Case Set
Early-Stage Collaboration Case Set
Last Updated
Topics
Collaboration, Strategic Leadership and Management
Location
Global
Overview
Complex city-wide challenges often require public, for-profit, and civic organizations to work together. But how do you find a common starting point? This collection of teaching cases explores the early stages of collaboration and how effective city teams can gain momentum.
Learning Objectives
- Diagnosing barriers to collaboration and possible avenues for collaboration across organizations and sectors to address social problems that cut across missions and organizational capacities.
- Examine how to take a strategic approach to “problem selection” and navigate the challenges and benefits associated with selecting a team across boundaries or sectors.
- Explore the concepts of “execution as learning” and “finding entry points.”
- Creating conditions for diverse teams to make progress on complex problems.
Cases
Region: Europe
Location: The Netherlands
Nobody’s Core Business: Confronting Cross-Cutting Problems in the Public Sector
Region: North America
Location: United States
Tackling Homelessness and Addiction: Coalition-Building in Manchester, New Hampshire
Region: North America, Northeast Region, United States
Location: Manchester, NH
Cases come with educator guides (suggested session plans for use in academic courses) and practitioner guides (suggested session plans for standalone workshops) as they become available. As a set of curricular materials, this collection of cases lends itself well for courses and training on:
- Capabilities for social problem-solving
- Public leadership and management in cities
- Social and urban policy
- Innovations in teamwork
- Organizational culture and design
Related Resource
In this episode of the Harvard Kennedy School PolicyCast podcast, Jorrit de Jong (Director of the Bloomberg Center for Cities at Harvard University and Faculty Co-Chair of the Bloomberg Harvard City Leadership Initiative) and Amy Edmondson (Novartis Professor of Leadership and Management at the Harvard Business School) talk about their research on what the most successful problem-solving collaborations have in common, including building a culture of safety and trust and being empowered to try, fail, and learn from mistakes.