I read the books like Reinventing Organizations. I know Holacracy. Those concepts are cool, but unnecessary overcomplicated. So instead of hiring an expensive coach we started experimenting ourselves. We solved the problems we had and built up our system from scratch.
I’m not saying our method is good for everyone. I’m not saying it’s better than any other systems. But you can probably steal a few good ideas from us. We are a 35-person UX design studio, a service company working for clients. But I think many ideas can be applied to different businesses too. So let me introduce you The Studio Model, a lightweight framework for self-organizing teams.
These are the six key ingredients for the Studio Model:
Let’s discuss them one by one.
We don’t have levels of hierarchy. Instead we define the tasks we have to do together and assign someone for them, who will be responsible for that specific task. If it needs more people, we form a team. We have teams for our client projects and inner company functions, such as HR or marketing too.
There is always someone who is responsible for the team. But this guy is not a leader in the traditional sense: he or she can’t tell the others what to do. His or her role is to make sure, that the team discuss everything, and they have progress. Decisions are made together.
We form client teams when a new project starts. We reconsider the teams for inner functions at the end of every month. So the team structure is changing rapidly according to our needs, but it is always clear for everyone.
The Process is your workflow written down. It describes the way you work. It doesn’t have to be too specific or too detailed. It is a minimal workflow instead. The steps your team will always follow whatever happens. It can protect you from doing the same mistakes again and again. The Process will be your common ground. The rules everyone knows and follows. You have to create and edit it together.
Putting together your process is very easy. Just sit down with your team and write down how you work, what is the process you want to follow. The result should be a list with bullet-points and key words. Keep it simple.
Later, you will have enough time to modify and complete it together. It will grow longer in the future or you will add many other guides. But for the first time it should be short. If you need more than an hour to create it, or it is longer than a single page, you are doing something wrong.
Think of the Process as a guide to new employees. If they have just ten minutes to read it, will they have enough information to understand how you work?
The weekly stand-up meeting is for informing about what’s going on, and organizing weekly operations. It’s a little bit different from the sprint meetings software development teams have, as we don’t discuss what to do here. It’s more like a show and tell, with some conversations about timing, coordination and critical points.
We do this on Monday afternoons. We go in a round, and everyone answers the following questions:
We have these questions written up on the wall, so when it’s your turn it’s easy to see and answer them.
You will always need someone to lead the meetings, otherwise they will turn into chaos. We go round-robin: someone else is leading the meeting every time. This way the team will feel they have no bossy characters.
Everyone will experience what it is like to lead a meeting so they will be more empathetic with others. People will also get better in workshop facilitation. At the end of the meeting we always check who will be the next leader from our list of teammates.
Here comes the good part. As Abraham Lincoln said: “Give me six hours to chop down a tree and I will spend the first four sharpening the axe.”
We stop for an hour every week to sharpen our axes and we call it the how-we-work meeting. This time we discuss topics about how we work together: how to change our processes, how to do certain tasks, or how we solve a problem that came up. Everyone can suggest a topic, we discuss them in smaller groups and make decisions on the spot.
The rules are simple:
As you see the how-we-work is a democratic forum. It gives a place where anyone can come up with ideas and solve problems. The decision making is also distributed. It guarantees that your organization will evolve in small steps week-by-week and everyone can have an impact.
We go to a rural place for a long-weekend every six months to discuss our long-term plans and have some fun together. This is the time when you set up goals for the next semester or talk about your values or mission. You can find many good advice about how to do that. In my experience you have to do it in every 6 months. It can boost motivation for everyone.
The first how-we-work meeting in every month is different, and we call it strategic meeting. This time the whole team comes together and we follow-up on our long-term goals. We check our KPI’s and collect the todos for the next month. Anybody can suggest new ideas and tasks we have to do to reach our goals. We also talk about our team structure on the strategic meetings.
This is also a good occasion to highlight the best achievements we had and celebrate our success. We sometimes just call it the “clapping meeting”, because we show the best designs we created and the team gives a huge applause for the designer.
So that’s it. The team structure defines who is working on what. The weekly stand-up can help in organizing the operations. The how-we-work can solve tensions and grant continuous improvement. The process will be your common ground and guide to work. The retreat and strategic meetings can help with long-term goals. The most important areas are covered. The Studio Model should be enough to run a 5-20 company, and it can be applied to teams in larger organizations too.
I hope it helped. Please give me feedback, or ask questions in the comment section below.
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