Title: Engineering and Facilitation
1Engineering and Facilitation
Bob Briggs University of Alaska Delft University
of Technology University of Nebraska at Omaha
2http//groupsystems.dist-ed.uaf.eduLogins
UAF01 UAF10Passwords group!
3Which is BobsExciting Secret Identity?
- Bob Briggs
- Rowed alone across the Atlantic
- Sang with Elvis in Concert
- Invented the Internet
4Photographic Evidence
Elvis
Bob
5- Bob
- Rowing alone
- in England
- (Which is, in fact, across the Atlantic)
6Who Is This Bob, Anyway?
- Scholar?
- Adventurer?
- Snappy dresser?
7Bob?
- Ees just zis guy, you know?
8Engineers on FacilitationWho Cares?
- You chose a profession where you must work with
groups - Your first promotion will make you a group leader
- Your promotions will come faster with
facilitation skills - Collaboration can be engineered
9The Trouble with Teamwork
Waiting to speak
Wrong People
Domination
Groupthink
Fear of Speaking
Poor Grasp of Problem
Misunderstanding
Ignored Alternatives
Inattention
POOR
Lack of Consensus
Lack of Focus
TEAMWORK
Poor Planning
Inadequate Criteria
Hidden Agendas
Premature Decisions
Conflict
Missing Information
Inadequate Resources
Distractions
Poorly Defined Goals
Digressions
10A Solution
- Facilitation Skills
- Methods and tools for moving a group toward its
goals - Efficiently
- Effectively
11Engineers View of Facilitators
12Facilitiators View of Engineers
13What Makes A Group Productive?
Cognitive Effort Over Time
Commun- ication
Goal Congruence
Productivity
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-
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Info Access
Deliberation
14What Does A Facilitator Really Do?
15The value of facilitation
- Reduce information overload
- Reduce communication overload
- Structure deliberation
- Minimize distraction
- Align Vested Interests
16The Role of the Facilitator
- To plan for, to monitor for, and to intervene to
improve issues of - Communication
- Deliberation
- Information Access
- Goal Congruence
- Distraction
17Most Valuable Facilitator Contribution
- Help the meeting owner define the goal
- What is the deliverable the group will produce?
- To whom will the deliverable be valuable?
- What value does it have?
- What will be done with it?
18Facilitator Tasks
- Establish the goal and deliverables
- Design a process for achieving the group goal
- Conduct the process on behalf of the group
- Keep the focus
- Mediate conflicts
- Distribute Deliverables
19What do groups really do?
20General Patterns of Collaboration
- Generate
- Move from fewer to more ideas
- Converge
- Move from more to fewer ideas
- Organize
- Move from less to more understanidng of
relationships among ideas - Evaluate
- Move from less to more understanding of value of
ideas - Build Consensus
- Move from fewer to more people willing to commit
to a proposal
21ThinkLets
- Named, scripted facilitation activities that
create known patterns of collaboration - Building blocks for group process designs
22Requirements NegotiationA Challenging Domain
for Engineers
23Technical Perspective on Requirements
- Are requirements complete, consistent and
correct? - Do requirements communicate designers intent
unambiguously?
24The Engineered Swing
25Boehms Law
- There is no complete and well-defined set of
requirements waiting to be discovered
26What is a System Requirement?
- That which a stakeholder needs, wants, or desires?
- A formally specified agreement with respect to
the project
27Understand Constraints
- Requirements depend on available resources and
capabilities.
28Boehms MaximIn Engineering ProjectsWin-lose
Generally Becomes Lose-lose
29Win-Lose Generally Becomes Lose-Lose
Proposed Solution
Loser
Winner
Quick, Cheap, Sloppy Product
Developer Customer
User
Lots of bells and whistles
Developer User
Customer
Driving too hard a bargain
Customer User
Developer
Nobody wins in these situations
30WinWin Perspective
- Success-critical stakeholders negotiate and
prioritize the requirements
31Who Are The Stakeholders?
- Customers
- Users
- Programmers
- Architects
- Domain Experts
- Analysts
- Marketing
- Sales
- Management
- ?
32- Requirements emerge from a process of
co-operative learning.
33The Boehm Principle
- You dont know the requirements until the project
is finished
34The Project Requirements Mess
PROJECT REQUIREMENTS
35An Engineered Requirements Process
- FreeBrainstorm
- What must happen for you to come out of this
project a winner - FastFocus
- What are the most important win conditions
- LeafHopper
- Issues
- Options
- HorseTrader
- Agreements
36People submit and share ideas about their win
conditions using electronic discussion sheets
37Team builds a clean list of win conditions and
organizes win conditions into pre-defined buckets
38Red cells indicate lack of consensus. Oral
discussion of cell graph reveals unshared
information, unnoticed assumptions, hidden
issues, constraints, etc.
39Low Hanging Fruits
Maybe later
Forget them
Important with hurdles
After voting,win conditions are displayed in
four categories
40Issues are captured as subheadings to win
conditions
41Elaborate Options
Options are captured as subheadings to issues
42Agreements are captured as subheadings to options
and win conditions
43Facilitation Resources
44Facilitation Resources
- Mining Group Gold
- Thomas Kayser
- Amazon price 2.50 (Used)
45Facilitation Resources
How to Make Meetings Workby Michael Doyle, David
Straus Amazon Price 0.01 (Used)
46Facilitation Resources
- The Skilled Facilitator
- By Roger Schwartz
- Amazon Price 32 (Used)
47Facilitation Resources
- International Association of Facilitators
- www.iaf-world.org