I don't know what the protocol is with blogs for just lifting something wonderful and reproducing it (with only one comment of my own at the end), but I'll push on. This is a wonderful post from Jack Ricchiuto on a blog he contributes to called Network Weaving. I just liked it so much because it talks about what is important in a network.
9 Indicators of Growing Networks
We continue to have countless conversations with funders and others who want to "grow" networks of collaborations and innovations. This is impossible until they have enough network literacy to understand what it means that a "network" actually "grows."
Here are 9 simple indicators of network growth, to this purpose. They become both indicators and strategies for the intentional growth of existing networks.
- People in the network gain broader and deeper awareness of the available assets in the network
- People in the network gain broader and deeper awareness of potential new collaborators and co-conspirators in the network
- People in the network spend more time introducing people to one another who are 2+ steps away from each other in the network
- People in the network spend more time introducing themselves to others who are 2+ steps away from them in the network
- People in the network discover more new opportunities to engage and combine their assets to create a future different from the past
- People in the network have more conversations together about their dreams and assets than their problems and deficiencies
- People in the network value change and differences as more valuable to the network's growth than similarities and protecting a status quo
- People in the network become "network weavers" who intentionally commit time and imagination to looking for new ways to connect unconnected people in the network
- People in the network together become more self-organizing, innovative, agile, inclusive, strengths-based, and dedicated to shared thrivancy
Wow. My only addition would be a statement that talks about how people in the network increasingly learn about and help each other reach their dreams because the willingness to know and help each other is a glue that holds a network together -- it's a source of deep value for network members that is often easy to create if you remember to try.
You can read Jack Ricchiuto's original post here.
Recent Comments