Celebrating
Diversity
Used
with permission of the author:
Author:
Dr. Marshall Goldsmith
Marshall@MarshallGoldsmith.com
(Amended
from The
Community of the Future, edited by Hesselbein, Goldsmith,
Beckhard and Schubert, Jossey-Bass, 1998)
15
February 2007
Back to ... Workinfo.com Human Resources Magazine Volume 1 Issue 3, 2007
To
create a positive global community, we need to meet three key
challenges.
The
rise of the global community brings many opportunities and
challenges. In the past, community members could communicate with
each other, trade with each other, and share a common culture. In
the future, communication, trade, and culture will become much
more global.
Opportunities
for learning will be greater than ever. “Global connectedness”
means that we can interact in a way that leads to rapid and
positive learning. More information, however, does not necessarily
lead to better decisions. Leaders are now hard pressed to make
decisions because they have too much information. Hence, editing
and accessing relevant information are vital.
We
can’t assume that instant information will lead to long-term
quality of communication. Today
television
addiction
is a huge problem. In the future, media
addiction
(including the Internet) may well pass drug addiction and alcohol
addiction as a social problem.
The
advantages of global trade are well known. Increased global
competition leads to higher-quality products and services at lower
prices. Consumers can have access to an incredible diversity of
goods that may have been produced anywhere in the world. Poor
countries, which have lower labor costs, can “catch up” by
doing labor-intensive work that would cost much more in wealthy
countries. As the poor countries become more efficient, they gain
the purchasing power to buy more goods and services from the rest
of the world. The removal of trade barriers leads to an
increasingly efficient market.
While,
in theory, global trade will create greater product diversity, in
practice it sometimes creates greater homogeneity. The “shopping
streets” in major cities around the world now look much the
same. They tend to have the same clothing, music, and even food.
While the stores may have products from more countries, they are
becoming the same products. People worldwide are buying the same
global brands that are globally advertised, marketed, and
distributed. Another cost of global trade may be an increased lack
of loyalty and identification with a larger whole.
Increased
access to information means that more cultural opportunities are
available to more people. Cultural access leads to a better
understanding not only of art or music, but also of people.
Repressive regimes that encourage hatred for others restrict the
flow of communication. But by communicating with people of diverse
backgrounds, we quickly learn that negative ethnic stereotypes are
invalid. Open communication can lead to a world where diversity is
celebrated and the ethnic hatred and violence is reduced.
While
the global culture has great potential benefits, it can also have
great costs. People around the world are much more likely to look
alike, act alike, and sound alike. We are becoming as concerned
with “cultural extinction” as we are today with the extinction
of plant and animal species.
Attempts
at stopping the flow of communication, trade, or culture may
produce short-term successes but are doomed to failure for two
reasons: 1) the Internet is global, and so information that is
censored in one country will be quickly duplicated in another
country; and 2) almost all brilliant young people who are
developing new technology believe in the free flow of information,
do not like censorship, and are not intimidated by government
edict. Attempts to protect noncompetitive industries or workers
produces a short-term benefit but does not stop the development of
better and cheaper products. Attempts to force trade restrictions
on unwilling partners are destined to fail. Attempts to restrict
access to any product often leads to greater desirability.
Creating
a Positive Global Community
To
create a positive global community, we need to meet three key
challenges:
1. Reaching out to humanity and avoiding isolationism.
In the global community, it is easier to reach out and easier to
become isolated. Superficial communication with everyone can lead
to meaningful impact on no one. We need to be inspired and
educated in the value of trying to benefit the world, not just
ourselves. As the opportunities for huge individual achievement
and wealth form, we need to better recognize people who make the
transition from success to significance. Community heroes need to
be celebrated based upon their skills in giving—not their skills
in taking.
2. Celebrating diversity and avoiding conformity.
Our ability to adapt to changing situations is largely a function
of our diversity. Language leads us to view the world in different
ways and to have different approaches to making decisions and
solving problems. We need to encourage diversity in language,
culture, and lifestyle to ensure our own survival. Powerful
countries must not try to make other countries become like them.
Residents of the global community need to celebrate the fact that
“different” may be synonymous with “fascinating,”
“enhancing,” and even “necessary.”
3. Building long-term value and avoiding short-term
stimulation.
Residents of the global community have almost unlimited access
to sources of pleasurable, short-term stimulation. Television,
movies, interactive games, virtual-reality experiences, chat
rooms, and other options are available at a low cost. Yet few of
these activities produce any long-term value. We need to inspire
and educate people about the value of “investing” for the
future. Long-term value is the result of vision, creativity,
innovation, and hard work. We now have access to tools with the
potential to dramatically increase our productivity, but we also
have access to countless pleasurable distractions that lead
nowhere.
Challenges
and Opportunities
The global community has the potential to become a nightmare:
A world of conformity: with billions of people wearing the same baseball caps,
baggy shirts, jeans, and shoes, speaking the same language, and
laughing at the same jokes.
A world of short-term stimulation: with countless hours spent on mindless
television, video games, and a virtual reality that begins to
eliminate the real human experience.
A world of isolation: with lives spent in front of a screen, striving for
personal excitement and gain with little thought for others and
even less effort devoted to helping future generations.
The
global community has the potential to be a dream come true:
A world of diversity: with billions of people being able to communicate,
trade, share cultural experiences, and appreciate each other, with
access to a range of products, services, religions, cultures,
philosophies, and languages.
A world building long-term value: with countless people working together to
advance our culture, building on what has been learned in a manner
that is positive, efficient, and productive.
A world reaching out to humanity: with people helping each other in ways that could
never have been imagined, celebrating each other’s success, and
helping less fortunate members of the community become more
productive.
Will
the global community of the future become a nightmare or a dream
come true? No doubt it will be some of both. The increase in
global communication, trade, technology, and culture will
continue. By inspiring people and educating them in the values of
celebrating diversity, building long-term value, and reaching out
to humanity, we can build a global community that is more like a
dream come true.
LE
Dr.
Marshall Goldsmith
is corporate America's preeminent executive coach and the New York Times best selling
author of 22 books, including What Got You Here Won't Get You
There - a Wall Street Journal #1 business book. The American
Management Association recognized Dr. Goldsmith as one of 50 great
thinkers who have impacted the field of management and Business
Week has listed him as one of the most influential practitioners
in the history of leadership development. In 2006, Alliant
International
University
named their schools of business and organizational studies - the
Marshall Goldsmith School of Management. He is a Fellow in the
National Academy of Human Resources. Marshall
is the co-founder of Marshall Goldsmith Partners, a network of
top-level executive coaches. Almost all of his material is
available (at no charge) on www.MarshallGoldsmithLibrary.com.
He is co-founder of Marshall Goldsmith Partners, a network of top
level executive coaches.
Short description
The
rise of the global community brings many opportunities and
challenges. In the past, community members could communicate with
each other, trade with each other, and share a common culture. In
the future, communication, trade, and culture will become much
more global.
Keywords and
relevant phrases
access to information, celebrity, communication, community,
conformity, culture, diversity, global community, information,
Internet, isolation, long-term value, short-term stimulation.
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