Connections Creating Value
As I sit on a plane on my way to another event, I am reflecting on what it
means to be with one another, in person.
That is why Rule #1 of the #SocialEra is about the role of Connections. “Connections create value. The social era will reward those organizations that realize they don’t create value all by themselves. If the industrial era was about building things, the social era is about connecting things, people, and ideas. Networks of connected people with shared interests and goals create ways that can produce returns for any company that serves their needs.”
This has a lot of implications for each of us and the way we create value..
So maybe it is this: We go to new places to explore because we know that explorations are the way we follow our curiosity and the very way in which all newness comes. And we create connections in the process not because we are trying to do so specifically…. but we cannot NOT find the connections when we are more open to them.
Thoughts?
What do we get by being together
in the same place rather than virtual places, through webinars and such? What
does it give us to be in one another’s space, rather than connected as Facebook
friends and Twitter connections? When so much information is
plentiful online, why go to a conference room in some far away place to be with
people? Could it be that the new settings create enough newness for us to pay
attention to that building or color that locals just walk past?
In all these years of watching
innovation happen, it’s easy to realize that many of the ideas were “already
there” but it was some shift in perception that caused people to connect the
need to the solution, or to see a new “blue ocean” space that no one else has
viewed as valid. All the elements of an Apple Iphone technology from touch
screens to apps were
already in existence before Apple decided to add their secret-sauce of
design and then open up the world
of creativity. In the same way, change on an personal level is not something
that happens because of a great idea, but because our own understanding of
something is shifted.
Shift is central to all growth; it happens not because of an idea but because
of a connection that wasn’t there before.That is why Rule #1 of the #SocialEra is about the role of Connections. “Connections create value. The social era will reward those organizations that realize they don’t create value all by themselves. If the industrial era was about building things, the social era is about connecting things, people, and ideas. Networks of connected people with shared interests and goals create ways that can produce returns for any company that serves their needs.”
This has a lot of implications for each of us and the way we create value..
For leaders of organizations, you
must stop thinking of who is inside your walls and who is out. You will find
ways to connect. And in doing so, you will be pleasantly surprised by what
happens next. Look at what GE is doing with its HealthyMagination work.
In it, they have an open call to action for businesses, entrepreneurs,
innovators and students with breakthrough ideas for accelerating early detection
and enabling more personalized treatment for breast cancer. GE knows some part
of that value will be theirs, but the open approach lets them discover solutions
that matter and to have a full network creating that connection.
Inside our organizations, we ought
to reimagine meetings, because they truly are the supertax of work. If our
goal is to create shifts, the role of meetings then should be about the dialogue
around an idea so we can understand and learn together. Meetings should not
about regurgitating information that people could read at their own pace. They
should allow space for us to hear one another and then to hear the distinctions
of the ideas so we can discuss and ultimately learn what criteria matters to
everyone — so a clarity of direction can become clear.
The role of conferences goes up when someone can give us something more than
what we can see on a video…When the curator can uniquely observe across
disciplines, to find the edge of an idea that is new. It’s a rare skill to draw
out distinctions, bring out the kernel of the new that must be explored, and to
do it respectfully for all sides so the tension point or pivots between ideas
can be seen well. But when it is done well, people have a chance to digest the
set of beliefs — tacit or otherwise — tied to the arguments and decisions
involved.
And finally, it seems to me that
the role of interdisciplinary people who can facilitate dialogue will go up in
value. The people who can celebrate the history of a problem or situation, but
also explore the new without judgement to the past. This is because we are
always living at the intersection point of who we’ve been, and who we
are becoming. In the middle of
the venn diagram of the past and the future, is the edge of where we are
creating. Curiosity is the key to exploring that terrain…
So maybe it is this: We go to new places to explore because we know that explorations are the way we follow our curiosity and the very way in which all newness comes. And we create connections in the process not because we are trying to do so specifically…. but we cannot NOT find the connections when we are more open to them.
Thoughts?
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