One of the most difficult aspects of adapting to rapid change, particularly when it is accompanied by complex technology and multiplying data sources, is the ability to give up an old construct about the way things ought to be and develop a new one based on the current realities. Accepting a new version of reality, essentially telling a new story, requires cultural intelligence. Cultural intelligence is the ability to observe, learn, and understand our own culture as well as the culture of others. It is an essential skill in a diverse community and a global market.
There are four stages to adaptation: technology, economics, demographics, and culture. We adapt easily to new technology, we accommodate new economic structures, we welcome new workers, but we resist changing cultural beliefs. Culture is basically the beliefs we have about the "way things ought to be." Culture always lags behind technological, economic, and demographic shifts.
As we increasingly become "cyborgs," part technician and part human consciousness, successful adaptation requires changes in management and leadership. The new knowledge workers, the portfolio professionals, prefer to work as part of a diverse, empowered team with maximum independence and minimum management. They have different skills and a different character than any previous worker class.
Our current leadership assignment requires a remaking of our staff, our organizations, and ourselves into more civilized, responsible, and productive cyber forms. The key is the ability to think in new ways. The adaptive executive is future-oriented; he or she understands both the current business environment as well as what their organization's place in the local and global market is likely to be.
Every major system in America is in the process of a major shift. Major industries, in particular telecommunications, were hit first and healthcare soon followed. The political, legal, and academic systems are facing the same "rightsizing." Leadership in this new era requires the ability to think in new ways. Management requires the skill of thinking about thinking, knowing how you think and operate. This seminar will provide experience in eight thinking skills:
Think of this seminar as a workout for your mind: a little brain aerobics, a blueprint for future success. You will leave energized and optimistic.
We are changing faster than any other generation of Americans. The changes are both deep and broad. Technology drives the speed of this change, economics creates the breadth and cultural shifts provide the depth. Each of us will be asked to think in new ways, to work in new ways and to feel in new ways. Yet we resist, the body and mind automatically resist significant changes.
This session will outline the sources and direction of technological, economic and cultural change. You will have a chance to evaluate your own flexibility and response time. You will learn the steps in the process of change and skills for building a 21st century mind and character.
We are all becoming "cyborgs," part technician and part human consciousness. The knowledge worker, the portfolio professional, has different skills and a different character than any previous worker class. Our current leadership assignment is nothing less than the re-making of our traditional workers and our organizations into more civilized and productive cyber forms.
We can teach the mind and body to adapt but it is a tough assignment. The key is the ability to think in new ways. We need to understand what our life and our business is now about and what our organization's place in the global market is likely to be.
Technology concentrates energy • it makes the difference between a steam engine and a microchip. Progress is the concentration of energy. International communications technology has literally changed who we are by concentrating human energy as never before. This knowledge based commerce and contact has changed economics (the efficient use of available energy), demographics (who we work with and meet with) and ultimately culture (the stories we tell ourselves about the way things should be).
There is, in all human adaptation processes, both a demographic lag (who will we work with) and a cultural lag (what stories are we willing to change).
Cultural intelligence is the ability to recognize cultural myths, our own and those of others, and replace them with current realities. Cultural intelligence is the ability to "unpack" the stories we have been told about who we are and what we do, examine them and replace them with new information. Leaders need to understand the balance between what technology can do and what human culture can accommodate.
Jennifer James is a keynote speaker and industry expert who speaks on a wide range of topics such as The Adaptive Executive, Thinking in the Future Tense, How to Change, How to Take Risks, The Human Face of Technological Change and Cultural Intelligence: Telling the New Story. The estimated speaking fee range to book Jennifer James for your event is $10,000 - $20,000. Jennifer James generally travels from and can be booked for (private) corporate events, personal appearances, keynote speeches, or other performances. Similar motivational celebrity speakers are Ali Rodriguez, Kathryn Cross, Emily Simpson, Erin Throlopolis and Kate Cosentino. Contact All American Speakers for ratings, reviews, videos and information on scheduling Jennifer James for an upcoming live or virtual event.
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