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  • Reflections from Uganda by John Izzo, PhD

    John posted this on August 12, 2010 to his blog.

    As many of you know, I am spending all of August in Uganda working with a non-profit organization named Bead for Life which has helped thousands of women start businesses while leaving a life of poverty behind. Day after day I have been inspired and challenged by the stories of these women, many of whom are widows at a very young age in a country with high rates of HIV.

    Bead for Life is a fascinating organization that began when two women from the U.S. decided to try to find a market for the beautiful beads crafted by women in refugee camps in Kampala. Inspired only by the poverty they saw and a desire to help, knowing little about business or marketing, they embarked on a journey to create steady incomes for women in Uganda while teaching them to be entrepreneurs. Today, Devin Hibbard overseas a four million dollar operation that has changed the lives of thousands of women and created an entire “Friendship” village where women who never dreamed of owning a home have paid for homes with beads.

    Of course I have been inspired by the courage of these women, but I have also been reminded of what it takes for any organization to succeed. On my first day here I attended their monthly staff meeting and witnessed all the elements of a great organization. Devin is a leader with great passion whose dream is contagious, the staff members see the deep purpose of their work and staff meetings reinforce this purpose, people treat each other like family, appreciation sits alongside a passion for excellence, and they consistently bring in outsiders to challenge their assumptions. These are the elements I have seen again and again over the last twenty years that are the hallmarks of great companies whether in the business of profit or of doing good (or ideally both).

    In my first book sixteen years ago, Awakening Corporate Soul, we interviewed people asking them to tell us about their most engaged times at work. Again and again they told us that in their most engaged times they saw the connection between their work and its deeper meaning. Spending time here in Uganda reminds me that when we tap into people’s desire to serve, they will engage deeply in their work. Years ago, the founder of Land’s End told me that in the early days of their company staff members volunteered together helping inner city kids in Boston and he was daunted by how passionate his people were doing that work. He wondered how he could get them to bring that same passion to their day to day work for his company and set out to help them see the deeper meaning of his company and its services. They also continued to provide opportunities for people to volunteer together.

    Being of service here has ignited my spirit. If you have not taken time to serve lately or to remind your people of how they are serving, remember that serving will ignite your passion and engages your people’s energy.

    From Uganda, Dr. John Izzo

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  • cmi welcomes Dr. John Izzo to the team!

    cmi President Karen Harris is pleased to announce that John Izzo has joined the cmi family of speakers!

    John IzzoFor 20 years, John has been a researcher and advisor to over 600 companies including many Fortune Top 10 best workplaces. Long before it became popular, his focus has always been on creating a positive brand strategy that inspires employees and customers alike. A best-selling author of four books including Awakening Corporate Soul and Values Shift, John shows businesses how to create a workplace environment that encourages true employee engagement and wins the hearts of their people.  

    As a business advisor and executive coach in the areas of employee engagement and corporate social responsibility, John is known for his ability to empower leaders at all levels in getting their people on-side. His presentations provide a fully customized set of practical, innovative solutions you can implement immediately along with insight into the future of business and how companies can get ahead of the curve. 

    Karen has been blown away by John's ability to reach into the audience's psyche and hearts while giving the C-suite executives all the substance they asked for. 

    To find out more about John Izzo, please call us toll free at 877-307-7403 or email info@cmispeakers.com.

    Click here for a video excerpt of John's presentation.





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  • Dr. John Izzo on Brand Makers and Breakers

    Reprinted, with permission, from Dr. John Izzo's blog. Originally posted on June 4, 2010.

    Brand Makers and Breakers

    If anyone doubted the impact of corporations on society just take a close look at the last two years. The decisions of large financial institutions to leverage risky assets nearly caused a second Great Depression leading to a massive bailout by governments. That bailout has lead to huge government debt and threatens now to cause what many feared -“the double dip.” Few financial firms took real responsibility for the carnage suggesting for the most part that “everyone” was doing it.

    Meanwhile, oil is gushing uncontrolled into the Gulf of Mexico from a BP oil rig threatening not only an entire fishing industry but sensitive wetlands all along the Gulf coast. Watching how BP is handling this situation is a case study in brand making or in this case, brand breaking. Over the last ten years BP has branded themselves as the “most responsible” oil company in the world and told us that BP stands for “beyond petroleum” and yet instead of really taking responsibility for a culture that apparently let safety slip, they are spending their time pointing the finger at other companies saying it’s not our fault. Just as Exxon has never recovered fully their brand image from the Valdez and how they handled that situation, so BP may never recover unless they step up and own up.

    Contrast BP’s response with similar situations in recent memory. Toyota built their brand based on quality so an accelerator pedal that does not let you stop the car is bad news. Even though the pedal was made by another company, Toyota apologized publicly to their customers saying we “let you down” and seems to be systematically trying to address the situation. Maple Leaf Foods in Canada had a food safety issue a little over a year ago that literally killed customers. That is a pretty big brand breaker! Yet by taking responsibility and apologizing deeply to their customers and letting everyone know how profoundly affected they were by what happened, the brand has come out almost unscathed.

    Those of us who run companies must never forget that the decisions we make impact the lives of real people and even the larger world. Whether we sell financial instruments, cars, food, or pull resources from the ground, the decisions we make have implications well beyond the bottom line of our own enterprises. What’s more, we can never forget how fragile our brands are. The percentage of a company’s value attributable to good will has increased five fold in the last thirty years. That is, a company’s value is less about the book value of its physical assets and more about how consumers view the brand. And remember this, as we reported in my book Values Shift, the single factor that has made the biggest gain in the last decade in terms of why we buy from or want to work for, a company. You guessed it-Social Responsibility.

    Warren Buffet may have put it best: “It takes twenty years to make a reputation but only five minutes to ruin it. If you think about that, you will do things differently.” So BP, this is your five minutes.

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