How do values move from words on a wall to ways of working that truly shape a culture?
In this conversation, Bev Attfield Partner at Within People sits down with Madeleine Drake Director of People and Culture at Stok and Sabrina Banadaga VP of Marketing at Shift, to explore how values come alive in real workplaces. Together, they talk about what it takes to turn shared ideals into everyday behaviors, and how leaders can nurture belonging and purpose by living their values out loud.
From using technology thoughtfully to keep values relevant, to keeping things simple and human, this episode offers practical insights for anyone looking to bring more meaning into how their organization works and grows.
Listen in to discover:
How values act as a compass for decision-making and belonging
Why the most transformative values are the ones that feel lived, not written
The role leaders play in making values thrive day-to-day
Why simplicity and creativity matter in bringing values to life
We are live thank you so much for joining us in
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:this event
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:Bev Attfield: hosted by Within People.
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:Within People is a growth and culture
consultancy that helps leaders
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:around the world strategize and
implement human centered cultures.
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:And we are very much
interested in how we work with.
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:Leaders who are progressive thinkers
around how do you actually build
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:intentional cultures that help you
have the impact that you wanna have
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:in a way that really celebrates and
surfaces the talents and energy of your
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:incredible people in your employee base.
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:And today we are going to be
talking about a topic that is very
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:near and dear to within peoples.
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:Behaviors and actions that are attached
to those values that lead to the impact
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:that organization can have, which aligns
with their purpose and their mission and
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:their reason for existing in the world.
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:we think this is a really
important conversation to have
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:specifically now in this moment
of time that we find ourselves.
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:we think that by and large most leaders
acknowledge that values are important.
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:But oftentimes it's really hard to put
those values into practice and to use
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:those values as guardrails that can steer
us into the behaviors that we wanna have.
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:why values are important?
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:they serve a number of
different functions for us.
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:they are that compass for us.
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:they guide us.
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:They're that common language that we have
when we dunno the answer to something
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:or when we have to make a decision.
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:They create belonging amongst people
in teams, especially across hybrid
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:and global teams, where maybe you
don't have that in-person moment to
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:ground those norms and rituals that
are part of who you're as a culture.
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:And we also like to think that
values help us attract and
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:keep incredible talent, right?
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:People come to work for us because
they see themselves echoed in their
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:own values They know they are arriving
in a space where a company has thought
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:about their values and are using
them to guide the business through
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:innovation product development and
how they support their customers.
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:And most importantly, how
they look after their people.
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:we believe that values are a
critical part of culture and they're
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:definitely worth talking about.
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:And not only talking about,
but putting into practice.
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:So I'm Biv Atfield, I'm a partner
at Within people and I have
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:the privilege of working with.
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:Very progressive, warm, human-centered
leaders like the two folks we have
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:with us here today who are gonna
have a conversation with me about the
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:importance of values, how to put them
into practice, and what sometimes gets
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:in the way of us really making them
actionable behaviors and not just words.
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:On a wall or in a slide deck, so I'd love
to introduce Madeline Drake, director
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:of People and Culture at Stoke, and
Sabrina Ger, VP of Marketing at Shift.
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:Both of these leaders, are
clients of within people.
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:I've had the opportunity to work
with them developing their sets
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:of values over the past year.
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:And we've had quite a lot of fun doing it.
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:And I've arrived at what I hope, and
you're gonna hear more from both of them.
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:They can speak to it, but a set of
values for each of them that's really
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:reflective of who their business
is, what they care about, and how
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:they would love to see their folks
show up in service of those values.
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:Madeline, I'm gonna come to you first.
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:Love to hear you just share
a little bit about yourself.
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:What does Stoke do and why do
you personally care about values?
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:Madeleine Drake: Thank you, Bev.
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:I'm very excited to be here.
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:The values project for Stoke in
:
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:of my favorite things to work on.
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:So, a little bit about myself.
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:My name is Meline Drake or Madeline
Drake, and I'm the Director of
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:People and Culture here at Stoke.
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:I like to also believe that, we bring
our whole self to work, and I like to
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:share the other facets of who I am.
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:So, I'm a mother, a snowboarder,
a poet, and a lifelong learner.
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:Stoke leads organizations
to decarbonize now.
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:we integrate expertise in ESG and
sustainability consulting in carbon
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:engineering and project delivery
to support owners and clients
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:from the enterprise to the asset
level to provide them with the
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:the strategy and the management
and technical support to translate
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:their bold commitments into action.
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:And we're also a B Corp certified company.
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:So for me, because we've got these
big, bold clients taking these
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:big, bold actions, we really need
values to support us in that work.
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:And that's why I believe that, it's
important to talk about these values
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:and how they translate into action.
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:Bev Attfield: Brilliant.
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:Thanks Madeline.
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:I can, attest firsthand to, you know, how
you have beautifully been able to bring.
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:Your humanity and your humility
as well to the process of finding
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:and crafting values, right?
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:And infusing that with this really
authentic sort of feeling around
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:what it means to be at Stoke,
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:That's a true extension of the
things we care about and the
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:impact that we wanna have at Stoke.
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:Sabrina, I'm gonna come to you.
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:Same question.
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:Can you share a bit about yourself?
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:What does, shift do and why do
you personally care about values?
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:Sabrina Banadyga: Yes, thank you, Bev.
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:it's amazing to be here.
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:My name is Sabrina, VP Marketing at Shift.
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:My career is centered around
storytelling, and I'm passionate about
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:connecting users or customers with
the solutions to their pain points.
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:That's what I get up to do every day.
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:At Shift, I get the privilege of
blending creativity and strategy.
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:Building a brand that really does
reflect both innovation and integrity.
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:And one of the things that I've been
observing in the last couple years is
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:without integrity, it's difficult to
have innovation in a meaningful way.
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:I, will talk more about values in
this call, but I found the process of
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:creating values within people was really.
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:It brought meaning in ways that
I've never quite experienced
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:before with the creation of Values.
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:Shift is a browser that simplifies
people's way of managing their digital
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:lives, their digital workflows.
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:It unifies apps.
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:It's the world's most
customizable browser.
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:It brings all accounts, apps, extensions
into one place and helps individuals and
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:teams cut through that digital clutter.
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:Having more focus, getting
more meaningful work done.
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:Ultimately at shift, we don't believe that
productivity is about getting more done.
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:It's about doing what matters.
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:And at shift We absolutely work
hard and we also work smarter.
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:through the product, it
unlocks the ability to do that.
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:Values matter.
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:They've always mattered to me.
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:I've done lots of different leadership
courses in values, values based
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:leadership, and I care deeply about
values and how they show up every day
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:for our teams and customers in the
fast moving tech environment, which is.
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:What we're in at shift values
have helped us anchor keeping us
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:aligned and authentic and human.
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:They don't, my, the values at
shift don't just guide how we
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:work, but how we live and, show up.
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:One of the things I've been reflecting
on too is that I don't, that success
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:really isn't measured by results.
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:how we actually achieve them.
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:Then the impact that success
metric leaves behind.
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:We are a carbon neutral browser
and that impact and what we're
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:leaving behind or not leaving
behind as a result of our product
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:is very much anchored in our values.
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:Bev Attfield: Thanks, Sabrina.
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:What I'm hearing from both of you is
the meaning behind what we do, right?
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:I think that you're both in very human
centric businesses, but you are impact
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:and purpose led, you care about the
way that you are going about doing
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:your business and building the product
servicing your clients and having the
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:outcomes feel like a meaningful experience
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:The world and the people that
are in it as you go about that.
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:I think that's ultimately,
what values help us do, They
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:help us articulate and express.
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:different companies obviously
have different values.
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:Some have the same, but the meaning
is different to each company,
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:But.
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:Are ultimately those guideposts for us
to understand whether or not we're on
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:track with how we're showing up together.
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:Right.
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:And without them, it becomes
a bit chaotic, right?
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:And it becomes a little bit harder to
keep everyone aligned on where we wanna
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:be pointing with our North Star, right?
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:so, thank you both.
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:You said it best.
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:I had thought Should I
introduce each of you?
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:And then I thought, you know what
I really wanna hear in your own
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:words, what these topics mean to you
and hear from you about what your
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:businesses are achieving in the world.
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:But speaking of the world, we're gonna
start at a very high context level here
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:I'd like to play a little bit
around understanding why values
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:are key to building workplace
culture today more than ever.
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:I think we all appreciate the feeling
of the business landscape today,
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:whether it's due to economic shifts.
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:Disruption thanks to ai.
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:Hybrid work continues to be a gnarly
problem that we have not yet solved
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:as a fallout from the pandemic.
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:And just generally, the philosophical
shifts happening around the world driven
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:by politics and socio political topics
are really putting strains on business
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:And are starting to put some pressure
on, you know, standing up for building.
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:People centered, kind, caring workplaces
where we really are looking after people.
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:that's why I think that talking about
values today is really critical to
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:making sure we are holding firm on
the things that we really believe in.
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:And just recently I saw a news
article shared by one of our
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:partners around one of the founders
of Ben and Jerry's Ice Cream.
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:Stepped away, stepped and has not wanted
to continue in with that business,
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:which is owned by Unilever, I believe,
because he believes that he cannot see
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:Ben and Jerry's original set of values
continue to be lived in that context.
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:So we're seeing that, and that's just
one example, where either people are
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:standing up and saying, we can't back
down from what we believe is true.
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:To the other end of the spectrum, Where
people are capitulating and saying they
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:will align with whatever the current
way of thinking is about the world and
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:not what they believe is right for their
business according to their values.
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:I think we're in quite a prickly
time right now, I'm not going to be
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:facilitating a political conversation
here, but I think we need to acknowledge
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:that we're living through some
interesting and challenging times.
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:the first question I have.
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:For Madeline and Sabrina is, and maybe
Madeline, I'll come to you first.
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:Why did you prioritize
articulating values for Stoke?
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:When we did?
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:Why this time?
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:Why now?
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:Madeleine Drake: Yeah.
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:Bev Attfield: So
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:Madeleine Drake: Stoke has had,
a set of values used for several
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:years, and Stoke acquired a Canadian.
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:Sustainability consulting firm last
year, we believed it was the right
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:time for a refresh, a unifying,
catalyzing moment to set us forward in
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:the next several years Stoke is here
to boldly catalyze an environmentally
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:restorative and socially equitable world.
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:That's a really bold ambitious,
Daunting, inspiring, exciting, purpose.
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:And in order to retain, engage, motivate,
inspire the team members that we have,
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:we need a set of guiding principles.
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:A North Star, to get us
to where we need to go.
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:the power of these words,
I believe, will support.
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:Us in energizing, and getting us to that
purpose we're boldly trying to achieve.
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:Bev Attfield: Yeah, that's a really
important point, Madeline, that values
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:don't just exist for the sake of values.
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:they are part of a cultural framework that
needs to have a guiding life that gives us
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:the reason why we would have those values.
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:Right?
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:Thanks Madeline.
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:Sabrina, how about you?
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:There was also an interesting context
for how we arrived at the need to have
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:a set of values for your business.
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:So tell us more.
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:Sabrina Banadyga: there were two
companies that merged together and
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:they each had their own set of values.
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:They, they weren't, the values weren't in
conflict we needed a shared foundation.
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:We're, building, something very
disruptive in a crowded space.
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:Two cultures coming together.
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:So our values to exercise, we, we knew
we just didn't wanna do this exercise.
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:To have slogans to put on a
wall but actionable behaviors
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:that hold us accountable.
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:They connect us to each other.
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:And to our customers and we needed that.
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:We have a remote team and
to have something to anchor
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:was really important to us.
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:articulating the values was a fascinating
thing when we went through this exercise,
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:is that it meant codifying the culture
that we already felt in practice so that
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:as we scale and we have exponentially
scaled over the last couple of years.
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:We just never lose the heartbeat
of who we actually are.
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:Bev Attfield: I love that idea
of bottling up, what it means
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:to be here and be us, right?
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:That's one way we can describe what
values are, It's a way to codify what
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:it means to be here, and that's really
important particularly in times of
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:uncertainty or rapid change, we need
it for business as usual moments.
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:But, I'm curious about in your both of
your experience, how have the values
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:that you have as you come through this
evolution for both of you, interestingly
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:that you both arrived at a set of values
through some sort of evolutionary process.
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:How do values help you stay grounded
in your businesses with your people in
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:times of uncertainty or rapid change or
some moment of triage for the business?
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:Sabrina, maybe I'll come to you first
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:Sabrina Banadyga: Yeah.
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:Well, being in tech, there's rapid change.
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:Madeleine Drake: You're always in triage.
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:Sabrina Banadyga: Yes.
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:Always.
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:And while it's exciting, I love it.
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:I wouldn't be here if I didn't At the same
time, markets are shifting constantly.
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:Priorities we're pivoting constantly to
keep up, to get ahead, and we have to
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:be agile values have really anchored us.
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:one of our values, for
example, is connect with heart.
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:It reminds us to lead with empathy
even when things are really hard.
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:And even another value, for
example, is go together.
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:And this is something that has
ensured that no one's, no one
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:feels isolated when things get
hard, that no one's left behind.
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:We are in this together.
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:We wanna see each other succeed.
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:And I've never been in a
culture that embodies that to
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:the degree that shift does.
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:Like I mentioned before, it's not
just because we went through a values
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:exercise, we just needed to articulate it.
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:They definitely give us confidence when
context changes the way we show up for
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:each other and our customers really
remain steady in tumultuous times.
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:Bev Attfield: I love that.
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:Thank you also for sharing some
examples of your values that really
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:gives some detail and color here too.
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:Something you said around the confidence,
when the context changes, when you all
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:know that you can hold onto something
that is constant, even though things are
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:changing, Is a really powerful part of
what I'm hearing about your experience.
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:Sabrina Madeline, how about for
you, what whatcha seeing in terms
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:of how you're using values to
help ground you and guide you?
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:Madeleine Drake: Yeah, so
our values keep us focused.
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:I mean, the world is noisy and messy
and difficult, and they keep us
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:tethered to where we are aimed to go.
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:they allow us to keep centered
accountable and in our lane.
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:one of the things they have
helped us do is develop processes
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:and tools internally to.
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:Put action towards our commitments.
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:for example, we created,
what we call an issue tree.
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:this is what we refer to
when events happen outside
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:of stoke that impact stoker.
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:And we need to decide how as leaders,
we're going to respond to those events.
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:sometimes those events are directly
tied to our purpose or impact, a
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:multitude or a majority of our stoker,
in which case we have different
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:actions that we take accordingly.
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:the issue tree is like a decision tree.
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:It's a decision making tool steeped in
our values and gives us a map to respond
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:in alignment with our values to events
impacting us directly or indirectly.
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:This has been a really helpful way
for us to guide decision making,
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:especially on zesty, hairy topics.
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:just this last weekend, there was
an executive order published in
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:the US related to immigration.
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:we have stoker that have immigration
statuses that were going to be affected.
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:this decision tree embedded in our values.
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:Helped leadership come to a decision
around how to, care deeply, which is one
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:of our values, and own our responsibility
and our accountability to communication
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:with leaders, with the peoples
directly affected with the company.
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:And so this, this is one example
of how Stoke is living, our
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:values in this tumultuous time.
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:Bev Attfield: What I'm hearing in that
too, Madeline, is it's not just whether
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:or not you respond, right, but it's
the how of the response that's really
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:important and where the values reveal
themselves as useful and critical
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:to the experience of the moment.
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:without those values.
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:You don't have that calibration point
of like, what should this feel for
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:us when we respond to these moments?
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:Like the example you mentioned
with the immigration issue.
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:I'm appreciating the examples you're both
sharing and I hope our audience will, you
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:know, really take away like the intention
that you are both bringing as well to
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:where the values start to arrive for us.
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:Right.
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:And that leads us into our next
topic set, which is around.
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:What transformative
values look and feel like.
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:I think in both of the, examples you
both shared, you know, you could have had
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:values that just were statements, right?
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:But that didn't actually give
you the guidance to, well,
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:how should we use this value?
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:And what are the things that are
important to us as a business?
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:Behavior that align
and support that value.
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:in my experience, all values
aren't created equal many times.
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:Probably more often than not, values
are written without clear supporting
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:behaviors that lead to action and impact
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:After all, values aren't really about
the words, even though the words are
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:incredibly powerful and important.
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:Transformative values are the ones that
intentionally help us shape and build our
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:culture because they're designed to have
clear actions and behaviors set out so
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:that there's no doubt what it means for
us to show up for each of those values.
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:Right.
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:Sabrina, I'm gonna come
to you for this one.
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:In your experience, you've gotten your
hands dirty, building the values that we
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:built together over the past year, and
you've had other experiences with building
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:values as well, but what is the difference
between a value that's simply good?
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:the words sound great, but they don't
really take action versus a value that
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:actually transforms how people show up.
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:Sabrina Banadyga: Yeah.
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:words like honesty or trust,
how do you not agree with that?
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:a transformative value is behavioral.
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:It's unique to the culture,
that was the cool experience
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:about coming up with our values.
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:We did it as an entire company.
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:It wasn't just the leadership
team in a boardroom One of
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:our values, do hard things.
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:asks us to try new ways to
seek feedback, to turn, turning
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:failure into learning opportunity.
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:So that an example of a value.
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:It really challenges us to show up
differently and not just not along.
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:We've had ex many different experiences.
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:Pre-product launch in July, post-product
launch that I often indexed to every day.
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:Like we do hard things.
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:This is hard.
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:it's part of who we are.
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:We just do it and we get through it.
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:I think that's the transformation
that I've seen, especially in
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:comparison to other workplaces, other
cultures where we didn't have that.
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:We didn't have anything to
anchor us into transformation.
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:Bev Attfield: Yeah.
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:And I think that there's another
dimension to the value set as well.
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:Sabrina, when you talked about your
value of do hard things, and that
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:you really do embody that value.
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:But what you've got and why this is also
transformative is in your set of values.
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:You've got a bit of a counterbalance
with Connect with Heart, which is
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:one of your other values, So it's not
just falling into the shadow side of
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:doing hard things all the time, but
you've gotta counter that with how
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:are you connecting with heart when you
are showing up to that set of values.
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:So maybe speak a little bit about,
where else does that show up and
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:why is that important that we have
those counterbalances in the values
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:Sabrina Banadyga: That's
such a great question.
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:It's coming off the heels of A couple
conversations that happened yesterday.
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:There was the hard thing that we needed
to do, and I am a bit of a grinder.
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:I wanna get it done, I wanna go fast
and we need to make quick decisions.
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:Let's test it.
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:see if it's working,
and then iterate on it.
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:And in that drive there can also.
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:A bit of friction, and
that's, that's natural.
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:That is part of what's hard.
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:But without pulling myself out of just
get it done and into, I need to have a
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:heart to heart with this person about
this hard thing, it wouldn't have
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:felt as good at the end of the day.
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:It would've felt more like
a grind rather than like a
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:meaningful progression forward.
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:interesting.
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:Bev Attfield: Yeah.
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:So I mean, values are transformative
in that they compel us to focus on
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:the experience that we're having with
other humans that are in this with us.
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:And I think that's really where we start
to see transformative values shine,
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:Is where we can really start to use
them in the day to day as well, Like
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:you're doing with the rest of your team.
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:Madeline, any thoughts from you?
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:I'm gonna come to you with another
question in a moment, but any thoughts,
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:about, the difference between a
good value and a transformative
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:value from your perspective?
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:Madeleine Drake: I wanted to add
that I think one of the things
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:Sabrina said that really stood out
to me is the uniqueness of values.
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:They are unique because we are unique.
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:And that's perhaps how you can tell that
the values are solid because they are us.
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:They are true.
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:Our essence, they feel like they
are a reflection of who we are
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:and who we want to continue to be.
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:sometimes it's hard to bring a hundred
percent of our best selves every
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:day, on days where we feel like we're
only bringing 30% of our best self.
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:The values remind us who we are
on our best days and who we wanna
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:continue to be going forward.
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:And that's important because the world is
Tough They help us and provide structure
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:as a support system to move us forward.
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:Bev Attfield: Yeah.
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:That's such a critical aspect of
transformation in my mind, around like,
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:values aren't just who we are today.
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:Like, they're not just a, you know,
expression of who we are and what we know
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:to be true about ourselves, but they've
gotta have an edgy aspiration to them
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:that can pull us forward into the future.
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:Right.
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:And that's why when we go
through these journeys with.
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:Clients sometimes we arrive with a
challenge around, where's the edge
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:in the value that you're offering?
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:How do you make it a productive, energetic
set of words that can propel you forward?
416
:It isn't just, oh, well
this is who we are today.
417
:I love that you revealed that,
parting values made you okay.
418
:Sabrina and Madeline, we've been
through values journeys together.
419
:We've done some incredible work together.
420
:And I've really enjoyed the journey.
421
:I think you both have too, but the
juicy question that I'm holding, and
422
:I've been ruminating about for a while,
is, can AI write transformative values?
423
:So we've just talked about what
transformative values look like.
424
:Do you think AI can
write values like that?
425
:No.
426
:Madeleine Drake: It's a simple Hell no.
427
:No, it cannot.
428
:Okay.
429
:Say more.
430
:AI is an excellent tool
to stress test values.
431
:It provides another perspective.
432
:It allows you to, it's a great critiquing.
433
:Tools.
434
:So you can ask it multiple questions.
435
:Looking for bias, trying to challenge
what you are crafting, That's helpful,
436
:and has certainly been part of our process
as we've created our values at Stoke.
437
:However, it's artificial intelligence.
438
:It's not real relational.
439
:True.
440
:Steeped in experience intelligence, and
that is critical foundational to creating
441
:transformative values in order for the
values to be unique like we were just
442
:talking about, in order for the values to
reflect us and who we want to continue to
443
:be going forward, they need to come from
us, they must be of us, and come from
444
:a place of truth and lived experience
there's no way that AI can possibly know
445
:what it's like to feel like a stoker.
446
:AI is not a stoker, and so it doesn't
know what truly moves us to action
447
:or inspires us So while it's a good
tool it cannot be the designer.
448
:Agreed.
449
:Bev Attfield: completely agree.
450
:I think there's a yet that we have
to put in there though, because
451
:I think once we reach artificial
general intelligence we're gonna be
452
:quite astounded at how experiential
and relational the robots can be.
453
:Right.
454
:And we most certainly will be finding
ourselves having this conversation,
455
:in different ways, over time.
456
:But yes, ultimately AI cannot
really do the function that is at
457
:its core, a very human experience.
458
:Right.
459
:And I love what you mentioned about
using AI for aspects of building values.
460
:It's incredible how powerful that
aspect of AI is to help us test our
461
:own thinking and make sure we're not
slipping into stereotypes and biases.
462
:Which is a really important
part of that tool.
463
:It's gonna be really interesting
to see what happens over time.
464
:Madeline, I wanna ask you a follow up
question, and it's something that we spoke
465
:about in our prep for this call, where
you were talking about another definition
466
:of ai, which is artificial intimacy.
467
:Yes.
468
:And I wonder, like, I was super curious
about what that was, and I know that
469
:Brene Brown and Esther Perel, have
been talking about that extensively,
470
:but can you give the listeners just a
little bit of a snapshot of why did you
471
:bring that up and why is that important
472
:Definition for us to
be paying attention to.
473
:Madeleine Drake: I think as we embed
AI in the ways that we work, we must
474
:also at the same time be thinking about
how we are making sure that we are not
475
:creating cultures of artificial intimacy.
476
:let's look at how we can take
advantage of AI to support
477
:our work and grow our impact.
478
:Yet we must also have one eye on, you
know, what I just said, but then also
479
:have the other eye on our people and
ensuring that we aren't creating spaces.
480
:that feel artificial, we must continue
to nurture and care for our people.
481
:that combination of utilizing the
tool to grow our impact and our
482
:technical abilities is fantastic.
483
:And if you can combine that
with growing the relational
484
:intelligence of an organization.
485
:That combination, I think is what
catapults us into the leading edge
486
:of our markets and industries.
487
:Bev Attfield: Yeah, I think there's
some guidance being offered as I've
488
:been reading more broadly around AI
and how it's gonna impact workplaces
489
:and the shift to society at large.
490
:how do we start to determine what
are the human led functions and
491
:what are the AI led functions?
492
:I think maybe looking through the
lens of artificial intimacy might
493
:give us some clues around what are
the things we must protect as humans?
494
:what are those special things
that we as humans do that we
495
:shouldn't be looking to replace?
496
:Technology that might be offered to us.
497
:Sabrina, any quick thoughts from you
on AI's ability to write transformative
498
:values and would you have used a bot
instead of people to build your values?
499
:Absolutely not.
500
:Sabrina Banadyga: I love ai, but it
generates copy, I don't feel like it
501
:can differentiate between something like
toxic positivity or genuine empathy.
502
:the human nuance, which.
503
:You guys have both been saying is
what makes values transformative.
504
:Bev Attfield: Yeah, 100% agree.
505
:speaking of the humans making values
transformative, I want to wrap up with
506
:our third topic getting practical about
how do we take those values off the wall
507
:or slide deck and actually into practice.
508
:for us, it within people, like we have
a way of architecting values that have
509
:behaviors hardwired into the value itself.
510
:We also have all of our values start
with a verb so that you are immediately
511
:expressing that there is an action
involved with that value, it isn't
512
:just trust or honesty as one word.
513
:Values, right?
514
:There's actually an expression with
a verb, but all that being said.
515
:That's fair.
516
:And well, we can wire the actions
into the phrasing of the value, but
517
:how do we actually live those values?
518
:Right?
519
:And so the questions that I'd love
you to, lead us into here, Sabrina,
520
:I'll come to you first on this one,
is what doing at shift to actually
521
:move beyond the words with your values
and the sentiment of your values and
522
:the feeling that those values create.
523
:And impact and really the ways that you
work together is what it comes down to.
524
:Right.
525
:So, whatcha doing?
526
:Can you give us some examples?
527
:Sabrina Banadyga: Yeah.
528
:at shift we, bake our values
into rituals and, systems.
529
:One very fun thing we did this year.
530
:We've, we've had a year runway to have
some fun and bake these, these values
531
:in, in our company offsite in July.
532
:We, we hadn't started with an
annual award ceremony, one of the
533
:evenings that we called the shifty.
534
:we.
535
:Called on our shift to nominate their
colleagues for awards tied to our
536
:four values and purpose statement.
537
:there were five winners.
538
:We offered them a financial gift.
539
:A additional day off to take in
the year, and then we made custom
540
:bobbleheads of them instead of trophies.
541
:some of them are in their office,
some of them ended up on family
542
:mantles in the living room next to
the graduation picture from college.
543
:that Landed so well with the team.
544
:We had a ton of fun and everybody
laughed and cried and hugged, in
545
:our hiring process, we used values
to inform stages of recruitment.
546
:So we really wanna ensure that
our new teammates kind of really
547
:embody the culture from day one.
548
:We weave them into one-on-ones
into our Slack channels.
549
:Every company offsite, we do live.
550
:Giy filming, on a green screen.
551
:we've created custom gies for each
value that we'll share around Slack
552
:and call out people for acknowledging
that they're embodying these values.
553
:And so I think it's almost
like what doesn't it touch?
554
:'cause we, we do weave it in
to a lot of different aspects
555
:of what we do on a daily basis.
556
:Bev Attfield: I like that sentiment
of what doesn't touch, because
557
:if there's a shifty involved.
558
:The value should be evident, right?
559
:you've taken such an expansive
approach to thinking about every
560
:dimension of your business and the
functions in your business using it
561
:for, you know, things like product
conversations and decision making and.
562
:Strategic roadmap is even informed
by your, your purpose and values.
563
:you've done a brilliant job of thinking
about the practical living of the values
564
:the measuring of them And the celebration
of them, which is such an important
565
:aspect of creating the norm for people to
lean into those values and embody them.
566
:Sabrina Banadyga: We're baked into the
process right now of our,:
567
:And at the top of our trail map for
:
568
:the pillars of what we were
working were underneath that.
569
:So we knew like everything we
were doing does it ladder up to
570
:what we said we were gonna do.
571
:that also helped us with strategic
planning, as you were just mentioning.
572
:Bev Attfield: Yeah.
573
:And there's some real clarity that comes
from that it takes away some of the
574
:questions that have to be asked, and helps
everybody align around their day to day.
575
:Right.
576
:Because after all, we all come to our
workplaces and we are a collection
577
:of all people that are there.
578
:Right.
579
:If people are.
580
:By and large leaning into and using the
values in their day to day, you must
581
:eventually start to feel like there's a
palpable way of being in that culture,
582
:yes, people are gonna have different.
583
:words and are gonna show up differently
because of being unique individuals.
584
:But I love what you're talking about
there, Sabrina, Iran finding those ways
585
:where like, where doesn't it show up?
586
:And the question is, well it
shows up everywhere, right?
587
:So, awesome.
588
:Madeline, anything to add to that
before we go to the next question?
589
:I think Sabrina captured it well.
590
:Yeah, I think that's good.
591
:Alright.
592
:Question for you, Madeline, as you've
been on this journey to create and
593
:involve the values at Stoke, and I know
that you've had other experiences before
594
:developing and implementing values,
but help our listeners understand
595
:like what are some of the lessons
you've learned along the way, right?
596
:Around how do we create this really
important set of codified words
597
:that express who we're as a culture.
598
:Madeleine Drake: The thing that
comes up for me is that it's a
599
:creative process, and I think
about the process of creating art.
600
:you don't just end up with an
awesome painting done right away.
601
:It takes time to sculpt or to
paint, or to write a novel, right?
602
:similarly.
603
:it takes a lot of time to do well, and
part of that time commitment is consulting
604
:with the right stakeholders, with the
right groups of people that reflect
605
:are, are gonna reflect and provide the
stress and challenge needed and the
606
:rigor needed to ensure that those unique
values are a reflection of who we are
607
:and who we say we want to continue to be.
608
:The time commitment and the commitment to
doing it well, and I think what surprised
609
:me was how joyful of a process it was.
610
:I told, I said right at the very beginning
when I was introducing myself, this was
611
:one of my favorite projects of the year
because of its creative nature, because
612
:it's got this messy kind of element
of like you're in the moment trying to
613
:come up with better and more aligned
words to who you are as an organization.
614
:it was really fun for me.
615
:And so that caught me by surprise,
how actually joyful that was.
616
:Bev Attfield: And what do
you think made it joyful?
617
:so that folks who are listening to this
and you know, they might need to be
618
:pitching a values project or knowing that
they need to transform their values to
619
:maybe the C-suite and they're not sure
how to talk about a journey or, or pitch
620
:a journey that could be joyful because.
621
:It just feels like it's a waste of time.
622
:It's gonna take a lot of effort.
623
:Why do we need to include other voices?
624
:Can we not just as the execs sit
in the room like Sabrina, you were
625
:saying that's not what you did.
626
:that can feel heavy for people to try
and get approval for their journey.
627
:So what made it fun and joyful for you?
628
:Madeleine Drake: aside from working
with within who are fabulous partners
629
:to Stoke who I've said it in the word
partnership, it feels so wonderful
630
:to, to be working with within, aside
from that, joyful experience, I mean,
631
:really you have to ask yourself,
are you a people first organization?
632
:are you truly committed to creating a
culture where you want people to show
633
:up in their values, in your values, and.
634
:The answer is yes.
635
:Then you have to do the hard thing
like Sabrina was just mentioning,
636
:and take that commitment and
take it true, true to heart.
637
:what makes it joyful is the
experience of being with your
638
:people while you're crafting it.
639
:And so if you are truly a people
and culture first organization,
640
:then you understand the importance
And the time that is required to
641
:put into the relationship with your
people to get to know your people,
642
:to make sure that the values you
create, truly reflect the collective.
643
:And that's a joyful experience for me.
644
:Bev Attfield: Yeah, it's probably one
of the most important things that a
645
:business can do is defined and articulate.
646
:What they stand for.
647
:Right.
648
:And taking the time and making the
investment in it is well worth it
649
:because it gives you the ability
to bring everybody along in so many
650
:different ways that really help your
bottom line at the end of the day.
651
:every person's experience is different.
652
:Sabrina.
653
:Feel free to build on what
Madeline, was talking about.
654
:But if you can find a way to frame
this as something that is incredibly
655
:enjoyable and co-creative, it can
take you that much further, I believe.
656
:So Sabrina, anything to add
from your side of things around,
657
:lessons learned along the way?
658
:Sabrina Banadyga: I think.
659
:I'm gonna answer that, but I wanted
to also add something that I said in
660
:a presentation at our company offsite,
was that our purpose and our values
661
:power the people and that the people
power the performance and that the
662
:performance powers the possibilities.
663
:And so that is something that we've
seen that shift in terms of starting
664
:with like, why are we doing this?
665
:It's, it does have a bottom line.
666
:It's can be sometimes hard
to articulate that, but.
667
:I would say some of the lessons that I
have learned in this process and have
668
:seen in my own personal life is that
values really only matter if the leaders
669
:embody it and if they model them visibly.
670
:if we say we go together as our
value, but we operate in silos,
671
:then the value collapses and it
creates the opposite of engagement.
672
:consistency matters
673
:and if not lived from the top,
they can't thrive elsewhere.
674
:It's not easy to show up every
day to our values and purpose.
675
:We're human beings in a human body in
this wild world, and it can be very.
676
:Challenging.
677
:Some values may be easier to show
up to than others, but through that
678
:experience, we can support each other
maybe I'm a bit more of an independent
679
:contributor acting like that right now.
680
:I need to rally.
681
:And work more across departmentally
rather than just within marketing
682
:on this exercise because
it needs to impact product.
683
:We need to talk to customer service.
684
:So there's lots of layers of that
685
:Bev Attfield: Yeah.
686
:Thanks Sabrina.
687
:And that's actually a good segue into
our closing question as we wrap up here.
688
:I wanted to ask for both of you
to offer a few words of advice
689
:for others who have great values.
690
:But they dunno how to activate them.
691
:And Sabrina, you already gave a
big clue there around it's gotta
692
:start with the leaders, right?
693
:what other couple of words of advice
might you both have to offer, about where
694
:people start to activate the values?
695
:Madeleine Drake: I have a bit
of a motto for myself this
696
:year that I've been trying to.
697
:Implement at work.
698
:And it's this, it's actually an
acronym and it's, it's a ISS and we
699
:actually say, keep it Simple, Stoker.
700
:And it's this concept that like,
oftentimes the solution is so much
701
:simpler than you think it needs to be.
702
:rather than thinking of complex ways to.
703
:Embed or launch a, you know, insert
action verb, the values, like actually
704
:what's the simplest thing that you can do?
705
:Like how do you, how can you reach
people in a really simple manner?
706
:that's been really helpful for us this
last year and yeah, connecting with
707
:people and getting to know really what
it is for them, that makes 'em tick.
708
:And trying to weave the values
simply into that connection.
709
:Sabrina?
710
:Sabrina Banadyga: Yeah, I love that.
711
:I think starting small and just making
it a behavior, it's, it doesn't, I
712
:think sometimes it can feel like this
big thing to take on, but similar to
713
:keeping it simple, it's starting small.
714
:And we often say like, what would it
look like in our next meeting project
715
:initiative or quarter if we just chose a
value and said, what would it look like
716
:if, if I embodied this really kind of
building rituals around those actions
717
:until they become second nature and
actually sacred, it doesn't, you know,
718
:transformation isn't just gonna happen in,
in a, in a single webinar or in a single.
719
:Event it's an accumulation of
those lived behaviors over time.
720
:Bev Attfield: Yeah, that's a great point
to end on around this being a journey.
721
:there might be a destination, but it
really is about the journey and sometimes
722
:that journey takes longer than you might
expect, it is the accumulation of many
723
:simple actions that add up to the feeling
we create when we are living our values.
724
:Well, thank you both.
725
:This has been a really conversation.
726
:I'm gonna put you both on the spot very
quickly, and ask you to end by sharing.
727
:If values had to be a song or a
book for you, what would it be?
728
:If you had to pick something that
would be your anthem or your go-to
729
:book or values, what would it be?
730
:I
731
:Madeleine Drake: don't even know
that I know this song that well,
732
:but when you asked that question, I
of the Tiger came up for me, Rocky.
733
:There's something joyful.
734
:One of our values is Stoke joy.
735
:It just felt playful and
action oriented and, strong
736
:Bev Attfield: I'm gonna
go with get it done right?
737
:Madeleine Drake: I'm gonna go with Io the
Tiger, even though I can barely sing it.
738
:Love it.
739
:Bev Attfield: Love it.
740
:Sabrina, how about you?
741
:Sabrina Banadyga: I can't remember
the exact name of the book.
742
:it has, something to do with.
743
:Zig Zig when others are zagging
it's a brand book and I'm a brand
744
:geek, so this book really codifies
what we've been doing at shift.
745
:Like, are we gonna do it because
everybody else is doing it
746
:or are we gonna not do it?
747
:Else is doing it and we're gonna
go over here and do this thing.
748
:Bev Attfield: Brilliant.
749
:I love having that as sort of
the guiding, like just be a
750
:bit weird and different, right?
751
:Don't follow the herd.
752
:And that absolutely is
expressed in your values.
753
:thank you both so much.
754
:I'm so grateful that I have had
the opportunity to work with
755
:both of you and continue to work
with both of you in other ways.
756
:You know, just really appreciate
that we are having this conversation,
757
:and I hope that it will continue
because as we know, business and
758
:culture and people continue to evolve.
759
:But the one constant that can
guide us is if we have a really
760
:incredible set of transformative
values that help us navigate through.
761
:Whatever we're facing
with our folks in our day.
762
:So thank you so much for being here.
763
:This has been really wonderful
and we'll at the next.
764
:Thank you to our listeners
for tuning in today.
765
:Really hope you found this time together
valuable and if you are a leader who is
766
:wanting to be more curious, hope that
you feel more resourced coming out of
767
:this today, thank you so much to Emily,
our producer, who always brings us
768
:together and helps us to create this.
769
:These brilliant episodes, which we
really hope will move the needle on the
770
:experience that people have at work.
771
:So please do tune in to our
podcast every month for more
772
:episodes on what's happening in
the culture and leadership space.
773
:What's on the minds of leaders committed
to change in our community and other
774
:future of work content you crave.
775
:Re imagining work from within is
available wherever you podcasts.
776
:That's a wrap for today.
777
:Thank you so much.
778
:And we'll see you next time.