Chief Change Officer - #236 From Disney Magic to Real-World Teamwork: Tricia & Edward’s Guide to Collaboration That Works – Part One
Episode Date: March 15, 2025We live in a world where “connections” are made with a click, but real collaboration takes more than a follow and a like. How do we build relationships that actually last?In Part One, I sit down w...ith Tricia Cerrone and Edward J. van Luinen, two former Disney colleagues who turned workplace synergy into a decade-long friendship and a thriving business partnership. Now, they’re co-authoring a book to help others master the art of collaboration.In Part Two, we’ll break down their framework—five key behaviors and a “noble purpose” approach that makes teamwork more than just a buzzword.Key Highlights of Our Interview:Why Telling People to ‘Collaborate’ Doesn’t Actually Work“Think you can just tell your team to collaborate and expect magic? Think again. Collaboration isn’t one action—it’s a mix of behaviors, and it starts with the individual, not fancy tools or technologies.”Why Collaboration Equals Innovation“Collaboration boosts innovation exponentially. It’s not about wasting time competing with colleagues; it’s about working together to solve problems and deliver innovative solutions that make your company stand out.”Noble Purpose: More Than Just Vision and Mission“Leaders need to remind their teams of the noble purpose behind their work. Whether it’s delivering diapers or developing apps, connecting individuals to the bigger impact they have on customers is key to motivation and collaboration.”The Hidden Barriers to Teamwork: Why Collaboration Fails“From egos to insecurities, collaboration struggles often stem from within. True teamwork begins by addressing these internal challenges, transforming both ourselves and our workplace relationships.”Why Gratitude and Generosity Aren’t Just Nice-to-Haves“Generosity creates safety, resourcefulness unlocks solutions, and gratitude gives teams the chance to rest and recover. Together, these behaviors make collaboration more than a buzzword—they make it work.”______________________Connect with us:Host: Vince Chan | Guests: Tricia Cerrone and Edward J. Van Luinen______________________--Chief Change Officer--Change Ambitiously. Outgrow Yourself.Open a World of Deep Human Intelligence for Growth Progressives, Visionary Underdogs,TransformationGurus & Bold Hearts.6 Million+ All-Time Downloads.Reaching 80+ Countries Daily.Global Top 3% Podcast.Top 10 US Business.Top 1 US Careers.>>>100,000+ subscribers are outgrowing. Act Today.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi, everyone.
Welcome to our show, Chief Change Officer.
I'm Vince Chen, your ambitious human host. Oshul is a modernist community
for change progressives
in organizational and human transformation
from around the world.
Don't burn bridges.
Keep up with business connections
and personal relationships.
Because you never know when that connection or person could become your collaborator,
business partner, or referral to a great opportunity.
That's how I landed five job offers within three months after leaving a role that led to mental depression years ago.
Today, though, it's so easy to burn and build bridges. You can add a friend in quotation
in one second and just as easily
delete them. This use
of friendly in quotation, UI
UX experience has seeped
into our modern mindset, making it effortless to kick people out of
our own circles or lives.
But without sustainable connections, how can we collaborate, build stronger teams, and create outcomes that benefit everyone?
In today's episode, I sit down with two guests, Edward Van Doeden and Trishir Sriram to talk about connection and collaboration.
Yesterday, Edward and Trishir reflected on their own collaborative journey, which started ten years ago at Disney.
They turned a positive work relationship
into a sustainable personal friendship
that has now grown into a business partnership
and a co-authoring collaboration on a book about collaboration. Today, Part 2 will dive into the vision and framework for collaboration,
centered on a noble purpose and five key behaviors.
What are these behaviors?
How can we practice them?
And why is collaboration so challenging today?
I assure you, the method isn't just another software solution.
It's far more human-centered than what we're used to seeing.
Let's start collaborating.
Before we dive into the five principles in your book and the noble purpose behind it, I want to ask, why does this book matter?
On the flip side, what is the problem you're trying to solve with the book?
From what you've shared with me so far, you believe collaboration is the solution to many of the biggest workplace challenges.
So if collaboration is the key, that means there are a lot of issues in the workplace
today.
What are those problems?
As you see them, we see collaboration as two or more people working toward a common goal,
where they are using all of their knowledge, skills, resources, and potential to achieve it.
And that's important because they have to feel like they're also uniquely contributing.
Like you were Vince in that job, or you were so excited to get out of bed.
So it's important that they feel that.
to get out of bed. So it's important that they feel that. I think also then the problem
when people say collaborate, I'll back up. In 2014, there were a couple different studies that said collaboration was the cause for 86% of workplace failures and that was Salesforce. And there was
another study done that they were looking at Australia, and if they could just solve the problem of collaboration, they would make another 46 billion a year.
And Australia is a fairly small economy compared to some other countries, and that's a significant amount of money.
As we look at these statistics of people measuring problems in the workplace, of not being engaged and quiet quitting
and having stress, like the youngest generation
coming into the workforce, 91% of them experienced
at least one kind of stress,
which is basically saying everyone is stressed.
We do think collaboration is the solution
because the way we have designed it,
you can design it into yourself and into your team
and into your company.
We're saying that you should design meaning and purpose,
which is the noble purpose for the company
and for the individuals.
And we're saying you should always be leveling up yourself in these behaviors of generosity and
resourcefulness and co-creation and action and gratitude.
Because all five of those, we pick them for certain reasons, because they interact and support each
other and build on each other.
because they interact and support each other and build on each other,
and they actually impact our brain
in different and similar ways
that help us to think better,
to be more resilient, to be more confident,
to be happier, and all these other things.
But we also have seen that people say,
oh, go collaborate,
but they don't understand what that means.
What we have discovered in our work, or what we believe from the work that we've done, is that
people just simply don't understand what collaboration is, and they're spending billions
of dollars on a problem they don't understand. Two issues with that,
people think that the core unit of collaboration is teams or tools or technologies, but we're saying
no. The core unit of collaboration is the individual. And so we all have to work on our
individual skills first, or we won't be able to collaborate with anyone.
There's this other piece of collaboration
is not one action, it's a collection
of actions or behaviors.
So you need, that's why we say these five behaviors.
If you have these, you will be collaborative
and your team will be collaborative.
And so those misunderstandings, it's like people say, go collaborate when they like
they say go ride a bike.
You didn't learn how to ride a bike by doing one thing.
You had to learn how to pedal the wheels and balance and use the handlebars and there's
all these other things.
So it's actually a slightly more complex activity, but once you get it,
we believe that you will become an incredibly high performer and develop a high-performance team.
Absolutely. I couldn't agree more, Trish. I believe the problem that we solve with collaboration
that we solve with collaboration is radically increasing innovation. Every CEO, every C-suite leader, every middle manager is trying to increase
innovation. That's the problem that collaboration solves is we deliver
innovation not only in leadership and building teams, but using the five behaviors,
as Tricia says, to be more efficient, to drive career growth, to drive better solutions,
because they're collaborative decisions and solutions. In a virtual world, where running a business has never been more difficult.
So the why is expanding innovation.
And we reflect that in our book title, which
is Collaborate to Compete.
Let's not compete with our colleagues.
Wasted effort, waste of time.
We collaborate so we as a company can innovate and compete better with others outside the
company.
So it's really the focus of what we want to do is collaborate and the why, Vince, with
your excellent question, is to increase innovation exponentially.
So that's why the name of the book is collaborate to
compete collaborate internally to compete successfully
eternally.
Right. Yes.
But don't become a competitor.
Use the same to your excellent earlier question, Vin and Trish Right? Yes. But don't become a competitor.
Use the same to your excellent earlier question, Vint.
And Trish, as we're all talking about, use the behaviors.
Use the noble purpose outside as well.
Don't turn into a different person once you're outside the company.
You're a collaborative leader.
You've built a collaborative team.
Extend those behaviors and noble purpose and process and roadmap
that Trish was describing to your life.
That's the true, we feel, innovation here.
So tell me more about this noble purpose.
How do you define it?
Noble purpose is really a combination of vision and mission, but it's more than that. So
you have your company vision and mission, but then you might have a team who is doing a project within
a company. And so you want to take that noble purpose for the company.
Let's say the noble purpose for the company is we make diapers and deliver them 24 hours a day to serve families at the messiest time in their life.
And so that's an important thing.
Like you're literally saving some mother's sanity and some little baby from diaper rash.
That's the big emotional noble purpose of it.
So there's like what you are physically doing and the customer,
the value and the change and the impact that you're having on their lives.
Now that can get lost when you're just a little person on a team,
maybe developing a new app for the company.
You're the person programming and you can lose sight of the noble app for the company. You're the person programming,
and you can lose sight of the noble purpose for the company.
And so we always ask the leaders
that you have to take that noble purpose
and explain it to your team,
the importance of this app for your end customer, right?
Not just for the company ROI,
this app is gonna now be accessible
to the mother or father for them to access
and order diapers to be delivered within eight hours.
Then with that like programmer,
you also wanted let them know, look,
this app wouldn't happen without your unique skills.
And our team wouldn't even function that
if you didn't have that sense of levity in your work
and the outgoing curiosity that you have.
So a leader wants to bring that noble purpose to the individual in a very specific and unique way
so that person feels seen and valued for everything that they're bringing to the job and to the
company and to the people they are serving in the bigger world.
We don't spend enough time, first of all, articulating what the noble purpose is and
the why. So link that, Vince, to your earlier question about you being motivated to want
to go to work at one of your past workplaces. What happens? We are in back to back meetings
for 10 hours a day. We're just trying to get tasks done,
but we need to spend time as Trish says, sharing,
what is the noble purpose with the team and with each individual to ensure they
understand the why and tie it back to Vince,
what you said, so that I do feel like I want to get my head off the pillow and go
to work, which I did at Disney because the noble purpose is incredibly
motivating at Disney to create things every day.
So tie the noble purpose, explaining the why, making sure it resonates and is real for the team member so that they want to get
their head off the pillow and want to go to work.
And also at the end of the day, have a dinner conversation.
That's exciting. Oh, this happened at work today. Oh,
this team member did this. Our leader shared this information with me. Those are the
deeply human metrics that drive collaboration, and I think we were able to do that.
Edward and I were both at Walt Disney Imagineering, so we were working to design the
theme parks and experiences around the world. And one of my very first attractions that I did was in Epcot, and it was a small little attraction
where you design a robot and then you race on a dance pan.
You have these different winners.
Opening week, there was this family that came in to play.
It was a father and mother, a very, like, annoyed,
cynical- looking teenage boy
and a little girl.
They start playing the game.
They're looking and then they start getting a little competitive with each other.
Then they race and when they left the attraction,
they were literally like walking off the dance pads
and the son and the father like high-fived each other and the son's face
was so transformed like he had had fun and laughter and their engagement while they were
playing it created a different space for them to engage.
How they looked at each other was different and how they experienced each other was different.
The dad put his arm around his son as they were walking out and I literally almost
started crying. I might have been crying because that's the noble purpose for Imagineers. Yes,
we're building these beautiful spaces and these rides that are fun, but what continues to drive
you when you're working 24-7,
trying to install an attraction or something,
is the memory of, I'm doing this for that family
that has no other place where they can connect
and see each other in the most important way.
Fulfilling that desire that a parent has
to connect with their kid and have a memory, express love in a way they can't express it.
That's what noble purpose, when you can explain it
to your team members, it's powerful,
and it gives us all kind of meaning in our lives.
As I'm listening to you, I'm visualizing this noble purpose as being at the top, and
then these five principles you mentioned serve as the pillars supporting and driving that
purpose. If I'm understanding correctly,
these principles are the foundation for everything.
I love to learn more about each
of these fundamental behaviors.
Could you walk me through them?
I would offer that the five behaviors
of generosity, co-creation, action,
resourcefulness, and gratitude are first in collaborate to compete. Why are they
first? Because the root about how we work is much more important than what we're doing.
You need the what,
but in most performance management systems
that we've all been in, we've created, we've designed,
we've led, and we've had to communicate to our team members,
put what first, what are your goals?
Oh, okay, you did your goals wonderfully.
Okay, you were a nice person at the same time, but oh,
sometimes you weren't a nice person, but that's okay
because you accomplished your goals.
In a way, the five behaviors are radically human and they have
to be put in the first position because the how you work is
based on it being more important than what you're doing.
Now the noble purpose, as we've just been talking about,
is vital and has to happen as well, but it happens next.
That makes sure that we're all aligned.
But first we focus on, as Trish said,
the unit of collaboration is not the tool or whatnot,
it's the human, it's the team member.
And that's why that focus on the behaviors, first and
foremost, and consistently demonstrating are really
important.
And then we add the noble purpose.
When it comes to these five behaviors, generosity,
resourcefulness, co-creation, action, and gratitude.
I know each one could probably have an entire episode of his own, with so much depth behind
them, but I still love to get an overview of what they mean in the context of your methodology.
How do these behaviors show up?
How can we nurture and manifest them?
Not just for our own benefit, but also for the benefit of the team.
I can add to what Edward said.
Let's just start with generosity.
Generosity is basically giving to others.
So it's about how you give to others.
And it's always about assuming positive intent.
When you are engaging with generosity and learning how to just be better at it and be more generous,
you end up creating a safe environment for people to grow and contribute,
to speak up and to share crazy ideas like ones that might be really innovative.
And so safety is really important for people to feel like they belong and to speak up and
contribute.
The next one, resourcefulness.
It's a very practical thing that you can grow, but it's all about growing your tools, your
information and your network.
Not just having them, but seeing different ways of using them and connecting them so
that you can always find the answers that you need, which kind of leads into then co-creation.
You can't always figure it out yourself, so having another person there is really helpful.
And co-creation is an area of, as a leader, there's a lot of skills in there that
you really do need to develop ongoing that are going to help you with brainstorming, with coming
up with new ideas. But at the foundational level, co-creation requires that you listen very well,
listen very well and that you ask open-ended questions, more expansive questions, so that you're gaining information versus judging or being a naysayer up front.
So co-creation is going to help you come up with new solutions for problems or those innovations
or if something went terribly wrong and you pull your C-suite
together and you need, you're the CEO and need a bunch of ideas, you have the smartest
people in the company there.
So you don't want to screw it up and say, we've tried that before.
You want to really ask open questions to get the best of everyone in the room in a way
that's positive and playful because that's when they do
their best. Then you're the leader you have to take action and a lot of people think they have
to wait until they have all the information to act and we're very much against that. You will never
have all the information you need to act but if you take an action even if it fails you're going
to learn and get more information and be able to
make progress toward your goal or pivot. The last one is gratitude. You think
about a high-performance team, even athletes, they need to rest after
delivering something or doing a lot of work and gratitude is the thing that helps people breathe even if it's
for a moment or have that recovery and so gratitude is how you respond to
generosity and to work. We always say don't just make it a feeling like oh I
feel grateful show it how are you showing thank you? And Edward would do
this great thing of sending a little thank you card with a coffee card inside for one of our
teammates who did a good job, which is just thoughtful. It's not just the handwritten note.
It's, oh, go get a coffee and brainstorm with a friend. Or we would have special lunches to
celebrate a big milestone and use those lunches to celebrate a big milestone
and use those lunches to thank every person individually
in front of the entire team
and make a note of some unique contribution that they made.
Sometimes it's like the big celebration of the end of the project.
Gratitude is really important for teams to have recovery and rest and then rebuild
that excitement to go get it again.
Not just feelings that are ambiguous.
Trish and I made a commitment to each other with senior leadership when we had to update
them over the three-year lifespan of our project, is we did it together.
And I think that was important so that we were hearing the
same thing.
It also showed that we were truly collaborative.
We were showing up collaboratively.
The visual is sometimes very important.
So that the collaboration looks like in big actions, small
actions, every action are collaborative.
It's a practical example of how we did that.
We also depended on partnering with our leaders in
this three-year knowledge transfer project that we led.
So we were very grateful and generous at the same time in
providing feedback to the leaders in
specific thank you written form
for the contribution that they made to our project.
And that not had happened that often.
So they remarked to us that they really liked that.
Finally, the other leaders of the people
that were on our team noticed,
hey, what are you guys doing over there?
People love going to your meetings.
They wanna be on your collaboration team.
Would you please come and speak to my leadership team
about what you're doing over there in collaboration?
So I feel that that was co-creation,
we were helping them out,
but we were also generous with sharing our time.
And when people are generous
in sharing your time in the organization,
that's another example of a collaborative behavior.
That's another example of a collaborative behavior. Tricia, you've quoted some important statistics about the scale of these problems.
And we've gone deep into the method and solutions.
But I want to shift from the macro view to a more micro view.
We know these issues have economic implications.
But why do we even have these problems in the first place. An other way to look at it is why is collaboration in organizations so difficult to embrace and
practice isn't due to office politics, ego, inexperience, or something else, could you highlight some of the key hurdles you see when it comes
to fostering real collaboration within a team?
Yes, that's a really good point.
There are barriers to collaboration.
They sneak up on you and they can be barriers that are inside us that we don't maybe recognize
or inside someone else.
And we don't know why we think we're there being a jerk,
but really they have some barrier that speaks
to a wound in their life in some way.
But those barriers that we see most often
are people who have a sense of superiority.
So they don't think they have to do the work or it's beneath them, or they have a big ego
and want all the attention, or I have to do everything myself.
They like to self-reliant and they think everyone else doesn't do it their way.
And sometimes it's okay for people to do it a different way.
And the one that is a little sneaky is insecurity, where a leader, they might
have just been put in a position that they're not fully equipped for.
So their insecurity can come out in a negative way.
But if you recognize what's going on, you can help them gain the
tool of incompetence that you need.
And then the last one is really just about being ungrateful, like
having ingratitude to see that you actually have some great people working
around you who want to help you that you have all these tools and these people.
And so all these things are, again, they speak to the behaviors, there are
these internal things when you get in, they speak to the behaviors. There are these internal things.
When you get in a work situation to your question, the reason we all fail a lot is
there hasn't been a lot of focus necessarily on developing what character looks like or what
morality looks like in the workplace or doing the right thing or virtue even. It's like almost sounds old-fashioned. Once you get into the workplace, we see each
other and we're working with each other and it's a very external thing. It's, oh I need this report,
so I'm going to do this report. Oh I need to serve this salad, so I'm making this salad.
I need to build a construction project.
It's all very external.
We can get caught up in thinking that life is external.
So much of what we experience is very internal.
I think we've lost sight that leadership is an inside game
and collaboration is an inside game.
And nothing changes outside until we change inside.
We have to focus on ourselves.
And going back to that Gandhi quote,
be the change that you seek.
And I feel that we have to focus first on ourselves and
that's important in collaboration. And the external influences as you say,
Trich, are very strong, but it really has to start with the internal. We also have
the challenge of company structures and resources and rewards really being based
on a 1900s industrial competitive productive model.
Yes.
So not only are we needing, as Trish brilliantly says,
start with ourselves, recognize how difficult
it is to be collaborative.
When we're competing for bonus dollars,
we're competing for headcount. We're competing for promotions.
It's very counter-incuitive. That's why, again,
we call the book collaborate to compete because sometimes those
collaboration behaviors are rewarded or recognized or valued.
As Trish says, the values are off. But we feel that our noble purpose is really important with collaboration and can make
a vast difference as we've talked about in innovation, engagement, efficiency, career
development, happiness, and many things.
Being able to say, going back to our metric, I love my job.
Yes, I just want to emphasize what Edward just said,
because we're both designers, and so we're like,
how do you design collaboration onto a team?
But what he just said is a truth that companies,
their design, their structures are designed not necessarily to
support collaboration or to reward teams, they reward individuals. And so there is a
lot of external design that fights against us in a lot of ways.
Do that. I had the privilege of getting a sneak peek at the framework of your book.
You've interviewed a lot of experienced and interesting figures to gather stories and
lessons.
I can't wait to read it myself once it hits the market. For today's listeners,
whether they're managing a team,
building a startup,
or even a CEO of a larger firm,
what are some actionable DIY
do-it-yourself tips
they can start implementing right after listening to this episode?
Edward, you mentioned before that collaboration is a process.
So what's something they can do now to kickstart that engine and move forward more collaborative outcomes? Any quick
practical advice for them?
Thank you and great question Vince. I love the
application because I thought we're all trying to do as leaders is be better
every day. One of the things we recommend is with the five behaviors
generosity, co-creation, action, resourcefulness, and
gratitude, we ask leaders to take just a quick informal poll of yourselves. Which
one of these collaborative behaviors am I good at that I understand and I show
consistently at work on the team with my peers. So pick the one or two of these five collaborative behaviors
and recognize that you're good at this
because we as leaders are not starting from scratch.
When we launch a new leadership model
or trying to be better,
we're always building and improving
and also leveraging what we've done in the past.
So we feel that one, two, or possibly even three of these collaborative behaviors, leaders
are already demonstrating now, but spend the time to understand them and keep demonstrating
and applying them on the job.
Thank you so much for joining us today.
If you like what you heard, don't forget to subscribe to our show, leave us top-rated
reviews, check out our website, and follow me on social media.
I'm Vince Chen, your ambitious human host.
Until next time, take care.