sf aa mar 2011 outsider ethnography

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Doing Corporate Ethnography As An Outsider Mary Walker, VP Organizational Development, Rackspace Society for Applied Anthropology, Annual Conference March 2011 Panel on Corporate Ethnography: Various Topics

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From panel talk on the experience of being an outside consultant, going into an organization to do a project. Wh

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Page 1: Sf aa mar 2011 outsider ethnography

Doing Corporate Ethnography As An Outsider

Mary Walker, VP Organizational Development, Rackspace Society for Applied Anthropology, Annual Conference March 2011

Panel on Corporate Ethnography: Various Topics

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Definitions

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What do we mean by “Doing Ethnography”?

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Corporate Ethnography: from traditional ethnography…

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…to “para-ethnography”

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Most of what happens in corporations

is para-ethnographyEthnography conducted via ESP

Meaning-making activities that have “an ethnographic sensibility” “…something that approximates ethnographic [activity]…”

“Fast-Capitalism: Para Ethnography & the Rise of the Symbolic Analyst” byDouglas R. Holmes & George C. Marcus. From Frontiers of Capital: Ethnographic Reflections on the New Economy, editors Melissa Fischer & Greg Downey, 2005. Smells like…ethnography

“…an aspect of expert practice…”

“…an alternative and valid method of knowledge” [an alternative to quantitative methods of knowledge]

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We need more of this mindset in the world.

We need more of this mindset in the worldJust ask Jaron Lanier

Corporate para-ethnography = activities with an ethnographic mindset - seek understanding & insight into people’s day-to-day lives- avoid value judgments (shoulds, right-vs-wrong, smart-vs-stupid) - respect the full range, variety & weirdness of human experience

-

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Classic deep ethnography• Done by professional (usually academic) ethnographers• Long term study (years) • On-site, in-person• In person /participant observation Objectives: • Develop a deep understanding of the full scope of experience of the studied group • Contribute to knowledge of the field & of humanity in general

Para-ethnography • Usually done by non-ethnographers (experts in other disciplines) • Short-term (days, weeks, months)• In-person and/or remote/mediated Objectives:• Develop an understanding of a defined area of activity (bounded scope) • Create recommendations for corporate action

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### of people doing adapted or para-ethnography

# people doing classic ethnography (in organizational settings)

there are usually a lot more opportunities to do this -

- than to do this

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Study people outside the organization (customers etc.)

with adapted ethno techniques

Para-ethnographic disciplines Examples: human resources, coaching,

organizational development, process improvement, program/project management, etc.

Study people inside the organization (employees) with

adapted ethno techniques

Para-ethnographic disciplines examples: market research, customer experience,

product development, customer service, etc.

“Organizational Ethnography”

External orientation (outside the organization)

Internal orientation (into the organization)

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Back to definitions:

What do we mean by “outsider”?

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*But that’s not the only answer. Depends on the organization & context.

Simplest answer: not an employee*

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“Outsider-ness” in an organizational setting can be complicated…

Summer intern

Acting Leader of X

…varies by context & observer

Overseas affiliate

Temp-to-perm candidate

Long-term on-site vendor Auditor sent from headquarters to field

Executive coach

Ex-employee, now contractor

Internal consultant

You

Executive of a support function

Executive of line function

Full time W2 employee

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An outsider is somebody who is not part of my…

Organizational Context OrganizationDepartmentWork groupTeam Seniority levelJob typeLocation

Societal ContextGeographicEthnicLinguisticReligionSocial statusWealthEducationFamily

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The Outsider Experience: Re-creating the Hero’s Journey

(one project at a time)

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Outside consultant on The Hero’s Journey

Objective CompanionsCrossing the ThresholdMeeting Helpers & HinderersRoad of Trials Temptations Completion Separation & Departure

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What is your official objective? (hint: they wrote it in your contract)

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What are the unofficial objectives?

Of the person who brought you in: • Outside expert brings credibility • Hit man to do my dirty work • Skill transfer to my internal people • Spend down my budget before I lose it • Experiment, fishing expedition • Responding to pressure from higher-ups • Scapegoat

Yours: • Your own learning• Promote humanistic values in the project,

organization or profession • Get a new reference client • Learn a new company, industry, area, topic• Material for an article / book /

presentation (cough, cough)

Figuring out your sponsor’s unofficial

objectives is key

Know thyselfYou have agency

What matters to you?

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Companions

Are you a lone hand?

Or one of a group?

Your outsider experience is heavily dependent on your companions -- other outsiders/consultants you’re

working with (if any)

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Crossing the Threshold: going onsite

The physical environment of the client’s workplace is rich with information (material artifacts & context for behaviors and interactions).

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Introductions are ritualized encounters that establish a frame for your activities in the organization.

• Who introduces you• To whom, in what order • What is & isn’t said • Implied permission frame• Body language, affect • Status signaling

Meeting & greeting

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Assessments & judgments Ally? Opponent? Irrelevant / ignore?

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Meeting Helpers &

Hinderers

As people assess your presence in their organization, they decide whether to help, obstruct or stand aside. Mapping allies, opponents & neutrals is part of the outsider experience.

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They wouldn’t have hired you if they’d been able to easily do it for themselves.

Road of Trials

There will be monsters and riddles and wolves in sheep’s clothing.

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Temptations• Telling clients what they want to hear • Avoiding sacred cows that need scrutiny• Looking the other way: ignoring uncomfortable implications • Thinking the project has no chance of success – but hey, the money’s good

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Completion of the project

Some projects fulfill every hope & expectation. Most don’t. • Time pressure• Scope constraints • Changing priorities• Political battles • Your own imperfect skills in navigating challenges

You still have to wrap it up & move on.

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• Wrap-ups & hand-offs • Disposition of materials: notes, reports, etc. • Lessons learned: personal, group • Separation & departure rituals• Celebrations and gifts

Good-byes

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• Logistical: impaired access to office/plant location, space to work, computer network, phone, meeting invitations, email lists

• Not part of their relationship network – out of communications loop • New kid feeling: lonely, superficial relationships, having to prove self to new people • Inefficiency: everything takes longer because you lack knowledge & connections• No benefits or perks (health care, 401k, PTO etc.)

Weaknesses & hassles of being an outsider

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Strengths & joys of being an outsider

• Variety: different projects, different organizations • Development of new skills in becoming a consultant • Psychological growth in “leaving the herd” - proving yourself, going it alone• Higher cash income than insiders • Easier to maintain independence & boundaries

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An idiosyncratic bibliographyBlock, Peter. Flawless Consulting: A Guide to Getting Your Expertise Used. Pfeiffer, 3rd edition, 2011.

Cefkin, Melissa, editor. Ethnography and the Corporate Encounter: Reflections on Research in and of Corporations. Berghahn Books, 2009.

Gellner, David and Hirsh, Eric, editors. Inside Organizations: Anthropologists at Work. Berg Publishers, 2001.

Ho, Karen. Liquidated: An Ethnography of Wall Street. Duke University Press, 2009.

Kleiner, Art. Who Really Matters: The Core Group Theory of Power, Privilege & Success. Currency/Doubleday, 2003. Jordan, Ann. Business Anthropology. Ann Jordan. Waveland Press, 2002.

Moeran, Brian. The Business of Ethnography: Strategic Exchange, People & Organizations. Berg Publishers, 2005. Schwartzman, Helen. Ethnography in Organizations. Sage Publications, 2002.Wolcott, Harry. Ethnography: A Way of Seeing. Altamira Press, 2nd edition, 2008. Wright, Susan. The Anthropology of Organizations. Routledge, 1994.

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Doing (Para) Ethnography As A Corporate Outsider