My Objective is to Help You Achieve Yours
Two Kinds of Communities of Practice© Fred Nickols 2012
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There are two kinds of Communities of Practice:
Self-Organizing CoPs are self-governing as well. They pursue the shared interests of the groups members. These CoPs add value to an organization by sharing lessons learned, acting as distribution points for best and emerging practices, providing forums in which issues and problems can be raised and resolved and, in general, by learning from each other. Owing to their voluntary, informal nature, self-organizing CoPs are fragile yet extremely resilient. They are fragile in that attempts to manage or control them can result in the group members disbanding or going "underground" instead of sharing their expertise and knowledge more broadly. They are extremely resilient in that members come and go as interests and issues shift and evolve. Over time, then, they adapt. They can even evolve into a formal or sponsored CoP. Or, they might disband if enough of the members decide they are no longer deriving any benefit from their membership. Sponsored CoPs are initiated, chartered, and supported by management. Sponsored CoPs are expected to produce measurable results that benefit the company. They get needed resources and they have more formal roles and responsibilities. Even so, they are much more self-governing and wide-ranging than the typical cross-functional project team. The basic charter for all sponsored Communities of Practice (CoPs) should have three major objectives:
The mission for a particular CoP and the results expected from it will depend upon the issue, process, or practice area around which it is organized and upon which it is focused. In general, however, the mission and expected outcomes for all CoPs should encompass the following:
A CoP (Sponsored or Self-Organizing) might be established to focus on almost any area of interest to the people forming or chartering it. Some of the more common focal points around which people organize CoPs in organizations are:
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This page last updated on August 2, 2019 |