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Orienting In and Orienting Out: The Political Context of Leading and Managing NICs
This sixth post in a series on networked improvement community (NIC) initiation focuses on how network leaders consider the policy, political, and economic environments in which their networks operate. Author Don Peurach argues that while network leaders must focus on developing and supporting the continuous improvement activities of their networks, they must also attend to the external environments that can do much to enable, constrain, and complicate their work.
Orienting In and Orienting Out: The Political Context of Leading and Managing NICs
March 3, 2016 | By Donald J. Peurach
This blog is part of a series that identifies and discusses practical issues that arise in initiating networked improvement communities (NICs). Contributors to this series have largely oriented in to the core work of NICs, in an effort to provide practical guidance to those seeking to launch networks. Their understandings are well represented…. Read the full blog post here.
Related Resources
NIC Initiation Blog Series:
- How to Launch a Productive Network
- Building and Supporting Improvers
- Organizing a Network for Collective Action
- Building a Culture of Improvement in the Context of External Accountability
- Excitement and Challenge on the Cutting Edge of Reform: An Observer’s Perspective on NIC Initiation
Five Essential Building Blocks for a Successful Networked Improvement Community