Friends at the Milun Women’s Centre in Chapeltown are at it again.
Planning great things.
And they want to hear your ideas!
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No-one can agree on a community. Is it defined by political geography? Physical geography? Economic geography? Interest, practice, culture? So how do we use such an elusive, slippery yet, for some of us, attractive and powerful concept?
Well, personally I have given up worrying about how ‘communities’ are defined by outsiders (politicians, funders, missionaries of various kinds, what Paul Theroux calls the Dark Angels of Virtue). The only thing that matters for me is the individual, or the usually small group sat in front of me, and their perception of their community, defined their way. Any other attempt to work with the concept for me is just hot air. We all define community personally and, very probably, uniquely.
But that does not make the concept useless. Quite the opposite.
I spend a lot of time helping people to look at the relationships and contexts that they are a part of and the extent to which they help or hinder them to become the kind of person that they wish to become, accomplishing the things that they most wish to accomplish. And I will spend time working with them on how they can get more of the support that they need from their ‘community’. I spend a lot of time and energy building networks of people who just love to ‘help’. Many of these networks are a blend of face to face and online – mediated through blogs and social networks as well as through a range of meetings, gatherings and parties. And I try to connect individuals from one network into individuals from another, so that help can start to flow across and between different groups.
So first we have to find self interest. That which really matters personally. That which shapes who we are. That on which our identity is based and through which it can be constructively shaped.
Then we have to find common cause and build networks and relationships where we can successfully negotiate our self interest. We then forge connections between these networks to build a diverse, resourceful ‘community’ of individuals who are helping and being helped as part of their daily practice. Surely this puts us firmly on the trail of the enterprising community?
And for great things to happen people have to learn to help each other. The stereotype of the selfish backstabbing ‘Apprentice’ does not thrive in an enterprising community – though they may do well in The City. Successful citizens in the enterprising community learn to associate, collaborate, cooperate and mutualise. To find those with whom there is a common cause. And they understand that giving hep to others is as important as getting help themselves. The have theGo-Giver mindset and they express it through their actions. They live it.
So, as those who attended Enterprising Community: Big Conversation explored, enterprising community is not a place or a neighbourhood but a philosophy, that can be summed up as ‘Concentrate on yourself and helping your neighbour’.
And where does entrepreneurship fit into this practice? How does this help the start up rate? Well the more powerful and enterprising individuals we have, embedded in enterprising communities the more great start-ups we will have, borne into a context where they may well enjoy the support of a wide web of community. We are truly building a community where enterprise and entrepreneurship may thrive.
by admin
No-one can agree on a community. Is it defined by political geography? Physical geography? Economic geography? Interest, practice, culture? So how do we use such an elusive, slippery yet, for some of us, attractive and powerful concept.
Well, personally I have given up worrying about how ‘communities’ are defined by outsiders (politicians, funders, missionaries of various kinds, what Paul Theroux calls the Dark Angels of Virtue). The only thing that matters for me is the individual, or the usually small group sat in front of me, and their perception of their community, defined their way. Any other attempt to work with the concept for me is just hot air. We all define community personally and, very probably, uniquely.
But that does not make the concept useless. Quite the opposite.
I spend a lot of time helping people to look at the relationships and contexts that they are a part of and the extent to which they help or hinder them to become the kind of person that they wish to become, accomplishing the things that they most wish to accomplish. And I will spend time working with them on how they can get more of the support that they need from their ‘community’. I spend a lot of time and energy building networks of people who just love to ‘help’. Many of these networks are a blend of face to face and online – mediated through blogs and social networks as well as through a range of meetings, gatherings and parties. And I try to connect individuals from one network into individuals from another, so that help can start to flow across and between different groups.
So first we have to find self interest. That which really matters personally. That which shapes who we are. That on which our identity is based and through which it can be constructively shaped.
Then we have to find common cause and build networks and relationships where we can successfully negotiate our self interest. We then forge connections between these networks to build a diverse, resourceful ‘community’ of individuals who are helping and being helped as part of their daily practice. Surely this puts us firmly on the trail of the enterprising community?
And for great things to happen people have to learn to help each other. The stereotype of the selfish backstabbing ‘Apprentice’ does not thrive in an enterprising community – though they may do well in The City. Successful citizens in the enterprising community learn to associate, collaborate, cooperate and mutualise. To find those with whom there is a common cause. And they understand that giving hep to others is as important as getting help themselves. The have the Go-Giver mindset and they express it through their actions. They live it.
So, as those who attended Enterprising Community: Big Conversation explored, enterprising community is not a place or a neighbourhood but a philosophy, that can be summed up as ‘Concentrate on yourself and helping your neighbour’.
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One of my favourite frameworks for thinking about team work was published in a book called Dialogue by Bill Isaacs.
The model suggests that if a group is to make progress it needs to have 4 distinct roles handled effectively.
Firstly it need Movers. These are people who float ideas, lead initiatives and generally make things happen. Spontaneous, action orientated and often extrovert – happy to put their ideas out there. In a community I often think that these Movers are akin to entrepreneurs.
But a productive group also needs skilled Followers. These are people who can take the energy and ideas of the Movers and build on them, add to them, take of the rough edges, put in the hard work and generally get the job done. They are close to what Mike Southon calls cornerstones. People who help turn the vision into reality.
But in addition to Movers and Followers a productive group also needs effective Opposers. These are people who are going to check the facts, collect the evidence and if there is an objection to be raised, they will raise it. Constructively, powerfully and effectively. They will skilfully play the role of the Devil’s Advocate and if there is a weakness or a fault-line in the thinking they WILL find it.
And finally a productive group, or I would argue and enterprising community, needs Bystanders. They stand back from the cut and thrust of the idea and its development but will instead provide perspective, an overview and perhaps some historical context. They also help to manage the group process, ensure that deadlines are met and that resources are available when they are needed most. They may well ‘chair’ the conversations.
People can play more than one role in the model, but in an effective group or community all 4 roles are played well.
Yet we seem to be obsessed really with just one of them. The Movers. The Entrepreneurs. We spend a lot of time and money developing the entrepreneur, but very little time developing people to play the other three roles.
One of the marks of the enterprising community for me is that it knows how to engage its Movers and Entrepreneurs and equip them with the Followers, Opposers and Bystanders that they need to really build a successful project, whether it is business start-up, a community project or a campaign.
We often rely on advisers or mentors to play these roles. But when an entrepreneur works with a group of their peers, drawn from their communities and markets who know how to follow, oppose and bystand skillfully, I can guarantee that they will get much more value.
And they will also win lots of advocates for them and their work.
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I visited a really great community centre recently. Busy, friendly, homespun, clearly doing great work in and with the community. We were using several rooms, one of which was called the ‘Enterprise Hub’. It was spotlessly clean, airy, spacious and well furnished, just like every other room in the building. But for the life of me I could not work out what made it an ‘Enterprise Hub’. It was not set up for hot desking, there were no PCs, no mail boxes, none of the usual paraphernalia…
So I asked the centre manager about the Enterprise Hub. The answer surprised me – but it shouldn’t have done. They were looking for cash to modernise and re-decorate the room and in conversation with the local authority it become clear that the only budget with cash available was in ‘Enterprise’.
‘They said if we called it an Enterprise Hub we could have the cash.’
I love the way this demonstrates the inherent enterprise of the community centre management team in tracking down the cash that they need to ‘get the job done’. I am less impressed by what it says about some investments in ‘enterprise’. I can just imagine the report to the councillors about the new enterprise hub…
I remember a colleague saying to me at the launch of a major enterprise initiative,
‘The problem is that many of the people in this room don’t really understand enterprise. They don’t live it and breathe it. If the Government was announcing a major initiative to invest in duck farming, because an economist had said THAT is the future of the UK economy, many of these same people would be in the room, nodding sagely, and would run home to invent new policies to encourage duck farming’.