When I received advice from 100 peers in five nations, a key question I asked (and the question that received the most responses) is âWhat is the number one reason that collaboration fails?â As you read the responses, consider what is needed to turn a negative into a positive.
Ego:
Alissa AmosâEgos
Amy FoxâEgo. If I spend my time comparing and contrasting my gifts and skills to the person I am working with and going either one up or one down to them I miss the abundance of the situation and the opportunity to ignite and stretch each other to greater heights.
Brad ClarkeâEgo
Herky CutlerâPride/Ego – When one or more members let their pride/ego get in the way of trying new things, being open to new ideas and/or accepting that what has worked in the past may not work any longer, thatâs usually when collaboration fails.
Michelle Phaneuf, P.Eng C.MedâEgos and fears often get in the way during the collaboration process. My inside voice is always popping up and asking,
âAre you sure you are getting as much as the other person?â I have learned to ignore it and work towards an open outcomeâwhich usually get us both more than we thought possible.
Self-Interest:
Andrew J. McQuistonâLack of âbuy-inâ from one or more of the participants.
Bernie FittererâCollaboration fails because individuals are more focused on their vested interests or what is in it for themselves than a greater good. Sadly, when individuals focus exclusively on self-interest, the outcome is less than it can be.
Kevin BargâPride, Selfishness, Greed, Immaturity, Ignorance, Lack of
Knowledge, Lack of Desire for Knowledge (many of these are related to each other and can be either a root issue or a surface issue).
Lee WahlâOnly worried about your own interests versus joint.
Lynda MacNeillâPersonal agendas or objectives.
Mary Ellen & Lorraine RichmondâWhen the ego or pride is too attached to a particular portion of the process or outcome. When an individual or group of individuals begin to act in a hording manner, rather than with the spirit of generosity for the greater benefit of all, collaboration is awkward and can cease to be productive. Working, thinking and creating together is a discipline of generosity in time, energy and skills.
Rick Hatala, BSc, P.Eng, PMPâSelf-interest grounded in fear and a sense of separation.
Competition:
Carrie ShaferâCompetition: community groups compete for funding while businesses compete for business. Lack of Trust – Change in partner manager or unsuitable personality. One or more groups not wanting to let go of control. Lack or loss of a champion.
Cinnie Noble – Competitive behaviors, poor communications, lack of commitment to or sharing the purpose, internal conflict that remains unresolved, lack of a sense of belonging, lack of motivation, cynical, pessimistic, lack of trust, historical experiences that preclude positive and active participation.
Jeffrey M. Cohen, Esq – Collaboration fails when individuals refuse to subordinate their self-interests to the collective consciousness of the group. Refusal to give up oneâs âturfâ is counterproductive to achieving a groupâs shared vision.
Lack of Trust:
Colin CampbellâLack of trust. A desire on the part of the politicians to be first or to make a profit over the expense of the other guy. Partnerships in business seldom work and I think it is because the partnership is often formed for economic reasons and the parties being individuals who tend to get things done donât know how to collaborate with someone else.
Dr. Nancy LoveâCollaboration fails when the trust in each other is marred by past or present actions, perceived or real, that do not allow the collaborators to be honest with each other. It is vital in business, as it is with astronauts in space, that everyone say what they are thinking. That is the only path to sustainable decisions. When people do not SHARE everything they are thinking or concerned about then the collaboration is based on false information and false relationships. If it is not grounded in open and honest dialog then it can go very wrong. First-time collaborators have not developed a trust in the process to create the best decisions. We know the process allows the kind of input and caution to create not only sustainable but regenerative relationships and GOOD decisions but until someone has seen that happen there is skepticism and concern. I have found two kinds of concerns. There is the âBUT Iâm the expert…â concern and there is the âWhy should I help them…â concern. Either will get in the way of the deliberately gentle, honest, open and specific talk necessary to ensure results and success from collaboration.
Garth WiggillâTrust
Henry MeadâThe collaboration is not genuinely open to new ideas, and the element of trust is missing.
Pat Van HesterenâTrust is required to insure that both partiesâ interests are being addressed and that information shared works to advance all involved. If it is a take-take approach then the collaborative efforts will be for none.
Also the inability to express an idea or thought in the way that it was intended can lead to misinterpretation and break down the process. Clarity is critical.
Sherry MathesonâMembers of the team not feeling free to express their thoughts, feelings and make mistakes.
Ron SaltâOne or more of the participating parties isnât trusted and wants more than their fair share.
Lack of Clarity:
Douglas StoneâBecause people are different or they are not good at communicating or arenât clear on their purposes at the outset, or unexpected stress sets in and each person has a different way of coping with itâsimilar to a marriage.
Susan BradyâLack of clarity around decision-making/who does what.
No Agreement:
Geoff GreenwellâLack of solid written agreements. People make the mistake of verbalizing commitments without documenting them and having both (all) parties sign.
Too Hurried:
Gary OckendenâNot enough conversation before intention formed. Iris EnglishâWhen we get into a âme first!â mindset; when we take the way of grabbing the first ârightâ answer, of not thinking through to outcomes that benefit ALL of the âus,â rather than just the singular âusâ; when we think only with our wallets, and not with our hearts and logic and ethics; when we fail to listen so that we hear what is being saidâand not said; when we choose to feel that anything we want/need is, by definition, more important that what anyone else might want/need; when we fall into the mindset that if âtheyâ get something, it will mean âIâ get less… ; when we forget that generosity of action and spirit always pays dividends. Maybe that is all summarized by the word âgreedâ?
Expectations Not Shared:
James HeilmanâA lack of a truly shared goal.
Jason DonevâUnreasonable expectations around everyone being on the same page; people often donât have the same goals, methods, values and desired outcomes.
Janice SommerfeldâLack of honest, open communication; unequal efforts and/or benefits.
Jodie KekulaâOne party is not personally vested in an outcome.
Justin BrownâWhen there is no defined set of goals or a solid agenda.
Stakeholders Excluded:
James MuraroâLack of integration or contribution of all individuals in the community.
Incomplete Authority:
Paul BlakeneyâPoorly defined decision-making authority. Are we really collaborating, does someone (usually a government, board or legislation) have a trump or impede our work together? The wrong people in the room. Inability or unwillingness to add, exclude/excuse or modify those people in the room overtime as the collaboration moves forward and interest are more fully understood. Choosing to collaborate when another process is more appropriate (arbitration, conciliation/shuttle mediation, authoritative decision making, do nothing, positional bargaining etc.).
Various:
Kristine SkoggâNot listening effectively and/or having the ability to vocalise effectively.
Nick RubidgeâInequality between partners, or unequal sharing of benefits.
Pete CheesbroughâFinding the right balance between staying open minded to everything, and sticking to what one believes is right. Compromising with other peopleâs views and perspectives in service of a desired outcome requires humility, confidence and faith.
Peter K. HischâFailure to plan, and communicate the plan on how we will collaborate efforts.
Philip H. Shecter, P.C.âSomeone, whether a party participant or professional creating a split between the parties and creating entrenchment with certain positions; usually occurs when one or more professionals in the process either fails to develop necessary skills or allows him or herself to align with one partyâs position instead of encouraging remaining open to discussion of all possible outcomes.
Ray MacEachernâParticipant(s)âs unwillingness to compromise.
Richard SchultzâMy sense is that collaboration fails when there is a âmisalignmentâ of the purpose, vision and values driving the collaboration. When there is clarity and agreement of these fundamental factors, then the probability of success improves. These become guiding principles to focus intention toward an outcome.
Scott MeakinâLack of alignment with line of sight to agreed objectives or goals. If there isnât a clear line of site between the projectâs objectives and the organizationâs strategic objectives, then even in the event of apparent success of a project it wonât have lasting impact as the project will fall by the wayside for not providing the necessary value add and link to strategic line of sight. Think of this as producing a better loaf of bread when the companyâs business is only donuts.
Shawne DuperonâWhen your integrity and values are not aligned. When you have different goals, ideas and values, you clash and you canât deeply cause something. Collaboration requires authentic transparency. One of those transparencies includes a clear idea of who you collaborate with and why. The âhowâ naturally takes care of itself. Deep collaborators become aligned.
Stephen Hobbs (DrWELLth)âBeing out of balance between assertiveness and cooperation. Too much assertiveness, slip towards conflicted challenges
with others. Too much cooperation, slip towards compromised settlement for you. To collaborate you cannot have assertiveness without cooperation and cooperation without assertiveness. In other words, to have assertiveness you need cooperation and to have cooperation you need assertiveness.
Trish BarnesâFrustration: âHell is other people!â Viki WintertonâIt must be a win-win.
Dr. Hedy Bachâdistorted sense of altruism.
Keith LawsâThe drive of humans to attempt to control their environment.
Ken Clokeâ
- Neglecting to involve those who are most immediately impacted by the problem
- Not making collaborative improvements in the design of systems, processes, relationships, communications, and technology
- Not reducing or eliminating bureaucratic work that takes time and energy from collaboration efforts
- Inability to visualize what collaboration is intended to achieve, or using it to pursue unclear priorities or vague objectives
- Lack of clarity about how to put it into practice
- Failing to transform existing cultures, processes, and relationships, and significantly alter day-to-day behaviors.