally slower to know their mind and be ready to speak.
If you
only have a hammer (one tool), pretty soon everything starts looking like a
nail and reality is not nearly so one-dimensional and who wants to lie down on a bed of nails anyway? You need more tools in
the box.
6.
Starting with proposals
In
sociocracy (and in many groups using consensus as well) there is the
expectation that when an item comes to plenary it will be in the form of a
proposal ("here is the issue and here is a suggested solution"). In fact, you
won’t get time on the plenary agenda unless you have a proposal.
While
this forces the shepherd to be ready for plenary (a good thing) and can
sometimes save time (when the proposal is excellent and does a good job of
anticipating what needs to be taken into account and balancing the factors
well), it can also be a train wreck. Far better, in my experience, is that if
something is worthy of plenary attention, that you not begin proposal
development until after the plenary has agreed on what factors the proposal needs to
address, and with what relative weight. If the manager or committee guesses at
these (in order to get time on the agenda) they may invest considerably in a
solution that just gets trashed.
Not only
is this demoralizing for the proposal generators, but it skews the conversation
about how to respond to the issue (“What needs to be taken into account in
addressing this issue?” is a different question than “Does this proposal
adequately address this concern?”) In essence, leading with the proposal is
placing the cart (the solution) before the horse (what the solution needs to
balance).
Cooperative
groups make this mistake a lot, and sociocracy follows them right down the same
rabbit hole.