A few months ago, I was introduced to social contracts by a colleague, and as a Project Manager, I’ve found it’s the ideal tool to have in your tools and techniques kitty to help achieve team coherence.
A social contract is an agreement between the members of your project team regarding how the team will work together and the expected behaviour of all members. It is unique to a particular project team and is not something that is transferable to another team.
The whole project team must come together to discuss and establish clear guidelines on how the team would hold each member accountable and how differences and member dissatisfaction will be addressed.Social contracts can be very simple, they probably don’t even need to be in a document format, it can be a word document, a page in Confluence but it must be someplace all team members can easily access it. The main requirement is it must have agreement and buy-in from your entire team.
And the benefits are:
Set aside a time when all your team members are available to discuss and flesh out a social agreement. It is important all team members participate in creating the contract since the whole team (not just the PM) owns the contract, therefore every member’s point of view must be considered and discussed prior to reaching an agreement.
It is the important to remember that the PM does not own the social contract, the whole team including the PM does and it is every member’s responsibility to ensure that behaviours not agreed to in the contact are called out and rectified. The contract will only work if every member believes in it.
A social contract is an agreement between the members of your project team regarding how the team will work together and the expected behaviour of all members.
It is unique to a particular project team and is not something that is transferable to another team.
The whole project team must come together to discuss and establish clear guidelines on how the team would hold each member accountable and how differences and member dissatisfaction will be addressed.
So, how do you make sure your social contracts stick? We’ve put together the following 10 suggestions.
Need a hand putting your social contract together? Contact us, we’ll sort you out.
At Kiandra, we work closely with Product Owners to bridge the gap between their organisation’s needs and our delivery team’s technical expertise. This collaboration is crucial for keeping the project aligned to business goals, managing scope effectively, and ensuring value is delivered.
“How do we make sure our AI systems behave responsibly, not just accurately?” We get this question a lot. Usually after something has already gone a bit sideways. Here is the short answer: You build responsibility into AI from the very beginning. Guided by our B-Corp principles, we see responsible AI as a balance of purpose and effectiveness.
When working with clients in the earliest stages of a project, speed matters. The faster we can turn ideas into something visual, the sooner we can test assumptions, get feedback, and align on a direction. That’s where product ideation tools like Lovable come in.
Whether you’re curious about custom software or have a specific problem to solve – we’re here to answer your questions. Fill in the following form, and we’ll be in touch soon.