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Mastering the Art of Creative Collaboration (Businessweek Books)
 
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Mastering the Art of Creative Collaboration (Businessweek Books) [Hardcover]

Robert A. Hargrove (Author)
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)


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Book Description

Businessweek Books December 23, 1997
This exciting new book takes collaboration way beyond its traditional frontier and focuses on its creative uses -- something that is frequently left behind when collaboration is mandated. Renowned speaker, consultant and business coach Robert Hargrove offers groundbreaking advice that gives readers the tools to make any collaborative activity creative, productive and rewarding. Creative collaboration, when done correctly, can make the impossible, possible.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

"More and more of us are faced with having to achieve breakthrough goals and to solve complex problems," says Robert Hargrove, a consultant based in Brookline, Massachusetts and the author of Mastering the Art of Creative Collaboration (McGraw-Hill, 1998). "You can't do that alone. The only way to meet these kinds of challenges is through collaboration." -- Hargrove, Robert, Fast Company

"easy-to-read and well-organized... refreshing." -- CIO Canada Magazine.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 256 pages
  • Publisher: Mcgraw-Hill; 1 edition (December 23, 1997)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0070264090
  • ISBN-13: 978-0070264090
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 6.3 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #544,781 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Robert Hargrove is a world-renowned, revolutionary thought leader in the field of talent development and coaching. His motto is "Better Leaders, Better World" and he believes that coaching leaders to achieve an Impossible Future is the fastest, most powerful way to achieve both.

Hargrove is the founder of Masterful Coaching Inc. and served as a Director of the Harvard Leadership Research Project. He has been awarded for Distinguished Public Service by the United States Government for his coaching work with political leaders.

Some recent clients have included the United States Assistant Secretary of Defense in charge of Acquisitions, the President of the New York Stock Exchange, and European CEO of the year. Hargrove's focus is on helping leaders realize an Impossible Future, while at the same time, transforming their nation or organization.

Visit Robert at: www.roberthargrove.com; www.masterfulcoaching.com; www.myfirst100day.net; and www.therevenueengine.com

Contact Robert directly at robert.hargrove@masterfulcoaching.com

 

Customer Reviews

8 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.2 out of 5 stars (8 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

29 of 30 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars The book promises more than it delivers, October 13, 1998
This review is from: Mastering the Art of Creative Collaboration (Businessweek Books) (Hardcover)
Robert Hargrove, Mastering the Art of Creative Collaboration, McGraw-Hill, 1998.

This book promises more than it delivers. Hargrove presents collaboration as some sort of breakthrough process when it is nothing more than a diverse group of motivated and creative people coming together to do something great. Sounds like teamwork to me but Hargrove dismisses that argument by telling us that "while all collaborations involve teamwork, not all teams are collaborative." "Most teams," he says, "are focused on routine work and doing the same thing better," while "...successful collaborative groups are made up of strange brews, of nascent combinations of people. Most teams, even multidisciplinary teams, tend to be fairly homogeneous."

The last time I looked "homogeneous" is not a word anyone would use to define a multidisciplinary team. And most teams, especially multidisciplinary teams, are not focused on "routine work." They are designing a new telecommunications systems, researching the next cure for cancer, developing an enhanced systems architecture, designing the layout for the factory of the future and understanding the planet of Mars---the very example cited by Hargrove. Hargrove dismisses teamwork but then goes on to present numerous examples of successful teams which he now calls collaborations.

Hargrove borrowed John Nasbit's research methodology of drawing a conclusion and then lining up a series of quotes from newspaper and magazine articles that report wonderful examples of successful teamwork (pardon me, I mean collaboration). In addition, there is not one quote or example that shows a failed attempt at collaboration. All of us learn from mistakes.

Let's assume you don't care about these points, you just want to know how to make teamwork or collaboration or whatever it's called, work in your organization. If you're looking for some great new insights, you won't find them here. But you will find two different lists that both seem to be saying the same old things with a few new age phrases. Hargrove's "recipe for creative collaboration"(pp. 33-38) includes such things as make a declaration of impossibility (which is nothing more than a broad goal), bring extraordinary combinations of people together, build a shared understood goal, do a "what's so" (just a factual analysis of the desired and current state) and identify what missing.

Then, later on, Hargrove presents "The Seven Building Blocks of Collaboration (p. 92). Once again, he talks about bringing together the right people, developing a shared goal, clarifying roles, lots of communication and lots of enthusiasm. This is good stuff, but we heard it all before in the literature of teamwork. And then there is the chapter on collaboration tools which is nothing more than warmed over tips from your favorite books on facilitation, meetings, management, conflict resolution and group dynamics.

A key ingredient that is missing from this formulation is the failure to address the issue of the environment for collaboration. Successful collaboration is more the result of a supportive culture, a flexible structure and encouraging systems and less about good facilitation skills and plenty of whiteboards. Most team failure comes from lack of support from the leadership of the organization, cultural norms that nurture competitive or selfish behavior and systems that do not reward team players.

Having dismissed teamwork allowed Hargrove to skip over a body of work that would have helped him understand these issues more completely. For example, Warren Bennis' Organizing Genius: The Secrets of Creative Collaboration, presents six case studies of "Great Groups," Lipnack and Stamps' books, The TeamNet Factor, The Age of the Network and, most recently, Virtual Teams, all address collaboration across traditional boundaries, Designing Team-Based Organizations by Susan Mohrman, Susan Cohen and Allan Mohrman shows that it takes fundamental changes in the design and practices of organizations and my book, Cross-Functional Teams: Working With Allies, Enemies and Other Strangers, outlines specific strategies for developing and implementing successful "multidisciplinary" teams. This book was a selection of a book club of senior organizational development professionals who meet regularly to discuss new books. The group had high hopes for the book, but we were generally disappointed.

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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars At best a mediocre book about an important topic., September 20, 1998
This review is from: Mastering the Art of Creative Collaboration (Businessweek Books) (Hardcover)
As a long time software developer and Business Week subscriber, I succumbed to an assumption of quality based on the publisher and the book jacket endorsement by Eric Hahn. I was sorely disappointed.

I found the book to be a casually written, sloppily edited (an egregious example being a reference to the trademark Nike "Swish", rather than "Swoosh") collection of psycho- and business- babble filled with self-aggrandizing name-dropping.

Though some of the descriptions of organizations and their modes of collaboration were interesting, and some individuals quoted had useful things to say, the overall book left me with the feeling that it was hurriedly pushed out the door to try to take advantage of a growing interest in more effective multi-group collaboration. At best, a mediocre work.

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2 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Insightful!, May 25, 2001
This review is from: Mastering the Art of Creative Collaboration (Businessweek Books) (Hardcover)
Robert Hargrove presents a well-organized look at the world of creative collaboration. He argues that collaboration is the new paradigm in a world of change and complexity, as well as an effective management strategy. Hargrove provides a hands-on guide to becoming more collaborative and to organizing effective collaborative groups. In this lively, engaging book, Hargrove shows his familiarity with the latest management expertise. He draws on quotes and ideas from such authors as Margaret Wheatley, Peter Senge and Tom Peters. We [...] recommend this book to executives and managers who wish to facilitate collaborations.
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