Essentials of successful collaboration

When we collaborate effectively, we can break down silos, share knowledge and deliver better results. These foundational principles can guide us to work cohesively, especially when we are coordinating, cooperating or in full collaboration.

Collaboration isn’t always perfect but paying attention to these foundations can strengthen our partnerships and help us achieve meaningful results that align with our public service values.

Check your team's capacity for collaboration with the Cross-agency pulse check tool or learn about the collaboration essentials below.

Trust is key for effective collaboration. It enables open communication and enables strong working relationships. Cultivating it from the start creates a culture that encourages individuals to contribute authentically and work together productively. Humans are hardwired for connection, and teams perform at their best when trust is high.

Use it in: Networking, Coordination, Cooperation, Full collaboration.

How this looks in practice

Schedule regular check-ins

Take time to connect beyond tasks and deliverables. Simple actions like checking in on others, following up on previous conversations and maintaining continuous interactions helps strengthen relationships.

Model authenticity and openness

Leaders and team members can build trust by sharing challenges, admitting uncertainties and asking for input and clarity. Encouraging open conversations makes it easier for others to do the same.

Celebrate small and early wins

Acknowledge progress, no matter how small. Recognising achievements early fosters a sense of shared success and reinforces trust.

Consistency and follow through

Reliability builds trust. If you commit to an action, deliver on it. If circumstances change, communicate openly about why and what comes next.

Build a culture of respect

Trust grows in environments where people feel valued. Ensure interactions—whether in meetings, emails, or informal chats—are respectful and acknowledge contributions, expertise and lived experience.

Create psychological safety

Encourage a culture where people feel safe to share ideas, voice concerns, and ask questions without fear of judgment or repercussions.

Find resources to help build trusting relationships.

Having a clear, shared purpose gives direction and keeps everyone committed. It strengthens teamwork, builds accountability, and creates the drive needed to move forward together.

Use it in: Coordination, Cooperation, Full collaboration.

How this looks in practice

Build a shared purpose

A shared purpose helps everyone stay aligned, accountable, and focused on achieving common goals. Work with your cross-agency team to create a clear and simple purpose statement that reflects your shared values and priorities.

Use a shared purpose statement to support decision-making

Review and update the purpose regularly to keep it relevant as priorities or goals change. Refer to it during discussions and decision-making to keep everyone on track and working towards the same outcomes.

Tell the story to build support

Use storytelling techniques to build shared understanding and support. Ensure that the narrative resonates with diverse stakeholders by aligning it with their values and objectives and demonstrating how their contributions drive collective outcomes.

Onboard new team members

Set up a clear onboarding process to introduce new team members to the team’s vision, goals, and culture. Help them understand how their role fits into the bigger picture.

Find resources to help foster a shared purpose.

Collaboration thrives when diverse experience and knowledge come together.  Engaging a broad range of stakeholders enriches decision-making and fosters innovation. Embedding diversity goes beyond representation—it ensures every voice is heard, valued, and empowered to contribute. Lived experiences are valuable assets that deepen understanding and drive more effective outcomes.

Use it in: All levels of collaboration.

How this looks in practice

Cross-agency stakeholder mapping

Identify individuals and teams across agencies who bring different perspectives, skills, and experiences. Keep this stakeholder map up to date to ensure everyone is represented in initiatives and decision-making.

Embed cultural competency

Provide joint training and forums where teams from different agencies can build cultural capabilities and address unconscious bias. Encourage teams to apply these insights in their work.

Engage with diverse voices

Develop shared frameworks for engaging with diverse communities and embedding different lived experiences into collaboration efforts. Consider the need for contributions from representatives of various cohorts including First Nations, culturally and linguistically diverse, LGBTIQ+, young people and people with disabilities.

Find resources to help embed diverse perspectives and experience.

’Power’ is the ability to influence decisions, shape outcomes and allocate resources in a shared effort. Understanding power dynamics means recognising where decision-making power should be shared to help the work succeed. Open conversations and sharing decision-making responsibilities can lead to more effective and fair collaboration.

Use it in: Coordination, Cooperation, Full collaboration.

How this looks in practice

Set up shared decision-making structures

Create cross-agency governance groups, working groups, or steering committees where decision-making is shared among key stakeholders. This ensures a range of voices help shape the outcomes.

Use clear and fair processes

Create transparent frameworks that explain how decisions are made, who is involved, and how responsibilities are shared. Regularly review these processes to keep power dynamics balanced and fair.

Empower teams to decide

Let teams and individuals make decisions within their areas of responsibility. This reduces delays, builds trust, and encourages accountability across agencies.

Listening to understand

Focus on truly  understanding others during conversations, showing curiosity and respect. If some voices dominate, gently encourage quieter participants to share their thoughts through turn-taking or direct engagement.

Find resources to help understand and address power dynamics.

Tensions can arise in any collaboration. It is a sign of diverse perspectives. These tensions can stem from tasks and processes, people and personalities, organisational structures or cultures and values.

Working through them constructively and with curiosity fosters deeper understanding and stronger relationships. When these tensions are smoothed over or ignored, conflict is more likely to occur. This is when structured mechanisms may be needed.

Use it in: All levels  of collaboration.

How this looks in practice:

Encourage different perspectives

Create an open space where all viewpoints are welcomed and explored with curiosity, not defensiveness. Use structured activities like reframing exercises or perspective-sharing to help teams see issues from different angles.

Encourage open discussions

Create forums where collaborators can openly discuss challenges, raise concerns early and work through differences before they escalate into major conflicts.

Agreed on conflict resolution guidelines

Develop clear, shared protocols for handling disagreements. This ensures everyone knows how to address conflicts in a consistent and constructive way.

Encourage conflict management upskilling

Support contributors to develop conflict management skills through training in active listening, negotiation and mediation. Giving opportunities to upskill helps teams navigate tensions and foster productive collaboration.

Use neutral facilitators for tough issues

For complex disputes, involve independent facilitators or mediators to keep discussions productive and focused on finding solutions.

Find resources to help navigate tensions and conflicts constructively.

Collaboration improves when teams learn through the process. Continuous learning comes from testing ideas, assessing results and adapting approaches. Adopting reflective practices help teams understand what is (or isn’t) working. Maintain momentum in a changing context by embedding learning as an active process. This ensures that collaborative efforts are adaptive, resilient and effective.

Use it in: Cooperation, Full collaboration.

How this looks in practice:

Schedule regular reflection sessions

Build in time for teams across agencies to pause, review challenges, and identify lessons learned from joint initiatives. Use structured approaches like retrospectives or debrief discussions.

Create spaces for candid discussion

Foster an environment where teams can openly discuss what working, what’s not and what could be done differently without fear of blame. Use facilitated discussions to ensure all perspectives are considered.

Create feedback loops

Create systems to track and measure the impact of your actions. Collecting feedback helps you see if your efforts are working and where you might make adjustments.

Share key learnings

Document insights and reflections in a shared format, like a lessons learned report. This helps pass on valuable knowledge for future projects and the wider public sector.

Apply insights to adapt and refine practices

Use reflections to make tangible changes to policies, processes, and approaches, ensuring that lessons learned lead to continuous improvement.

Find resources to help reflect and learn.

Good communication helps teams define problems, create a shared vision and stay committed to common goals.

Clear and consistent communication lets ideas flow freely, encourages constructive feedback, and supports informed decision-making. Sharing data and evidence helps everyone understand the situation, track progress and focus on shared goals.

When cross-agency teams share insights and information they build trust, stay aligned and adapt more easily to changing needs.

Use it in: Coordination, Cooperation, Full collaboration.

How this looks in practice:

Set clear data-sharing guidelines

Agree on clear rules for sharing data across agencies, covering accessibility, security, and timeliness. This ensures consistency and transparency.

Use shared platforms

Adopt shared digital tools or collaboration platforms that enable real-time access to data and documents. Provide the necessary training to use these tools effectively, for easy and open communication.

Be transparent in decision-making

Share relevant data regularly to guide decisions and actions. Discuss the data openly and explain how it’s being used to support collaborative efforts.

Encourage a culture of information sharing

Promote a culture where team members actively share useful data, reports, and findings. Open communication helps solve problems and make better decisions together.

Make sure data is accessible and easy to understand

Present information in clear, simple formats so everyone can use it, regardless of technical expertise. Add summaries, visuals, or explanations to make the data more accessible.

Find resources to help share information through open communication.

Clear roles are key to accountability, avoiding duplication and keeping collaboration on track. They also support wellbeing by defining who does what and how everyone’s roles fit together. This makes the team effort visible and highlights big challenges that need many hands to tackle.

As collaboration evolves, roles may change. Regularly reviewing and communicating responsibilities helps teams stay aligned and adapt to new needs.

Use it in: Coordination, Cooperation, Full collaboration.

How this looks in practice:

Define and document roles early

At the start of any cross-agency project, outline and record the roles and responsibilities of each agency and team member. Make sure everyone, including new team members, understands their role.

Shared project management

Use clear workflows and shared project management tools to keep everyone on the same page, track progress, and stay accountable. Set milestones and timelines to clarify roles, responsibilities, and what’s expected for the project.

Create a responsibility matrix

Use tools like a RACI (Responsible, Accountable, Consulted, Informed) matrix to clarify who is responsible for each task, who needs to be consulted, and who should be kept informed. This helps everyone know their role and avoids overlaps or gaps.

Encourage accountability through ownership

Give individuals and teams clear responsibilities and empower them to take ownership of their tasks. This helps them focus and work towards successful outcomes.

Provide role clarification when conflicts arise

When misunderstandings or conflicts occur, refer to the agreed-upon roles and responsibilities. Use these as a framework to resolve disputes and ensure that everyone is aligned with their expected duties.

Find resources to help clarify roles and responsibilities.

Agencies need to share and allocate resources such as skills, time, funding and materials to achieve common goals. Pooling resources boosts capacity, avoids duplication and ensures efforts are sustainable.

It’s important to allocate resources not just for short-term projects but also to support long-term impact. Invest in shared tools, knowledge and infrastructure to build lasting partnerships and maximise the benefits across agencies.

Use it in: Coordination, Cooperation, Full collaboration.

How this looks in practice:

Regularly review resource needs

Check what resources are needed during the collaboration and adjust them as priorities, workloads and challenges change.

Facilitate or support sharing resources

Ensure that resources, whether physical or skills and capabilities, are accessible across the collaboration. Implement shared platforms or systems for managing resources to improve coordination and efficiency.

Create a transparent resource-sharing framework

Develop and communicate a clear process for how resources will be shared across agencies, ensuring fairness and transparency. Document the process so that all parties understand how resources are allocated and tracked.

Find resources to help respond to resourcing constraints and enablers.

Effective collaboration requires adaptability, especially in complex environments. This means that cross-agency teams must remain open to adjusting strategies, responding to change and evolving their approach as new challenges emerge. A flexible mindset lets individuals and agencies shift direction when needed and helps the collaboration stay relevant and responsive. Embrace adaptation as a strength to navigate uncertainty. It builds resilience and long-term impact.

Use it in: Coordination, Cooperation, Full collaboration).

How this looks in practice:

Establish a culture of continuous learning and curiosity

Encourage teams to stay open to new ideas and approaches. Regularly review project progress and outcomes and adapt strategies as new insights or challenges emerge.

Build agile processes for rapid adjustments

Implement flexible, agile processes that allow teams to quickly adjust to changing needs. This could include iterative planning cycles, short feedback loops and the ability to pivot quickly when necessary.

Encourage cross-agency problem-solving

When unexpected challenges arise, bring together representatives from all involved agencies to brainstorm and collaboratively find solutions. This promotes adaptability and helps agencies respond to evolving needs effectively.

Allocate resources with flexibility and sustainability in mind

Ensure that resources (personnel, time, budgets) are allocated with room for flexibility. Allow for adjustments in response to shifting priorities or emerging needs, ensuring that the collaboration can remain effective even as circumstances change.

Set up shared feedback channels

Create ways for everyone to give ongoing feedback, helping to spot changing priorities or issues. Regularly check in with team members, partners, and external stakeholders to make sure the collaboration stays aligned with their needs as they evolve.

Find resources to help adapts to meet evolving needs.