I recently received this comment about my blog of Jan 3, Working in the We Hours:
Nice.
Still though, there is research that says, people are not the most
creative in groups (as in brainstorming). But rather when they have a
chance to (also) brainstorm privately. I would love to know your views
on that, and on groupthink more specifically. I find that close
communities, whether traditional or ICs, for all their virtues, promote
groupthink via peer pressure. The ol' "I have to live with these people,
so I better not be honest."
This is a good topic. Cooperative culture is not about producing and maintaining a mind meld. Nonetheless, you do want people to exercise appropriate discipline, by which I mean:
o Speaking on topic
o Avoiding repetition
o Keeping an open mind (especially when someone says something surprising or a odds with your views)
o Looking for ways to connect ideas, rather than pitting them against each other
There
is an important difference between not rocking the boat (going along to
get along) and having a positive attitude about finding a mutually
agreeable path forward.
In
my experience, the key element is the way the group handles the
Discussion and Proposal phases when wrangling with an issue. [For more
detail about these phases, see Consensus from Soup to Nuts.]
1.
First of all it's important that the group treats them as separate
phases, to be completed in sequence. That's both because you want
different energy for the two phases, and because you need the output of
Discussion phase to know what screens to use for assessing proposals.
2.
In Discussion phase you're trying to identify the factors that a good
response to the issue needs to take into account—setting the table, as
it were, for the problem solving that will come next. By keeping
proposal generating assiduously separate from factor identification, it
protects the group from short circuiting that can occur when by dancing
back and forth between the two. If someone mentions a potential factor
in brainstorm mode and it's immediately followed by a statement
undercutting the suggestion, or by riffing on how to address it, that
either dampens creativity or diffuses energy—neither of which is a good
thing.
For brainstorms to work well they need to be free flowing and unevaluated until after
all the input has been gathered. Critical comments midstream inhibit
the flow, which directly relates to the question about the
susceptibility of intentional communities to groupthink. The way to
avoid a gravitational pull toward conformity (groupthink) is the
adequate care and feeding of differences: are they welcomed, or
attacked?
In
a voting environment ideas have to survive in a shark tank, where the
operant rule is survival of the fittest. The potential of cooperative
culture is not realized unless it is robust enough to make it safe for
members to express dissent. To be clear, members should always be
thinking about what's best for the group, but that should not produce
lock-step thinking, or deferral to what the leaders say.
Here are other thoughts about ways communities can be on guard against groupthink:
3.
If whole group brainstorming doesn't work for some members of the
group, you can mix it up by doing it first in small groups and then
aggregating the results in the whole circle (sure there will be a lot of
overlap, but you will have protected some aspects of creativity).
Alternately, you could give everyone a sheet of paper and 10 minutes to
silently brainstorm before the ideas are collected. The value in not
doing either of these things is the potential for one person's answer to
creatively trigger an inspiration in another. This kind of synergy is
sharply curtailed (or even lost) if brainstorms are always done in small
groups or alone.
Sometimes you have to be creative about formats in order to protect creative input.
4.
All of this said, it's true that there can be pressure to conform in
intentional communities (this would all go a lot easier if you'd just go
with the flow). I think this comes from arrested development of the
group's culture. In particular, being stuck in what Scott Peck styled
"false community," the first of four stages:
false community
emptiness
chaos
true community
In
false community, members act nice with one another before a solid basis
for connection has been established (fake it til you make it). Dissent
is suppressed, and expressing disagreement is seen as a social faux pas.
There is the veneer of unity, but it's brittle and shallow. In true
community it's OK to disagree, because there is sufficient social fabric
for the group to hold dissent without tearing the group apart.
Seen
through this lens, communities that are stuck in the first stage may
indeed be susceptible to groupthink, but that shouldn't be the case in
groups that have reached stage four, where the closing quote from my
reader gets turned on its head:
I have to live with these people, so I better be honest.
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