Facilitators we love
We've known many good facilitators. Each is unique and all are similar.
Some are classic organizers. Others are classic facilitators.
Some do leadership development. Others are enterprise facilitators. Many are just good wives and mothers.
Below you can access profiles of some of the most successful facilitators we've known and loved.

Vaughn Grisham
leadership development as facilitation
Richard McCarthy
organizer to social entrepreneur
Wayne Mattingly:
you have to be as committed as the growers
Can you learn to be a facilitator?
Bill Green
you can't textbook this stuff
Joe Bryant: preacher, farmer, facilitator
Paul Teague: marketing agent as facilitator
John Gardner
researcher, administrator and facilitator
What skills do you need?
Annette Meyer:
multiple perspectives are crucial
Ed Martsolf:
happy in chaos
Lee Meyer:
helping enterprises coalesce
Van Ayers: a hybrid between
an enterprise facilitator and a classic organizer
Harold Eli:
community comes first
Larry Miller:
organizing can't be a government program
Deborah Webb:
rural organizing is foundation
What wonders can you achieve?
Harvey Willliams:
synergy in organizing
Lois McMurchy:
employers need work ethic and math
Paul Artman:
a good mayor pulls everyone in the community together
George Walker:
good businesses begin with education

Other facilitators who work mainly outside our time and space,
but have helped a lot of groups:
Robert Greenleaf:
servant leadership
Jeff Goebel:
consensus for sustainability
Bob Chadwick:
consensus, listening, circles, holism
Ernesto Sirolli:
passion and enterprise facilitation