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Most
of our creative lives have grown out of a shared excitement
about ideas, a process that has involved us for over forty
years: first as students and teachers, then as consultants
and facilitators. We have seen processes taught and executed
well, and we have seen them conceived and delivered poorly.
“Everything we do,” said one facilitation teacher “is determined
by forces inside of each member of the group of which they
are totally unaware.” This kind of approach makes facilitation
seem esoteric and alien, and the claims and processes by some
facilitators arrogant and ominous. When taught and executed
well, facilitators have the capacity to enrich rather than
deplete, to empower rather than diminish, to deepen experience
rather than haunt it. It is with this in mind that we would
like to thank the many colleagues, educators and competitors
who have enriched our thinking, challenged our ideas and asked
us to “always seek a higher ideal.”
What
we have learned is who we are. That is not to imply that we
agreed with all that we have been taught, but we are very
grateful to have known and learned from our many teachers:
Bryan Mattimore from the Mattimore Group, Dick Feder from
The Marketing Group, Jit Chropa and Pam Moore from Synectics,
Jim Ferry and Mark Seabell from CreativeRealities, Chris Miller
from Innovation Focus, Bill Heater from Heater Advertising,
Susan Parrish from Parrish Marketing, Susan Earabino from
The Marketing Partnership, Michael Blaber from Fresh Pond
Communications, Jon Lindalow, Peter Bakalor, Chris Jacobs,
Diane Parks, Deiter Sauer from the Unisys Corporation, Michael
Orme from the EEC and HP - Europe, Lee James and Regis MeKenna
from Regis McKenna, Inc., Kate Newlin from BrainReserve, Larry
Burns from The Cambridge Group, Tom Peters from Tom Peters
Group, Tony Winch, Rita Harris, Paul Regan, Bob Stacey from
Hill, Holiday - Boston, and Grace P. McEnerney from C.Schmidt
and Sons.
I
am most indebted to our clients, whose generosity and willingness
to allow us to explore new ideas and techniques with them
as partners is the foundation for all thoughts and concepts
we've developed so far. It is a great irony because of the
confidential nature of our work, that we cannot thank each
person and each company by name.
It is the paradoxical nature of business to be both public
and private. While encouraging change and "newness" companies
often keep both at bay. Negotiating a course though the paradox
is at the core of our work.
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