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The Identity Circle Blog



It's 2010 - What Universe Do You Live In?


Posted By: Larry Ackerman on @

For all the sophisticated management thinking these days, why is it most managers only see half a world - the world of economics - as opposed to the "other" equally formidable world of identity?

 

A short, provocative article in Newsweek last month challenged the notion that we’re forever having to choose between science and the humanities, as if they are mutually exclusive. It occurred to me that companies do the same thing, if unwittingly, when they pay rapt attention to the economic ‘universe’ we all inhabit, but virtually no attention to the ‘identity universe’ that’s also ever-present and inescapable in its impact on business success. Why is that? Is it because managers can’t quantify its effects? (That’s no longer the case, with the results of the Identity Impact Survey which lend hard evidence to the quantitative impact of identity on employee engagement and business performance.) Is it because we don’t have the tools to manage identity, as we do with economics? (Ditto, from above.)

 

Why, however, doesn’t matter as much as why not...Why not open our eyes to the "other" universe that governs organizations? Why not combine them, consciously, into a seamless, more holistic, management discipline aimed squarely at value creation? If economics provides the capital model of how companies work, then identity provides the human model. They belong together. They are symbiotic.

 

 

When I was a kid, I always needed someone else on the end of the see-saw to make it go up and down, in a steady, rythmic way. As a high school student, I recall learning about the need to keep the scales of justice in balance. Today, I see no less a need for managers to balance the discipline of economics with the discipline of identity, when making decisions about strategy, brand and operations. It’s only logical. It’s the future. Who’s going to go first?

 

 



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Comments


Larry
I think you’re spot on with this post.  My buddy Barry Johnson who has worked with Polarity Management (he now calls it the Infinity Factor) would be a strong proponent of this “both/and” thinking you’re raising.  The symbiosis is required for a healthy organization.....or person.

Kudos to you!


Posted by  on  Dec 09, 2009  at  06:15 PM

Larry:
I like your notion of encouraging the left and right brains to become friendly—and by analogy, to have the linear economic sensibility enriched by harnessing knowledge of an organization’s unique ability to create value.


Posted by  on  Dec 10, 2009  at  03:08 AM
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Name:
Larry Ackerman
Location:
Connecticut, United States


My career has been about helping organizations and individuals discover their uniqueness and potential,and then bringing that potential to life in ways that dramatically enhance their performance, impact and reputations.


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