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Culture is as organization does...

I’d say probably 92 times out of 100, company executives call us up and say something like “We’ve heard you’re culture change experts and we need to change our culture. We’re thinking we want it to be more fun like that Tony what-his-name guy’s company – umm, Zappos.    Can you do a “we heart employees” (I say tongue-in-cheek) campaign or something to help us with that?”

Or: “We’ve had a lot of good people leave lately and we heard from the employee opinion survey that our culture stinks.  We’re thinking maybe we should start having ‘Jeans Friday.’ You think that would be a good start?”

And, here’s yet another recent one: “We need our employees to be self-starters – more motivated, more innovative.  What do we do with our culture to make our employees more that way?”

My inside-my-head voice is groaning “OMG.  Are you kidding me?”

And, my actual voice, out of wanting to truly help this poor soul, says something like “I’m glad you called us.  Let’s talk for a few minutes about this thing called culture and what you’re really trying to get at with your objectives….”

‘Culture’ is one of those mystical and elusive terms.  It often surfaces in hallway, manager and all-hands discussions as if it’s a kind of separate entity of its own, something that made itself, something that could be changed or tinkered with independently of the other elements that make up your business …and when we talk about “changing it,” it’s spoken about as if it’s a switch you can flip, a lever you can pull, and an initiative we need to implement.

I suppose if it were like that, it might make things simpler.  But it’s not.

Your culture is an outcome - of what you do, what you say and how you do things around here. It’s about the ways your business practices, values, leadership actions and employee attitudes and behaviors show up everyday.  It’s how an organization operates.  And, you cement this said culture over time with actions or inactions, paralysis or knee-jerk decisions, appreciation or hard-driving perfectionism, rewarding brilliant lone-star’s or compromising team players, giving responsibility or micromanaging tasks…

The individuals in your organization are essentially sharing patterns of behavior that they all observed, learned, and in more than a handful of cases, eventually assimilated to or rather, quit bucking if they were to “possibly survive here.”

Your culture might just have the chance to really change when you get to the real stuff.  Things like espresso machines, free lunches, business casual aren’t the point.

If you want a culture that oozes more positive juju, then you have to look at how it was formed in the first place – those things that are contributing to making it that way.  What you do advertently or perhaps inadvertently do, say, and convey as a company and as leadership?

Here are some of the questions we ask our clients to explore about themselves to begin really deep diving into how we do things around here and subsequently how the *culture* got to where it is now.

  • How do you set priorities and goals? Is this process consistent with the kind of culture you want to have?
  • How does accountability show up in your organization – how is it established and maintained? Are there accountabilities for line-level employees but not for leadership?  Do you have the appropriate metrics or do employees feel they have impossible standards to meet?
  • How is information shared? Does leadership only share on a need-to-know basis?  Are employees fearful to share and thus, hoard information because that’s what keeps them valuable to the company?  Does leadership share early and share often, even before they feel a strategy is ready for prime-time?
  • What are the priorities in company communications to employees? What is it that is actually getting airtime in your organization?  Is it something the employees can get behind, they can understand, they feel proud of?
  • How is the truth shared and sought? Do things get pushed under the rug?  Are things out in the open?
  • How do decisions get made? Who is involved in this process?  Is it leadership ‘do the thinking’ and employees ‘do the doing’ without opportunity for input?
  • How does delegation occur? Is it truly effective delegation or is it relegation? Ultimately one party wiping their hands of it and passing the buck.
  • How are ideas shared? Are they occurring freely?  Do employees want to contribute their best ideas to the company knowing they’ll be given a fair shake or chance to succeed?
  • How does collaboration occur? That is, does true collaboration actually occur?  Are people incented to contribute to the collective or only as individual performers and how well they do their respective jobs?
  • How are rewards given? Are brilliant jerks rewarded even if their ruthless personalities degrade morale and teamwork?  Are rewards given inconsistently across the organization?
  • How do punishments occur and how are mistakes handled? Do people that hit a bad patch get another chance?  Does anyone ever really get fired for poor or non-performance?  Do some people get worse punishment simply because they have different managers?
  • How valued is learning? Are you the type of organization that helps people to grow and deepen their expertise - or do you tend to pigeon hole and hold someone back because you need them in a specific role or effort?   Do you provide opportunities for mentoring and growth – or do your employees hide their lack of experience and understanding because they’re afraid they’ll be penalized for not knowing?
  • How are people’s efforts appreciated? Are you the type of organization that gives an “A” for effort?  Or, is “hard work” irrelevant with knowledge that only effectiveness (not effort) is rewarded?
  • How are risks encouraged and taken? Does risk taking apply to everyone or just a few of the top rung?  Do you encourage innovation and a fail-fast mindset?  Do you say you want innovation but shoulder employees with metrics squarely based on execution?
  • How are successes celebrated? Is it something that is done publicly?  Is it something seldom done?  Are stories shared far and wide?  Are successes celebrated in a way that is meaningful to employees? Have you asked them what is meaningful to them?

You can also use these as a guide to think about the organization you want to have – and subsequently, a culture that better matches and is more congruent with your objectives as a business.

Are there other areas or questions we’re missing?  We’d love to hear where you think culture lives in organizations…

Are you a Change maker or faker? Questions I ask of myself and others >> a challenge for 2012 and beyond.

This post is a little personal.   And, (clears throat) I’m quite uncomfortable.  I’ve posed a personal blog challenge to myself and I have to say myself is somewhat itchy about it.  I suppose my challenge is not so much to blog more but to blog more real, more raw.  I think the reason I don’t blog much - is not because I don’t have ideas - but rather that I keep waiting for that complete thought, that epiphany, that beautiful brain bubble to fully materialize – and it doesn’t.  You see, I’m a bit of a perfectionist and therefore also sometimes / often a procrastinator.

I’m lucky that my team and I get to do the work we love.  We work with some of the largest and most prestigious brands in the world (big names, interesting projects– quite a handful that I can’t share on our website but you know who you are) helping them to make transformational change in their organizations…helping them solve some of their most vexing organizational issues – like how to collaborate, innovate, share knowledge, better communicate with their employees, uplevel their leadership…

Everyday I’m sharing with clients what they need to do to be successful in creating this environment for their employees  - they need to create a safety net for failure, they need to open their kimonos, they need to share more openly and allow debate, they need to get input on ideas from employees before they become steadfast commands on which to execute, they need to incent their teams, they need to distribute decision making and empower employees to make the right choices for the customers.

Well, man oh man, I have to say that as I was thinking about this blog post over the holiday, I realized that I often am not living up to the very things I espouse.  Oh, God, am I a change maker wannabe?

For instance, I am timid to write the blog, my next book, my next whatever because I don’t want my ideas to be up for scrutiny.  I’m afraid to be out there in the open and vulnerable.  Everything my team and I produce needs to be polished, exacting, absolutely complete before I let anyone see it.  I am steadfast on my ideas and convictions but then someone comes along who intimidates me pushing back or questioning me and I retreat.  As for failing on a project, a commitment, a relationship, it’s perfectly okay, in my mind, for others to misstep because they’re only human -- but as for me?  Nope, no way, no how….  I need to do it right the first time (every time) or I beat myself up for days.  My perfectionist streak has driven this car for quite a long time.

As you can imagine, I’m not normally so “open” about these things but I’ve had quite a year.  Really transformational in its own right.   Some up’s but a lot of down’s mostly due to an ailing mother who will lose a battle with cancer – and, all at once (after working through years on Earth being this way), a deep realization that being fearful, being in control and being stoic brings with it no progress, no growth and a desperate clinging to the old – in life or in work.

As I have contemplated the imprint I want to make on the world moving forward and building up the wherewithal to always be what I value and believe in, I have pondered what I believe are the things that really separate the ones who make change from the ones who simply say (or perhaps, believe) they do.

How you can be the change maker you’re meant to be…

  • Trust yourself.  Really, really trust yourself.  You don’t trust that you’re necessarily *right* but you are secure enough in your ideas, hypotheses and convictions that you’re willing to put them out there for dialogue
  • You can’t be a change maker if you’re afraid of being scrutinized and examined.  At your core, you have to be ready for someone to debate, disagree or call you stupid; all the while, hoping what you have to say resonates for at least one person and makes a difference.  Pontificating in safe company does not drive real change (Remember the whole “you’re preaching to the choir” thing) - You can’t be safe if you want to be prolific.
  • Don’t let perfectionism cripple and sabotage you.    Give yourself permission to take actions everyday imperfectly.  Even though it may pull at you, you let your perfectionist mindset go because you know all it brings you is high stress and low output.  When you start to obsess or fret it’s not enough, you take a deep breath and keep dancing.  Change makers make steady, and sometimes only small actions every day – but they add up to transformation over time.  On the other hand, perfectionists rarely get started, because perfection is in very short supply.
  • Don’t shield yourself with hubris and arrogance. There are a lot of people who put thoughts out there in the world but if you challenge them, even the slightest, they will attack you.  They’re not open to contribution or community.  They’re up for grandstanding, pontificating and letting you know how right - and important they are.  These people may believe they’re leading change but they’re often isolating themselves.  And truly, how impactful can someone in isolation be?
  • You share your ideas and knowledge with unflinching courage. You don’t hoard because you trust that by sharing and learning with others, it doesn’t extinguish your flame, it helps it burn more brightly. You know that ideas and thoughts are infinite; not something in short supply to covet fearing you won’t be as valuable or others will steal your idea.  When you treat your thoughts and ideas in this limited way you’re worried about where the next one will come from, instead of treasuring and cultivating the ones you have.  It squelches your creativity.  I remember hearing something once, to the tune of,  “to guard the heart is to guard the mind which guards the thoughts…” and I am pretty sure you can’t really find your voice until you’ve let your heart be heard.

These are a few thoughts from my own experience and observations and there’s more to come (after all, there’s that personal blog challenge thingy) – I’d love to continue this list and hoping you will contribute ideas and stories to the mix.  What have you seen that really separates the change makers from the pack?

Happy New Year!

- S

The QWERTY Complex: Un-jamming our organizations to thrive through change

Navigating in today’s workplace can be disorienting.  It seems that the minute we reorganize, restructure, merge, shift… we need to do it yet again to keep up with new demands.  We lament, when are things ever going to be normal again? Things are changing so fast.  We can’t possibly keep up!

What exactly is going on?  For starters, witness the last twenty years.  There’s been an explosion of vastly more information, globalization resulting in larger and farther-flung teams and, not to mention, greater competition coming from unexpected and untraditional sources.  Think: NetFlix and how Blockbuster didn’t see it coming. There has been a serious tectonic shift and our companies are at the epicenter.

In our organizations, we often point to ‘agility’ as critical to our success – yet the ironic part is that our organizations are still trying to command and control our way into being more nimble.  Often times we don’t fully realize that these old hierarchical structures, we’re holding steadfastly to, are unable to process information quickly enough to make the necessary day-to-day business decisions.  We think we can simply optimize to do it better, faster and cheaper but in reality, we need a transformation in our workplaces.

As I was writing this last paragraph, it made me think of a cognitive behavioral theory I recently read about, called “path dependence.”  This term refers to the notion that “something that seems normal or inevitable today began with a choice that made sense at a particular time in the past, but survived despite the eclipse of the justification for that choice.”  For instance, typewriters used to jam if people typed too fast, so the manufacturers designed a keyboard that would slow typists. We no longer have typewriters, but we are stuck with the letter arrangements of the qwerty keyboard.

Let’s ask ourselves: do we really want to be stuck with qwerty organizations?

I believe the time has come for organizations to truly rethink the way they organize and get work done. I’ve seen first-hand evidence of it consulting with numerous Fortune 250 and Global 1000 clients. We can’t “manage” change anymore – we’ve got to proactively drive it and live it.  There’s a need to shift the role of leadership, decentralize decisions and equip every single one of our organization’s people to be the everyday change leaders that are required for success in this new era.

This June at Enterprise 2.0, I’ll be assisting in the facilitation of a workshop on Organization Next and also, presenting a keynote titled “The Ex-CXO: why your employees will be running your enterprise in 5 years and why you should let them” both which speak to this topic.

In the workshop, we’ll be discussing concrete ways organizations can start to put these new capabilities in place and adopt new ways of working that are more employee-driven, collaborative and less reliant on top-down management direction.

One of the questions we’ll discuss is just exactly how can companies become agile? We’ll explore how the hierarchy needs to give way to self-organization and we move to more bottom-up and side to side. This means that instead of control and decisions coming from the top, individual teams must be empowered to execute. However, this does not mean chaos and disorganization. And, it does not mean a complete lack of planning. It’s about setting goals globally but enabling the execution locally. Each team within the company will need to have the tools, the motivation, and the mandate to execute at its best.

Why will this be critical?  I think Rupert Murdoch said it best, “The world is changing very fast.  Big will not beat small anymore.  It will be the fast beating the slow.”

With my two esteemed co-facilitators, Mike Gotta and Daniel Rasmus, as well as a panel of five experts from Fortune 100 companies and the U.S. government, I think it will be a fantastic event and undoubtedly will leave everyone in the room thinking about what’s in store for our companies and how to lead the charge.

For more on this topic, follow me on Twitter at @RobertsGolden.

This blog post was also featured June 1 at cisco.com - view it here:

http://blogs.cisco.com/collaboration/the-qwerty-complex-un-jamming-our-organizations-to-thrive-through-change/

What's in Store for the Workplace? 7 Trends You Shouldn't Ignore

We just recently released our newest whitepaper entitled "Our Emerging Workplace: Seven Workplace Trends You Can't Afford to Ignore."

Of course we want you to pore over it in great detail but (ahem) it is 22 pages so we wanted to give an executive summary for those who just don't have but a minute to check it out.

We have seen in our work with our various clients there will be some pretty important competencies organizations are going to need to get right if they want to stay viable and relevant in the future.

Rethinking and adapting for change takes courage, fortitude and a vision for what can be. The payoff for those who lead the way will be unprecedented creativity and innovation, and the opportunity to benefit from—rather than struggle against—the inevitable and relentless waves of technological and global workplace change.

1) Leadership: Those bottom-line-at-any-cost folks are costing you too much

Successful future leaders will earn the trust of employees by showing respect for workers at all levels in the organization. They’ll do that by listening, making a sincere effort to understand different perspectives and following through on their commitments.  In other words, those number gurus are costing you too much.

2) Sustainability: Care about the bottom-line but not only the bottom-line

Employees understand that an organization needs to bring in a certain amount of revenue in order to survive. But, beyond survival, workers want to feel that what they’re doing contributes to a greater good.  Young talent, in particular, is motivated to understand an organization’s overall purpose and broader goals and results.

3) Technology: Go social or get left behind

Collaboration tools—similar to the ones we use in our personal lives, Facebook, Twitter and the like—have made their way into the workplace. These social tools will be a significant catalyst for workplace change, enabling real-time and powerful channels to share knowledge, bridge performance gaps, find and tap the expertise of colleagues, fuel employee-driven innovation and harness the collective wisdom through “crowdsourcing.”

But we will only see the benefits if we do the hard work first of fostering these new behaviors and expectations into our culture.

4) Growth & Development: If they're not growing, they're going

Career development is an exciting, dynamic practice space right now. With the aging of the Baby Boomers and the entrance of millions of Gen Yers into the workplace, there’s an opportunity to rethink career progression norms and partner young and experienced workers in unprecedented ways. We believe the way people begin and end their careers must be recreated, offering audacious, strategic work experiences to younger workers at earlier points in their careers, and giving experienced workers the chance to reinvent themselves and take on coaching and mentoring roles.

Learn more about the new workplace GDP (growth & development path) in our whitepaper.

5) Culture: Culture is king; collaboration is queen

A commitment to a people-centric culture is needed to create the sense of community and mission that can be embraced by employees in the years to come. The first step is for leaders to honestly assess their current culture, with a willingness to admit and take action if the actual culture turns out to be different from what is stated in brochures or promoted in company folklore. Company cultures shift over time. New leaders, mergers and acquisitions and external market conditions all contribute to culture shift.

6) Communication: If you think you shouldn't share it, you probably should

Transparency is the name of the game.  Honesty is a good policy not just because we’re forced to do it in this Internet era, but also because telling the truth demonstrates respect for one’s audience and gains people’s trust. Honesty leads to deeper understanding and commitment. People are more apt to follow a leader they believe they can trust and comply with requests when they know they’ve been given the straight story.

7) Rewards: Meaning is the new money

Everyone believes they should be paid fairly for what they do. Absolutely. But, beyond fair pay is a deep need for meaning at work. People want to dedicate their skills and ideas to the achievement of an end game they understand and believe in. And they want to be appreciated for their specific contributions.

Learn more on these emerging workplace trends from our point of view >> get the whitepaper here

The Generations Go Social: How the Boomers, Xers and Yers Can Collaborate at Work for Social Technology Success by Sara Roberts & Leah Reynolds

Collaboration tools—similar to the ones we use in our personal lives, Facebook, Twitter and the like—are making their way into the workplace. These social tools are proving to be significant catalysts for workplace change, equipping employees with powerful channels to share knowledge, bridge performance gaps, find and tap the expertise of their colleagues, fuel employee-driven innovation and harness the organization’s collective wisdom through “crowdsourcing.”

These tools and practices have the potential to shift the way we interact across teams, the way our organizations function and how leaders engage with employees. As our use of these tools increases, they will enable us to move away from strictly top-down management approaches and one-way information sharing. We’ll be able to influence in many directions—bottom up, side-to-side and middle out—which is the sort of agility our organizations will need to succeed in the future.

But before we can experience the full benefit of these tools, there are organizational challenges that need to be addressed, such as: How do we rethink roles and encourage leaders to reach down the org chart for strategic input and guidance? Can we disregard titles and levels in order to get out of our own way and collaborate effectively?

We also need to overcome the idea that these tools are only for the young. We’ve learned it is possible for each generation to strategically contribute to building a social technology culture and adoption strategy. We’ve worked with organizations to bring generations together, expand understanding and focus attention on the advantages of a cross-generational approach. Here’s what we’ve discovered about the age groups in the workplace today and the roles they can play in driving social collaboration across the enterprise.

The Baby Boomers—“Strategic Adapters”–Born between 1946-1964

To a large extent, the Baby Boomer generation holds the power in our current work environments. Many of them are in leadership roles, and as a result of their position and influence, the characteristics and outlook of the Boomer generation play a huge role in determining workplace norms. Creating an environment that values the perspectives of all generations will require rethinking and openness on the part of Boomers, a building of trust across all age groups and a redefinition of success and rewards.

For Baby Boomers who are willing to rethink and reinvent themselves, and become socially aware, the move to social technologies and collaborative work environments offers a world of possibilities. Boomers can make valuable contributions to collaborative work teams as seasoned mentors, facilitators and guides. Knowing when to innovate requires new ideas as well as the deep understanding and experience Boomers have acquired.

Getting excited about the tech savvy, energy and fresh perspective of young talent does not preclude the need for experienced workers. In fact, it’s really just the opposite. Harnessing what Gen Y and X have to offer, and applying it to business objectives, requires the wise, thoughtful counsel Boomers can offer.

Many Boomers need exposure to social tools and the opportunity to learn how to use them in practical, everyday ways. Their years of work experience will enable them to provide rich insight and guidance in the context of social technology adoption, once they understand the business value these tools can provide.

The Xers—“Change Agents”—Born between 1965-1980

Generation Xers are the perfect candidates to be much-needed change agents in the move to social business. Young enough to embrace technology, but old enough to understand the status quo of the Boomer-run world, they play a critical bridge role between the Yers and the Boomers.

Utilize Xers to find existing business processes that need to be reinvented, discover ways to change the conversation with employees and identify and measure bottom-line returns generated through use of social technologies. Many Xers are in first-line management roles, making them the most influential person in the day-to-day work lives of their employees. They’re in an ideal position to champion their team’s innovative uses of social technologies and drive results. Xers will need support, access to information and flexibility in order to make their most valuable contributions in this emerging workplace.

Xers will need to understand the bottom-line costs of current workplace processes and systems so they can fully evaluate the benefits of change. They will need to be included in strategic discussions about business objectives and will need a fine balance of guidance and input and autonomy and decision-making authority.

The Yers –“Critical Catalysts”—Born between 1981-1995

Yers, by virtue of their place in the birth year cycle, are destined to play a critical catalyst role in the transition to social business models. There’s a generational theory that says that parents, in raising the next generation, end up (perhaps even unconsciously) creating what is needed for a future space and time. In other words, the Boomers who are predominately the parents of the Yers, are largely responsible for molding the characteristics of the Yer generation. Seemingly, Boomers have instilled in Yers the skills that are critical at this juncture in history, skills such as the ability to collaborate and the need for a diverse and global perspective.

Taking full advantage of what Yers have to offer will mean rethinking the way we’re organized and how we work together. It will require a reorientation to roles and responsibilities at both ends of the experience spectrum. More experienced workers can benefit from observing Yers in collaborative settings, witnessing new ways of openly sharing information and building a network of supportive contacts. It will be critical moving forward to embrace Yers in ways we haven’t with entry-level workers in the past, allowing them to contribute to strategy, find ways to do things more efficiently and lend fresh insights on how we interact with customers.

Building a Cross-Generational Competency—It Might Be the Most Important Thing You Can Do

Whether you’re seeking to adopt collaborative technology tools or just pursuing good, old-fashioned connections across teams, cross-generational competency should be a strategic priority for your organization.

Tapping and aligning the perspectives of multiple generations will enhance your organization’s ability to achieve business goals. By combining the fresh perspectives of youth with the experience and wisdom of age, you’ll be able to create solutions that wouldn’t be possible if viewed from a single generational lens. You can improve your organization’s speed-to-market, enhance your innovation outcomes and increase your company’s ability to sell to each generation of customers.

The payoff for those who lead the way in building cross-generational competencies will be unprecedented creativity and invention, and the opportunity to benefit from—rather than struggle against—the inevitable and relentless waves of technological and global workforce change.

 

To read more, get our whitepaper, 'The Generations Go Social...' >>

http://www.robertsgolden.com/fileadmin/rgc/downloads/RG-wp-GenerationsGoSocial-lr.pdf

Collaboration tools—similar to the ones we use in our personal lives, Facebook, Twitter and the like—are making their way into the workplace. These social tools are proving to be significant catalysts for workplace change, equipping employees with powerful channels to share knowledge, bridge performance gaps, find and tap the expertise of their colleagues, fuel employee-driven innovation and harness the organization’s collective wisdom through “crowdsourcing.”

These tools and practices have the potential to shift the way we interact across teams, the way our organizations function and how leaders engage with employees. As our use of these tools increases, they will enable us to move away from strictly top-down management approaches and one-way information sharing. We’ll be able to influence in many directions—bottom up, side-to-side and middle out—which is the sort of agility our organizations will need to succeed in the future.

But before we can experience the full benefit of these tools, there are organizational challenges that need to be addressed, such as: How do we rethink roles and encourage leaders to reach down the org chart for strategic input and guidance? Can we disregard titles and levels in order to get out of our own way and collaborate effectively?

We also need to overcome the idea that these tools are only for the young. We’ve learned it is possible for each generation to strategically contribute to building a social technology culture and adoption strategy. We’ve worked with organizations to bring generations together, expand understanding and focus attention on the advantages of a cross-generational approach. Here’s what we’ve discovered about the age groups in the workplace today and the roles they can play in driving social collaboration across the enterprise.

The Baby Boomers—“Strategic Adapters”–Born between 1946-1964

To a large extent, the Baby Boomer generation holds the power in our current work environments. Many of them are in leadership roles, and as a result of their position and influence, the characteristics and outlook of the Boomer generation play a huge role in determining workplace norms. Creating an environment that values the perspectives of all generations will require rethinking and openness on the part of Boomers, a building of trust across all age groups and a redefinition of success and rewards.

For Baby Boomers who are willing to rethink and reinvent themselves, and become socially aware, the move to social technologies and collaborative work environments offers a world of possibilities. Boomers can make valuable contributions to collaborative work teams as seasoned mentors, facilitators and guides. Knowing when to innovate requires new ideas as well as the deep understanding and experience Boomers have acquired.

Getting excited about the tech savvy, energy and fresh perspective of young talent does not preclude the need for experienced workers. In fact, it’s really just the opposite. Harnessing what Gen Y and X have to offer, and applying it to business objectives, requires the wise, thoughtful counsel Boomers can offer.

Many Boomers need exposure to social tools and the opportunity to learn how to use them in practical, everyday ways. Their years of work experience will enable them to provide rich insight and guidance in the context of social technology adoption, once they understand the business value these tools can provide.

The Xers—“Change Agents”—Born between 1965-1980

Generation Xers are the perfect candidates to be much-needed change agents in the move to social business. Young enough to embrace technology, but old enough to understand the status quo of the Boomer-run world, they play a critical bridge role between the Yers and the Boomers.

Utilize Xers to find existing business processes that need to be reinvented, discover ways to change the conversation with employees and identify and measure bottom-line returns generated through use of social technologies. Many Xers are in first-line management roles, making them the most influential person in the day-to-day work lives of their employees. They’re in an ideal position to champion their team’s innovative uses of social technologies and drive results. Xers will need support, access to information and flexibility in order to make their most valuable contributions in this emerging workplace.

Xers will need to understand the bottom-line costs of current workplace processes and systems so they can fully evaluate the benefits of change. They will need to be included in strategic discussions about business objectives and will need a fine balance of guidance and input and autonomy and decision-making authority.

The Yers –“Critical Catalysts”—Born between 1981-1995

Yers, by virtue of their place in the birth year cycle, are destined to play a critical catalyst role in the transition to social business models. There’s a generational theory that says that parents, in raising the next generation, end up (perhaps even unconsciously) creating what is needed for a future space and time. In other words, the Boomers who are predominately the parents of the Yers, are largely responsible for molding the characteristics of the Yer generation. Seemingly, Boomers have instilled in Yers the skills that are critical at this juncture in history, skills such as the ability to collaborate and the need for a diverse and global perspective.

Taking full advantage of what Yers have to offer will mean rethinking the way we’re organized and how we work together. It will require a reorientation to roles and responsibilities at both ends of the experience spectrum. More experienced workers can benefit from observing Yers in collaborative settings, witnessing new ways of openly sharing information and building a network of supportive contacts. It will be critical moving forward to embrace Yers in ways we haven’t with entry-level workers in the past, allowing them to contribute to strategy, find ways to do things more efficiently and lend fresh insights on how we interact with customers.

Building a Cross-Generational Competency—It Might Be the Most Important Thing You Can Do

Whether you’re seeking to adopt collaborative technology tools or just pursuing good, old-fashioned connections across teams, cross-generational competency should be a strategic priority for your organization.

Tapping and aligning the perspectives of multiple generations will enhance your organization’s ability to achieve business goals. By combining the fresh perspectives of youth with the experience and wisdom of age, you’ll be able to create solutions that wouldn’t be possible if viewed from a single generational lens. You can improve your organization’s speed-to-market, enhance your innovation outcomes and increase your company’s ability to sell to each generation of customers.

The payoff for those who lead the way in building cross-generational competencies will be unprecedented creativity and invention, and the opportunity to benefit from—rather than struggle against—the inevitable and relentless waves of technological and global workforce change.

Copyright ©2010 Roberts Golden Consulting. All Rights Reserved.