Replying to @coderbyheart

But we do not educate ourselves in collaboration. But collaboration is the only
way we can make up for our own limitations.

Collaboration between humans however comes with a cost, communication is messy,
cultures are different.

Sun, 21 Apr 2019 14:27:15 UTC164

31 replies

Replying to @coderbyheart

I always say that I'd love to have more software problems, because they are easy
to fix. But people problems is what I have to deal with.

And in the past I invested very few time in educating myself on collaboration
and communication. I want us to change this.

Replying to @coderbyheart

Here are some techniques and frameworks (yeah, don't we love us some nice
frameworks) I hope we can look into and adopt them, or even extend on them like
we do for developing software.

Replying to @coderbyheart

Because as with software frameworks, communication frameworks should prevent us
from doing the same mistakes over and over again and have best practices at hand
which will let us achieve our goals faster.

Replying to @coderbyheart

The premise of this talk is to give the listener then an overview over these
frameworks, and this is where I now need your input. Does this resonate with
you? Would you be interested in hearing this talk?

Replying to @coderbyheart

It works very well for me in that it gives me a process to dissect communication
and try to find the true message, which might be wrapped in emotions and hard to
get initially.

Replying to @coderbyheart

But this is (at least how I practice it) a passive method, where I do the
analysis and do not go in an exchange with the other person about the way they
communicate. Maybe a little subtle when I mirror their request back to create a
better shared understanding.

Replying to @coderbyheart

Typically here, I did not have a formal training in it but discovered it on my
own a few years ago. So it would be interesting to learn if there are developers
out there hat received training, and how that went for them.

Replying to @coderbyheart

Since most people work for some kind of affirmation 5LL gives a good model about
the different ways humans are receptive for gratification and it is important as
a collaborator to understand what drives them and how I can give them the
feeling that I value their work.

Replying to @coderbyheart

The four-ears-model is a valuable complement to the earlier mentioned
Non-violent communication, since it also models a message as a composite of
various aspects, and it helps to identify and separates the different aspects
the were amalgamated by the sender of a message.

Replying to @coderbyheart

In my experience as an organizational coach these systems do not work well with
heterogeneous teams where you gradually change something, it's hard to explain
to an "outsider" why this makes sense and it can actually feel inhuman.

Replying to @coderbyheart

I guess the second part needs more GIFs. Nevertheless, I think it could be a
valuable contribution to a conference to look into more of these ideas about
collaboration and communication and make them available in a collection.

What do you think?

Replying to @coderbyheart

One point I want to stress on the talk is this:

We developers happily pay (money, time) for getting up to speed on tech topics.

We don't do this for communicatio/collaboration skills.