Posts Tagged ‘Society’

The Corporate Culture Cure

Tuesday, April 5th, 2011

When you hear the word “culture,” you, like most people, probably picture some other land with strange customs you don’t quite comprehend. Culture is odd or other to us, which is why we often fail to see what makes up our own. We’re too close, and our customs are too ubiquitous to think to apply the word to ourselves. We take our rituals and traditions for granted as just a standard way of existing without judgment.

The problem with this is that it presents a challenge for sparking cultural change. At once, cultural change is one of mankind’s greatest adaptation tricks – allowing us to cope and adjust without the need to wait on physical mutation to help us get along in the rapidly changing world – and one of the most confounding things for us to really understand.

Culture, according to a recent essay in The Edge, is an iterative process that involves four pillars:

  • foundational ideas,
  • institutions,
  • everyday practices and artifacts,
  • and selves.

In order to affect cultural change, you need to affect change in all four areas.

When we talk about corporate culture, as we like to do at MindWorks, these things are no less true. And it’s important to be able take off the blinders and study your corporate culture so that you can understand how it works and what you need to change. In light of the assertions in a recent article in the Harvard Business Review, We All Work for Enron Now, it seems that the blindness to your corporate culture could ultimately be your company’s demise. While the article asserts that it pertains to our global economy, the crux breaks down to “lethal” corporate cultures being largely at fault and offers hope by pointing to companies that are making substantive changes. Organizations like The Institute for Sustainability with its Green Plus Certification, and B Labs with its B Corp designation can be a big help in providing structure for building a culture that focuses on the triple bottom line:  people, planet and performance.

By recognizing the ways your ideas, institution, actions, and people comprise your organization and shape its culture, you can begin to make those changes to formulate a stronger company better suited for growth and sustainability. By extension, understanding and embracing culture change puts you in a position to continue to adapt to change, which is coming whether you’re ready for it or not. What are you doing to change your corporate culture for the better?

Can Our Brains Be Fully Engaged In An Online Community?

Wednesday, August 11th, 2010

Recently, I discovered an article in USA Today that analyzed our brain wave activity during storytelling and engaging conversation. The study, led by Princeton University’s Greg Stephens, confirms that brain wave activity during storytelling is similar for both the listener and the speaker. In other words, when the conversation is engaging and intimate, both the listener and speaker have similar (or “mirrored”) brain wave responses. Stephens and his team believe these findings “may shed light on the mechanisms by which our brains interact and bind to form societies.”

The more I thought about this study, the more I considered the impact of online communication as a dominant conversation medium. If the majority of our “conversations” are occurring online, are our brains allowed to respond and engage to their fullest potential in concert with others? What does this say about future communities or societies (especially online) if scientists believe “mirrored” brain activity helps bind us together? Could the increased emphasis on online communities ultimately pull us apart? Obviously, electronic forms of communication (social media, text, e-mail, etc.) do allow us to share experiences, stories, ideas and thoughts more than ever before, but are we sacrificing human engagement for convenience? If nothing else, this study highlights the continued importance of face-to-face communication and in-person storytelling in an increasing digital world.

What do you think?