Legal communities often talk of their desire to achieve collaborative working. The aim is to bring together legal, technical and product specialists with different mindsets, backgrounds and experience, to help boost innovation, increase understanding and ultimately build better product solutions.
At the latest London Law Expo, Karen Waldron and Dani Mccormick shared how ½Û×ÓÊÓƵ has moved towards new collaborative working practices and culture. They outlined ½Û×ÓÊÓƵ learnings which could help you to reach this goal.
Achieving a collaborative way of working is more than just throwing together a variety of people in a room and hoping something great comes out of it. Instead, a wider cultural change is vital in attaining the benefits of closer collaboration.
Cultural change is difficult and takes time. But, as ½Û×ÓÊÓƵ discovered, it’s worth it.
On its journey, ½Û×ÓÊÓƵ identified three key building blocks that allow collaboration to flourish in business:
Physical environment
In order to bring your teams together, one of the easiest things to do is change your physical environment. Though it is not the be all and end all, it is a start.
½Û×ÓÊÓƵ recently made the move to locally based development teams, creating a shared environment for them to work – the ‘Tech Hub’. This space has bought together technology, product, delivery and user experience teams. Crucially, these development teams work alongside the legal content experts in . By bringing the teams together it has enabled them to work on common goals in a cross-functional approach.
Creating a new environment not only allows the space, facilities and means to employ agile and service design practices, but also enables continuous learning through discussion and experimentation.
Benefits seen by ½Û×ÓÊÓƵ included:
Measuring success
Another key to successful collaboration is to focus your business on tracking measurable outcomes rather than solely the delivery of products, or technological features.
By doing this, you are minimising the potential for tunnel vision, potentially looking at the wrong solutions. It opens up space for teams to do what is best for a project and be more creative in how they achieve an outcome, creating more innovative results.
Business and investment planning
Annual budgeting and reliance on lengthy business cases to approve investments can be limiting. Pressure on creating up front traditional business cases can also result in temptation and expectation to double down on specific deliverables that have been approved to meet the business case projections. Often market needs have moved on or the proposed solution evolved.
½Û×ÓÊÓƵ realised that this approach needed to change. By understanding the problem to be solved, the outcome expected by solving it and what that outcome will deliver for the business has allowed teams to experiment with a range of options and pivot or stop if that idea fails.
Collaboration equals a well-rounded business. By gathering your teams together, you can get inputs from diverse mindsets, experiences and expertise.
In ½Û×ÓÊÓƵ’ case, it has helped to ensure prototype products are quickly built. For example, ½Û×ÓÊÓƵ legal and technical experts worked together to create an innovative Q&A prototype solution based on Halsburys Laws of England. The combination of legal and technical expertise allowed for rapid increases in the accuracy of the prototype. Constant communication meant the team were able to understand, learn and implement changes quickly.
Diverse experience also provides the opportunity to challenge, clarify, and employ a wider range of techniques to solving a common problem. The focus on outcomes and the ability to shift focus or pivot in direction means that the team can experiment and learn together.
Waldron and Mccormick shared some of the lessons ½Û×ÓÊÓƵ has learned in their journey so far on improving collaborative working practices. These lessons can be applied for any business, helping increase collaboration to achieve better outcomes or quicker innovation:
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Hannah is one of the Future of Law blog’s digital and technical editors. She graduated from Northumbria University with a degree in History and Politics and previously freelanced for News UK, before working as a senior news editor for ½Û×ÓÊÓƵ.
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