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Preface to the Third Edition xvii
What The Skilled Facilitator is About xvii
Who This Book is For xix
How the Book is Organized xix
Features of the Book xxii
What's Different in the Third Edition xxiii
Part One The Foundation 1
1 The Skilled Facilitator Approach 3
The Need for Group Facilitation 3
Most People Who Need to Facilitate Aren't Facilitators 3
Is This Book for You? 4
The Skilled Facilitator Approach 8
Experiencing the Skilled Facilitator Approach 10
Making the Skilled Facilitator Approach Your Own 11
Summary 12
2 The Facilitator and Other Facilitative Roles 13
Choosing a Facilitative Role 13
Basic and Developmental Types of Roles 23
Serving in Multiple Facilitative Roles 25
When It's Appropriate to Leave the Role of Facilitator 25
The Group is Your Client 28
What is Your Responsibility for the Group's Results? 29
Summary 33
3 How You Think is How You Facilitate: How Unilateral Control Undermines Your Ability to Help Groups 35
How You Think: Your Mindset as an Operating System 36
Two Mindsets: Unilateral Control and Mutual Learning 37
How You Think is Not How You Think You Think 37
The CIO Team Survey Feedback Case 38
The Unilateral Control Approach 41
Values of the Unilateral Control Mindset 41
Assumptions of the Unilateral Control Mindset 45
Unilateral Control Behaviors 46
Results of Unilateral Control 50
Give-Up-Control Approach 55
How Unilateral Control Reinforces Itself 55
How Did We Learn Unilateral Control? 56
Moving from Unilateral Control to Mutual Learning 57
Summary 58
4 Facilitating with the Mutual Learning Approach 59
The Mutual Learning Approach 59
Values of the Mutual Learning Mindset 61
Assumptions of the Mutual Learning Mindset 75
Mutual Learning Behaviors 77
Results of Mutual Learning 80
The Reinforcing Cycles of Mutual Learning 84
Are There Times When Unilateral Control is the Better Approach? 85
Summary 86
5 Eight Behaviors for Mutual Learning 87
Using the Eight Behaviors 87
Behavior 1: State Views and Ask Genuine Questions 89
Behavior 2: Share All Relevant Information 94
Behavior 3: Use Specific Examples and Agree on What Important Words Mean 97
Behavior 4: Explain Reasoning and Intent 99
Behavior 5: Focus on Interests, Not Positions 101
Behavior 6: Test Assumptions and Inferences 103
Behavior 7: Jointly Design Next Steps 114
Behavior 8: Discuss Undiscussable Issues 117
Learning to Use the Behaviors 119
Summary 120
6 Designing and Developing Effective Groups 121
How a Team Effectiveness Model Helps You and the Teams and Groups You Work With 122
The Difference between Teams and Groups-and Why It Matters 122
How Interdependence Affects Your Work with Teams and Groups 127
The Team Effectiveness Model 128
What's Your Mindset as You Design? 132
Team Structure, Process, and Context 133
Team Structure 134
Team Process 139
Team Context 143
Interorganizational Teams and Groups 150
Helping Design or Redesign a Team or Group 150
Summary 153
Part Two Diagnosing and Intervening with Groups 155
7 Diagnosing and Intervening with Groups 157
What You Need to Diagnose 158
What You Need to Intervene 160
The Mutual Learning Cycle 160
Summary 163
8 How to Diagnose Groups 165
Step 1: Observe Behavior 165
Step 2: Make Meaning 171
Step 3: Choose Whether, Why, and How to Intervene 178
Challenges in Diagnosing Behavior and How to Manage Them 186
Summary 192
9 How to Intervene with Groups 193
Key Elements of the Intervention Steps 193
Using the Mutual Learning Cycle to Intervene: An Example 196
Step 4: Test Observations 198
Step 5: Test Meaning 200
Step 6: Jointly Design Next Steps 203
How to Move through the Intervention Steps 205
Choosing Your Words Carefully 209
Summary 212
10 Diagnosing and Intervening on the Mutual Learning Behaviors 213
How Mutual Learning Behaviors Differ from Many Ground Rules 213
Contracting to Intervene on Mutual Learning Behaviors 214
Intervening on the Mutual Learning Behaviors 218
Behavior 1: State Views and Ask Genuine Questions 220
Behavior 2: Share All Relevant Information 220
Behavior 3: Use Specific Examples and Agree on What Important Words Mean 221
Behavior 4: Explain Reasoning and Intent 222
Behavior 5: Focus on Interests, Not Positions 223
Behavior 6: Test Assumptions and Inferences 225
Behavior 7: Jointly Design Next Steps 227
Behavior 8: Discuss Undiscussable Issues 230
Summary 231
11 Using Mutual Learning to Improve Other Processes and Techniques 233
Using Mutual Learning to Diagnose and Intervene on Other Processes 233
Diagnosing and Intervening When Groups are Using a Process Ineffectively 235
Diagnosing and Intervening on Processes That are Incongruent with Mutual Learning 237
Diagnosing and Intervening on Processes That Espouse Mutual Learning: Lean and Other Continuous Improvement Approaches 244
Summary 246
12 Diagnosing and Intervening on Emotions-The Group's and Yours 249
The Challenge 249
How People Generate Emotions 250
How Groups Express Emotions 252
Managing Your Own Emotions 254
Deciding How to Intervene 256
Intervening on Emotions 259
Helping People Express Emotions Effectively 259
Helping People Reduce Defensive Thinking 259
Helping the Group Express Positive Emotions 265
When People Get Angry with You 267
Learning from Your Experiences 267
Summary 268
Part Three Agreeing to Work Together 269
13 Contracting: Deciding Whether and How to Work with a Group 271
Why Contract? 272
Five Stages of Contracting 272
Stage 1: Making Initial Contact with a Primary Client Group Member 274
Stage 2: Planning the Facilitation 283
Stage 3: Reaching Agreement with the Entire Group 293
Stage 4: Conducting the Facilitation 295
Stage 5: Completing and Evaluating the Facilitation 295
Summary 297
14 Working with a Partner 299
Deciding Whether to Partner 299
Dividing and Coordinating the Labor 306
Allocating Roles within Your Division of Labor 308
Developing Healthy Boundaries between You and Your Partner 310
Debriefing with Your Partner 314
Summary 314
15 Serving in a Facilitative Role in Your Own Organization 317
Advantages and Disadvantages of the Internal Facilitative Role 317
How Your Internal Facilitative Role is Shaped 320
Shaping Your Facilitative Role 321
Changing Your Facilitative Role from the Outside In 329
Summary 330
Part Four Working with Technology 333
16 Using Virtual Meetings 335
Choosing Which Type of Virtual Meeting Technology to Use-If Any 336
The Challenges That Virtual Meetings Create 339
Designing and Facilitating Virtual Meetings to Meet These Challenges 341
Summary 345
Notes 347
Acknowledgments 361
About the Author 363
About Roger Schwarz & Associates' Work with Clients 365
The Skilled Facilitator Intensive Workshop 367
Index 369
Since I wrote the first edition of The Skilled Facilitator in 1994, it has become a standard reference in the field. Many readers have told me that the book has fundamentally changed how they help the groups they work with. They return to it again and again when faced with challenging or new situations. I am gratified that many people in different roles across many fields have found the book so valuable. I hope you will be among them.
The Skilled Facilitator is about how you can help groups become more effective, whether you're a consultant, facilitator, coach, trainer, or mediator. When I wrote the first edition, facilitative skills were something you called on a facilitator for. Now these skills are recognized as a core competency for anyone working with groups.
The book describes one approach to facilitation-the Skilled Facilitator approach. It's a relatively comprehensive and integrated approach, so you can learn it and use it as you work with groups. The approach is based on research and theory that I cite throughout the book.
The Skilled Facilitator approach has several key features. It's based on a set of core values and assumptions-what I call mindset-and principles. Whether you're serving as a facilitator, consultant, coach, trainer, or mediator, you can always figure out what to do in a particular situation by turning to the core values, assumptions, and principles to guide your behavior.
The Skilled Facilitator approach integrates theory and practice. Throughout the book, I answer three questions: "What do I do? How do I do it? Why do I do it that way?" By answering the first question, you understand what specific tool, technique, or method to use in any particular situation. This gives you a general idea of how to respond in any situation. By answering the second question, you understand exactly what to say in that situation. Answering these first two questions is necessary, but not sufficient. By answering the third question, you understand the theory and principles that make all the tools, techniques, methods, and your specific behaviors work. When you know the answers to these three questions, you no longer have to use the tools and methods exactly as you learned them-you can modify them and design your own tools and methods to help a group, no matter what situation you're in.
The Skilled Facilitator approach is a systems approach for helping groups. All the parts of the approach fit together and reinforce each other because they are all based on the same set of core values, assumptions, and principles. The logic of the approach is transparent, and you can share it with the groups you're helping. This makes the approach more powerful and practical.
In the Skilled Facilitator approach, the mindset and behaviors that you use to help a group are the same mindset and behaviors that the group can use to improve its effectiveness. There isn't a secret set of principles, techniques, or methods for you and another set for the group. When you act effectively, you're modeling effective behavior for the group. This makes it much easier for you to help the group increase its effectiveness. Recently, I wrote Smart Leaders, Smarter Teams for the groups and teams you are helping. The book uses the very same approach (including the same models and behaviors) that I describe here to help teams develop the mindset, skill set, and team design to create better results. If you find The Skilled Facilitator useful and want to help teams learn how they can apply it in their leadership roles, Smart Leaders, Smarter Teams will show them how.
At the heart of the Skilled Facilitator approach is the premise that how you think is how you facilitate (or consult, coach, train, or mediate). Research shows that in challenging situations almost all of us use a mindset that leads us to behave in ways that reduce our ability to help the groups we're hired to help. The Skilled Facilitator approach teaches you how to rigorously reflect on your own thinking and feeling so that you can more consistently operate from a productive mindset. This will enable you and the groups you help to get three results: better performance, stronger working relationships, and individual well-being.
Most people who need to use facilitation skills aren't facilitators. If you need facilitation skills to help groups that you're not a member of, I wrote this book for you. The Skilled Facilitator will help you work more effectively with groups so that they can better achieve their results. You'll find this book useful if you work in any of these roles:
If you're the leader or member of a team, I've written another book for you: Smart Leaders, Smarter Teams. It uses the same approach that I describe in this book, but it's designed for your specific role. If someone has suggested you read The Skilled Facilitator, you might find Smart Leaders, Smarter Teams a better fit for your needs.
I have organized The Skilled Facilitator into four parts. Here are brief descriptions of the chapters within them.
In Part One, I lay the foundation for using facilitative skills.
Chapter 1, "The Skilled Facilitator Approach." In this chapter, I give an overview of the Skilled Facilitator approach, including what it will help you accomplish and the questions I answer throughout the book.
Chapter 2, "The Facilitator and Other Facilitative Roles." How do I figure out what role to use when working with a group? What do I do if I need to play more than one role? In this chapter, I describe how you can use the Skilled Facilitator approach in any role you serve: consultant, facilitator, coach, trainer, or mediator. I describe each role, explain when to serve in each one, and discuss how to serve in multiple roles when working with groups.
Chapter 3, "How You Think Is How You Facilitate: How Unilateral Control Undermines Your Ability to Help Groups." The most challenging part of facilitating, consulting, coaching, or training is being able to work from a productive mindset. This chapter describes how almost all of us operate from an unproductive mindset-unilateral control-when we're faced with challenging group situations. I describe how unilateral control leads you to think and behave in ways that reduce your effectiveness and your ability to help groups.
Chapter 4, "Facilitating with the Mutual Learning Approach." The mutual learning approach is the foundation of the Skilled Facilitator approach. In this chapter, I describe how the mutual learning mindset enables you to think and act in ways that help you and the groups you're working with get results that aren't possible with a unilateral control approach. I describe the specific values, assumptions, and behaviors that make up the mutual learning approach.
Chapter 5, "Eight Behaviors for Mutual Learning." This chapter describes the eight behaviors that put the mutual learning mindset into action and how you can use them to increase your effectiveness and to help groups increase their effectiveness. I explain how each behavior contributes to better results and when and how you use each one.
Chapter 6, "Designing and Developing Effective Groups." If you're helping groups get better results, it's important to understand what it takes for groups to get those results. Building on the mutual learning approach, this chapter provides a model of group effectiveness that explains how to design new groups to be effective and how to help existing groups improve their results.
In Part Two, I describe how to observe a group, figure out what is happening that is limiting...
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