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Corporate anthropology | Michael Henderson | TEDxAuckland

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    So to get us underway,
    would you please give a warm welcome
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    to corporate anthropologist,
    Michael Henderson.
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    (Applause) (Cheers)
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
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    Thank you.
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    So I just thought, to start off,
    to make it very clear,
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    when I was sitting,
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    the smoke that appeared
    behind me wasn't due to me.
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    (Laughter)
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    I'd hate to go down on my CV,
    as the guy that did that on TED.
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    I thought for a moment
    they were running out of time
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    and decided to cut speaker number one,
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    "Gas him now!"
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    Still glad to be here.
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    I thought I'd start off with a story
    my grandfather told me.
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    This was many years ago,
    about a worker in a Russian factory
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    not long after the revolution,
    in the new Soviet Union.
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    At the end of every work day,
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    the workers would leave the factory,
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    go down to the gates of the factory,
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    and be stopped by security guards
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    they would be searched
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    to ensure they weren't taking
    any tools or any equipment,
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    or even any of the motherland resources
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    out of the factory.
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    This one particular worker,
    used to wheel a wheelbarrow with him,
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    he'd carry his winter coat in there
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    and perhaps a basket
    to carry his lunch in.
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    The security guards
    everyday would stop him,
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    search under the coat,
    make sure it didn't have any tools in it,
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    and this went on, day after day,
    week after week, for years and years.
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    And after four or five years,
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    it was found that this particular worker
    had skipped the Soviet Union.
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    Apparently with a very large sum of money.
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    Turned out, he'd been
    stealing wheelbarrows.
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    (Laughter)
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    I suspect this happens a lot
    with company culture.
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    Company culture wheels in and out
    of the building on a daily basis,
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    but no one actually pays attention to it.
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    And traditionally, that didn't really need
    to be an issue in the last century.
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    But I think, this century,
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    it's something, we need to be
    paying attention to in organisations,
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    because people,
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    even what we're doing today,
    playing with ideas,
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    have actually started to contribute
    far more to organisations in that way,
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    than perhaps they have ever before.
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    And as an anthropologist,
    I find that fascinating.
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    So, the field of corporate anthropology,
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    is literally the discovery
    and the search for
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    what is the nature of people
    in organisations.
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    I got into corporate anthropology
    almost by mistake.
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    I graduated from Auckland University
    in anthropology,
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    I highly recommend
    their anthropological programs.
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    And on graduation, the professor
    gave me some very good advice,
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    he said, "Two things I need
    to let you know, Michael.
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    Number one, congratulations, you will
    never be bored for the rest of your life.
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    You're an anthropologist,
    we don't suffer boredom."
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    "Second thing", he says,
    "you're unemployable.
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    Good luck with that."
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    (Laughter)
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    Turned out, he was right on both counts.
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    Difficult to get a job when you say,
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    "Hi, I'm an anthropologist,
    where do I start?"
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    So I took off to London,
    as we Kiwis do and went on an OE,
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    and decided that I'd better go
    and get a "real job,"
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    I think that's what my mother called it,
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    joined an advertising group in London,
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    and was selling advertising,
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    in that particular market in the 80s.
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    I'd been with the company
    for about a month,
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    and suddenly there was called
    a "crisis meeting."
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    I didn't know what it meant,
    maybe the building was burning down.
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    Turned out it was about financial figures
    we weren't doing as well as we could be.
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    This gentlemen came on stage,
    a distinguished looking chap,
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    and there was hundreds of us
    brought together to sit at his feet.
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    And he was introduced as the CEO.
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    I didn't know much about business,
    "CEO, what's that?"
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    So I leant across to the person next to me
    and said, "What's a CEO?"
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    They said, "Well duh,
    it's the Chief Executive Officer."
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    And I just went, "Woah!"
    because that first word,
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    as an anthropologist,
    captured me of course.
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    (Laughter)
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    So, I went, "Coo.l"
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    I pulled out my little black notebook
    and got my pen ready.
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    Two things you should know,
    anybody carrying a black notebook,
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    is one of two things,
    an anthropologist or a policeman.
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    (Laughter)
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    They both ask the same question,
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    "So, what is it you're doing here?"
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    Anthropologists do it
    with a matter of inquiry.
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    The police are
    a little more threatening.
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    I listen to this guy talk
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    about how badly
    the organisation was performing,
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    how results hadn't been
    how they should have been,
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    that we needed to lift
    our endeavors and our efforts,
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    that times were tough.
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    That we needed to pull together more
    and make this thing happen.
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    Now, the interesting thing
    about his talk was,
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    he didn't actually use the words,
    but he made it very clear,
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    it was our fault.
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    (Laughter)
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    I thought, "This is interesting."
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    I'd been there for a month,
    and it suddenly clicked,
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    this guy didn't realise,
    that he was head of a cult.
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    Not a culture.
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    Most businesses don't know
    the distinction between those two,
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    how that happens and what it delivers.
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    I wrote that down and thought
    "Wow, this is really interesting.
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    He's got no idea."
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    The difference being that in a cult,
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    a leader sees greatness
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    in themselves.
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    In a culture,
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    the leader sees greatness in ...
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    the people, of course.
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    It was interesting
    even from his comments
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    I realised he doesn't
    realise he's set up a cult.
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    So, a lot of the performance issues
    he was blaming everyone else for,
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    in fact, I believe, possibly,
    was a reflection of his leadership style.
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    So as a result of that, I took his money,
    I did some selling, didn't do too well,
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    I was too busy with my black notebook
    and kept getting warnings,
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    "The sales not right."
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    I headed to South America
    and Africa for a couple of years
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    and went to study the cultures and tribes,
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    that I was interested in
    and had a passion for,
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    to learn what they were doing
    around culture and leadership.
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    And one of the central revelations
    of anthropology is, it's a little bizarre.
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    You become an anthropologist because you
    want to study other tribes and cultures,
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    and a big number of you
    putting your hands up
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    saying you'd been there, done that.
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    So, nice to be talking to an audience
    full of fellow anthropologists.
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    You go there to study other people
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    and perhaps even reveal
    who they truly are.
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    In reality what happens is,
    as you're studying them
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    and spending time with them,
    you reveal not who they are,
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    but of course, who you are.
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    You come face to face
    with your own prejudices.
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    It can be sexist, it can be political,
    it can be racist.
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    That's not necessarily
    a pleasant thing to experience.
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    The more I looked at this,
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    I suddenly realised that in fact,
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    the lessons that are to be learnt
    from traditional tribes and cultures,
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    did not need to be shared with these,
    they were already okay.
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    It occured to me that the people
    that needed these lessons
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    on how to build cultures
    and effective leadership,
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    were in fact the tribe
    I'd just left in London.
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    That toxic cult environment.
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    It occurred to me
    in fact that organisations,
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    are the modern tribes.
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    I experienced that many of us spend
    far more hours in our work place,
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    or our education places,
    here we are at the school,
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    than potentially we do even in our
    national culture or in our ethnic culture.
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    And that perhaps, that's something
    we should be paying attention to.
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    Perhaps that's giving us some indication
    as to what's going on in society
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    and the way it has been going on.
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    I looked at the history of organisations.
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    Organisations have been
    running the world for 400 years now.
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    My question is, "How's it going?"
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    Rhetorical question.
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    So, I gathered all this, came back,
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    got back to London,
    thought, "Hmm," got another job
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    and started to sit within organisations
    and view them as a tribe.
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    So as I said, started to see the CEO,
    as the chief, executive officer.
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    Let me explain what that means
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    C, E, and O.
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    The chief is head of culture,
    the executive is head of structure,
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    who's at what position,
    with how much power,
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    how much authority.
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    And the officer, clearly military,
    the delivery of strategy, if you like.
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    I saw that the chief
    actually had three mandates of power,
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    this is not a title or a position
    within the business,
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    it's the three things that the individuals
    should be paying attention to.
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    But my experience showed me that
    they tended to favour two of those
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    and delegate the other one
    to a group called HR.
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    Have you heard of this group, HR?
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    (Audience) Yes.
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    Human Resources.
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    When you use the phrase "human resources"
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    with a traditional tribe,
    you can see them pull back a little bit.
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    They don't like that phrase.
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    It brings up bad memories for them,
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    they have another word
    associated with that;
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    it's called slavery.
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    What's intriguing is one of the lessons
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    I believe organisations
    can learn from traditional cultures is
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    tribes don't do HR they do RH.
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    In other words they resource humans
    for an occupation,
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    they don't have human resources.
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    Think about that,
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    it sounds like a clever
    play on words, doesn't it?
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    Just nod.
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    It's actually more than that.
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    It's a whole mentality.
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    Yes. So resourcing humans,
    where would you rather work?
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    Somewhere that resources humans
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    or somewhere that treats people
    as human resources?
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    I just wonder if there's some
    opportunities for us to learn here.
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    I'm often questioned,
    people go "Yes, yes clever stuff,
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    but is this the latest business trend?
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    Is this what companies are doing
    at the moment, looking at culture?"
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    My response to that is clearly no.
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    In fact I'd say, business is just
    the latest cultural trend.
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    Culture's been around, as long as humans
    have been processing cognitive thought,
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    and communing together on this planet.
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    Business, in the forum that we,
    currently, most of us, operate in,
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    is barely 400 years old.
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    So do you think,
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    maybe there's some lessons
    in traditional cultural experience,
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    that we could draw on and engage from,
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    within our organisations?
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    I started to play with that,
    share that with organisations,
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    there's a couple of things,
    some of those lessons we can take
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    from traditional tribes
    and apply within organisations,
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    very simple, they're obvious
    when you look at them.
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    I guess that's one of the benefits
    of being an anthropologist.
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    Most people suffer from
    a thing called "déjà vu,"
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    have you heard that expression?
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    You feel like you've been here before,
    had this conversation,
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    often accompanied with goosebumps,
    hairs standing up,
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    going, "Oh it's a bit freaky,"
    been here before, had this conversation.
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    Anthropologists don't suffer from that,
    we suffer from "vuja' de'"
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    that's actually the reverse,
    we've been there 100 times,
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    but this is like seeing it
    for the first time.
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    Every time I go into an organisation
    I've been there before,
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    but I always treat it
    like a new experience,
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    a new beginning, a fresh mind.
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    Just as we've been asked
    to clear our minds for this session.
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    What are the lessons that
    organisations could learn from tribes
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    if they clear their minds
    and see themselves for the first time?
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    The big one, is a thing called engagement.
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    Tribes are famous for doing two things
    fundamentally: enabling their people,
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    preparing the next generation
    to be able to hunt,
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    fish, make babies, build huts etc.
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    And also engagement, which is making them
    proud to be who they are.
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    Finding their place to stand,
    the Tūrangawaewae of the people,
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    actually defining who you are
    through historical text
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    and stories and symbolism.
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    Here's the intriguing thing:
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    Global surveys around the world,
    show that in engagement surveys
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    on average, in most modern organisations,
    20% of the people are engaged,
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    80% are either sitting on the fence
    or are clearly disengaged.
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    What we mean by engaged,
    is three things:
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    they're willing to stay
    with your organisation;
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    to speak positively about the organisation
    which given the social network forums
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    that we have available to us nowadays,
    crucial comment,
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    you bad mouth your company
    to millions of people on the Internet,
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    it effects things like your reputation
    and your brand etc;
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    the other thing was to strive
    for your organisation.
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    Imagine if an organisation
    has low levels of engagement,
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    people aren't willing to stay,
    to speak positively about it,
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    or strive on behalf of it,
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    what do you think that
    does to productivity,
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    customer service and job fulfilment?
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    And yet all round the world,
    we have 80% of the workers,
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    and I'm talking about millions of people,
    are not fully engaged in the work they do.
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    Those numbers may sound familiar
    if you're in business,
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    have you heard of 20-80,
    the Pareto theory?
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    The theory being that 20% of your people
    deliver 80% of your results on average.
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    I'm not saying there's
    a correlation between those figures
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    but isn't that interesting?
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    20% are engaged and they happen to
    be generating 80% of the results.
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    Here's the interesting thing:
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    I've travelled extensively, I think
    I won that prize for countries visited,
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    over 70 looking at cultures and tribes,
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    so if a chocolate fish is up for grabs
    put my name down for it.
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    I found that no tribe
    that I've ever come across
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    that runs engagement surveys.
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    Why would they?
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    They're in contact with the people,
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    know what's going on,
    they don't need a survey for feedback.
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    It's in dialogue, in everyday expression,
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    brought to the table at every meeting.
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    They're paying attention to,
    truly listening to each other,
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    as tribe members.
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    We don't do that in organisations.
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    I often suggest that leadership
    in modern organisations
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    has become an email sort.
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    In tribes, it's a contact sport.
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    Again it sounds like
    a clever play on words
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    but some real differences
    show up when you do that,
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    and lessons potentially
    to be learnt from that.
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    The other thing about engagement
    in traditional tribes is
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    it's not 20% of the people
    delivering 80% of the results,
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    it's 80% of the people
    delivering 100% of the results.
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    The 20% that aren't involved
    in delivering those results
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    are either too young and still learning,
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    being brought up as tribe members,
    learning the traditions, the skill sets
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    required to make them
    contributing tribe members,
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    or they're too old,
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    so their responsibility
    then is more a mentor role,
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    passing on the traditions
    and the stories of the old times
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    to the next generation.
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    Which in our western societies
    seems to have drifted away, doesn't it?
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    We tend to, when we they get too old,
    we stick them in a retirment home
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    and go and visit them every second month
    if we've got the time,
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    or is that just what happens in my family?
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    (Laughter)
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    It's interesting, yes? They embrace them.
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    So even this whole
    Gen Y thing in the workplace,
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    Gen Ys have to have their managers
    taught how to manage a Gen Y generation.
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    What is intriguing is,
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    how come no one's teaching the Gen Ys
    how to respect the older generations?
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    Respect the wisdom that has come before.
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    As you would do in a tribe.
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    Bizarre, don't you think?
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    What else can we learn?
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    I guess one of the things I'm big on, is
    something around dignity in the workplace.
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    You see, the thing I find
    in traditional tribes,
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    it doesn't matter who you are,
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    what your role is,
    or how old you are,
  • 13:49 - 13:53
    it doesn't even, often, not always,
    matter what gender you are,
  • 13:53 - 13:57
    you are provided with instant dignity,
    instant respect is afforded to you.
  • 14:00 - 14:03
    And in southern Africa,
    they have a word called "Ubuntu."
  • 14:03 - 14:07
    "Ubuntu" meaning a person
    is a person because of the people.
  • 14:08 - 14:12
    So a manager is only a manager
    because they have people to manage.
  • 14:12 - 14:16
    Sales teams are only sales teams
    because they have people to sell to,
  • 14:16 - 14:18
    they have accountants
    that process the numbers,
  • 14:18 - 14:21
    a manufacturing department
    that manufactures products,
  • 14:21 - 14:25
    researches and develops those products,
    imports those products in the first place.
  • 14:25 - 14:26
    It makes sense, doesn't it?
  • 14:26 - 14:30
    That who we are and what we do
    is absolutely because the world we live in
  • 14:30 - 14:34
    dependant on our ability to function well
    with others, to serve with others.
  • 14:35 - 14:39
    So this ubuntu is acceptable in tribes.
  • 14:39 - 14:40
    And yet in businesses it's often missing.
  • 14:40 - 14:43
    I know it would never apply
    to the schools or businesses
  • 14:43 - 14:44
    that you people belong to,
  • 14:44 - 14:46
    but have you heard of organisations,
  • 14:46 - 14:50
    where they have silo mentality,
    one department at war with the other?
  • 14:50 - 14:51
    Have you heard about that?
  • 14:51 - 14:55
    It's just bizarre, because that
    never occurs in a tribe.
  • 14:56 - 14:59
    And it's interesting,
    the way leadership responds to this,
  • 14:59 - 15:02
    one of the key areas, that there's an
    opportunity as well as the leadership role
  • 15:02 - 15:05
    in organisations and tribes are two
    fundamentaly different things.
  • 15:05 - 15:08
    Do this ... A little exercise for you,
    for just a moment.
  • 15:08 - 15:12
    Take a moment, in your mind, picture
    the structure of a typical organisation.
  • 15:13 - 15:15
    It could be the school we're at today,
  • 15:15 - 15:17
    a modern business,
    a government department,
  • 15:17 - 15:20
    if you were going to draw
    a symbol to represent the structure
  • 15:20 - 15:22
    of that organisation,
    what would it look like?
  • 15:22 - 15:23
    You got that?
  • 15:25 - 15:28
    Now, picture within that where
    would you typically position leadership?
  • 15:30 - 15:33
    Hold that for a moment,
    you've got a structure and a position.
  • 15:33 - 15:35
    Now, even if you've never been
    to a traditional tribe,
  • 15:35 - 15:38
    think about the structure
    of a traditional tribe,
  • 15:38 - 15:40
    what shape would you choose for that?
  • 15:40 - 15:41
    Picture that in your mind.
  • 15:41 - 15:44
    Then think about where
    would you position leadership
  • 15:44 - 15:46
    within a traditional culture.
  • 15:46 - 15:48
    Here's a question for you:
  • 15:48 - 15:50
    How many, for the first one
    went for something like a triangle,
  • 15:50 - 15:52
    hierarchical, with leadership at the top?
  • 15:52 - 15:53
    Show of hands.
  • 15:53 - 15:56
    Yes, so we've all been
    indoctrinated through that, yes?
  • 15:56 - 16:00
    And traditional tribes, how many of you
    did a more flat maybe even circular shape
  • 16:00 - 16:03
    as the symbol that came up,
    and where was leadership?
  • 16:03 - 16:05
    In the middle, yes, centered.
  • 16:05 - 16:10
    And so this is a huge insight into why
    tribes are able to sustain culture,
  • 16:10 - 16:13
    our neighbours in Australia,
    we know from the artefacts alone,
  • 16:13 - 16:16
    traditional culture there
    is a minimum of 30,000 years old.
  • 16:18 - 16:21
    So, here we are, modern society,
    talking about sustainability,
  • 16:21 - 16:24
    we have experts across the channel
    we could be learning from.
  • 16:24 - 16:25
    Likewise in this country.
  • 16:26 - 16:28
    Some of the wisdom
    contained on the Marae here,
  • 16:29 - 16:31
    is what we should be paying attention to.
  • 16:31 - 16:34
    The ability to be in amongst
    the people as an equal,
  • 16:34 - 16:37
    listen and pay attention to one another,
    is incredibly powerful
  • 16:37 - 16:40
    and offers an opportunity to do,
    not only learning and sharing,
  • 16:40 - 16:43
    which of course is crucial,
    it's why we're all here today at TED.
  • 16:44 - 16:47
    More importantly, it offers us
    the opportunity to share that dignity,
  • 16:47 - 16:51
    to pass that respect
    back to different people.
  • 16:51 - 16:54
    Even the language, I often refer
    to language within organisations,
  • 16:54 - 16:58
    and with any culture,
    language is the bloodline of culture.
  • 16:58 - 16:59
    If you want to gauge
  • 16:59 - 17:02
    how well a company
    or a traditional culture is going,
  • 17:02 - 17:03
    you listen to the language.
  • 17:03 - 17:05
    It gives you clues as to what's going on.
  • 17:05 - 17:07
    I was doing some work
  • 17:07 - 17:09
    where an organisation
    asked me to do exactly that.
  • 17:09 - 17:11
    I spent a few weeks floating around jobs
  • 17:11 - 17:13
    doing whatever it took
    to listen to the language.
  • 17:13 - 17:14
    Interestingly,
  • 17:14 - 17:18
    the most commonly spoken word in that
    organisation began with the letter "F."
  • 17:19 - 17:21
    It wasn't football.
  • 17:21 - 17:22
    (Laughter)
  • 17:22 - 17:23
    Yet interestingly enough,
  • 17:23 - 17:27
    when you went into the reception area
    they had the values on the wall there,
  • 17:27 - 17:29
    of integrity, teamwork, sharing and trust.
  • 17:30 - 17:32
    Which do you think
    is believable and real?
  • 17:32 - 17:34
    The language people are speaking,
  • 17:34 - 17:36
    or the proclaimed values?
  • 17:37 - 17:39
    The difference between
    tribe and organisation
  • 17:39 - 17:41
    is a tribe lives the values
    lived on a daily basis,
  • 17:41 - 17:45
    organisations typically have executives
    that go off on a thing called a retreat.
  • 17:46 - 17:47
    As an anthropologist it's fascinating
  • 17:47 - 17:50
    that businesses go on a retreat
    and not an advance,
  • 17:50 - 17:52
    but that's what they choose
    to do and call it.
  • 17:52 - 17:54
    They create a set of values, come back
  • 17:54 - 17:57
    and they have the audacity
    to stand up in front of their tribe
  • 17:57 - 18:00
    and announce the tribe's values
    to their own people.
  • 18:01 - 18:04
    "We, your esteemed leaders,
    have come up with a set of values.
  • 18:05 - 18:08
    They are integrity
    and team work and respect.
  • 18:08 - 18:11
    And we will honour these values
    and we will fight for them.
  • 18:11 - 18:14
    In the workplaces and in the cafeteria
    and in the carpark.
  • 18:14 - 18:18
    We will never surrender
    our commitment to these values."
  • 18:18 - 18:20
    It used to work well in the last century,
  • 18:20 - 18:23
    but nowadays that's
    a bit like a Tui (beer) ad.
  • 18:23 - 18:24
    (Laughter)
  • 18:24 - 18:27
    The audience sits there,
    they don't hear values,
  • 18:27 - 18:28
    what they hear is violations.
  • 18:29 - 18:31
    They hear you go, "Integrity":
  • 18:31 - 18:34
    "Really? Weren't you having
    an affair with the secretary?"
  • 18:34 - 18:35
    (Laughter)
  • 18:35 - 18:39
    So, culture's started to position itself
    in such a way within businesses,
  • 18:39 - 18:42
    that I even inform
    a lot of my clients now,
  • 18:42 - 18:45
    that it's possibly their strongest
    form of competition.
  • 18:45 - 18:47
    They're threatened by
    their own competition more than
  • 18:47 - 18:50
    the physical competition
    in the market place.
  • 18:50 - 18:53
    I started to pay attention to this
    once Enron Arthur Andersen and Co
  • 18:53 - 18:55
    started to fall apart at the seams.
  • 18:55 - 18:57
    Here's the interesting thing:
  • 18:57 - 18:59
    Enron's competition didn't
    put them out of business.
  • 18:59 - 19:00
    Enron's culture did.
  • 19:02 - 19:05
    And Enron's leadership
    of that culture more specifically.
  • 19:05 - 19:07
    I've seen this time and time again.
  • 19:07 - 19:10
    We are failing at culture
    in organisations.
  • 19:11 - 19:14
    And yet we have the innate ability
    for that just not to happen.
  • 19:14 - 19:16
    It's a natural way of being human.
  • 19:17 - 19:19
    Birds flock, fish school, humans tribe.
  • 19:20 - 19:22
    We know how to do this, it's very simple.
  • 19:23 - 19:25
    I guess to wrap this up,
  • 19:25 - 19:27
    one of the key things I'm interested
    in paying attention to
  • 19:27 - 19:30
    is two dynamic forces
    I see play out in many organisations.
  • 19:30 - 19:35
    This can be government departments,
    churches, schools, or organisations.
  • 19:35 - 19:40
    And that is the dynamic forces
    of relationship versus result.
  • 19:42 - 19:45
    If you don't pay attention
    to those two in your organisation,
  • 19:45 - 19:48
    there's some bizarre stuff
    that starts to happen.
  • 19:48 - 19:51
    We talk a lot with our organisations
    to pay attention to those two.
  • 19:51 - 19:54
    To get a result, what happens
    to the relationships?
  • 19:54 - 19:56
    Is there a relationship between
    relationship and results?
  • 19:56 - 19:58
    Do people need to get on
    to deliver the results?
  • 19:58 - 20:01
    If there is, you better pay attention,
  • 20:01 - 20:03
    you better take culture seriously.
  • 20:03 - 20:04
    You better start to get tribal.
  • 20:05 - 20:07
    I guess the best story
    I can share with you on this
  • 20:07 - 20:11
    that really massaged the point home for me
    was actually our own children,
  • 20:11 - 20:14
    my wife and I, this was
    about a year or so ago,
  • 20:15 - 20:19
    we heard our daughter and son fighting
    over the TV remote in the room next door
  • 20:19 - 20:20
    which normally means trouble,
  • 20:20 - 20:23
    we were debating who was
    going to go and play United Nations
  • 20:23 - 20:24
    and rescue them.
  • 20:24 - 20:25
    It was getting pretty intense.
  • 20:25 - 20:27
    And then suddenly, it went silent.
  • 20:28 - 20:29
    And that terrified us,
  • 20:29 - 20:32
    because when it goes silent,
    we realised someone was dead.
  • 20:32 - 20:33
    (Laughter)
  • 20:33 - 20:36
    So we both stood up in panic,
    and ran into the room
  • 20:36 - 20:38
    and came accross a bizarre situation.
  • 20:38 - 20:42
    Daughter and son, standing there
    just looking at each other.
  • 20:42 - 20:44
    My daughter looked a bit upset.
  • 20:44 - 20:45
    Oh, here we go, what's happened now?
  • 20:45 - 20:47
    And I say "Guys, what happened?"
  • 20:47 - 20:50
    My son turned round and says,
    "Dad, I waved the white flag".
  • 20:51 - 20:52
    I said "You what?"
  • 20:52 - 20:54
    "I waved the white flag."
  • 20:54 - 20:56
    He'd overheard us talking about
    some work that we'd done
  • 20:56 - 20:58
    about results versus relationships.
  • 20:58 - 21:00
    Waving the white flag,
    what that means is -
  • 21:00 - 21:03
    and this is how he put it -
    "I was just thinking Dad,
  • 21:03 - 21:04
    I'm bigger and older than her,
  • 21:04 - 21:07
    I could easily get that remote
    and demand it off her.
  • 21:07 - 21:09
    But I realised this is my sister,
  • 21:09 - 21:12
    I have to grow up with this girl
    for the rest of my life,
  • 21:13 - 21:16
    the relationship is more important
    than the result right now."
  • 21:16 - 21:18
    Wave the white flag.
  • 21:18 - 21:19
    Interestingly he also said,
  • 21:19 - 21:22
    "Besides, I need to borrow
    pocket money off her on Saturday."
  • 21:22 - 21:23
    (Laughter)
  • 21:24 - 21:26
    So in reality, there's a result
    in there as well.
  • 21:27 - 21:28
    So, parting words for you,
  • 21:28 - 21:30
    what I'd like to leave you with,
  • 21:30 - 21:33
    is the opportunity to explore
    in your own lives and tribe
  • 21:33 - 21:36
    be that your own family, the organisations
    you work for and belong to.
  • 21:36 - 21:38
    Have a look and measure yourself
  • 21:38 - 21:41
    in terms of how you relate to others
    and the results you strive for.
  • 21:41 - 21:43
    Are you jeopardizing relationships
  • 21:43 - 21:45
    that maybe deserve more dignity than that?
  • 21:45 - 21:48
    And can you find the courage to consider
    maybe waving your white flag,
  • 21:48 - 21:51
    surrendering your position,
    your opportunity to win,
  • 21:52 - 21:53
    for that relationship?
  • 21:54 - 21:56
    I believe that's a great idea,
    worth doing.
  • 21:56 - 21:57
    Thank you very much.
  • 21:57 - 21:58
    (Applause)
  • 22:06 - 22:08
    Fantastic.
Title:
Corporate anthropology | Michael Henderson | TEDxAuckland
Description:

Corporate anthropologist Michael Henderson discusses company culture, the importance of the relationship between relationship and result, and how modern organisations could learn a thing or two about leadership from traditional tribes and cultures.

This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at http://ted.com/tedx

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDxTalks
Duration:
22:11

English subtitles

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