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Pat Coyle

Blog IN Unconference - inspired by "Open Space" technology

As we prepare for our first ever, Blog IN, I thought it might be helpful to talk a bit more about the "unconference" format.

An unconference is a conference where the content of the sessions is created and managed by the participants (generally day-by-day during the course of the event) rather than by one or more organizers in advance of the event. The term is primarily used in the geek community. Open Space Technology, however, is an unconference process that has been around since 1985 and is now in widespread use. Open Space Technology is an energizing and emergent way to organize an agenda for a conference. Those coming to the event can post on a wiki ahead of time topics they want to present about or hope others will present about. The wiki can also be used as an attendee list.

The only "unconference" I attended was guided by the principles of Open Space Technnology

Open Space follows these simple, and very liberating principles:

1. Whoever comes are the right people.
2. Whatever happens is the only thing that could have.
3. Whenever it starts is the right time.
4. When its over, its over.
5. Document on the Wiki
6. Law of two feet: If you find yourself not learning or contributing at any time it is your responsibility to use your two feet to take and fine somewhere you are learning or contributing.

From Wikipedia:

Methods
In Open Space, a facilitator explains the process and then participants are invited to co-create the agenda and host their own discussion groups. Discussions are held in designated areas or separate rooms known as 'breakout spaces' and participants are free to move amongst the discussion groups. Each group records the conversations in a form which can be used to distribute or broadcast the proceedings of the meeting (in hard copy, blog, podcast, video, etc). Online networking can occur both before and following the actual face-to-face meetings so discussions can continue seamlessly. In a multi-day Open Space, participants have the opportunity to announce new discussion topics / late-breaking sessions each new morning. At the end of the day (or 2 days or 2.5 days) the full group reconvenes for comments and reflection. This helps participants to re-engage in the full group over the duration of the meeting.

While the mechanics of Open Space provide a simple means to self-organize, it is the underlying principles that make it effective both for meetings and as a guidepost for individual and collective effectiveness. The Law of Two Feet (also known as the Law of Mobility in settings where participants don't necessarily have the use of both feet) -- a foot of passion and a foot of responsibility -- expresses the core idea of taking responsibility for what you love. In practical terms, the law says that if you're neither contributing nor getting value where you are, use your two feet (or available form of mobility) and go somewhere where you can. It is also a reminder to stand up for your passion. From the law flow four principles:

Whoever comes are the right people
Whatever happens is the only thing that could have
Whenever it starts is the right time
When it's over, it's over

People can choose different roles for participation in Open Space meetings:

Host: the person who feels a burning passion for the subject and is willing to take responsibility to call the conversation, invite others in and make sure something gets harvested.

Participant: Anyone who is drawn to a conversation wants to stay the whole time and participate fully.

Bumble bee: The ones who move from conversation to conversation cross-pollinating the learning.

Butterfly: A butterfly may not want to be in any conversation, instead they prefer to sit on the lawn and look beautiful. A new, unexpected conversation may happen when two butterflies meet.

The organizing theme of an Open Space meeting is that people who care about the subject will come together. The initial meeting notice takes the form of an invitation, thus the people who have attended have chosen to be there and are willing to contribute. The objectives for the meeting and the time available affect design decisions such as whether action planning is included in the Open Space or not

The BlogIN is an unconference. We'll use the process outlined above to begin exploring the blog as a tool to build community, commerce and culture.

Tags: blogin, open, space, technology, unconference

4 Comments

Jeffrey Cufaude Comment by Jeffrey Cufaude on April 18, 2008 at 9:59am
You might also want to look to the World Cafe model, a modified and popular form of Open Space.
John Uhri Comment by John Uhri on April 18, 2008 at 10:24am
So is there a wiki for the event to kickstart some topics?
Erik Deckers Comment by Erik Deckers on April 18, 2008 at 10:46am
Sounds very hippieish, so it's kind of cool to see that mindset coming back into place 40 years later. But if anyone brings beads and a tambourine, I'm leaving.
Pat Coyle Comment by Pat Coyle on April 18, 2008 at 12:17pm
doug karr will set up a wiki...right doug?

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