Ownership vs. collaboration, cooperation, working together
The culture in Nokia is to split the tasks and to name people to be
responsible for them.
The unstated rationale is an effectiveness bound to the
personalization of responsibilities. This culture is well-adapted when
the tasks may be carried upon in large independence, or respecting a
tight hierarchy of power: when I need somebody else's involvement, I
can order him to perform a sub-task, myself not loosing the control
over the "higher-level" context.
This effectiveness quickly degrades as the situation of
communication gets more complex:
- the tasks cannot be bound in time
- some dependencies are beyond control
- the expertise is not distributed hierarchically
- the knowledge is not safely acquired before the action starts
(one gets wiser as one goes)
The result of this degradation is:
- duplication of work: work is performed in parallel within
different contexts, ignoring each others
- poor quality: the best experience is not available, not
concentrated; the results are not guaranteed to be consistent
with each other; they can be jeopardized by any new effort
- poor commitment: insecurity
- politics:
people are the key to access the information and resources;
effort is better spent in securing relationships than directly
in the tasks.
Split or share,
communications,
quantity of information,
functions of language,
dimensions of information,
SCM culture,
personal logging
Collaboration ToC
Marc Girod
Last modified: Fri Dec 28 14:55:34 EET 2001