My goal is to create opportunities for courage to emergefor your organization to ask itself important questions and discover the best answers that fit your values and mission, what your organization wants to become and the resources your organization has. My affordable, customize facilitation, training and strategic planning services spark exuberant organizational achievements. Clients report such benefits as more joyful work experiences, better interpersonal coordination and reduced meeting time. Some of the group decision and planning methods I build my practice on include:
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Open Space Technology |
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The Discussion Method |
The Workshop Method |
Action Planning |
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Critical Path Method and P.E.R.T. |
Eight-Step Planning Wheel |
Consensus |
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Public Conversations Project |
Team Spiritsm |
Appreciative Inquiry |
FEES. All fees for workshops can be negotiated depending on length, number of people and degree of customization desired.
GET OFF THE DIME! Today!
Because your group has no time to lose.
John E. Perkins, Ph.D.
Keep the Change
5201 22nd Ave. NE Ste. 201
Seattle WA 98105
206 524.4496
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* This topic available as a 27 Minutes MAX! Micro-Workshop
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Micro-Workshops |
With these right-sized workshops your group1 gets the essence of longer presentations in a package you can put to use at once. Plus, 27 Minutes MAX! Micro-Workshops easily fit into your regular meetingsso everyone learns together. Current topics include:

> Making the Most of Meetings
Better meeting performance has a multiplier effect on the achievement of the group. Impediments to performance include unclear goals, discouraging new ideas, misuse of power, and antagonism among group members. Every member holds a share of the responsibility for the success of the group, and therefore for the success of the groups meetings. Finding the way to success entails maintaining a balance between assertion and listening, group success and group or member burnout, open-ended discussion and focused agreement leading to successful follow-through.
This 27 Minutes MAX Micro-Workshop will show you how the alternative to Roberts Rules of Order is not chaosits better communication and mutual assistance among members towards the collective achievement of the group.
> Managing Irreconcilable Issues
Irreconcilable issues stubbornly refuse permanent solutions, instead they require eternal attention. Common examples of these types of issues include the boardexecutive director relationship, organizational stability vs. organizational change, and decentralized vs. centralized approach to decision-making. This 27 Minutes MAX! Micro-Workshop will leave you with two powerful questions to use to determine when you have something which can be solve or is irreconcilable. You will also learn an easy-to-use tool for diagramming irreconcilable issues and managing them over time.
> Negotiation Basics
Many people confuse the terms negotiations and mediations with sound bites on the media involving international relations or dramatic interventions in labor-management contract talks. In reality, many groups, such as boards of directors and coalitions, produce agreements and plans after a process of mutual negotiations. Because these processes are not formally named and structured as negotiations does not deflect from the reality that agreements within a peer-based group or network cannot be imposed.
This 27 Minutes MAX! Micro-Workshop will present the model of negotiations developed by the Harvard Project on Negotiations with suggestions for how you can apply it successfully to improve your groups discusses and agreements.
> Synergy by Designsm (Burnout Prevention)
Ever witness this: a committed group of people meet and make exciting plans, then over the next several weeks or months, a few people take on the bulk of the work of follow-through on the plans while the rest do less and less? Synergy By Designsm takes full account of the three elements most important to providing all involved with a overview of the complete work load. This 27 Minutes MAX! Micro-Workshop will pace you through a simple example from your own work and describe how you can apply it to everything your group hopes to accomplish.


JOHN PERKINS, Ph.D. is a Solution-Focused Consultant and partner in Keep the Change. He has a Ph.D. in Organizational Change from Union Institute. Safeco Insurance Company honored him with a Rudy Award in 1994 for his ability to cut through the fog and get the job done. His forthcoming book on board governance, Get off the Dime!, will be available in 2003. A partial list of clients includes:
Univ. of Washington Medical Center
Tobacco Free Washington Coalition
King County Community Organizing Program
Madison Market Natural Foods Grocery
Seattle Office of Neighborhood Planning
Community Public Health and Safety Networks
Green Party of Seattle
GreenLaw
ADR Options
Washington State Department of Health
Washington Association for the Education of Speakers of Other Languages
KC Arboretum Association
Association for Quality and Participation
YWCA
Northwest Institute for Restorative Justice
Comments from Clients and Workshop Participants
1 The term group denotes any collection of people working together. This includes boards of directors, task forces, commissions, committees, work teams, coalitions, etc.
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