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I want to share something with you today that I believe will make you much more effective at
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resolving conflict and building collaboration. But, I want to start by telling you a little story about
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some groups of chickens because believe it or not, chickens have a lot to teach us about collaboration.
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This takes place at Purdue University where Bill Mear is a professor of genetics, and a genuinely
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nice guy, and Bill was looking into the differences between groups of collaborative chickens. These
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were just chickens that got along well with each other. I call them the green zone chickens.
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And there were no star performers in their group. They were just nice to each other. And in the
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chicken world, a star performer is the hen that lays the most eggs. But the problem with the star
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performers is that the tend to be much more aggressive animals. And so we often times see
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among the chickens, something that we occasionally see in human organizations, and
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that is that the star performers become the stars not by being so good themselves, but by
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suppressing the egg production of other chickens. So, the look better. And they do this by pecking
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on them. Now, I call these more aggressive star performers the red zone chickens, and they do
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a lot of damage. So the farmers have tried different strategies to deal with that. One is to house the
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birds in individual cages, about this big. Not a great solution because it's very expensive - takes
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millions of cages. Another thing they tried is something that's called trimming their beaks.
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Now, this is a bit of a deceptive term because it gives you the impression that there's a chicken
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manicurists out there sort of filing down the sharp point, but really it's an employee with a tool
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that looks a little bit like a pair of pliers, and they go up and rip a big chunk of the chicken's beak
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right off its head. Also very expensive, not to mention horribly unpleasant for all the chickens
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and the employee that's assigned to do that. So Bill was trying to see if it's possible to breed
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collaborative instincts into chickens, and if so, what would be the impact of that on their egg production.
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So we had all of the green zone chicken groups over there, and the red zone chicken groups
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over there, and he took the best of each generation's egg producers to produce the
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next generation. He did this for one year - about five generations. And at the end of that one-year
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period, the results were pretty dramatic. This is a picture of the green zone chickens. They were
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healthy and productive. Now the next picture is what was left of the red zone chickens.
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And I say it's what was left of them because more than half of the red zone chickens had been
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murdered by their colleagues - pecked to death. Now, they say that a picture is worth a thousand
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words, but if this doesn't tell the whole story, let's look at the egg production of the green zone
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chickens. In that one year period of time, it went up 260%. So what we can learn from these chickens
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is that red zone environments that are more hostile, that are more adversarial, highly-conflicted,
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internally competitive vs. externally competitive, they produce more red zone behavior. It feeds on
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itself and can spread like a virus in an organization. And green zone environments that are more
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supportive and cooperative and more highly skilled at collaboration, they produce more eggs - or
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whatever your organization's equivalent is to more eggs. Now, I'd like you to think back on that picture
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of those red zone chickens for just a minute and get that in your mind. As a judge for almost
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25 years, my jurisdiction was collective bargaining disputes - labor management conflicts. And in that
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role, I believe that I have mediated more school district labor strikes than any other person in the
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United States. In just about every single strike that I have ever mediated, by the time we get to the end
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of that process, every single person involved in that process, on both sides of the table, knows exactly
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what those chickens feel like because that is the existence that they are trapped in. Now these are
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not mean people. These are good people doing their imperfect best to improve the world the
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best way they know how. I mean they've all dedicated their lives to public education. They
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didn't lack an interest in collaboration. What they lacked was skills, and this lack of skilss was
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costing the state of California a tremendous amount of money in the cost of conflict.
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So a small group of us got together. We did a lot of research and we set out to teach the more
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adversarial red zone groups to be more collaborative. We were wildly successful.
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Trust went up. Conflict went down. We reduced the amount of measurable conflict in almost 100
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different organizations by almost 70% over several years. It saved the state of California a huge
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amount of money. It also transformed the working lives of thousands of employees who had been
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trapped in that red zone chicken existence, which in turn, I believe, improved the quality of education
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for the thousands of school kids who finally had positive role models who could teach them
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how to resolve their differences without destroying their community or going to war with each other.
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And what we learned from this experience is not just limited to public education. It is applicable
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in any setting that requires collaboration, whether that's a family trying to figure out where to go on
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vacation together, or the corporate world where it has become blindingly obvious lately that you
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cannot compete externally if you can't first collaborate internally. Or even in politics where
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the defensiveness of our Congress probably costs as much as the entire defense budget at the
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Pentagon. So, what I'd like to do is share with you today what I believe is the biggest learning from
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that experience, and that's this: There is nothing that will help you become more effective at
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resolving conflict and building collaboration more than better manaing your own defensiveness.
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In over 25 years of working with other people's conflicts, I almost never had to deal with pure
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legal issues. People were almost always before me because somebody would start feeling vulnerable,
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and then they would get defensive. And when we get defensive, our thinking becomes rigid. Our
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IQ drops about 20 points, and we simply become stupid. And not only are we terrible problem
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solvers ourselves, but then we invite everyone else in the room to get defensive, and then what you
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end up with is a whole room filled with red zone people who cannot solve a problem. The technical
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term for that, by the way, is litigation. It's as simple as this. If you reduce your defensiveness,
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you increase your ability to solve problems. Now if we know that's true, why don't we just stay
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non-defensive and keep a more collaborative green zone mind set all the time? So, I'd like
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you to try something with me that may give you some insight into that question. I would like
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you to use all your creativity and empathy to let yourself become one with this piece of paper.
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Know what if feels like to be this piece of paper - nice and cool to the touch, and crisp edges,
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a few sharp corners, a few wrinkles like some of us have. So in just a minute, I'm going to ask you all
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to take a deep breath, we'll do this all together, and as you exhale, I would like you to focus all of your
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attention on this piece of paper and just see if it's possible for you to breath yourself right into this
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piece of paper and become one with it. Okay, is everybody ready? All right ... Go.
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Okay, everybody have that now? Now, anybody want to collaborate with me right now?
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Or build a relationship with me right now? Or more likely, anybody have any really strong red zone
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feelings towards me right now? So, I apologize for this, but I wanted to do this because I wanted you
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to see how easily and quickly you can move from the green zone, where pretty much everyone
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in this room was just a minute ago - into the red zone. And when it happens, it can happen
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just that fast. And when it happens, we don't have defenses, they have us. They own us. They
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become our operating system, and they determine how we see the rest of the world out there.
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And the problem is that it's almost all unconscious stuff. So, we don't even recognize that we're
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getting defensive until it's too late. So, here's our premise about defensiveness. When we get
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defensive, we are not defending ourselves from another person. We are defending ourselves
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from fears inside of us that we don't want to feel. Three big fears that come up all the time: Fears
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about our own significance, our competence, and our likeability. Let me give you an example.