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Contents contributed and discussions participated by Stephan Dohrn

Stephan Dohrn

What Makes a Good Collaborative Leader?Collaborative Innovation - 0 views

  • n his book, Practically Radical, William C. Taylor (cofounder of Fast Company magazine) writes about collaborative leadership. Taylor believes that collaborative leadership is about ”collective capability,” not just collective intelligence.  That is, leaders create the conditions in which diverse people work together to solve a tough challenge.
Stephan Dohrn

Practical Radicals | Fast Company - 0 views

  • Meyerson defines tempered radicals as employees who operate on a fault line. They are committed to the organization that they work for. To some measure, moreover, they want to advance on their employer's terms; their company's success is theirs too. At the same time, though, they are at odds with their company. Marginalized by gender, race, or ideology, they identify with causes that defy the dominant culture. While they feel bound to their organization's goals, they also aim to stay true to their own personal ideals. And so they pursue change, constantly challenging the status quo.
Stephan Dohrn

Platforms - are they a distraction to the real work of knowledge sharing? « K... - 0 views

  • No technological tool or implementation is perfect for Knowledge Management related work, and people’s tastes differ in terms of how they prefer to use technology and these patterns change over time – we have to accept that there are no silver bullets in technology. If we focus too much on the tools and not enough on what we are trying to achieve with them then we risk to develop tools that no-one will use, or tools that will reinforce existing knowledge silos and bad sharing practices.
Stephan Dohrn

Rise of the networked enterprise: Web 2.0 finds its payday - McKinsey Quarterly - Organ... - 0 views

  • McKinsey’s new survey research finds that companies using the Web intensively gain greater market share and higher margins.
Stephan Dohrn

The Big Failure of Enterprise 2.0 Social Business | Beyond the Cube - 0 views

  • I believe it will be rare that culture change will be one of the first things accomplished or changed in a short period of time.  Culture will change as a result of the pervasive use of social tools.  Lack of cultural change is not social business’s biggest failure.  The biggest failure is the lack of workflow integration to drive culture change.
Stephan Dohrn

We Are Media - Tool Box - 0 views

  • Social Media Tool Box created by the WeAreMedia community
Stephan Dohrn

Center for Nonprofit Excellence: The CNE in Charlottesville, VA - 0 views

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    Collection of links and research papers on Collaboration
Stephan Dohrn

Research | Columbia News - 1 views

  • Sparrow’s research reveals that we forget things we are confident we can find on the Internet. We are more likely to remember things we think are not available online. And we are better able to remember where to find something on the Internet than we are at remembering the information itself.
Stephan Dohrn

Switch off and stay on through worlidays - FT.com - 0 views

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    promoting virtual work
Stephan Dohrn

The Network Community: An Introduction to Networks in the Global Village - 0 views

  • Wherever they have looked, researchers have found thriving communities. This is so well documented that there is no longer any scholarly need to demonstrate that community ties exist everywhere, although the alarmed public, politicians and pundits need to be constantly reassured and re-educated. But there is a pressing need to understand what kinds of community flourish, what communities do — and do not do — for people, and how communities operate in different social systems.
Stephan Dohrn

Is Multitasking Evil? Or Are Most of Us Illiterate? | Britannica Blog - 0 views

  • there is an as-yet undocumented literacy in the relatively unexplored middle, a partially mental and partially technical skill at deploying the appropriate attentional style with the appropriate media at the appropriate time
  • the need to balance a defense against becoming overloaded by the overwhelming influx of mediated information with a need to know the most accurate and fresh information that will be professionally and personally useful.
Stephan Dohrn

The Unselfish Gene - Harvard Business Review - 0 views

  • overview of the evolution of cooperation in Science magazine, “Perhaps the most remarkable aspect of evolution is its ability to generate cooperation in a competitive world. Thus, we might add ‘natural cooperation’ as a third fundamental principle of evolution beside mutation and natural selection.”
Stephan Dohrn

Networks are not always revolutionary | Technology | guardian.co.uk - 0 views

  • And fame is necessary – but not sufficient – for a commercially successful career in the arts.That quality of "necessary but not sufficient" surfaces again and again in discussions of the transformative power of the internet. It's also the source of much of the controversy about just how transformative the internet actually is.
Stephan Dohrn

Get more done by being a better listener - Online Collaboration - 0 views

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    Listening is an essential skill for any virtual worker - even more important than in traditional team settings
Stephan Dohrn

Tips for Using Experiential Training Games - 0 views

  • games are powerful metaphors. That means, like stories, they can and do mean different things to different people. The task of the facilitator is to ensure that all participants get the message in the game that is relevant to themselves and translate that message back to the workplace. In other words, the purpose of the game is to have participants see things differently and as a result positively change some element of their workplace behaviour.
Stephan Dohrn

How social influence can undermine the wisdom of crowd effect - 0 views

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    Summary: "Although groups are initially "wise," knowledge about estimates of others narrows the diversity of opinions to such an extent that it undermines the wisdom of crowd effect in three different ways. The "social influence effect" diminishes the diversity of the crowd without improvements of its collective error. The "range reduction effect" moves the position of the truth to peripheral regions of the range of estimates so that the crowd becomes less reliable in providing expertise for external observers. The "confidence effect" boosts individuals' confidence after convergence of their estimates despite lack of improved accuracy. Examples of the revealed mechanism range from misled elites to the recent global financial crisis."
Stephan Dohrn

Can Absence Make a Team Grow Stronger? - Harvard Business Review - 3 views

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    Summary: "The scores of successful virtual teams the authors examined didn't have many of the psychological and practical obstacles that plagued their more traditional, face-to-face counterparts. Team members felt freer to contribute--especially outside their established areas of expertise. The fact that such groups could not assemble easily actually made their projects go faster, as people did not wait for meetings to make decisions, and individuals, in the comfort of their own offices, had full access to their files and the complementary knowledge of their local colleagues. Reaping those advantages, though, demanded shrewd management of a virtual team's work processes and social dynamics. Rather than depend on videoconferencing or e-mail, which could be unwieldy or exclusionary, successful virtual teams made extensive use of sophisticated online team rooms, where everyone could easily see the state of the work in progress, talk about the work in ongoing threaded discussions, and be reminded of decisions, rationales, and commitments. Differences were most effectively hashed out in teleconferences, which team leaders also used to foster group identity and solidarity."
Stephan Dohrn

Leading Virtual Teams: Managing When People Are At A Distance - 0 views

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    Presentation of little less than 1 hour
Stephan Dohrn

Harvard Business Review on Building Better Teams - Harvard Business Review - 1 views

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    Summary: "Most teams underperform. Yours can beat the odds. If you need the best practices and ideas for superior team building--but don't have time to find them--this book is for you. Here are 10 inspiring and useful perspectives, all in one place. This collection of HBR articles will help you: boost team performance through mutual accountability, motivate large, diverse groups to tackle complex projects, increase groups' emotional intelligence, reverse the fortunes of a struggling team, prevent decision deadlock, extract results from a bunch of touchy superstars, fight constructively with top-management colleagues, and ensure productivity in far-flung teams."
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