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Getting Streeetwise

On a beautiful London summer evening a large group of innovation and sustainability practitioners  wandered through the Southbank experimenting with a new innovation technique.

Street Wisdom combines a meditative state with divergent stimuli to produce new ideas.  It can be used to solve a personal or organisational challenge and may be for new products of services, new ways of thinking or a new direction.  Challenges are varied. In our group some wanted to think about a job change, another launching a new business, a third how to help their mother and another to solve a thorny problem at work.

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Street Wisdom works through honing awareness of one’s surroundings.  As hurried Londoners we often miss the beauty and life in the streets around us. Refocusing on our environment made us appreciate it and, of course allowed us to access its ‘universal wisdom’. Many people found this the most rewarding part. 

It asks participants to connect with their environment first – through time alone noticing patterns, people, and beauty. It then allows for participants to ask specific questions and receive stimuli towards answers. 

As an innovation technique, I believe it is particularly pertinent to sustainability as it forces personal congruence – to move into a mindful personal space from which to test and originate ideas.

Feedback from innovation professionals, students and sustainability practitioners was excellent. Some of the comments included:

“I so enjoyed yesterday, both for the innovation approach itself and the whole new look at familiar spaces” Julia
“Thanks for the event yesterday. I had good time!” Ashish
“Last night was lovely. Great to be around such an open gang of treasure seekers (and finders)”  Tiu
“What an absolutely lovely evening! I feel privileged to have been included” Maggie

wise3Working with the Streetwisdom team was a pleasure. They embody openness and inspiration and offer the course for anyone who wishes to participate or teach.

We recommend you look into other Street Wisdom sessions – they can be found on http://www.streetwisdom.org/

Have you done anything similar?  Do you have an interesting technique to share? 

Beyond Brainstorming – Innovation is Everywhere

Bored with brainstorming? Fascinated by mindfulness? We are experimenting with a fresh technique that is effective, collaborative and works with awareness.

Curious?

I was and went along to Street Wisdom. I did a random tai chi class, met wonderful kindred spirits and discovered an interesting technique to get creative, reflect and solve business and personal issues. Others spoke to strangers, found beautiful architecture and discovered new parts of London.

As an innovation practitioner, it was useful to find a new technique. Changing the context and creating awareness brought fresh perspective. It is particularly useful for the divergence stage of creative thinking.

6heads will be co-hosting a Street Wisdom experience, with the wonderful Street Wisdom team on 16th July. You can learn a new technique, meet some of our wonderful members and enjoy a summers eve on the South Bank. Coming?

RSVP here: Innovation is everywhere

More info: Street Wisdom

AN INVITATION – CREATING WEALTH: A NEW GENERATION OF RESPONSIBLE INVESTORS

Thursday, 3rd July at 6:30pm, Sir Richard Steele Pub, Chalk farm, NW3 4RL 

We are building a network of young professionals interested in investing their money in socially and environmentally responsible ways. We believe investing should be simple and that money has the power to do good. If you think so too, we’d love for you to join us.

If you discovered that your money was being used to finance child labourmilitary weapons, or harmful chemicals – would you be concerned? It is a troubling fact that 35% of savers in the UK have no idea what their banks do with their hard earned money. We are Light Up The Crowd and we want to change this.

We’ve noticed that investment can be overwhelming for first-timers. Yet whether it’s £50 or £50,000, we believe everyone should feel empowered to invest in the things that they care about. That’s why we want to help young professionals like you make simple but well-informed investment decisions that are both good for your wallet and good for the planet

Our founding members event on Thursday, will allow you to learn more about responsible investingshare your input and ideas, and become a founding member of our network as we learn to navigate the middle ground between young people and the financial world.

 We have a fantastic speaker lined up –  Jonathan Maxwell, Founding Partner & CEO of Sustainable Development Capital LLP. At SDCL he has advised on the formation of a number of investment vehicles involving total capital raised of approximately US$600 million. He has also served as an advisor to governments, to the United Nations Environment Programme Finance Initiative and is a director and trustee of the Institute for Sustainability in the UK.

It promises to be a fun evening with drinks, talks, lively conversations and interactive sessions as we explore how we can change the landscape of investment for young people.

There will be half an hour of meeting and greeting, with talks starting at 7pm.

We look forward to seeing you there.

Please RSVP to reserve a ticket.

Can business change the world?

Creating conditions for positive business engagement in society

Leading businesses increasingly recognise the need to go beyond traditional corporate social responsibility approaches and see contribution to societal good as a strategic imperative.

Some are engaging fodeloitte 1r commercial return, recognising opportunities to develop new value. This might be through access to additional revenue from new markets, to solve a problem and/or to build new strategic capability.

Each of these motivations results in different pitfalls for which there are some useful ‘remedies’.

1. Accessing new markets
Most businesses are aware of the value in the bottom of the pyramid. Some have noticed that this segment is also more resilient to economic flux and that businesses that have engaged here have received significant public visibility – all good reasons to develop a new market.

Some companies get this right. Grameeen is the much touted example.  Another example comes from the insurance world. One issue confronting the poor is the lack of any support system – if a child is sick or a shop burns down, there is no access to bridging funds or reparations. In many cultures this is addressed by women pooling funds to support each other through crises. Recently AXA created an initiative to support groups of these women (working through PWDS in India) to access family health insurance. Based on a community verification and penalty scheme, operating costs are kept low. This is a positive example of a company engaging with new markets in a way that is in line with existing structures and which meets real needs.

Other companies don’t get this right. A large water company tried to set up a water purification scheme in India. This provided entrepreneurs with the equipment to purify water, at an ongoing cost for maintenance over a ten year period. This wasn’t successful – it required new entrepreneurial structures, forced communities into long term debt but also, importantly, didn’t address the real problem – prevention of dirty water would be better than cure.

The main pitfall with this motivation is lack of alignment to communities and this is best solved by operating closely and within communities to determine and meet their actual needs.

2. Solving a problem.

Often this is driven by CSR practitioners or corporate philanthropists as a more sustainable alternative to traditional ways of donating. This may take various forms – the Carbon Trust was tasked with creating new businesses to shift sectors towards low carbon alternatives, M&S recently looked at how a new initiative could solve both a growing skills shortage in the food industry and help employ young people.

Both of these initiatives  – like most other initiatives of this type – suffered from a lack of inherent commercial rationale. They were looking for solutions where unmet customer needs (and therefore a commercial value proposition) were not the main focus. This made creating a business case very difficult.

These cases were ‘cracked’ by developing an indirect customer (e.g. suppliers, philanthropic funders), using new business models (e.g. long term equity upside) or finding a value differentiator (e.g trusted brand ).

A solution to a lack of inherent commercial rationale is therefore using ‘extreme’ commercial creativity. 

3. Strategic engagement.

These forward thinking pioneers are actively creating the customers, capabilities or resources for their future. A great example is Interfaces Net Impact programme.  It pays fishermen for old nets and then transforms these into tufting material for carpets. Fishermen from poor communities receive value from a ‘waste’ product. These nets are no longer thrown into the ocean and loss of marine life is prevented. Interface has a differentiated input for its carpets and new capabilities in setting up partnerships and accessing resources. Currently we are working on another Interface initiative to alleviate poverty, create a secondary market for used carpet and develop capability for global recycling.

A pitfall of companies operating with a strategic intention is the negative effect of ‘unintended consequences’. For example by enriching only part of the population resentment may be stirred up which results in domestic violence or tribal warfare.

Uninitended consequences can (often) be addressed by organisations taking a systems thinking approach to any new initiative.

For any organisation venturing into this space three new competences need to be built:
– extreme partnering: bringing together unlikely play mates with different agendas and resources towards achieving a common goal (e.g. AXA, PWDS charity, local women),
– lateral innovation: designing business value in entirely new ways, and
– ecosystem thinking: making sure that supporting initiatives and structures are in place to provide all the elements required (for example
Interface recognised the need for a banking partner for its networks initiative).

There are tremendous benefits for companies venturing into social change. From the bottom line benefits (e.g. new customers or premium products), to risk mitigation (e.g. diversified sourcing) to intangibles (e.g. employee loyalty, customer aw
areness).

I’d go further and say that no business can, over the long term, separate itself from the society that supports it – as suppliers or customers. Positive engagement with society is an imperative for business to build a robust and resilient global future. 

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This article is an excerpt from a talk Nicola did for Deloitte at a Net Impact event. She is focused on creating new commercial solutions for social and environmental change and is interested in exploring thinking and opportunities in this area. What is your experience in this area? Any lessons you’d like to share? How could your company engage better with society?

Please contact her on nicola.millson@6-heads.com for further information.

Make a difference – three opportunities in London next week

Many of you have followed the blogs related to the remarkable Tsiba University, attended the Transformative Education event at LSE last year or donated to the Tsiba cycle for change campaign. We are inspired by Tsibas innovative approach to transforming individuals and societyin South Africa and impressed by their success – in terms of the quality of graduates and the significant awards won, including 5 Mandela Rhodes Scholars and a Kofi Annan Scholar.

Next week Adri, Tsiba’s CEO is in London.  We have some wonderful ways for you to connect with Tsiba and do great things…Kindly RSVP using the links below.

1)      Thursday 15 May 18:00 – 19:30 pm, London Business School More About Mentoring

Are you interested in learning more about mentoring a TSiBA student long distance? Join Adri to hear how TSiBA facilitates this very special and impactful relationship and how you can make a positive contribution to a South African’s young life in a very direct way. Drinks and snacks will be served. There is no charge for this event.

RSVP at : http://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/more-about-mentoring-tickets-8337799583

2)      Saturday 17 May 08:30 to 10:00am, Richmond Park Fun Cycle Ride and Breakfast

To celebrate TSiBA’s successful Cycle for Change campaign, our London based friends are invited to enjoy a relaxed half hour cycle around Richmond Park, starting at 08:30 at Roehampton Gate. Bring your bike and helmet with you and join Adri for breakfast thereafter at Roehampton Café. You are welcome to skip the ride and just join for breakfast at 10am! There is no charge for this event.                           

RSVP at:  http://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/celebrating-cycling-for-change-tickets-11563000245

3)         Friday 16th May, Introductions

We are building our community here in London with the aim of raising an endowment fund for long term support of the University.  Please do get in touch if you have any ideas for funders that would be interested in Tsiba.

We hope to see you next week.

Yours in Igniting Opportunity,

6heads and the TSiBA Team

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More information on Tsiba:

TSiBA (which means ‘to jump’ in isiXhosa) provides scholarships to pursue world class education to deserving people throughout Africa. Its innovative approaches include partnering (a big 5 firm lecturing the accounting curriculum for free) and Pay it Forward (graduates returning as lecturers and mentors) and its whole person approach develops dynamic, emotionally intelligent entrepreneurs and social change agents. Professor Otto Scharmer of MIT observed, “TSiBA is a living example of a new breed of business schools.”

www.tsiba.org.za

A 6heads series: If education is the foundation for how our society evolves into the future – then how do we align this important system to our emergent societal needs?

http://6-heads.com/2013/09/19/transformative-education-teaching-for-tomorrow-part-1/

http://6-heads.com/2013/09/27/transformative-education-teaching-for-tomorrow-part-2/

http://6-heads.com/2013/10/24/transformative-education-a-luxury-for-rich-kids-part-3/

 

Samuel challenges you to “Zep it”!

Serial innovator Samuel Gordon came up with this smashing idea and was kind enough to share it with 6heads. And we, of course are kind enough to share it with you!  We’re also interested in your views for Sam on how he can grow this into a strong campaign for change… Let us know at info@6-heads.com

Sam introduces the concept here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v5vwWSm4GB0

There is an easy way to make climate change campaigning more successful and fun.

Rather than encouraging people to cut their emissions, we should be encouraging them instead to “ZEP it!” – to replace the emitting objects they own with alternative products that release Zero Emissions at the Point of use (“ZEPs”).

Examples of ZEPs could include heat pumps, electric boilers or a lithium-ion battery for an electrically-powered bike. These emit no CO2 at the point they are used but they also emit no nitrous oxide, sulphur oxide or carbon particulates either. For the sake of this project, the amount of energy ZEPs use is irrelevant.

Why ZEPs? Well, if we adopt this approach, it becomes far easier for consumers to lead on tackling climate change. It is tough to do this when trying to cut emissions, because no matter how hard we try we will always be emitting indirectly via the electricity we use. Everyone has their hands dirty, so to speak, so it is tough to credibly convince other people to change.

The “ZEP it!” campaign is different though. Because you’re only responsible for what you own, becoming a role-model is a much faster process. Do you own any objects that emit at their physical point of use? No? Congrats! Under this approach you’re now guilt-free and can start persuading your neighbours and power company to ZEP it too.

The “ZEP it!” campaign is also easy to draw the public into. The key is focus on fun and convenience. For example, you could create brightly-coloured “ZEP it!” stickers for all the motorbikes in your office car-park then include riding directions to the nearest zero-emission replacements. Under this approach, the complex science and “doom and gloom” of emissions no longer matters – all that matters instead are the benefits of taking action!

The “ZEP it!” campaign is also easier to draw businesses into. The key is to focus on just five types of products. By replacing only their engines, boilers, furnaces, kilns and stoves, businesses will cut the world’s greenhouse gas emissions by around 85% and largely solve the problem. No-one needs to be demonised, and we can bypass the fossil fuels debate completely. Under this approach, our message to businesses is simple and positive: “Replace these five products and you’re mostly done!”

In fact, the “ZEP it!” campaign is easy for businesses to lead. The key is to aim for the single goal of bringing ZEPs to 100% market share. Because all of these five types of products exist in million- and billion-dollar markets, this goal creates a strong commercial incentive for companies to act quickly. The businesses who act first with ZEPs will capture the most market share. Under this approach, funding will be easier to find.

Finally, the “ZEP it!” campaign is also easier to draw governments into. The key is to focus on the benefits of ZEPs. Designing policy to increase these benefits will be far more popular than trying to enforce the costs of widespread cuts in emissions. Under this approach, it is easier for governments to look good when they support us. We’ll make progress faster!

All in all, the “ZEP it!” campaign is the simplest and most powerful way we can solve our climate change problem. Let’s get ZEPping! 

Great idea Sam!

THE SMART CEO’S GUIDE TO SOCIAL JUSTICE

This post is from the brilliant Seth Godin. I follow his thoughts daily. You can subscribe TO more of his brilliance here: SETHDAILY

It seems as though profit-maximizing business people ought to be speaking up loudly and often for three changes in our culture, changes that while making life better also have a dramatically positive impact on their organizations.

Minimum Wage: Three things worth noting:

  1. Most minimum wage jobs in the US can’t easily be exported to lower wage places, because they’re inherently local in nature.
  2. The percentage of the final price of a good or service due to minimum wage inputs is pretty low.
  3. Many businesses sell to consumers, and when they have more money, there’s more demand for what they sell.

Given that for even the biggest organizations there are more potential customers than employees, the math of raising the minimum wage works in their favor. More confident and more stable markets mean more sales. Workers struggling to make ends meet are a tax on the economy.

(Consider the brilliant strategic move Henry Ford made in doubling the pay of thousands of his workers in 1914. The assembly line was so efficient that it created profits—but only when it was running, and high turnover made that difficult. By radically raising pay, Ford put pressure on all of his competitors (and on every industry that hired the sort of men he was hiring) at the same time that he created a gateway to the middle class, a middle class that could, of course, buy his cars, whether or not they happened to work for him). Also, consider this point of view

Climate Change: The shift in our atmosphere causes countless taxes on organizations. Any business that struggled this winter due to stormsunderstands that this a very real cost, a tax that goes nowhere useful and one that creates countless uncertainties. As sea levels rise, entire cities will be threatened, another tax that makes it less likely that people will be able to buy from you.

The climate upredictability tax is large, and it’s going to get bigger, in erratic and unpredictable ways.

Decreasing carbon outputs and increasing energy efficiency are long-term investments in global wealth, wealth that translates into more revenue and more profit.

Anti-corruption movements: The only players who benefit from corruption in government are the actors willing to race to the bottom–the most corrupt organizations. Everyone else is forced to play along, but is unlikely to win. As a result, for most of us, efforts to create transparency and fairness in transactions are another step toward efficient and profitable engagements.

Historically, when cultures clean up their acts, get more efficient and take care of their people, businesses thrive. It’s not an accident, one causes the other.

In all three cases, there’s no political or left/right argument being made–instead, it’s the basic economics of a stable business environment with a more secure, higher-income workforce where technological innovation leads to lower energy costs and higher efficiency.

A sisterhood for societal change: how invisible networks of care re-shape our society

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This week I was at the launch of Lloyds ‘Helping Britain Prosper’ plan.  I noticed that they have a goal to have 40% women filling executive positions by 2020.  On the tube on the way home I read that empirical evidence has been gathered that bringing women into senior roles affects the bottom line – positively. When later I asked a senior man in DIFD what the one thing he thinks needs to be done that would change the destiny of the millions living below the breadline he said “educate and empower women”.

I myself come from a strong line of women – all of whom have had to carve out their own destinies.  Marked among them are my grandmother who – in her early 30’s, widowed with 2 children and no education – set up a tie factory in Africa. Or my mother who challenged the status quo in South Africa by being a female physiotherapist to major sports teams – “a women in the locker rooms”.

I’m not however a feminist – I get squeamish at any kind of separation – probably a legacy of growing up under apartheid. Although I hear the need for ‘special treatment’ I think on one level this reinforces the idea of victimhood and perpetrates the very issue it’s trying to solve. For many years my best friend headed up a national institution to further the rights of women and although I appreciated the institutional acknowledgement of gender imbalance, I was a hesitant to support it (bad friend!). I wanted instead to change the perspectives that forced this need – across all sectors of our diverse society and not just gender related.

I’ve worked in large commercial institutions all my life.  I have listened in on the tense debates about how to succeed women have to ‘turn into men’, that those females that reach the top are harder on other women and that women ‘opt out’ to care for families and are not a reliable corporate investment. My last ‘real’ job I was paid almost 20% less than the men on our team – despite the high pressure and profile of my role within it.

Yet, despite this loaded topic and my own discomfort with gender as a focal point, I have come to deeply appreciate the women who have given me a hand up – particularly in my career over the past few years. Perhaps (somewhat ironically!), it is a particularly female attribute to express gratitude for a reciprocal relationship – I do deliver on our tacit agreements. However, I know that without the support of these women in my sector I – no matter how talented – would not be able to fully play out my unique attributes and dreams for both self-manifestation and social change.  I don’t offer a ‘plug and play’ set of skills – I’m not an accountant, a lawyer, a teacher or with a clear boxed set of proven skills. I’m a business change maker, a commercial transformer – a more tricky proposition. Somehow it is majority women, (and a few enlightened men!), who read my potential and take significant risks to match them to their organisations, bring me into senior roles and create conditions to allow me to flourish.

6heads started with a call from a very busy senior woman to meet to discuss what we could do for her organisation. Yesterday I was introduced to executive decision-makers by another women, who trusted me to support and enrich a critical initiative. Today a third called me to tell me that a proposal that will radically affect my future, my fortunes and the lives of hundreds of others has been accepted – I know she has been working extremely hard in the background building confidence in me to make this happen.

I think all of us with all of our diverse strengths and perspectives – be it gender, race, nationality or perspective have a significant contribution to make to a better world. But I am deeply grateful for the women that took time to understand, trusted their intuition and have reached a hand out to me, as I continue to carve my unique career journey. I won’t let you down!

Perhaps it is this invisible network of care that will ultimately, positively effect change in any under-represented part of our society that requires visibility and opportunity in order to thrive.

And now I have to go – I have a call with a young woman who wants career advice – I’m consciously paying it forward.

Thank you ladies. 

Striking gold in recruitment

As small companies scale it becomes critical to hire good people – and very difficult in a traditional interview situation for a time-strapped entrepreneur to assess whether the person being interviewed is, in fact, the rare being they want to hire. And hiring mistakes for a small organisation are costly.

A group of entrepreneurs suggested these ideas:

1. Quick test: Leave a number connected to an answer phone. Get them to call back and leave a message with their name, number and reason for application. Their energy, ambition and ability to articulate will all be immediately apparent. An easy way to a short-list of candidates.

2. Structured interview: Have a set list of critical questions. Rate each applicant immediately after the interview against questions out of 10. After all the interviews add up scores and use this as an objective way to test your overall perception of performance.

3. Conduct “stay” interviews: It is more cost-effective to retain excellent staff than have to source new ones. These are regular interviews with key existing staff where you ask “Why are you still here?”

I’m sure there are many other ideas – but I quite liked these and thought I’d share them…

 

 

All February’s inspirations – and how to keep the sunshine into March…

An Inspired February

Your February posts have been little beacons of clarity and light”

Today is the last day of our month of inspirations. We’ve loved how they have spread out like ripples to far shores and connected us and the ideas within to new people and places. Thank you Columbia, Canada, Singapore, Botswana, Brazil, Romania and all the other places that picked up on this! We like the possibility that we’ve not only brought daily sunshine but somehow inspired change.

We’ve enjoyed having others volunteer to write – and encourage anyone who’d like to write, to contact us for future blogs at info@6-heads.com. We know our stories are currently UK centric – you can change that!

We’ve enjoyed a sense of community beyond our normal group of change warriors.  We’d love to invite you to continue to join us at our events or our regular UK members meetings. For more details have a look here: events , or join our regular newsletter here: newsletter

And of course, if there is any other way we can support you: through talks, writing, training, consulting or spring-boarding your business idea – please do get in touch!

For today’s inspiration, we invite you to enjoy a selection from the past month:

Thank you for joining us on this sunshine journey for February. 

May 2014 be your best year yet. 

sunshine