Title: COLLABORATION 101:
1COLLABORATION 101
- AKA The Art of Collaboration
2SESSION PURPOSE
- To provide participants with the basic
information needed to successfully link services
with other community child and family services - To provide participants with the skills needed to
improve coordination and delivery of child and
family services in communities.
3SESSION AGENDA
- Overview of Session
- What is Collaboration?
- Pre-Collaboration Assessment
- The Collaborative Process
- Partnership Success Principles
- Wrap Up
4 ACTIVITY
- MY HOME IS MY CASTLE
- Why is your home your castle?
- Why is this important to you?
- Why would I want to come live with you at your
house? - What would be the benefits to me?
- What would be the challenges if I came to live
with you?
5COLLABORATION IS
- Collaboration is the most intense level of
working together. It is a structure a process
for creating CHANGE. - A collaborative effort is driven by partners who
agree to share information, activities,
resources, influence, power decision-making
authority to achieve common goals goals that no
single partner or program could achieve by acting
alone. - From Community Partnerships Working Together, US
DHHS
6BARRIERS/SANDTRAPS
- Turf-ism
- History of unresolved conflict/Hidden agendas
- Lack of communication
- Lack of clear purpose
- Lack of leadership
- Ineffective inter- OR intra- agency structures
- Resistance to change
- Lack of time/resources
- Conflicting requirements
- Parents/Staff not involved in decisions
- Unequal distribution of work/recognition
- No clear ground rules
7BENEFITS TO COLLABORATION
- Increased access to additional services for
children families - Full day/year
- Continuity of care
- Expanding services in cost effective manner
- Serving a wider range of children
- Improving quality
- Reaching new communities
- Providing more flexibility
- Strengthening local community systems
8COLLABORATION SKILLSPRINCIPLES OF COMMUNICATION
- Relationships created by communication.
- Intrapersonal communication is a major factor
affecting interpersonal communication. - Relationships should be defined by both persons.
- Each is 100 responsible for nature of the
relationship.
- Relationships change when communication changes.
- To change a relationship requires persistence.
- Most options the best odds of getting what is
wanted. - Communication is most effective when it reflects
intentions for the relationship.
9COLLABORATION SKILLS COMMUNICATION
- WHAT LANGUAGE ARE YOU SPEAKING?
- Cross program/cross agency language barriers,
i.e., use of acronyms - Articulation of agency mission, goals, and
philosophy - Active listening
- Research
- Written, verbal, and body
- Ongoing
10COLLABORATION SKILLSNEGOTIATION
- A WORD ABOUT POWER
- Negative positive uses
- Same characteristics can be negative or positive
- Sunshine/Shadow
- Charisma winning/beguiling
- Expertise apply share/withhold
- Persuasion convincing/bullying
- Position/turf knowing boundaries or
demanding control
11COLLABORATION SKILLS NEGOTIATING COMMON GROUND
- POSITIONS regulations, beliefs, demands
- INTERESTS what you care about, concerns, what
matters - MUST come to middle/common ground
12COLLABORATION SKILLS NEGOTIATING COMMON GROUND
Position Whats your demand? Is it regulatory or belief based? Interest What do you care about? What worries you? COMMON GROUND Interest What are your biggest concerns? Why does it matter? Position What do you believe? Why is it right?
13COLLABORATION SKILLSNEGOTIATION
- WHEN NEGOTIATING
- Honor the relationship
- Be realistic fair
- Know your bottom line
- Come prepared to commit resources
- Explain what youre doing
- Engage in active listening
14COLLABORATION SKILLS NEGOTIATION
- Work toward a group outcome
- Work toward the Mission, not self-interest
- Facilitate dont manipulate
- Take a fresh look at practices standards
remember the difference between
positions/interests - Take PLENTY of TIME to get it right!
15INTRA-AGENCY PRE-ASSESSMENT
- LOOKING INWARD
- HOW ARE WE DOING ON OUR OWN?
- Look at own mission, integration, evaluation
- DO WE NEED TO CHANGE?
-
- What needs to change how?
- Whats in it for you?
- LOOKING OUTWARD
- HOW WELL ARE WE CONNECTED?
- How connected where
- HOW READY ARE WE TO COLLABORATE?
-
- Common vision, how strong are connections?
16STAGE 1 Getting Together
- MILESTONES
- DECIDING TO ACT
- SELECTING PARTNERS
- SET GROUND RULES
- EVALUATE/CELEBRATE
17DECIDING TO ACT
- HAVE YOU COMPLETED YOUR PRE-ASSESSMENT WORK?
- HAVE YOU DETERMINED A NEED FOCUS FOR
COLLABORATING? - THEN, YOURE READY TO MOVE ON
18SELECTING PARTNERS
- CONSIDER
- Who you know/share a positive relationship
- Who you need
- Who has the expertise skills you need
- Diversity
- Power who has it/what do you need
- Who can block it
- Who will be affected
- How big should the group be - numbers
19SETTING GROUND RULES
- DISCUSS/DECIDE
- Meetings when, where, how often, who does
agenda, - Rules to guide decision-making
- Rules to protect confidentiality
- Responsibilities
- Length of time
- How to resolve conflict
- How to keep records, gather data, share
information - How to evaluate work
20STAGE 2 Building Trust Ownership
- MILESTONES
- Engage Partners
- Build Common Base of Knowledge
- Develop Shared Vision
- Revisit Revise Ground Rules
- ID Planning Resources
- Evaluate/Celebrate
21ENGAGING PARTNERS
- BUILD TRUST/OWNERSHIP WITH PARTNERS BY
- Face to face individual meetings
- Visit them on their turf, at their home
- Share information tentative dream
- Clear the air
- DONT apply pressure
22BUILD A BASE OF KNOWLEDGE
- BUILD TRUST/OWNERSHIP WITH KNOWLEDGE BY
- Work to understand self-interest personal
similarities differences - Apply no PRESSURE
- Accept divergent point of view
- Presume the positive
- Avoid 1 right answer thinking
23BUILD BASE OF KNOWLEDGE (continued)
- Encourage risk taking
- Figure out whats in it for them!
- Share information about your services, program
culture, etc. Find out about theirs. - Focus on their skills
- Clear the air
- Think and act win-win
- TAKE YOUR TIME
24DEFINING A SHARED VISION
- VISION Clear picture of what you hope to
create. - SHARED VISION SHOULD
- Get partners to knit own visions into ONE
- Focus on possibilities for children families
- Generate energy motivation
- Tell everyone where collaborative is going
25ACTIVITY
- DREAM HOUSE
- How does the group dream house compare to your
own dream house? - What was hard about the process?
- What did you notice about behaviors during the
activity that helped/hindered it? - What would have made it better?
26In Stage 2, dont forget to
- Assess the group to ensure there is commitment to
the collaboration the Vision. - Revisit your Ground Rules revise renegotiate
until all partners are satisfied. - ID planning resources before you move into the
planning of Stage 3.
27STAGE 3 Developing a Strategic Plan
- MILESTONES
- Develop a Mission
- Environmental Capacity Assessment
- Establish Goals Strategies
- Write Plan of Action
- Evaluate Celebrate
28 DEVELOP THE MISSION
- MISSION captures the SHARED VISION, UNIQUE
PURPOSE VALUES of the collaboration, and
should - State the direction, rationale what will be
achieved by the collaboration - Describe what (will be accomplished) for whom
- Suggest the scope of work how big, how
many/much - Convey the Vision
- Be easy to UNDERSTAND and REMEMBER
- Not include the how-tos for achieving results
29ENVIRONMENTAL ANALYSIS
- Consider
- Economic/population changes
- Funding trends
- Political social forces
- Laws/regulations
- Policies/procedures
- Existing collaborations
- Share info about these impact on the collab
- What other needs?
- What is happening in the community that will
affect your plan? - 1.
- 2.
- 3.
- 4.
30 CAPACITY ASSESSMENT
- Discuss strengths each partner brings
individually collectively to the collaboration - Discuss/list what is lacking.
- Consider benefits of collaborative action what
might happen if you take no action in the
immediate future
- Central Question Does the collaboration have the
ability to accomplish its mission? - Review the Environmental Analysis prioritize
which factors will have the greatest impact on
the collaboration
31ESTABLISH WELL-FORMED GOALS
- GOAL specific statement of what collaborative
partners intend to do. - GOALS ARE
- Indicators of what partners want to achieve
- Measures for evaluating a collaborations
progress - Measures for holding partners accountable
32GOALS (continued)
- LONG TERM GOALS results partners hope to see in
2-3 or more years - SHORT TERM GOALS focus on more specific,
immediate results - In developing GOALS, use the following
- Does the goal focus on the positive?
- Is it realistic achievable?
- Can it be measured?
- Is it clear specific?
33GOALS (continued) AFTER
- AFTER goals are decided
- Compare them to the environmental analysis
capacity assessment - If large gaps are found revise the goals until
gaps are minimized
34SELECT STRATEGIES
- Brainstorm strategies or routes to achieve goals
- Look at potential impacts, benefits costs of
each - Select those that are feasible
- Review Mission see if strategies fit
- GOAL 1
- Strategy 1
- Strategy 2
- Strategy 3
- GOAL 2
- Strategy 1
- Strategy 2
- Strategy 3
35DEVELOP A PLAN OF ACTION
- Map out actions to implement strategies
- Decide who will take responsibility for each
action - Set target dates for completing each action
- Decide on accountability/evaluation measures or
standards - Prepare a budget
36CASE STUDIES
- There are 5 case studies.
- Case Studies 1 2 A Partnership at Work
- 2 different perspectives
- Case Study 3 Discord in Harmony
- Case Studies 4 5 Metro-City Head Start
- Scenes 1 2
- In groups of 5-7, take 30 minutes to review,
discuss answer the questions.
37STAGE 4 Taking Action
- MILESTONES
- Written Agreement
- Implement Plan of Action
- Adapt/Expand
- Monitor Evaluate
- Celebrate
38COMPONENTS OF A WRITTEN AGREEMENT
- Identity/legal status of signers.
- Period of agreement.
- Scope/Vision.
- Statement of performance/services/plan.
- Compliance with regulations.
- Financial agreement/payment procedures.
- Prior approval requirements/authority.
- Management.
- Equipment/materials ownership.
39AGREEMENT COMPONENTS (CONT.)
- Liability/Insurance.
- Record Keeping/Confidentiality.
- Monitoring/Evaluation.
- Public/Community Relations.
- Conflict of Interest/Prohibited Activities.
- Changes/Amendments.
- Dispute Resolution.
- Renewal/Termination.
- Contact Person.
- Signatures.
40WRITTEN AGREEMENTS
- REMEMBER, it is always advised to consult an
attorney!
41WHY A WRITTEN AGREEMENT?
- To write agree to shared vision
- To write agree to goals, strategies plan
- To spell out results
- To spell out responsibilities
- To spell out services
- To define partnership management
- To commit to what, when, how
- To hold people accountable
- For audit legal purposes
- To provide escape in case of failure
- To commit resources
- For monitoring evaluation
42OPERATIONAL TIPS ASK
- Is the Written Agreement in place?
- Has the case management record keeping system
been revised? - Are there policies procedures in place?
- Is there a system for access to needed records
information? - Are confidentiality protocols in place
understood? - Does the database include the collaboration?
43OPERATIONAL TIPS ASK
- Does the collaboration team meet regularly?
- Are communication systems used effectively?
- Is conflict appropriately addressed?
- Have job descriptions been revised?
- Is there a collaboration manager with appropriate
support/authority? - Are we doing cross training?
44OPERATIONAL TIPS, ASK
- Have the goals been communicated effectively?
- Is the team regularly assessing progress on the
plan? - Is data being collected analyzed?
- Are team members following through?
- Is the community aware of the collaboration?
- Are you evaluating for outcomes?
45EVALUATION
- Evaluation is an ongoing process
- Tells how well the strategies are working
- Guides changes/modifications to the plan
- DOES NOT need to be complex
- Find out whats working whats not
- Fix whats not
46EVALUATING EFFORT
- ASK
- Are our efforts achieving our Mission?
- What environmental factors have inhibited or
helped? - Do we need new partners?
- Is our Plan being implemented?
47EVALUATING EFFECTIVENESS
- ASK
- Are we reaching the right people?
- Are we making an impact?
- What are the child/family outcomes?
- Whats different?
- What happened that we didnt expect?
- Is our Plan still appropriate?
48EVALUATING EFFICIENCY
- ASK
- Are our goals attainable? Are they being
attained? - Are our resources sufficient?
- Are we making the best use of our talents
strengths? - What can we do to be more efficient?
49PARTNERSHIP SUCCESS PRINCIPLES
- TAKE YOUR TIME DEVELOP THE PARTNERSHIP
- DRAW FROM STRENGTHS OF ALL
- OPENNESS, HONESTY, MUTUAL RESPECT
- ATMOSPHERE OF POSITIVE THINKING
- RECOGNIZE SEEK EXCELLENCE
50PARTNERSHIP SUCCESS PRINCIPLES
- HOLD TO THE VISION
- ABIDE BY RULES
- HONOR AGREEMENTS
- SYSTEMS-FOCUSED APPROACH
- ADAPT TO CHANGE
- HAVE A SENSE OF HUMOR!
51BE A STAR! COLLABORATION COMMERCIAL
- With a team, take 5 minutes to develop a 60
second commercial promoting and selling
collaboration. - Commercials should be ONLY a paragraph, catchy,
and include concepts learned.