Over the course of his writing, rather cleverly, Peter Drucker found a way to coin our past, present and future into distinct societies. At its root, a โsocietyโ is a group of people sharing traditions and values, organized as a community. Think of it as a collection open learners.
He first introduced the emergence of a โknowledge societyโ with the arrival of the knowledge worker. From there, Drucker insisted the โknowledge societyโ was beginning to evolve into an โemployee society,โ so long as management was able to focus on making the knowledge productive and useful.
Drucker then envisioned a day where the created, collective wealth of knowledge would advance into an โentrepreneurial society.โ He felt the โentrepreneurial societyโ would mark a turning point in history. I believe weโre missing a few steps in order to get there.
Drucker wrote, โWhat we need is an entrepreneurial society in which innovation and entrepreneurship are normal, steady and continual. Just as management has become the specific organ of all contemporary institutions, and the integrating organ of our society of organizations, so innovation and entrepreneurship have to become an integral, life-sustaining activity in our organizations, our economy, our society.โ
Drucker felt the role of the institution (public, private, not-for-profit, legal, etc.) had to be rethought, to become far more innovative and entrepreneurial. I believe the most critical point that Drucker put forward about the โentrepreneurial society,โ however, is that of continual learning. We must not believe a university credential earned in our early 20โs is the end of our learning. If leaders are to shift the organization (and our communities) to become a reasonable facsimile of the โentrepreneurial society,โ we ought to become better lifelong autodidacts. (self learners ... or perhaps organizational learners)
Take for instance Bas van Abel. He is the Founder and CEO of Fairphone. The purpose of the company is to manufacture mobile phones that are ethical. The phones are made from conflict-free minerals assembled by firms who also ensure fair wages for the factory workers. They make a mobile phone but do so ensuring they keep the greater good of society in mind.
But Bas chose to start Fairphone mostly because he is someone who loves to learn. In fact, loving to learn is part of Bas's personal definition of purpose. Arguably, Bas is demonstrating Druckerโs premonition about the โentrepreneurial society.โ By learning, he is innovating, and through Fairphone, society is benefitting.
The story of Bas and Fairphone got me thinking about my own professional situation. When I joined TELUS in late 2008, it was an organization possessing an employee engagement score of 53 percent. Customer satisfaction and corresponding likelihood to recommend scores were low, too.
Under the leadership of CEO Darren Entwistle, we utilized an enterprise-wide learning spirit to build a new leadership framework, pervasive learning model, community investment plan, recognition platform and collaboration tools. By 2015, employee engagement soared to 87 percent while every business metric correspondingly improved including customer satisfaction.
TELUS is now a highly engaged organization and its โentrepreneurial societyโ is paying dividends. TELUS Wiseโa program fostering internet and smartphone safety and securityโwas launched to the public, free. The TELUS Innovation Lab commenced operations in 2016 to help startups, universities, and major corporations collectively bring ideas to market.
In late 2013, I pitched the idea of launching an external โfuture of workโ culture change consulting practice under the TELUS umbrella. TELUS Transformation Office (TTO) works with customers by helping them improve employee engagement, corporate culture and open leadership concepts. We do so by assessing the organizationโs current-state and we then work with leaders to address how various processes, actions and disciplines ought to be redesigned. The launch of TTO has afforded me the opportunity to continue my own personal learningโin the start-up of a new businessโwhile the team (and TELUS) gets to learn about our customers in a different way than offering IT services and telecommunications products.
Drucker insisted at the heart of the โentrepreneurial societyโ is an employee population that continuously learns and constantly innovates to ultimately improve society. I believe it is a goal that can be achieved, but in order to realize this vision, the following ought to be considered:
Invoke a learning culture across the organization by introducing formal, informal and social learning opportunities; not everything happens in a classroom and entrepreneurs learn from one another, not solely from the sage on the stage.
Encourage innovation but if a mistake or failure occurs, learn from it, donโt reprimand the error; as Entwistle says, โThere is tuition value in mistakes.โ
If the organization possesses a hierarchically driven leadership culture yet wants to become more innovative, employees will likely wait for innovation to originate from the top; if a more open and collaborative culture were to be demonstrated, there is the potential for the โentrepreneurial societyโ to materialize outside of the C-Suite.
Fairphone and TELUS are but two examples of organizations (and leaders) who understand the important aspect of both individual and organizational learning. If other organizations want to eventually create the โentrepreneurial societyโ we had better have more Bas Van Abelโs and Darren Entwistleโs in our midst, coupled with an organizational mindset that is open, cooperative and truly wanting to learn from one another.
WORK-LIFE BLOOM
PERSONAL ASSESSMENT
Find out if youโre currently blooming, budding, stunted or in need of renewal through the Work-Life Bloom Personal Assessment.
We are so proud to have had you at our event. Your talk was a big hit. It moved us. We canโt thank you enough.
Malin Bjรถrnell, Salesforce
Dan challenged us to have clarity of purpose, both as individuals and as an organization. He related inspiring stories drawing on his experience in business, technology and academia. As he said, โThere is no ownership without belonging.โ
Christian Pantel, D2L
Fantastic engaging talk for our global partner summit. Thank you so much, Dan!
Barb Kinnard, CEO Response Biomedical Corp
Dan not only brought his presentation to life with his charisma, but also content, style and presentation finesse. Our members were especially interested in his thought provoking and top of mind topic on the future of work and how weโre going to be leading the next generation of leaders.
Cheryl Goodwin, CPA
Dan is a conference organizerโs ideal speaker. Not only did he inspire and energize our group, but he also masterfully adapted his content so it resonated with the audience and our conference theme. As a bonus, Dan is able to nimbly navigate to adjust to a reduced time slot when other speakers went over time without sacrificing the impact of his session.
Director and General Counsel
Dan accomplished what we set out to do, which was not only to be inspirational, but also to leave everyone with tools and food for thought / self-reflection to improve their personal and professional lives.