How do I know when I’m part of a self-organizing work group? How do we know if our group is self-organizing? This is the third of a series of posts in which I document the nine indicators of self-organization that emerged from my research and consulting work.

Indicator #3: Openly seeking to understand another

I am self-organizing when I:

  • Openly seek to understand another. Demonstrated, for example, by:
    o Setting aside your plan and instead asking questions to better understand another in the moment
    o Intentionally asking a lot of questions and surfacing memories that had been forgotten by yourself and others
    o Asking big, broad, open-ended questions and shutting up long enough to listen

As a group, we’re self-organizing when we:

  • Openly seek to understand another. Demonstrated, for example, by:
    o One individual struggles to find language (e.g., saying “this is hard to describe” or turning to a metaphor or simile to describe the experience) and another steps in to help find the language and the idea
    o Group members are seen learning from others—including those with whom they disagree—first inside and then outside the group