We all know that high performing cultures for safety rely
heavily on engagement, collaboration, and cooperation. But if you could choose only one, which would
it be, collaboration or cooperation? If you had to improve safety performance over the next 12-months, would you
rather have a large degree of collaboration or cooperation?
Collaboration often requires working together to solve common
problems or to complete a given task.
There may be specific roles, goals, or milestones to reach. There may be particular skills and team
synergies that have to be utilized for more efficient and effective outcomes. And with collaboration, a focused framework of active involvement
is often inherent.
Cooperation implies a less formal structure, mostly without specific goals, roles, milestones, or team-related dynamics. The word, cooperation also suggests starting and stopping in less formal ways. It implies less active, more passive and spontaneous work. Cooperation often requires very few written guidelines and even less task-related boundaries. However, cooperative work arrangements are quite necessary to move forward, progress, and improve. One might even argue that cooperation is part of the organizational infrastructure that catapults collaboration to entirely new levels of success!
Cooperation implies a less formal structure, mostly without specific goals, roles, milestones, or team-related dynamics. The word, cooperation also suggests starting and stopping in less formal ways. It implies less active, more passive and spontaneous work. Cooperation often requires very few written guidelines and even less task-related boundaries. However, cooperative work arrangements are quite necessary to move forward, progress, and improve. One might even argue that cooperation is part of the organizational infrastructure that catapults collaboration to entirely new levels of success!
Cooperation a Critical Cultural Dimension
I don’t think it’s fair to choose one over the other, but I
do believe it is important to seek higher degrees of both collaboration and
cooperation, especially when it comes to something as important as safety.
If you think about it, even though certain safety-related
groups may be highly collaborative, those same groups need to be reminded of
the importance of cooperation. In
effect, highly collaborative groups need a set of guidelines to reach higher
levels of cooperative success. And they must
continually ask a set of questions that will help ensure they’re being as
cooperative as possible so that better outcomes are realized.
The following questions can help you to improve your
organizational cooperation and collaboration.
1. Even though your people may be working together
on a specific project (collaboratively), are they working in unison and openly sharing their knowledge, skills, and
abilities?
2. When there is conflict, do your people fight
fairly, without personal attacks, and work hard to get back on track to
complete their work, through their best efforts?
3. When groups of people are working together to
enhance safety performance, is everyone included in the discussions and is
everyone given an appropriate way to contribute?
4. Are your workers reminded of the importance of
letting go of the past so that current work and future success is not hampered?
5. And are individuals held accountable to complete
their assigned tasks on schedule and as expected?
In my own culture assessment strategies for safety, I have always found that cooperation is very critical and cannot be overlooked. However, it takes time to develop enough trust and cooperation that will
afford your workers more opportunities to contribute openly and effectively for
continual improvements in safety. But
open, honest, and highly cooperative work strategies are critical to your next
great safety performance gain! And it could be the kind of substantial safety
culture improvement that you’ve been seeking for a long, long time.
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above written work.
David J. Sarkus, MS, CSP is president and founder of David Sarkus International,
Inc. He has over 30 years of experience as a speaker, consultant, and
leadership coach who works with some of the biggest and best run organizations
in the world. For more information regarding his services please visit www.davidsarkus.com.