September 16-19, 2007
The 2007 International
Appreciative Inquiry Conference
The Power of Positive Change
|
Overview | Day 1 | Day 2 | Day 3 | Presentations
| Conference Brochure (PDF)
Day 1 - Report from the 2007 AI Conference
Keynote speeches by Cooperrider, Buckingham, Seligman
September 17, 2007, 11:58 pm
Note: This is coverage
of the 2007
Appreciative Inquiry Conference (Sept 16-19, Orlando, FL). Today
was Monday, September 17, 2007, and the main events were three keynote
speeches by David Cooperrider, Marcus Buckingham, and Martin Seligman.
Cooperrider went broad, Buckingham went specific, and Seligman went
cohesive: Cooperrider introduced the concept of strengths elevating
an organization to beyond its four walls, Buckingham hit home the
message that using strengths at work starts with you, the individual,
and Seligman outlined some major findings of positive psychology
that support Cooperrider and Buckingham’s work in
strengths.
David Cooperrider and Appreciative Inquiry
David
Cooperrider, Professor of Organizational Behavior of the Weatherhead School
of Management at Case Western Reserve University, opened the 2007 Appreciative
Inquiry Conference by showing images of inspiring leaders making strides in social
entrepreneurship, including economist Jeffrey Sachs and UN head Kofi Annan. Cooperrider
showed videos and described the practices of many organizations that use strengths
to as Cooperrider says “extend” their work beyond the organization.
There’s the case of Wal-mart which wanted to buy 100 million
pounds of organic cotton in one year when there wasn’t enough
supply. So Wal-mart set out to revolutionize organic cotton farming
as part of its operations. There’s
Fairmount Minerals that used the AI method and created a new sand filter
that is now being used in villages in third world countries to produce
inexpensive drinking water. There’s the military that used the
AI methods to create a culture of leadership at all levels of the organization
and received high praises. There’s the World
Inquiry which
has collected over one thousand stories about business as an agent
of world benefit - in helping the economy, poverty, etc. Cooperrider
focused on social entrepreneurship.
Other thoughts by Cooperrider heard
throughout the talk:
“… organizations are not
problems to be solved; they’re
centers of human relatedness” ~ David Cooperrider
“Awe is what moves us forward.” ~ Joseph Campbell
“… hot and alive within us, and where everything has to re-crystallize
about it.” ~ William James
“The task of leadership is to create an alignment of strengths in ways
that make a system’s weaknesses irrelevant.” ~ Peter Drucker
Marcus Buckingham and Strengths-Focus
Marcus Buckingham, author
of several strengths-focused books including Go
Put Your Strengths to Work, spoke primarily about the progress
(and non-progress) of strengths in the business place over the past
decade. Buckingham started with the story of how he is different
from his brother and sister in personality, and he became aware of
that as a boy. He continued saying that these differences magnify
over time. There are certain traits and behaviors that are your strengths.
Buckingham then talked about enjoying studying the positive outliers
such as the store that outperforms, to learn what it is doing. There
was a collective sigh of recognition from the audience when Buckingham
unveiled the one question found by Gallup to most predict job satisfaction: “At
work, do you have the opportunity to do what you do best everyday?”
Despite this question being the number one predictor, people in surveys
around the world, when asked “What do you think will help you
be most successful?” still
say that fixing weaknesses (57%) is more important than building strengths
(41% worldwide in 2000).
Buckingham drew to a close by clarifying that
the phrase should not be, “People
are our greatest asset,” but that it’s people’s strengths
- where they shine - that matter, and that the phrase really needs
to be, “People’s
strengths are our greatest assets.”
And he gave two major recommendations
to people for using their strengths more. One, as a boss, to challenge
subordinates to use their strengths even more and in new ways, as we
learned when Buckingham interacted with an audience member and pretended
to be her boss by asking her to use her strengths even more. Two, to
each week be pushing ourselves and to be deliberate about using our
strengths even more.
Martin Seligman and Positive Psychology
Martin
Seligman, Professor of Psychology at the University of Pennsylvania,
was the afternoon speaker, and he highlighted the science underlying Cooperrider’s
and Buckingham’s areas of research. Specifically, Seligman gave
an overview of the three ways to look at happiness - the pleasant life,
the engaged life, and the meaningful life.
Among other topics, Seligman
spoke about positive emotion, broaden and build, gratitude, and the
three benefits of living the pleasant life - increasing intellectual,
social, and physical resources.
Seligman also touched on other examples
such as sales and Olympic swimming as two situations in which optimism
and resilience matter - an optimist will work harder when he thinks
he failed, and a pessimist will work less hard.
Throughout the talk,
Seligman spoke about tools to increase positive emotions, engagement
and meaning - including the gratitude visit, using signature strengths
at work, and doing something philanthropic.
Adding to Buckingham’s
earlier topics, Seligman spoke about schools in which strengths-based
exercises are working, including Strathaven, the UK Schools, and Geelong.
Seligman
wrapped up his discussion by tying it to those of Cooperrider and Buckingham.
Positive Psychology is the science underlying the case studies of Cooperrider
and Buckingham’s research. Seligman ended with a description
of the politics of positive psychology, including that not saying “no” is
not the same thing as saying “yes.”
|