Portable Wisdom

Patterns of Human Cooperation

As humans it can be fairly said that our superpower is the ability to work cooperatively with others of our species.

But these seemingly simple ideas of cooperation and coordination turn out to be devilishly complex in practice, especially in large undertakings.

Functional Patterns of Cooperation

In an organization/society of any appreciable size, all of the following patterns of cooperation might be found.

  1. Direct apprehension of the immediate environment, combined with application of internalized knowledge, motivated by personally felt goals.

    (While you may initially protest that this seems to involve no cooperation at all, it must be mentioned, for it is the fundamental building block on which all of the following depend.)

  2. Direct communication with peers. In other words, exchange of information and ideas with people you work with on a daily basis. Such communication is generally verbal.

  3. Group understanding and acceptance of Shared Goals, constraints, norms, contributions and benefits: in other words, team formation.

  4. Intergenerational Learning: the transfer of knowledge, skills, competencies, norms and values from an older, more experienced generation to a younger, less experienced one. More broadly, we could simply think of this as learning and guidance from experienced colleagues.

  5. System tuning: monitoring, consultation and/or intervention to preserve and enhance the patterns of cooperation throughout an organization.

  6. Informal Trust Networks: connections between individuals who have come to know and trust each other, either through prior work experience, or through special assignments taking individuals outside of their normal, daily working teams. Note that trust may be qualified: an individual may be trusted to be able to perform certain tasks, in certain situations, but without similar levels of confidence in other areas.

    Note that trust networks may also involve pockets of distrust, as in agreement that a certain colleague should generally be avoided, at least for certain responsibilities.

    In a large organization, these trust networks should be widely dispersed and only partially overlapping, so that someone I trust may know someone else whom they trust, but who is unknown to me.

  7. Division of Labor and Specialization: an arrangement in which certain individuals/organizations focus on specific pools of knowledge and expertise.

  8. Management Hierarchies: an arrangement in which small (3 - 15 members) teams of peers are each represented at higher levels by individuals from those teams, with those representative individuals then forming similarly small management teams, and with this same representative structure continuing upwards until reaching the top of the organization. Knowledge of current conditions should be accurately communicated, with appropriate summarization, as information flows upwards through the hierarchy; goals and resources should be supplied, with appropriate decomposition, as these flow downward through the hierarchy.

  9. Standardization: as applied to behavioral norms, units of measurement, product/service designs, and work definitions. This requires written communication.

  10. Experimentation: competition between alternative approaches to solving a particular problem.

  11. Independent Verification: an arrangement that permits the validity of the results obtained by one worker/team to be confirmed by another, operating independently.

  12. Multi-team membership: An arrangement in which an individual is part of two or more different teams, each with complementary, but different, goals.

    Within a single large organization, multi-team membership is often associated with matrix management. A frequent example is that of an individual or other organizational component with dual responsibilities, one as part of a multi-function integrated product team, and another as part of a consolidated functional unit, or unit of specialization. As part of the first team, the worker is responsible for delivering a successful product, on schedule and on budget; as part of the second team, the same worker may be responsible for maintaining and enhancing organizational expertise in a particular area of specialization.

    Within a broader context, though, all of us participate in multiple teams: we are members of families, of civic organizations, of professional societies, of cities, states and nations, as well as working at our jobs within organizations of one sort or another.

  13. Identification and Exploration of, and Adaptation to Novelty. Things change. New opportunities and threats emerge more or less continuously. Relevant developments must be identified, explored and understood, and perhaps integrated into an organization’s other patterns of cooperation, as identified above.

Note that these patterns of cooperation are roughly correlated with Developmental Levels, in the following fashion.

Developmental Level Patterns of Cooperation
Beige / Instinctual 1
Purple / Magical 2, 3, 4
Red / Tribal 5, 6, 7, 8
Blue / Traditional 9
Orange / Modern 10, 11
Green / Postmodern 12
Yellow / Integral 13

So there you have it. A list of thirteen patterns of human cooperation, defined in fewer than six hundred words. Sounds easy, doesn’t it?

Well, the main problem, of course, is that all these things must somehow be kept in balance and maintained simultaneously: not an easy undertaking.

Common Examples of Dysfunction

Here are just a few examples of how things can go terribly wrong.

The Bottom Line

Of course getting all of this right is easier said than done, and in practice it is easy to get too much of one thing, and not enough of another, and so organizational cooperation done right involves a constant recalibration of forces to try to optimize the levels of healthy participation in all of the patterns listed above.

But hopefully having a fairly complete list of patterns of cooperation to keep an eye on will prove helpful, since by far the most common organizational/societal failing is to narrowly focus on only one or two of these at a time, while ignoring the others.