Resources

Network Leadership Series Fall 2023

NLS Fall 2023 Resources

We are from around the globe!

Resource links

Zoom link for all Fall 2023 sessions

Zoom Recordings Password: Emergence (this links to the entire folder with all the recordings)

Participant Profiles

Impact Networks E-Book 

Discussion Guide to Impact Networks

Impact Networks - Documentary Film

Film Discussion Guide

NEW: NLS Foundations 2023 (summary slidedeck)

Orientation

Orientation Video Recording  

Password: Emergence

Orientation Audio Recording

Orientation Chat

Module 1 Session 1: Network Mindset and Emergence

Session 1 Video Recording

Password: Emergence

Session 1 Audio Recording

Session 1 Transcript

Session 1 Chat

Reflection Questions

*You may want to reflect on these questions with your buddy group.

  • Are there times when a machine mindset shows up in your network where a biological mindset would be more beneficial? 
  • Network members typically work in organizations that have a machine mindset. When they come into a network, how can we invite them to shift towards a biological mindset and see things from a living systems perspective?    
  • What external challenges and inner resistance might you face when inviting people to think and work differently?
Try it out
  • How might your network benefit from embracing emergence?  Take an action to invite a shift. What do you notice? Share your experiment on WhatsApp. 
  • Engage with a friend or colleague and share with them the Networks Theory of Change. Reflect on how you explain this to someone new. What’s easy, what’s difficult about sharing how networks create change?
Resources

Network Mindset and Emergence Slidedeck!

Foundations for Module 1

Network Theory of Change

Wenger-Trayner’s Cycles of Value Framework

Humberto Maturana - writes about a living organization

We and Me, Inc. - Connection and communication made easy

Getting to Zero Book

Engaging Emergence: Turning Upheaval into Opportunity - Peggy Holman

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=16W7c0mb-rE

https://interactioninstitute.org/thinking-like-a-network-2/ 

https://www.awecology.eco/unifying-fractal-patterns-of-life/

https://issuu.com/sahityaparvathaneni/docs/patterns

This is how your cohort experiences emergence!

Module 1 Session 2: Network Mindset and Emergence

Session 2 Video Recording

Password: Emergence

Session 2 Audio Recording

Session 2 Transcript

Session 2 Chat

Did you take the end-of-module survey? If not, you can take it now by clicking here!

Reflection Questions
  • Why is embodying a network mindset, compared to a machine mindset, important for changing systems? 
  • What strategies do you use to invite people to question dominant narratives and explore possibilities beyond the status quo? 
  • How could emphasizing the principle of Trust-not-Control help to address inequities in the systems your network engages with?
Try it out
  •  Identify a dynamic tension in a meeting or conversation you are participating in. Practice naming the tension and notice what happens next. 
  • When you observe a dynamic tension, offer some considerations about what’s driving the divergence. Explore what’s important to people on each side of the polarity. 
Resources

Network Mindset and Emergence Slidedeck!

Foundations for Module 1

Rapid Coordination

Conversation with Adrienne Maree Brown on emergence

How Stupid Things Become Smart Together

Thinking Like a Network

Creative Metier report

Book recommendations:

  • The Culture Map
  • Beloved Economies
  • Connecting to Change the World
  • Networks for Social Impact

Module 2 Session 3: Participant Engagement

Session 3 Video Recording

Password: Emergence

Session 3 Audio Recording

Session 3 Transcript

Session 3 Chat

Reflect on Engagement Challenges

Many network leaders experience challenges with participant engagement in their networks. 

Lack of participation can be a result of several different things. It can be a symptom of deeper issues such as: the purpose is unclear, self interest is unclear, relationships aren’t strong enough to hold difficult conversations about systemic change, people don’t see a path to impact, or we aren’t making change visible and celebrating together.  

Here are a few points on participant engagement to consider

  • How are you tending to inspiration in your network? 
  • Do you have a strong narrative about purpose and potential? 
  • Are you making quality invitations that are personal, concrete, and point to possibility?  
  • How are you creating conditions that support emergence?
Try it out: Participation and Emergence

We spoke about how engagement is sparked by possibility and nurtured by the magic of emergence. This week find a way to deliberately introduce emergence with a surprise or something novel. Invite your participants to engage creatively and embrace emergence. 

Resources

Amplifying Network Engagement Worksheet

Foundations: Participant Engagement

Slidedeck: Participant Engagement

Module 2 Session 4: Participant Engagement

Session 4 Video Recording

Password: Emergence

Session 4 Audio Recording

Session 4 Chat

Be sure to take the survey for module 2! We actively use your feedback to improve the sessions.

Reflect
Reflect on the current state of trust in your network
  • To what extent do network members trust each other? 
  • What behaviors do you see that indicate high or low trust?  
  • Can you recognize any of the four elements; care, honesty, reliability, competence at play here?
  • What’s your sense of the connection between trust among participants and network participation? 
Take Action
  • As the network leader what action can you take in the next two weeks to increase trust among particular members, a working group, or within the network as a whole? 
  • As part of framing the action you will take, write out three or more talking points to make the case for cultivating trust and the hopeful outcome in your network. 
Resources

Foundations: Participant Engagement

Slidedeck: Participant Engagement

Fostering Trust in Our Networks and Collaborations

True Stories Exercise

Module 3 Session 5: Coordination

Session 5 Video Recording

Password: Emergence

Session 5 Audio Recording

Session 5 Chat

Reflect

Think about a specific initiative led by a project team or working group within your network (or a collaboration you’ve been part of)

  • What process was used to select this idea for advancing the network’s purpose?
  • Was there a conversation to clarify the relationship between people’s interest in the idea and the capacity available to advance the work?
  • What support did you as coordinator and other network members provide to the project team?  
Take action

As you enter meetings this week, pause to consider how you want to show up. Choose 1-3 words to describe your desired way of being.  Examples: present, loving, compassionate, patient, receptive, brave, honest, clear, grounded, energized. 

  • During the meeting, especially if something doesn’t go as intended, what ways of being do you notice arising? Are you afraid of showing up in any particular ways? 
  • After the meeting, reflect on how you feel. Does it match the ways of being you chose? Did you notice others around you responding to your ways of being?

Resources

Coordination Practices

Foundations for Coordination

Slidedeck: Coordination

Module 3 Session 6: Coordination

Session 6 Video Recording

Password: Emergence

Session 6 Transcript

Session 6 Chat

Be sure you let us know what you think, if you haven't already! Take the survey for this module.

Reflect

Network coordinators play an essential role in helping the network see itself as a whole living system. They do so by drawing upon the skills of framing and weaving. When coordinators offer content framed as Current Best Thinking, the next step is to invite dialogue that engages participants.


Below are some reflection prompts to consider, followed by opportunities to apply what you've been learning in your own context.

  • What activities or exercises have you tried to help your network "see the whole elephant"?
  • How would you design a conversation to bring forward the diversity of member perspectives about your network's purpose or theory of change?
  • Has your network experienced tension between what participants from larger, well-resourced organizations think is important compared with the interests of participants with smaller "power footprints"? How have you helped the network navigate the tensions and hold diversity within wholeness?
Try It

In an upcoming meeting or weaving conversation, ask participants to share learning from their recent work. After listening, invite participants to reply using prompts like, "I wonder if...", "I'm noticing that...", "I have a hunch that..." Notice if reflections point ot the emergence of potential collaborations. Resource on the prompts: https://shareyourhunch.org

Resources

Foundations for Coordination

Slidedeck: Coordination

Turning to One Another  by Margaret J. Wheatley 

There is no greater power than a community discovering

what it cares about.

Ask “What is possible?” not “What’s wrong?” Keep asking.

Notice what you care about.

Assume that many others share your dreams.

Be brave enough to start a conversation that matters.

Talk to people you know.

Talk to people you don’t know.

Talk to people you never talk to.

Be intrigued by the differences you hear.

Expect to be surprised.

Treasure curiosity more than certainty.

Invite in everybody who cares to work on what’s possible.

Acknowledge that everyone is an expert about something.

Know that creative solutions come from new connections.

Remember, you don’t fear people whose story you know.

Real listening always brings people closer together.

Trust that meaningful conversations can change your world. 

Rely on human goodness. 

Stay together.

Culmination Session

Culmination Video Recording

Password: Emergence

Culmination Audio Recording

Culmination Transcript

Culmination Chat

Resources

Network Leadership Capabilities

Rapid Coordination

NLS Foundations 2023 (link to Google slidedeck)

radical gratitude spell by adrienne maree brown
a spell to cast upon meeting a stranger, comrade or friend working for social and/or environmental justice and liberation:

you are a miracle walking

i greet you with wonder

in a world which seeks to own

your joy and your imagination

you have chosen to be free,

every day, as a practice.

i can never know

the struggles you went through to get here,

but i know you have swum upstream

and at times it has been lonely

i want you to know

i honor the choices you made in solitude

and i honor the work you have done to belong

i honor your commitment to that which is larger than yourself

and your journey

to love the particular container of life

that is you

you are enough

your work is enough

you are needed

your work is sacred

you are here

and i am grateful

back to resources