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Dialogos International, LLC is a world leader and pioneer in developing
dialogue and organizational learning practices. Our principals
include
originators and co-developers of many pivotal techniques, including
organizational learning, dialogue, and dialogic process consultation,
that have been influential in business and consulting practice.
We conduct, produce and publish research related to dialogue,
sustainability,
and organizational learning. And we draw upon the
growing body of theory and practice that has developed during the
past 50 years as researchers have studied the nature and impact
of the modern organization.
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Organizations as Living Systems
The work of Dialogos incorporates several different threads of
systems-related theory and methodology:
System Dynamics is a body of knowledge about of systems modeling and intervention,
developed originally by Jay Forrester at MIT (Forrester, 1960-1971;
Richardson, 1999; Kleiner, 1996).
Structural Dynamics is an outgrowth of family systems theory applied to organizational
contexts (Kantor, 1994 and 1999).
Dialogic Systems
Theory is a set of insights about group interrelationships,
derived in part from the “dialogue” theories of David Bohm, and
expanded to organizational and leadership contexts by William
Isaacs (Isaacs, 1999).
Central to all of these threads of work is the concept of all
human groups (including formal organizations and corporations)
as “living
systems:” as adaptive and unpredictable as the people who comprise
them. The Dialogos work succeeds because it takes into account
(and
embodies in its change initiatives) the primary characteristics
of living organizations:
Participation: Everyone
in a group of people both influences and reflects the thinking
and interaction of the whole. Powerful patterns
of influence
resonate throughout the organization, not merely up and down
the hierarchy. For this reason, we design our initiatives
to “get
all the voices in the room:” to make sure people know that their
perspective is heard, and that all perspectives are comprehended
by the decision-makers.
Coherence: Living
systems evolve to meet the challenges and constraints in their
environment. Thus, in organizations, there is always
a reason why some situation has evolved the way it did.
This principle
compels us to come to a clear-sighted understanding of why
things look and work as they do. It also sets the stage to
enable
us
to work with circumstances as they are, and not from illusions
we might project about how things should or could be.
Unfolding Potential: When living systems are young, they often have a different
physical form than when they are mature. An acorn doesn’t resemble
an oak tree. But the form of the oak tree is ready to unfold
from
the
acorn. Similarly, living organizations have a distinct potential
form and purpose that continues to evolve as the organization
grows. Applying this principles entails discerning not only what
is possible, given the current reality, but the deep
potential carried in the situation, even if it is not fully yet
grasped or realizable by people in the system.
Awareness: An
amoeba will move away from salt water; a Mercedes will stay
and rust. Living systems are characterized by awareness
of their
environments and themselves. A system’s capacity to be aware
of what it is doing as it is doing it is a very high-leverage
change
avenue. This principle suggests that the most effective way to
intervene in organizations is to increase their capacity to
detect
and correct errors. The quality of reflection that a system has
about itself directly influences its capacity for taking generative
action.
The Dynamics of Effective Intervention

Derived from these principles is a theory of the complex nature
of interventions, in which several different dimensions of activity
are all interrelated:
Tone (or “space”
or “atmosphere”): Any human interaction takes place in an intangible
but very real environment, which limits the kinds of moves that
are possible. A room where there has been a vicious argument “feels
different” than a room where people trust each other and can
speak candidly without fear — precisely because the tone is
different. The tone or space of an environment can be shaped
and influenced
in a variety of ways; this in turn influences the quality and
direction of human action.
Thinking (or
“mental models”): The habitual attitudes and beliefs-in-use of
most people consist of the theories and stories that they tell
themselves about the world and the way it works. If they can
open
themselves to consider alternative views of “how things ought
to be” and “what we are doing here,” they become capable of realizing
many more possible forms of action.
Structure:
Every system is influenced by the patterns of interrelationships
and
mutual influence among the factors and forces within it. For
example, reward systems influence the choices people make;
which influence
the profitability of an enterprise; which in turn influence the
quality and size of the rewards. Similarly, the makeup of
the
“Core Group” — the people whom decision-makers perceive to be
important — is an important structure in organizations (Kleiner,
2003). Mapping the various structures of a system is often a
good
first step to becoming aware of high-leverage interventions.
Patterns: Events
that recur over time give rise to patterns of behavior in a system.
For example: Receipts may be oscillating. Job satisfaction may
be falling. The number of innovations may grow at first but then
level off and decline. These are symptoms of the underlying structures
of the system; interveners can use their awareness of patterns
to diagnose the situation and generate a proactive response.
Action (or “events”):
The chosen steps and moves that people make to achieve their goals.
Interveners often try to change organizations by taking new actions,
which may or may not be sustained in the organization over time.
Often, the effectiveness of actions depends on whether the actions
reinforce, or contradict, the existing space, structure, and thinking
of the system.
Dialogic Process Consultation (learning laboratories)
Though our work draws on the thread of action learning that stretches
back to John Dewey through the work of Kurt Lewin, Chris Argyris,
and Edgar Schein (Kleiner, 1996; Kolb, 1984; Argyris, 1985, Schein,
1965), the dialogic approach we use goes beyond participatory action
research and action learning. In dialogic process consultation (Schein,
1998), the following principles apply:
Interventions are jointly
designed with participants (who are no longer kept apart as “objects”
of the intervention);
Time for joint reflection
with participants is built in, both for evaluation and to develop
their capabilities to make use of the actions so far;
We take part in joint
theory-building with participants, helping them to derive a meaningful
model (in mind) of the situation. At the MIT Center for Organizational
Learning, Dialogos principal William Isaacs pioneered the concept
of a learning lab (or “practice field,”) in which participants
explore practical issues in a reflective space where they can
learn by observing their own actions or those of others, and then
building shared models of the impact of those actions.
Dialogue: Collective Thought
The work of Dialogos is based on keen awareness of the nature of
reflective thought (Isaacs, 1999; Isaacs, 1993; Isaacs, 1994a-b).
Dialogos principals include some of the world’s leading experts
in the design and facilitation of generative conversation conversation
that fosters awareness and capability in the service of genuine
aspiration. In this sort of facilitation we pay close attention
to the quality of the “container:” the conversational environment.
For example, it is possible to deliberately engender a “high-quality
container:” an environment where dangerous perceptions and undiscussable
topics can be raised productively, without making people vulnerable.
Four qualities are significant in the design of dialogue. These
can be simply stated as:
Voice: Creating
a place for all relevant perspectives and attitudes to be spoken
so that they may be heard.
Listening: Attention
to the spoken and unspoken nature of the conversation and the “acoustics” of
the space in the room.
Respect: Acknowledgement
of the value of differences and participants’
identities.
Suspension: Willingness
to raise and consider assumptions and perceptions without being
bound by them.
The Five Disciplines of the Learning Organization
Our work also draws upon the five organizational learning disciplines.
Popularized by Peter Senge, the five “learning disciplines” have
formed the basis of a growing practice for individual, team and
organizational development (Senge, 1990 and Senge, et al, 1994,
1999 and 2000). The underlying premise is that “real-world” results
are more effectively achieved, especially when flexibility is needed,
by galvanizing authentic human commitment. Senge suggests five forms
of ongoing practice:
Personal Mastery: Articulating individual aspiration while fostering
keener awareness of existing challenges;
Mental Models: Uncovering the “theories in use” and mindsets that
govern behavior;
Shared Vision: Designing processes that elicit the common aspirations
that can spark extraordinary behavior;
Team Learning: Learning to transcend barriers and reach beyond agreement
to genuine alignment and effectiveness in teams; and
Systems Thinking: Learning to see recurring interrelationships in complex
environments and thus intervene more effectively, drawing
on intellectual
traditions
such as those of system dynamics.
Several Dialogos principals and associates are longstanding professional
colleagues with Dr. Senge and have contributed to his books: William
Isaacs, Robert Hanig, Glennifer Gillespie and Art Kleiner. Skillful
practice of the five learning disciplines has long been a backdrop
to the work of Dialogos.
Emerging Organizational Research and Practice
As a meeting ground for theoretically-oriented practitioners in
organizational learning, design and intervention work, Dialogos
is becoming a center for new work in the field. Among the works
in progress by Dialogos associates are:
Collective Leadership by William Isaacs
The Heart of Profound
Change: Learning from the Civil Rights Movement by Leslie F. (Skip)
Griffin
References
- Argyris, Chris, 1993: Knowledge for Action (San Francisco: Jossey-Bass).
- Bohm, David, 1992: Thought as a System (London: Routledge).
- Bohm, David, 1996: Wholeness and the Implicate Order (London:
Routledge).
- Forrester, Jay, 1961, Industrial Dynamics (MIT Press, Productivity
Press).
- Forrester, Jay, 1969, Urban Dynamics (MIT Press, Productivity Press).
- Forrester, Jay, 1971, "The Counterintuitive Behavior of Social
Systems,"; Technology Review, January 1971, p. 52-68.
- Hanig, Robert, Andreas Priestland, Dominic Emery, and Art Kleiner,
2002: "First Level Leaders: Engagement and Design Story"
(Cambridge, MA: Dialogos Working Paper and London: BP Report).
- Isaacs, William, 1993: "Taking Flight: Dialogue, Collective
Thinking, and Organizational Learning," Organizational Dynamic us,
vol. 22, 1993, p. 24-39.
- Isaacs, William, 1994a: "Dialogue" and "Designing
a Dialogue Session" in Peter Senge, et al., The Fifth Discipline
Fieldbook (New York: Doubleday).
- Isaacs, William, 1994b: "Dialogue: The Power of Collective
Thinking," Reflections on Creating Learning Organizations,
ed. by Kellie T. Wardman (1994, Pegasus Communications).
- Isaacs, William, 1999: Dialogue and the Art of Thinking Together (New York: Doubleday).
- Kantor, David and Nancy Heaton Lonstein, 1994, "Reframing
Team Relationships," in Senge et al, The Fifth Discipline
Fieldbook (New York, Doubleday), p. 407.
- Kantor, David and Steven Ober, 1999, "Heroic Modes,"
in Senge et al, The Dance of Change (New York, Doubleday), p. 263.
- Kleiner, Art, 1996: The Age of Heretics (New York: Doubleday).
- Kleiner, Art, 2003: Who Really Matters: The Core Group Theory of
Power, Privilege, and Success (New York: Doubleday).
- Kolb, David, 1984: Experiential Learning: Experience as the Source
of Learning and Development (Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall).
- Richardson, George P., 1999: Feedback Thought in Social Science
and Systems Theory (Cambridge, MA: Pegasus Communications).
- Schein, Edgar, 1998: Process Consultation, Volume II (Reading, MA:
Addison-Wesley).
- Schein, Edgar, 1965: Process Consultation: Lessons for Managers
and Consultants, Vol. II (Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley).
- Senge, Peter, 1990: The Fifth Discipline: The Art and Practice of
the Learning Organization (New York: Doubleday).
- Senge, Peter, and Art Kleiner, Charlotte Roberts, Rick Ross, Bryan
Smith, and George Roth, 1999: The Dance of Change: The Challenges
to Sustaining Momentum in Learning Organizations (New York: Doubleday).
- Senge, Peter, and Charlotte Roberts, Rick Ross, Bryan Smith, and
Art Kleiner, 1994: The Fifth Discipline Fieldbook: Strategies and
Tools for Building A Learning Organization (New York: Doubleday).
- Senge, Peter, and Nelda Cambron-McCabe, Tim Lucas, Bryan Smith,
Art Kleiner, and Janis Dutton, 2000: Schools That Learn: A Fifth
Discipline Fieldbook for Educators, Parents, and Everyone Who Cares
About Education (New York: Doubleday).
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