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Return to Rio: Expanding the Covey model AN ORGANISING FRAMEWORK FOR TEACHING SUSTAINABILITY How to bring sustainable development and the environment to a wider audience in both government and business? The initial reason to write this was to develop a framework for teaching Local SustainAbility, a methodology of Environ, a leading Leicester-based environmental consultancy, so their work could be readily replicated. Stephen Covey, author of “Seven Habits of Highly Effective People,” seemed to suggest a good starting point. Covey’s work, based on principle-centredness, is totally congruent with sustainable development principles, building a positive shared language around being proactive, win-win thinking, new paradigms, and building synergy. Covey’s mental models suggest a new way to look at the ‘overlap’ of environmental issues with society and economics. And they hint that inner work on community building will be needed to achieve effective, sustainable environmental change. BACKGROUND – CONFLICTING VISIONS OF THE FUTURE Environ have been engaged in the practice field of sustainable development for some time, and synthesised their experience in a series of publications ‘Local Sustainability’. Environ are working towards an environmental manifesto, and are increasingly invited to train groups in the public and private sector who want to replicate their results. A series of development plans have been proposed in Leicester in the last few years, from three different perspectives – economic, social and environmental. Each has in turn been opposed by the other two groups. Environ have now brought together the Millennium Partnership – a group of leaders from all three sectors – private, public and voluntary, to try to create a single shared vision. The group has been shown Peter Senge’s (The Fifth Discipline) model of Learning Organisations, which sets the stage for a learning group to develop a shared vision, but it doesn’t show how to coalesce three divergent visions in a unified framework. This dilemma of partially overlapping visions for economic, social and environmental development was identified at the Rio Earth Summit, and plagued the more recent Kyoto environmental summit on global warning. THE PROBLEM WITH THE RIO EARTH SUMMIT MODEL The Rio Earth Summit brought out the by now familiar Agenda 21 model of three overlapping circles representing Environmental, Social and Economic issues. This is the first thing people usually describe when explaining the Earth Summit. Leaders agreed that a single focus on protecting the environment wouldn’t work. To develop sustainably, we must also look after our communities, and have productive economies. How Much Overlap? With a model based on overlapping circles, it’s hard to see where alignment is going to come. The model actually recognises and gives strength to potential conflicts of interest. This may sound simplistic, but as Covey says “The way you see the problem is the problem.” With this overlapping circle model, people can easily say, “I don’t see any overlap. There’s no reason for me to care about ecology. ” And then dismiss sustainability as something for others. Even the work of a dedicated, resourceful, single focus agency in Leicester, Environ, has had an uphill task getting a group of leaders to see an overlap might occur. And even when they do see it, they still tend to ‘fight their own corner,’ looking out for their own limited self-interest. And who’s to say they are wrong in this? On Covey’s Seven Habits course we soon learn that when we get frustrated looking at a problem one way, what is needed is a paradigm shift. A new way to see the problem. Because the problem is the way we see the problem. Social Environment Economic Or... ? Social Environment ! ? ? Economic FINDING SYNERGIES IN STEPHEN COVEY’S MODEL Covey uses a lot of mental models based on circles. ‘Circle of Influence – Circle of Concern’ is one very important mental model – The environment - saving the whales - may well be in my circle of concern, but is it in my circle of influence? Covey shows we are most effective when working in our circle of influence. This model helps decide where to act for maximum effect, maximum empowerment. And this explains why people will tend to focus their efforts in their ‘Rio’ circle. Organisational Interestingly, one key circle diagram, which builds on ‘Circle of Influence’, is missing from Covey’s book Seven Habits of Highly Effective People. It’s the inside-out change model from his second book Principle-Centred Leadership. ‘Myself’ is always in my circle of influence. So I can work on myself, the inner circle. And when I am trustworthy I can expand my circle of influence to build a trusting relationship with you. This is the core 7 Habits model. Managerial Inter Personal Personal Trustworthiness Trust Empowerment Two further circles are drawn round this to Alignment expand the circle of influence model to the task of leadership of organisations. The principle is the same – that effectiveness begins with inner work. In Principle-Centred Leadership, organisational effectiveness is Return to Rio 2 achieved by the inner work of empowering groups and teams (Covey called this circle managerial) then aligning them within the organisation. Inside-Out Change – Four Levels of Leadership Level Principle 1 Personal Be Trustworthy 2 Interpersonal Trust 3 Managerial (Group/Team) Empowerment 4 Organisational Alignment This diagram above does appear right at the start of the Seven Habits Course Workbook (page 6). Participants are told that Seven Habits will focus primarily on levels 1 and 2, whereas the Principle-Centred Leadership Course will develop the theme at levels 3 and 4. Let’s look at this diagram slightly differently, with the Rio model of society, economics and the environment in mind. The inner two circles are really about society, i.e. relationships. The outer two are about the Economy (Business, PrincipleCentred Leadership). Can’t we expand and add in the environment? What makes these sets of circles in the inside-out change paradigm concentric is the idea of expanding circle of influence – and the common core of principle-centredness. If sustainable development is right environmental methodology, it should overlap too. This diagram suggests a way to improve on Rio, and integrate Covey and Sustainability THE NEW IMPROVED COVEY-RIO MODEL The breakthrough is to add a couple more circles to the circle of influence model, and then see the three Rio circles as fully overlapping – completely concentric. See everything from this perspective, and it all fits in place. Until you see it, this insight isn’t obvious, because Covey’s circles aren’t labelled Economic and Social, they are labelled ‘Seven Habits’ and ‘Principle-Centred Leadership’, and there’s no environment in his overlapping circles, because Circle of Influence only goes as far as organisation. But once you seen the new paradigm, you can’t forget it. Combined Covey / Rio Model Environment Economic Social What we see is a new way of looking at the Rio Model. The Rio circles don’t overlap an arbitrary amount any more, they overlap 100%, because they are concentric. They’re all on the same axle of principlecentredness. For anyone who previously said, “the overlap isn’t enough to affect me,” now there’s no excuse. This paradigm suggests we always should be able to find Return to Rio 3 synergy and win-win if we are willing to look for it. How would this have reshaped the outcome of the Kyoto summit? N.B.: There isn’t a course yet for the outer circle – that’s the opportunity we have, to create a new training programme, to add unique value and to create synergy. FURTHER IMPLICATIONS OF THE COMBINED COVEY / RIO MODEL The way we make the Rio circles converge and become concentric is by conducting business and society in an ethical, principle-centred manner. If all circles spin on an axle of principle-centredness, they are all concentric. The importance and value of the central implicit paradigm – that ethics and principle-centredness matter – simply cannot be overstated. If the environment circle is also to be concentric, it has to be because the principles of sustainable development are also ethical. As Seven Habits is split into an inner and outer circle – personal and interpersonal, and Principle-Centred Leadership is also subdivided into Team / Group and Organisation, we are tempted to make an intuitive leap and suggest the Environment might be subdivided, with organising principles for the inner and outer circles. Three Circles of Concern – Six Levels of Leadership Circle Level Social Seven Habits Economic PCL Environmental Sustainability Principle inner Personal Be Trustworthy outer Interpersonal Trust inner Group / Team Empowerment outer Organisation Alignment inner Community Acceptance outer Environment Care / Service This is not a detailed proposal for the course on sustainable development. Nor is it even a proposal for how to go about developing the course. But it is the germ of an idea for that course, showing it is consistent with an extension of Covey’s principles. The discipline of using a strong ordering structure for an educational experience is not unlike that of writing poetry vs. writing prose. It turns out that fitting ideas to a metre enhances creativity rather than hinders. PARADIGMS, PRINCIPLES PRACTICES, PROJECTS! In the Seven Habits course workbook, each habit is subdivided into principles, paradigms, and practices. As sustainability is the outer green circle of three, the most expressed and concrete value, the course on sustainability must also be related to action – practices and projects. Return to Rio 4 A good way to break old habits in organisations is to bypass the old hierarchical power structures via cross-functional teams working on projects. If businesses get involved in their communities and environmental projects, this will be even better. All improvement takes place project by project, and in no other way. J. M. Juran. This training is a profound structure for environmental back-towork schemes. It is a unified training in life skills, principle-centredness, relationships, teamwork, leadership, community building, and care for the environment. What could be more satisfying and complete? ACCELERATED LEARNING FRAMEWORK We can copy the success of UK Covey courses – accelerated learning activations help create effective guided learning experiences. It makes sense to use best practice to carry the message. By involving all our learning intelligences the experience comes alive, and recall and comprehension increase. Content Activation The course content is surely as important as the way it is delivered – we want people to take on board the principles and processes of Structure sustainability. We don’t just want accelerated learning activations; we also need a strong cognitive framework to carry the content, and powerful, memorable mental models. In the Covey courses Covey, these diagrams and models act as a mental framework for recalling the content, principles and processes. BUILDING COMMUNITY We’ve already figured from using the Covey model for sustainability, that there is a ‘private victory’ associated with the ‘public victory’ of sustainable development. This inner value, the private victory that must happen first, is building community. Many want to leap into saving the environment – the most expanded possible circle of concern, but to look at building community – our circle of influence – before leaping to save the whales is a profound idea and a direct result of using the Covey model. The implications are far reaching. Businesses which want to help their wider community must first create internal community. And sustainable environmental development first requires sustainable communities. So, how to build community? Scott Peck’s work “The Different Drum” is the best source of theory on community building. For practice, the Foundation for Community Encouragement (FCE) and Community Building in Britain (CBiB) have grown from Peck’s work and are good for workshop facilitators, training materials, and research on community building. Return to Rio 5 Gerald McCloud, founder of the Iona Community, says community is built through “a strenuous and virtuous work.” A community that is formed around a great task itself creates synergy, which we experience as something greater than ourselves, something holy, sacred. This holiness / wholeness is awe-inspiring. But we can create wholeness, and so we can choose to make any ground holy. Dee Hock, Founder of VISA, has some great ideas about how to build organisational community. At VISA he created an example of what he calls a “Chaord” – a chaotically ordered, organic, selforganising, self-replicating system. VISA has propagated rapidly, almost like a virus, through the traditional banking community. You may make a mistake, you may make a bad gamble, but in the long run you’re acting on a principle that has the backing of evolution. This is the way biological evolution goes on – constant delegation of authority. Obviously democracy is superior to monarchy. It was De Tocqueville who said that democracy is always right, but for the wrong reasons. Because there is operating in a democracy the principle that Buckminster Fuller called synergy. Synergy is the intelligence of a highly complex system, the nature of which is always unknown to the individual members. Alan Watts Chaords have organising principles, which are so compelling that replication is inevitable. The Internet is another example of compelling principles setting a standard. If community building and sustainable development can become Chaordic, the desired result of rapid growth and propagation of the ideas and practice will be achieved. It makes sense then to research and incorporate Dee Hock’s work. SEVEN HABITS OF SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT Covey’s Seven Habits Model places personal and interpersonal on a ‘maturity continuum’ from dependence through independence and on to interdependence, with three Habits on the personal level, and three Habits for interpersonal. The Seventh Habit is Sharpen the Saw – i.e. sustaining. The same structure is in Principle-Centred Leadership. Interdependence Independence This structure may work to organise principles of Sustainability. Dependence Three habits for building community, three for creating an ideal environment? If the model is good, any gap that needs filling will indicate a place where the model is incomplete. The inner and outer structure for each of the three Rio levels makes sense. The subdivision into three (see, do, get – or thinker, process of thinking, thought) is in tune with deep natural principles. ORGANISATIONAL CIRCLES OF INFLUENCE “Circle of Influence – Circle of Concern” is a foundation principle from Seven Habits. It’s interesting to see how this applies in practice with the growth of a large organisation. Here is an example of expanding organisational circle of influence, as it grows beyond the confines of fulfilling the organisation’s own needs for survival. Return to Rio 6 Mr. Kaku, chairman of Canon, explains very clearly how Canon first shifted into community (stage 2), then expanded into its wider community (stage 3) before fully expanding to a world role (stage 4). It’s a clear description of broadening Canon’s Circle of Influence into the outer community and environment rings of the Covey / Rio model. If this is to the template for how many organisations grow into world citizenship, as Kaku suggests, Covey provides the tools in Seven Habits to establish a business in Stage 1 (Effectiveness). Principle-Centred Leadership fills the same role for Stage 2, in which individual and team visions become aligned with the organisation’s. Many Covey clients are at this point and poised for this next step. It seems a timely opportunity to build tools to help business and organisations move into community and on into world service. Companies truly are the economic engines driving society, so it makes sense to design a training programme that teaches the principles of shifting through Kaku’s stages, to connect the engine to the wheels. This is what the Sustainable Development book and course can be about – creating effective organisational communities and linking them with the wider community. The evolution of a company has four stages. The first stage is purely capitalistic, which leads to labour-management conflicts, low morale and trust, broken and breaking relationships, and is driven by a narrow focus on stakeholder needs Overcoming these problems, the company reaches the second stage where labour / management relations are based on shared destiny. All people in the company are treated as equals. “Management with a common destiny invites all the parties to share their joys and sorrows as well as their prosperity.” Few companies ever evolve to this stage but overemphasis on this type of solidarity can create a gap between the corporation and society. So in the third stage, the company is considerate of its local community and makes contributions to it. But the company may eliminate the barrier between itself and the local community only to provoke friction at the international level. This eventually leads to the fourth stage, where a company is committed to serving humankind as a whole through its philosophy and activities. Canon today takes responsibility in areas such as the growing imbalance between rich and poor, and the depletion of the world’s natural resources and the destruction of the environment. Mr Kaku, Chairman of Canon Kaku’s ideas show the way forward for others. It will be very timely to have a training programme to help organisations work on building their influence in the widest and most expanded circle of concern – their community and the environment. SYNERGY – CO-MARKETING WITH COVEY Covey literally wrote the book on creating synergy – Seven Habits. The recent merger with Franklin shows Covey is open to new synergy. The ideas contained in this paper are suggestions for one more big step – synergy with community and the environment. Covey’s courses often create a sense of community and a shared language for personal and organisational growth. They are warmed up to the potential of community. But Covey’s group lacks expertise in Community Building, so facilitators trained by the Foundation for Community Encouragement could be synergistic with Covey trainers. Return to Rio 7 Similarly, CB facilitators will typically not have the full knowledge of how to carry through a full corporate diagnostic and culture change, and aren’t likely to be able to fulfil a client’s needs, but in concert with Covey trainers, they’d be a winning team. For environmentalists, it makes sense to use Covey to take ecology to business. Mischievous scamps can think of Covey as a Trojan Horse for the environmental agenda in business. The idea that community building must precede effective environmental action will make sense to many environmentalists, and challenge others. Currently there are separate languages for development in the private, public and voluntary sectors, which tends to confound communication. The new model creates the basis for better communication, through a convergence of language in all 3 sectors. A HOLISTIC SCHEME FOR DEVELOPING SOCIETY Covey’s inside-out change model is developed into a complete integrated approach to developing every level of society. No single group has the tools to implement and teach this approach, so it makes sense to build a collaborative strategic partnership. These three circles match 3 of 4 stages in the ancient Indian Vedic ideal of society. The first stage is student, bramacharya, learning and growing up (7 Habits). The next is marriage and following the family dharma – action and success in the world (PCL). The third shifts to taking a parental role, making a contribution to society as a whole – a role of servant leadership and sustainable development. Each stage is a circle in our model. Fourthly – the undrawn circle – we retire to the forest to seek enlightenment. This further Vedic insight suggests that our new third course should be aimed at those in government or entering this third age in life, preparing to take a paternal role in community and society. And perhaps also those working at a high strategic level in business and organisations. It’s about shaping society with a wise touch, bringing light so that strategies, structures and enterprises are fruitful and sustainable. Seven Habits has a spin-off course – First Things First – to make the practices very clear, and Principle-Centred Leadership has a process – the Performance Cycle Review – to turn the principles into practice. Similarly, it’s quite likely our new programme will end up with a companion piece – perhaps around running projects effectively. David Saunders, December 1997 Return to Rio 8