Democracy in Action at Linden Lab

April 24, 2008 RSS Feed Print

In Linden Lab's virtual online game, Second Life, players create alter egos in a virtual world where there are few rules and a lot of experiments that sometimes work out and sometimes don't. Life at the San Francisco company's headquarters is much the same. Back in 2000 "we started with the feeling that this company would be a system where people would be largely self-directed," CEO Philip Rosedale says.

Because Second Life itself is so multifaceted and amorphous, Rosedale figured that Linden Lab's managers could not control or understand every aspect of it. So executives created a structure in which engineers and the rest of the company's 250 workers have a lot of say over their projects and how they work.

Transparency is the key to making things run smoothly, Rosedale says. The company's online wiki board is filled with lively discussions. Employees meet in Second Life, allowing workers in different offices to work together as a team. People send weekly E-mails tracking what they plan to do and what they have accomplished. Because employees don't know who will be reading the progress reports, Rosedale says, the E-mails keep them accountable.

That openness also means coworkers have a good sense of who is doing what. Linden's "Love Machine," an E-mail feature, lets workers send positive notes to one another acknowledging their accomplishments. They send about 90 a day, which are archived. While the system may seem touchy-feely, Rosedale says that managers look through the notes during reviews to evaluate employee performance.

Not every experiment in democracy works out. Last year, Linden tried a system in which employees got credits that translated to time units they could distribute among projects. But because the credits were tied to real cash, the whole thing "stressed everyone out," Rosedale says.

Rosedale insists that Linden's open structure encourages employees to express their opinion, even if in the end he still gets the final say. "In a complex, rapidly changing market," Rosedale says, "our system allows everyone to take risks, not just me."

Tags:
democracy,
corporate culture

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Lukkibessoni of AL 8:01PM August 20, 2008

LL is only democratic if you accept the idea that only federal employees have the right to vote in federal elections, and the rest of us are just peon tax payers who should shut up and get back to work or get sent to the gulag. Some democracy.

The Governance Team purposely harasses residents to destroy their second lives, so they get recruited into griefing groups, so that Linden Lab customer Central Intelligence Agency can study and game responses to terrorism (its a fact, check government records for the contract).

LL Victim # 980345nlfniadf89-dhyr78-87dbhf of NH 4:09PM June 18, 2008

A government you get to vote in and then you trust in their decisions is more like a dictatorship. The future of a democratic government perhaps because of available communication technology should be based on a phone call or email by all who want to vote yes or no, and just like most companies the final decision would be left to the CEO, or in a democratic country President or Prime Minister. Perhaps Linden Lab's and any company or government should be not just allowing its employees this vote but shareholders and customers also. By making major decisions in this way, in the end if something goes wrong no one person can be held responsible, unless the head of this went totally against the democratic decision of all. Maybe they should play with this as an experiment instead of with something that upsets the majority.

Andrew Ruselle 10:50AM June 16, 2008

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