Top 3 Items to Consider Before Collaborating with Someone

As event professionals, we are not self-made.  We are the result of a lot of experience from experimental epic fails (read between the lines:  "learning curves"), incredible successes and let's be honest:  often times just plain "luck":  when opportunity met good old-fashioned preparation.

If you work for a company, collaboration and working with a team is often mandated and one does not have a choice.  If you are self-employed or a small creative business in this industry, collaboration is a choice.  And depending on the project and the people in charge of it, this collaboration can take your business to the next level, or it can set you back.  If you are self-employed or a small, boutique business,  reputations are triply as important because they are more delicate to build and much easier to break, because it is harder to mask bad behavior and reputations when one is smaller.

Here are our top 3 questions to ask before agreeing to collaborate:

1)  Is there a need that needs filling?
If the other entity is providing a service that isn't relevant or going to actually benefit the project, no need to collaborate.  Sounds elementary, but consider the following story where someone with great speaking skills and expertise in one part of the nation was approached by a colleague who lives in another part of the country to conduct a very high-end, pricey workshop for young female entrepreneurs in the latter's hometown.  When the speaker asked her colleague if he had a database of attendees who would come, since she had no contacts in the area or enough outside the area to make the trip, and he said no, it was quickly determined that there was no way to fulfill this potential collaboration, because there would be no demand for it.

2) Do you trust your fellow collaborator?
There are many forms of trust when deciding to collaborate with someone.  While you may feel you know them or like what you've heard about them, there is nothing like working together intensely and in stressful conditions to bring out other sides to people.  Is there a chance that they may jeopardize the project (and your reputation) by the way they respond to pressure situations and others who are important to your business?  Are they known for integrity?  Your name is associated with theirs once you agree to collaborate, so it's a bit like being tied at the ankle in a three-legged race.  There is only working together and in pace together.  If one goes down - in any capacity - the other (you) is sure to, too.

3) Does your collaborator bring a unique skill to complement the project to make it better than if you had worked on it alone?
If you are working with a collaborator just because they are a friend, but you are both doing the same thing, the project may not have the same dynamic "wow" factor in the end.

Collaboration should make a project even greater than if it were done singly by one of the parties.  When done right, it has the potential to build good relationships, provide excellent networking for future relationships and can make outstanding business sense when invested in properly from the beginning. 
_________________________________________________
Engaging Inspiration  Specializes in the special event & hospitality industry partner, providing strategic training and marketing solutions designed to spark and engage better leadership and business.

Comments