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Collaboration, Coordination and Cooperation for Action

Collaboration, Coordination and Cooperation for Action. Jacqueline N. Epping State Orientation Meeting 2008. Distinguishing Elements. Vision and relationship Structure, responsibilities, and communication Authority and accountability Resources, risks and rewards.

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Collaboration, Coordination and Cooperation for Action

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  1. Collaboration, Coordination and Cooperation for Action Jacqueline N. Epping State Orientation Meeting 2008

  2. Distinguishing Elements Vision and relationship Structure, responsibilities, and communication Authority and accountability Resources, risks and rewards

  3. Characteristics of Cooperation • Informal relationships • No commonly defined mission, structure or planning • Information shared as needed • Authority retained by each organization • Resources and rewards separate • No risk

  4. Characteristics of Coordination More formal relationships Compatible missions Some planning and division of roles Communication channels are established Most authority and accountability with individual organizations

  5. Characteristics of Coordination (cont.) Resources available to participants Rewards mutually acknowledged, may be shared for a specific project Some risk

  6. Characteristics of Collaboration • More durable and pervasive relationships • New structure with full commitment to common mission • Comprehensive planning and formal communication channels on multiple levels

  7. Characteristics of Collaboration (cont.) Authority determined by the collaborative Resources pooled or jointly secured Products are shared Risk is great

  8. A brief exercise…. Think about a recent, current or proposed joint endeavor Based on the major distinguishing elements, is it a cooperative, coordinated or collaborative effort? Is it what you thought it was? Is it what you want it to be? What would you need to change to make it what you want?

  9. What makes collaboration successful?Twenty success factors • Six major categories • Environment • Membership characteristics • Process and structure • Communications • Purpose • Resources

  10. Environment • History of collaboration or coordination • Collaborative group seen as legitimate leader, reliable and competent • Favorable political and social climate

  11. Membership Characteristics • Mutual respect, understanding and trust • Appropriate cross-section of members • Members see collaboration as in their self interest • Ability to compromise to reach consensus

  12. Process and structure • Members feel ownership and share a stake in both process and structure • Multiple layers of participation • Flexibility in process and structure • Clear roles, rights, responsibilities • Adaptability to changing circumstances • Appropriate pace for structure, resources, activities

  13. Communication Open and frequent formal communication Includes informal relationships and communication

  14. Purpose Concrete, attainable goals and objectives Shared vision, agreed upon mission, objectives, and strategies Unique purpose – differs at least in part, from member organizations’ mission, goals, or approach

  15. Resources Sufficient funds, staff, materials, time Skilled leadership – organizational, interpersonal skills, fairness

  16. The short list….. • Mutual respect, understanding, and trust (27) • Sufficient funds, staff, materials, and time (20) • Appropriate cross section of members (18) • Multiple layers of participation (17)

  17. The short list (cont.)…… • Members see collaboration as in their self interest (15) • Clear roles, rights, and responsibilities (15) • Open and frequent communication (15) • Shared vision

  18. When should you collaborate? When it’s the best way to arrange partners to accomplish tasks, address issues and/or fulfill a mission It’s a tool – not always the best or only way “Collaboration doesn’t always constitute the best way to accomplishment, any more than a pair of pliers is always the best tool for household repairs”

  19. Examining your own collaborative project Read each item Circle the number that indicates your agreement or disagreement with each statement Identify your strongest and weakest factors Compare to the success factors and particularly the “short list”

  20. Group Think How is your collaboration doing in relation to “the short list”? To the total twenty factors? To the six major factors? Where are the collaboration’s strengths? Needs or weaknesses? What’s the impact of the strengths and weaknesses on the process? Products? How might the collaborative strengthen the weaker areas? What might you do to enhance the collaboration?

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