Explore Insights

There are hundreds of Insights to explore that we hope raise people’s consciousness and elevate the conversation by exploring today’s world through the lens of The HOW philosophy.

51 Insights about Culture
Explore Insights
BehaviorCommunityCultureFrameworksHumanityInnovationJourneysLeadershipMetricsMission and PurposeThe HOW InstituteTrustValues

The State of Moral Leadership in Business 2024

The 2024 State of Moral Leadership in Business report represents our ongoing effort to specifically study the presence of moral leadership and how, when it is present, it inspires elevated behavior in people, shapes values-based organizational cultures, strengthens performance, and leads to deeper relationships with communities and society.

Explore Insights
BehaviorCapitalismCommunityConnectionCultureEconomyLeadershipSocietyThe HOW PhilosophyTrust

How to Out-behave the Competition with Dov Seidman

It once wasn’t uncommon to hear a boss tell their employees “just get it done. I don’t care how.” However, in the last decade, organizations have evolved. Now, we often hear leaders priding themselves on encouraging their employees to speak up. But, what if leaders created environments and cultures in which it didn’t take an act of courage for employees to speak their minds? In this episode, we explore how leaders can create a framework and playbook for moral leadership at their organizations that allows employees to out-behave and consequently out-perform the competition.

Explore Insights
BehaviorCommunityCultureFrameworksHumanityInnovationJourneysLeadershipMetricsMission and PurposeThe HOW InstituteTrustValues

The State of Moral Leadership in Business 2022

The 2022 State of Moral Leadership in Business report represents our ongoing effort to specifically study the presence of moral leadership and how, when it is present, it inspires elevated behavior in people, shapes values-based organizational cultures, strengthens performance, and leads to deeper relationships with communities and society. This year’s report confirms our hypothesis that while some leaders have risen to the occasion of late, especially since the pandemic, there still aren’t enough moral leaders to go around.

Explore Insights
ConnectionCultureFrameworksHumanityJourneysLeadershipPausePurposeTrustValuesWAVE
SALA Series

Gregg Berhalter & Dov Seidman – World-Class Leaders Discussing ‘How We Do Anything Means Everything’

Best-selling author and Chairman of The HOW Institute for Society, Dov Seidman pairs with Gregg Berhalter, head coach of the United States men’s national soccer team. Berhalter’s intentional build of team culture can be seen through the lens of Seidman’s best-selling book: How: Why How We Do Anything Means Everything. Explains Seidman: “Self-governing cultures both inspire alignment and eject elements that don't fit in.”

Explore Insights
BehaviorCommunityCultureFrameworksHumanityInnovationJourneysLeadershipMetricsMission and PurposeThe HOW InstituteTrustValues

The Human Connection in the Virtual Workplace

The HOW Institute undertook the research to understand how human connection in the workplace has evolved since the onset of the pandemic. The Human Connection in the Virtual Workplace report found human connection was strained for all employees but for some more than others, particularly women and younger workers. Yet, the findings also showed workers feel more meaningfully connected when their supervisors exhibited and embodied behaviors and attributes associated with moral leadership.

Explore Insights
AIBehaviorCapitalismCommunityCultureEconomyFrameworksHumanityInnovationJourneysLeadershipMetricsMission and PurposeTechnologyTrustValues

Why We Need Moral Leadership Now More than Ever?

Human systems can’t function without formal authority, whether it’s the President of the US, a CEO or a school principal, but what makes organizations really work is when leaders occupying those formal positions have moral authority too. While formal authority can be seized, won, or bestowed; moral authority must be earned by who you are and how you lead.

Explore Insights
BehaviorCommunityCultureFrameworksHumanityInnovationJourneysLeadershipMetricsMission and PurposeThe HOW InstituteTrustValues

The State of Moral Leadership in Business 2020

In addition to presenting The Institute’s definition of moral leadership, this report provides a wide variety of data on how moral leadership manifests in the business world today—the presence of moral behaviors among managers and executives, the demand that employees express for leaders with moral authority, and the variety of benefits that stem from moral leadership. The report also offers valuable advice to those who aspire to become moral leaders.

Explore Insights
BehaviorCapitalismCommunityConnectionCultureEconomyLeadershipSocietyThe HOW PhilosophyTrust
CNBC

Dov Seidman and Admiral James Stavridis at CNBC Evolve with Suzy Welch

Former admiral James Stavridis motivated and inspired thousands of sailors amid shifting tides; Dov Seidmen, the ‘CEO whisperer’ teaches the ‘how’ of innovation. They both are joined by Suzy Welch at CNBC Evolve talking about what makes great leaders, and what new skills are needed in today’s dynamic business environment.

Explore Insights
AIBehaviorCapitalismCommunityCultureEconomyFrameworksHumanityInnovationJourneysLeadershipMission and PurposeTechnologyTrustValues

Employees feel businesses are lacking moral leadership

"Who are America’s moral leaders?" USA Today asked in a recent headline. At a time when businesses are increasingly thrust to the forefront of complex issues such as racial bias, gender equity and privacy rights, an overwhelming majority of employees feel adrift. They do not believe their organizations are run by moral leaders.

Explore Insights
CultureResponsibility

United Takes a Beating

United Airlines’ rough dragging of a passenger off a flight to Louisville has now joined Cecil the Lion and Justine Sacco as case studies in social media outrage.

Explore Insights
AIBehaviorCapitalismCommunityCultureEconomyFrameworksHumanityInnovationJourneysLeadershipMission and PurposeTechnologyTrustValues
Leader to Leader

The Rise of the Human Economy

In the face of rampant technology and automation (including warnings about jobs being lost to robots), Seidman points out that we must cultivate trust, truth, values, passion, and other human-related qualities. He notes that numerous companies tout the word human in their slogans. In many cases, these companies do exemplify human-centered values. However, “though these efforts are likely earnest attempts to embody human values, companies get into trouble when they don't fully and completely instill these values in their organizations.” Citing the example of Nelson Mandela, Seidman writes: “When you demonstrate moral authority, people follow you not because they have to, but because they want to.”

Explore Insights
BehaviorCommunityCultureFrameworksHumanityInnovationJourneysLeadershipLRNMetricsMission and PurposeThe HOW InstituteTrustValues

The HOW Report

Are the world views, frameworks, and tools that leaders use to chart their course sufficient to compete today and tomorrow? We believe the answer is “No.” Our conclusion is supported by the results from one of the most ambitious, long-term research projects in the fields of organizational effectiveness, behavior, and leadership. The HOW Report suggest a clear roadmap for how organizations can simultaneously build resilience and deliver growth in today’s global economy.

Explore Insights
ConnectionCultureLeadershipTrustValues

The ultimate sign you’re working for a great company

Fortune’s annual “100 Best Companies to Work For” list provides useful insights into how we collectively view corporate culture. Most of us flip through the pages or click through the screens hovering over pictures and blurbs highlighting gourmet chefs, nap rooms, yoga instructors and other signifiers of “great” workplaces.

Explore Insights
ApologiesCultureLeadershipPauseSocietyTrust

Measuring the Apology of the Atlanta Hawks

This is the fourth apology in our Apology Metrics series in which we present apologies for readers to assess. Our goal is not to evaluate apologies as theatrical performances but to evaluate the apologizer’s behavior over time to see whether there has been genuine change. The survey for this apology will be predictive rather than retrospective. We will follow up with a retrospective evaluation after at least a year.

Explore Insights
AICapitalismCultureEconomyHumanityLeadershipTechnologyTrustValues

From the Knowledge Economy to the Human Economy

Over the course of the 20thcentury, the mature economies of the world evolved from being industrial economies to knowledgeeconomies. Now we are at another watershed moment, transitioning to human economies—and the shift has profound implications for management. What do I mean by the human economy? Economies get labeled according to the work people predominately do in them. The industrial economy…

Explore Insights
CultureEconomyLeadership

Are We All GM? Take the Quiz

Is your organization like GM? Your reaction to that question is probably similar to my own reflexive response–and to the reactions of the vast majority of business leaders and managers: “Of course not! Nor was our company like Enron or BP, for that matter. Our products didn’t kill customers, sap retirement accounts or damage the environment.” Of course, you may wonder why you should care enough to even ask yourself the question. Fair enough, but I strongly believe we all should ask this question.

Explore Insights
CultureLeadershipSociety

Ich bin ein Cavalier: What We Can Learn From LeBron, German Soccer And The Spurs

I want to congratulate LeBron James, Germany and the San Antonio Spurs on their recent wins -- before they fade from our minds -- and for demonstrating to the world, and each other, how inspirational leadership works and what it takes to build a winning organization – any organization. This lesson goes far beyond sports; it is, in fact, directly analogous to the journey on which all leaders need to take their organizations to truly compete in today’s hyperconnected world as it reshapes our collective operating environment.

Explore Insights
ApologiesCultureLeadershipPauseSocietyTrust

Measuring the Apology of Kevin Rudd, Former Prime Minister of Australia

This is the third apology in our Apology Metrics series in which we present apologies for readers to assess. Our goal is not to evaluate apologies as theatrical performances but to evaluate the apologizer’s behavior over time to see whether there has been genuine change. This time, we will look at the apology of Kevin Rudd, the former prime minister of Australia, to Australia’s indigenous community in 2008. With the benefit of six years of hindsight, we are in a much better position to judge the apology’s authenticity.

Explore Insights
AIBehaviorCapitalismCommunityCultureEconomyFrameworksHumanityInnovationJourneysLeadershipMission and PurposeTechnologyTrustValues
the dome of the u s capitol building under a cloudy sky
USSC

Testimony Before the U.S. Sentencing Commission

We are in troubling times for the business community, and your work is greatly appreciated by it. Trust of American business is at an exceedingly low level, perhaps the lowest since the Great Depression. The actions of a few, spectacular malfeasants have sullied the reputation of business as a whole and exposed the need for greater vigilance, and greater penalties for failures of compliance and ethics.

Explore Insights
CultureTechnology

Netflix: From Customer Revolt to Breakthrough

Netflix is the toast of the town, and they rightly deserve to be congratulated not only for bringing joy to their nearly 30 million subscribers, but for impressing stalwarts from both the Street and the Valley.

Explore Insights
CultureTechnology

Gaming Culture: Why ‘Cool’ Isn’t Enough

Online gaming company Zynga has been in the news a lot lately, but most of this reporting and analysis neglects a fundamental point: Now that it has rebooted its leadership, its success hinges not on how it executes business, but how it integrates culture. Zynga’s journey presents a rich reminder to all companies -- of what organizational culture is, what it is not, and how culture can and should be a strategic asset that informs and inspires everything our companies do.

Explore Insights
CultureLeadershipLRNValues

A Company, Adopts Collaborative Management

THREE years ago, in front of my 300 colleagues, I ripped up our organizational chart and proclaimed that none of us would report to a boss anymore. From that point on, we would all “report” to our company mission. Literally. No one would experience life at LRN as someone else’s subordinate. In short, we would strive to become a self-governing company.

Explore Insights
BehaviorCapitalismCultureHumanityInnovationLeadershipTechnology

Can Social Technology Help “Reinvent Business”?

From Occupy Wall Street to the publication of resignation letters in the New York Times, we cannot ignore the widening “trust gap” between business and society. Increasingly, consumers and citizens are demanding that companies match their actions to their words. Integrity must incorporate the values and principles of stakeholders, including society at large. Our current crises – referring not only to financial ones – are not the result of unforeseen disasters or natural market cycles. They are the result of our behaviour.

Explore Insights
CrisisCultureResponsibilityValues

Why Companies Shouldn’t ‘Do’ Compliance

How would a global company build a big enough bureaucracy to ensure that all 100,000 employees in its operating companies worldwide follow each and every law and regulation? Even further, how could the CEO of that company be assured that his or her people were acting according to the even higher standard of behavior demanded by its stakeholder community?

Explore Insights
CommunityConnectionCultureLeadershipSociety

Business is Personal

What ideas are you building your company on? It’s an important question for all organizations, and some companies are responding with innovative and inspiring answers. Ideas shape our thinking, animate our endeavors, and serve as the foundation upon which we scale our institutions and companies.

Explore Insights
Culture

Beyond the Best Buy Outcry

A debate about Best Buy’s behavior, and the retail giant’s very existence erupted in the blogosphere this month. Although the issue qualified as “big” – the electronics giant’s future as well as the competitive threat Amazon poses to traditional bricks-and-mortar retailers – I believe these deliberations were so heated because much more significant issues are involved.