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Circulate, Serve, Pollinate: What Bees Teach Us About Community-Driven Strategy

Circulate, Serve, Pollinate: What Bees Teach Us About Community-Driven Strategy

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The most powerful coordination doesn't come from a single leader running the show. It comes from circulation, from service, from organisms doing their work and creating conditions for the whole ecosystem to thrive. In this episode, we kick off the Wild Lessons series by looking at what bees can teach organizations trying to build trust with communities, coordinate across coalitions, and move from extractive storytelling to something real.


We dig into the "Paradox of Coordination" that entomologists named in the 1950s: how do whole collectives achieve common purpose without centralized control? We talk about John Paul Lederach's work on movements that fly like bees and thread like spiders. And we make the case that circulation, showing up where people actually are rather than convening them where it's convenient for you, is the foundation of community-driven strategy.


If your organization defaults to the town hall, the survey, or the annual report scramble, this one's for you.


IN THIS EPISODE

Why bees circulate instead of convene, and what that means for how organizations engage communities. The difference between extracting and pollinating, and how the act of listening can also be the act of building. Why iteration beats events: the case for retainers, story banks, and sustained narrative infrastructure. What it looks like when different roles serve a shared ecosystem, and why coalition work depends on it.

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