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− | {{glossary}} | + | {{glossary}}{{stub}}<onlyinclude>A group of people can be defined by how people answer a specific set of questions. Even if the "members" of such a resulting group don't appear on any list, are not stored anywhere and never communicate their answers to anyone, it still exists in a certain sense by having a definite potential for action. We call this kind of "non-explicit" group an organic group (as opposed to a trust group which is one who's members are known to one another). The membership of organic groups can never be truly known and may be constantly changing, it's only when members are given the opportunity to act in a particular [[alignment|aligned]] way that the potential of such a group can begin to manifest.</onlyinclude> |
− | An Organic Group is a group of people who share a particular interest, for example a group of all the people who are interested in car-pooling together. The group is organic because the query used to define it is able to be adapted by the interested members, and because the context itself serves as an informational portal for the group allowing it to refine and evolve under collaboration. Organic groups may also make use of organisational [[groupware]] and [[group decision]] tools to manage the shared pool of resources made available to the context by the members. Some software such as [[Drupal]] inherently support this concept (in fact Drupal even has the same name for it), whereas other software such as MediaWiki needs to be set up specifically to work in this way.
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− | At Organic Design we have a specific plan of how we'd like to use the Organic Group concept. The overall idea is very similar to the Drupal usage of the concept whereby each Organic Group forms exhibits a home page, or "portal" through which all the necessary tools and resources for that group are made available. Some common tools used by such groups are blogs, forums, wiki pages, mailing lists, group decision-making tools (such as polls), project management tools, shared schedules and online chat systems,
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− | Groups should be able to divide in separate groups, or merge multiple groups into a single group, as well as be able to create sub-groups. For example if a group decision is unable to be resolved, the group could split into two, or an group representing an organisation may wish to create sub-groups representing various departments and further into projects or roles. Note that Roles are a separate concept, but roles may like to have an Organic Group for themselves as a common portal catering to their specific needs.
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− | There should be different types of Organic Group which all work the same way, but have specific layouts and collections of tools. Such types represent the major concepts such as Organisation, Role, Project or Campaign. As well as acting as a container for tools and resources and exhibiting various members, these groups should also have their own data fields and views so that they can be searched for and accessed from various contexts.
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| == See also == | | == See also == |
− | *[[Drupal]]
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| *[[Trust group]] | | *[[Trust group]] |
| + | *[[Alignment]] |
| + | *[[Common vision]] |
| + | *[https://medium.com/enspiral-tales/the-beautiful-trap-of-belonging-f4f99a69b248 Richard Bartlett on "belonging"] |
| + | </noinclude> |
Latest revision as of 22:13, 8 July 2018
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This page describes a concept which is part of our glossary
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This article or section is a stub. Stubs are articles that have not yet received substantial attention from the authors. They are short or insufficient pieces of information and require additions to further increase the article's usefulness. The project values stubs as useful first steps toward complete articles.
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A group of people can be defined by how people answer a specific set of questions. Even if the "members" of such a resulting group don't appear on any list, are not stored anywhere and never communicate their answers to anyone, it still exists in a certain sense by having a definite potential for action. We call this kind of "non-explicit" group an organic group (as opposed to a trust group which is one who's members are known to one another). The membership of organic groups can never be truly known and may be constantly changing, it's only when members are given the opportunity to act in a particular aligned way that the potential of such a group can begin to manifest.
See also