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Ideal group sizes

March 6, 2012 By Chris Corrigan Art of Hosting, Collaboration, Conversation, Design, Facilitation 5 Comments

First of all there is no such thing. Second, a friend asked me the question “What is the idea group size for collaborative process?” and in trying to answert the question I emailed him the following (please note that this is all off the top of my head, and in practice I usually go with intuition, relying more on patterns than rules): Innovation generally starts with individuals, so I like to build time into to processes for people to just be quiet and think for a bit.  Small groups can help refine and test good ideas, and large groups can …

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Waking up beloved community

March 2, 2012 By Chris Corrigan Art of Hosting, BC, Being, CoHo, Collaboration, Community, Facilitation, Invitation, Leadership, Music, Practice 2 Comments

Last night in Vancouver listening to Le Vent du Nord, a terrific traditional band from Quebec. They put on one of the best live shows I have seen in a long time with outstanding musicianship combined with incredible energy. Listening to them and watching people dancing I had a deep experience of why we humans need art. It brings us into a joyful relationship which each other that we seem built to need – a kind of belonging that transcends each of our individual reservations, a sort of shared ecstasy. The cynic might say that such an attitude is decadent …

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Addicted to knowing

February 14, 2012 By Chris Corrigan Collaboration, Emergence, Leadership, Organization One Comment

The Cynefin framework is helpful in making a distinction between the worlds of complicated problems and the worlds of complex ones.  One simple distinction between these two worlds is the extent to which they can be known. In a complicated domain, the parameters of the problem can be known and several good practices can be hammered out, with largely knowable results.  In the complex domain, the initial conditions are unknown and the results are unknown which is why small experiments designed to tell us more about what is going are very useful for creating emergent practice. Financial markets are famously …

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Harvesting and distillation

February 9, 2012 By Chris Corrigan Art of Harvesting 3 Comments

 by gautsch In a little conversation this morning on the art and practice of harvesting we got into a conversation about the pattern of distilling.  We talked about what it takes to lay a table with a meal for a group of six friends.  How no one can creat a meal from scratch, and that everything from the food to the table, to the machines that transported the food, to the people that sold the chairs and built the factory that created the plates all contributed to that meal.  That a single meal with friends is a distillation of …

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Fierce design

February 7, 2012 By Chris Corrigan Art of Hosting, Design One Comment

A lovely day of design with friends in Lindon Utah.  In most Art of Hosting type events, the substantive design work happens in the days just before the event, when the hosting team can finally be physically together, when we can read over the “getting to know you” answers from participants and when we can sink into a deeper space of good working relationship and creative planning.  We work until we get to a design that is good enough to hold the bones of what we are trying to do, and then we rest and let it sink in so …

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Find Interesting Things
Events
  • Art of Hosting November 12-14, 2025, with Caitlin Frost, Kelly Poirier and Kris Archie Vancouver, Canada
  • The Art of Hosting and Reimagining Education, October 16-19, Elgin Ontario Canada, with Jenn Williams, Cédric Jamet and Troy Maracle
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