***** To join INSNA, visit http://www.insna.org ***** Probably not what you saw, but here is a real client network from many years ago -- black lines are prescribed network or hierarchy. Grey lines are emergent conversations around key decisions. http://www.orgnet.com/decisions.html Valdis On Jan 15, 2007, at 3:55 PM, Martin Bliemel wrote: > ***** To join INSNA, visit http://www.insna.org ***** > > Hi SocNeters, > > In my flurry of reading through the literature I came across an > interesting > organizational chart (formal reporting) with the network ties (real > communication) superimposed. I believe it was a pretty recent > publication, > too. However, I can not find a copy. If you know the publication I > am trying > to locate, or of a similar diagram, please let me know, > particularly if it > is related to an organization with an R&D division of some sort. > > Kind regards from the unseasonably cold, windy, snowy and rainy > Vancouver. > > Martin > > Martin Bliemel, BSc (Mech.), MBA > Faculty of Business Administration, PhD Candidate > Strategy and Entrepreneurship > Simon Fraser University > Mailing Address: > Centre for Policy Research on Science and Technology > 515 West Hastings St. > Vancouver BC Canada V6B 5K3 > Street Address: > Segal Graduate School of Business > 500 Granville St., Vault 255 > Vancouver BC Canada V6C 1W6 > m: 604.786.2789 (no voicemail) > > _____________________________________________________________________ > SOCNET is a service of INSNA, the professional association for social > network researchers (http://www.insna.org). To unsubscribe, send > an email message to [log in to unmask] containing the line > UNSUBSCRIBE SOCNET in the body of the message. _____________________________________________________________________ SOCNET is a service of INSNA, the professional association for social network researchers (http://www.insna.org). To unsubscribe, send an email message to [log in to unmask] containing the line UNSUBSCRIBE SOCNET in the body of the message.