- sports editors that, left to themselves, cared more about athletics than journalism and knew of the importance of athletic teams, but what teams had to do with getting a paper out.
- arts columnists who lived in the theatre arts and music buildings but did not see the connection between the roles individuals play in a choir or play and their role on the newspaper.
- production people who cared more learning about the new technology available to put the paper together than about the people who wrote the articles they needed to lay out.
The problem is that people living in silos only know their own silos and have a hard time envisioning what they have to do with the rest of the farm. What was amazing in retrospect was that rather than focus on working with each department to be better at what they did, my instinct was that for the paper to be better, people had to care about and learn about what others did and work together to make the best possible newspaper. In a career that has spanned decades and had many permutations, collaboration has been the constant, and has been the focus of my professional practice for over a dozen years.
Silos still exist and collaboration remains thought of as the unnatural act performed by unconsenting adults. However, the need has never been greater for collaboration, and so this blog is dedicated to helping people think about how we can all just work together - and create far better products for our efforts.
1 comment:
I heard a new fed speak term for silos = cylinders of excellence...
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