Emotional intelligence is a real, and really important, factor at play in any business which employs and serves human beings. Leaders are learning how to leverage the impact that emotional intelligence—sometimes called “soft skills”—has in business, from individual careers to organizational culture. Articles on the subject are no longer relegated to fringe publications or social sciences, in fact mainstream business journals like Forbes, Harvard Business Review, and FastCompany have been talking about it for several years. The thriving conscious capitalism movement, the emergence of B Corps , and sold-out conferences like Wisdom 2.0 are all further evidence that more and more professionals and companies are taking the human element of business very seriously. This means that not only is the industrial age model of treating people like machines an outdated one, but companies who aren’t engaged with their employees and customers on a human level are at a competitive disadvantage in an increasingly networked world.
Software as a Service (SaaS) and Platform as a Service (PaaS)
Full-Spectrum Innovation
Full-Spectrum Innovation is the idea of creating value in every possible place—from culture & society down to end users of a product, service or platform.
Everyday Robots and the Social Network of Things
Damon Albarn, famed for his frontman role in the bands Blur and Gorillaz, released this great music video "Everyday Robots" a few months ago. The lyrics provide a subtle and powerful critique of our relationship with technology and were a great soundtrack as our team crafted Cyborgs and The Social Network of Things, a visual guide to our progression from the information age and the Internet of Things (IoT) towards what might be called an age of cyborgs. You can read more about the Cyborgs and the Social Network of Things here on the Causeit site.
Your Ideas Needed: The Grand Challenge of Digital Financial Inclusion
Our colleague Konstantin Peric at the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation has recently announced a million-dollar grand challenge for digital financial inclusion (as part of the Digital Financial Services project I volunteer for). Find out more here!
Do smart tech safety nets make us take stupid risks?
From compensation to exchange: moving beyond the model of sacrifice
"See the attached cash…": Gmail Adds Money Transfer for More and More Users
Google rolls out yet another killer feature for their Gmail suite: money as an attachment. For Gmail users with a Google Wallet account (or who can open one), now sending money as as easy as attaching an image to your email.
Purple Beach day one was something like this:
I'm at the Purple Beach Conference in London for the next few days—talking and listening and dancing and getting fired up about People Innovation. I've already captured some great content and inspiration for our Field Guide on Cultures of Innovation. Check out this video sampler of today's adventure:
Next-level volunteerism with the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
I recently started working on a poverty-alleviation project with the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation—a volunteer opportunity which I've been looking forward to for a while and which I hope to continue over the next few years as a deep-level project alongside my business. While we're just getting started, I am already excited to engage with this team and this project. A big part of what lights me up about this type of work is that it's an opportunity for me to fulfill on one of my callings in life—to leverage my own social privilege and skills to lessen global inequalities and suffering. It sounds a bit lofty, but the work is very real and so is the need for it.
Breaking it down and getting unstuck at Wisdom 2.0
Moving from Hierarchies to Networks: Creating Feedback Loops [online session November 7, 2013]
Smart innovation relies upon information and collaboration to steer it in the right direction, and innovative organizations need to be great at exchanging ideas and opinions among their own departments as well as with their customers and strategic partners. Feedback loops are a straightforward way to invite, collect, and broadcast collective wisdom and put it to good use making better stuff in smarter ways.
Moving from Hierarchies to Networks: Creating Feedback Loops [EVENT 23 July]
Causeit's Principal, MJ Petroni, will be facilitating an interactive PurpleBeach Talking Heads session on the future of leadership and teams. We'll be going through an exploration of feedback loops in three important pillars (teams, clients and industry) and then will collaborate in breakout groups for a quick challenge: how can you create a useful, cost-effective and sustainable feedback loop in under 90 days?
Mind to Matter: twelve weeks to launch your action plan for work-life balance
Cultivating Boredom
Go to Kenya, Learn About Leadership. Free.
Event: Corporate Rebels & Moving From Hierarchy to Network [30 May]
Causeit is proud to participate in @petervan's Corporate Rebels United. We first met Peter Vander Auwera in his work with @innotribe (a Causeit client), and are glad to support his work of helping the corporate rebels and misfits of the world find the best way to apply their brilliance to pressing global issues.
Causeit will be speaking as part of Corporate Rebels United's 24-hour Global Rebel Jam, on the topic of how to prepare organizations for the transition from hierarchies to networks, build feedback loops and cultivate the business case for empathy. Causeit's Principal, MJ Petroni, will be speaking from 2:30-3:00 PT; login and registration details are below, along with some context from Corporate Rebels United.
Feedback Loops, Empathy and the Importance of Outrospection
As the world shifts towards more-networked organizations, the creation of feedback loops is more important than ever. An organization's capacity for empathy determines whether or not its products and services will actually serve the people it is trying to earn money from, and its awareness of what motivates its competitors, regulators and even its own staff will determine its ability to form important strategic alliances, form public-private partnerships and retain its workforce.
Human Technology: A Founder's Journey
Running a company can be incredibly challenging. I started Causeit in 2006, without a clear vision for the business, but with a remarkably big, broad vision for my work in the world. Having done several years of personal, transformative work alongside academic study in my field of Cyborg Anthropology, I was really clear that I was committed to creating love, joy and community in the world.
everal years later (seven, to be precise), I'm still constantly attending to the intersection of my personal and business visions, how they play out in the world, and what it means for my team.