Teach Behavioral Intelligence Across All Academic Fields, Along Every Career Path

The recent “Collaborating and Sharing Bring Real Value” post hijacked my imagination this morning. What if behavioral intelligence could be woven into our college major corriculum?

Principles of Psychology 101 would remain on the basic requirement list. As we climbed closer up our chosen education ladder towards our career path, that’s when we could build an understanding for how to work with people we’ll be collaborating with in the work world.

For any decision making situation — crisis or process — our professor might ask her students some empowering questions. As we move into careers, we might continue asking these types of questions:

  • How can I help, not force or overwhelm others into (submission) understanding?
  • Who do I admire and might my heroes behave?
  • What would Martin Luther King Jr. say ?
  • How would Gandhi handle this?
  • If I did it like this, might I be elitist, arrogant and doomed like Mussolini?
  • How might Seth Godin flip my view in a better direction so that my decision results in something special others find helpful, useful?
  • Does what I’m advocating entails shouting at a market rather than what Doc Searls might do: participate with others in a market?
  • What question would Jeremiah Owyang ask that’d break down a wall blocking me from reaching a goal with measurable results?
  • How might Rohit Bhargava take my well-intentioned approach and subtly re-engineer it into a more interesting, compelling and engaging action that might be more meaningful for my team or others I’d like to run with my idea/hope/plan?
  • How would springboard storyteller Stephen Denning craft a meaningful visual anecdote to help me jettison the imagination of my teammates, sending them surfing on a parallel brainwave alongside me?
  • Is there a point where I can squeeze in some passion sparked by my “Life Purpose” like Eckhart Tolle teaches?

My BookStack, collection of classics and poetry play a role in my decision making and influence how I embrace change.  I just found Terry’s Take on Business, a cool blog with a great collection of succinct book reviews for business.  For me, data is important but behavioral intelligence is the “core” or “key takeaways” inside every great great book, story, poem, movie…even a campaign plan.

Homer’s Iliad showed me the ruinous destruction of wrath and hubris — something I watch for in me and bubbling up in teammates. Then Homer’s Oddysey opened my eyes to the endless potential of intelligence as Odysseus blends knowledge of self, and open mind, quick wit, teamwork and cunning to keep on course. Odysseus makes me think of Mike Moran’s Do It Wrong Quickly — sure, we’ll stop at this isle of nymphs or scheme the giant Cyclops…be let’s hit it and quit it so we can escape alive and sail back home to my castle to be with the woman I love.

I wonder if The Institute of Behavioral Sciences could help create a common thread of behavioral intelligence training across all fields of academics. And career coaches and businesses would continue driving better appreciation and understanding of productive behavior, behavior where excellent criticism is immediately followed with excellent suggestions that help move things ahead.

If we really can mature civility with each generation, this is the time to pump up the importance of behavior in our information era.

At some point in our lives, we all say, “I’m going to keep learning forever!” Books are essential for learning. Yet there are are other powerful sources for learning behaviors that help us improve through times of change.  At any decision making point the people you involve become ingredients for moving beyond goals.  These ingredients build trusting relationships strengthen by informed behaviors that help us accomplish things better, more quickly.

If you regularly sharpen my behavioral skills, would you be more valuable, more helpful to your team, company and your own career.

Intel’s Pankaj Kedia with MID

Nice cigar!

Makes me think of Graucho Marx or WC Fields: “Hey, Chickadee!.” Here is collection of WC Fields videos.

Every time I see these nifty Internet gadgets, I want to take one for a week tour all expenses paid.

Cool photo by my Intel social media posse, world traveler Nick Knupffer.

The wonders of innovation even Charlie Chaplin might appreciate.

Collaborating and Sharing Bring Real Value

Chris Heuer shared a link to a great post by Christian Kreutz, who hits on my favorite topic that I hope becomes more valuable the more we understand how it.  It’s the underlining meaning for why we work together and share our collective experiences, discoveries…and I’d say even our emotions…with our teammates. Information is free most of the time, but we can bump up the value every time we touch it, favorite it, bookmark it, tag it, collect and sort it then share it. That helps us more quickly find the right people and right information we we want. That’s the power within an organization, not the classical hierarchical, political structure most people are dealing with today.

Christian offers these “bottom-up approaches”:

  • Start a collaborative tagging experiment over del.icio.us with colleagues to see how easy the sharing of valuable information can be, or open up a room on friendfeed to discuss right away resources.
  • Use external tools for your team to make project management easier. One example could be a blog for your project’s history, milestones and other management tasks.
  • Connect with colleagues through existing social networks such as Xing, Linkedin or Facebook and use it for exchange.
  • Extend informal activities on the web and make other colleagues be aware of it: bulletin board, liftsharing etc.

Separately, but complimentary….Chris offers an example of how FriendFeed can replace email as a collaboration tool.

  • As Joitske commented on my first blog post, you can address a specific problem and use social media for an open transparent discussion.
  • Investing in Innovation — Intel Capital CEO Summit 2008

    Intel Capital CEO Summit brought 8 investments totaling over $60 million. Deals, primarily led by Intel Capital, include: India-based Vriti Infocom (online education); Czech Republic-based Internet Mall (online retail); and several U.S.-based companies including Accertify (online security), TOA Technologies (workforce management software), Grid Net (energy efficiency, smart grid), HealthiNation (online health), Vostu (social networking with a Latin America focus) and Veoh Networks (online videos).

    May Your Cup Runnith Over into the Tyrrhenian Sea

    Pizzo-TropeaMay2008 312, originally uploaded by KenEKaplan.

    I shot this in late May 2008 from the balcony of our friends house, located just down from the Piazza overlooking the sea.

    My Kids’ Favorite Car — Rosso Cinquecento

    The past return, originally uploaded by clydeye.

    No matter what color, when a Fiat 500– cinquecento — rumbles past or is peacefully parked…you have to look and smile. This nifty, compact car has survived generations and still oozes character and desire.

    Cluetrain at 10 – Hangin’ with Robert DeNiro of Intel

    I had the pleasure of spending a day of getting my mind cracked open by wisdom from great people at the Cluetrain at 10 event hosted at sweat SAP digs in Palo Alto on May 29.

    I go to hang with the young Robert DeNiro of Intel, Michael Brito. He’s a force of energy and good ideas that he shares inside and outside of Intel.

    The Cluetrain at 10 was a day well spent, especially getting the chance to see Doc Searls in person for the first time. Deb Schultz gave my favorite presentation of the day.

    Hoping to find time to share more of the great one liners and many pearls of wisdom like: Get out of marketing and get into markets. One could spend a whole career exploring the meaning of that line by Doc Searls.

    It was about sharing and learning.

    Eye Candy Window in a Pizzo, Italy

    Pizzo-TropeaMay2008 330, originally uploaded by KenEKaplan.

    Here’s one I shot on my walk back from a fun kindergarten recital in Pizzo, Calabria, southern Italy. On this day in late May 2008, Summer was about to make its stay.

    This is the pastry shop reflecting the nearby and storied Murat Castle, which adjacent to the Piazza, overlooking the marina and Tyrrhenian Sea far below.

    You can’t eat the castle, but you can certainly devour the life size prickly pears, mandarins, strawberries and other sugar-made fruits.  Like the tasties my lovely, talent wife recently made.

    Speaking Improvement Resources from Mark Ivey

    Mark Ivey is someone I heard about quite often after joining Intel in 2000.  .

    Mark was a nationally acclaimed Intel PC Dad, a dynamic duo along with my newfound broadcast partner (and fellow Chico Wild Cat) Ralph Bond. Ralph continues to be a mentor with his great communications and storytelling skills.
    Mark is remarkably gifted communication pro.  These days he’s keenly tuned to the role of social media for communications pros.  Here’s a recent post Killing Off the Social Media Specialist. I finally got to meet Mark in 2007.  Since then, he’s been keeping me in mind whenever he comes across great resources.  Like these:

    Thank you, Mark!