FAQ
How does what we are proposing in network leadership relate to collective impact?
The 4 principles are very complementary to FSG’s CI approach. In fact, I (Jane Wei-Skillern) have done a guest blog, describing how these principles can help to enable CI efforts to succeed. I think that they are doing good work raising awareness and helping to implement more collaborative approaches. We focus on different aspects, they more on structure, systems, driven by funders. I focus more on organic networks that emerged primarily from the bottom up, more as a mutually beneficial solution to a problem rather than driven by a funder, and put more emphasis on what I have seen to be the most critical success factors, not systems and structures, but rather trust based relationships and shared values. The 4 principles are an attempt to capture the values and norms that characterize high performing networks. I believe that the systems and structures that CI emphasizes may be helpful, but without the right values and culture, they will not likely foster a thriving network/collaboration/partnership (I am not particular about terminology either). In contrast, I believe if a collaborative/network/partnership has the right values, culture and trust that stems from that alignment, they can overcome any number of obstacles, even if they didn’t have all the of formal systems and structure in place at the outset.