Dylan Taylor, Chairman & CEO, Voyager Space Holdings.
In today’s increasingly dynamic, post-pandemic business landscape, human-centered leadership is more important than ever. The last few years have underscored much-needed changes for employee well-being and accommodation in countless industries. This is, in turn, creating new opportunities for leaders to integrate and normalize such factors within their infrastructure, policy and product output.
Still, even as our collective leadership ideology becomes more empathetic and progressive, the reality is that human-centric transformation remains, in many ways, an enigmatic challenge. I believe that we must navigate this change carefully, balancing proactive action with nuanced planning and an inherent desire to challenge longstanding norms.
There are many elements to consider when fostering a more human-centric business, but in my experience, I have found that leaders can boil their aspirations down to three critical variables: culture, value and consistency.
Strengthening Internal Culture
Genuine human-centered infrastructure can only exist atop a solid internal foundation, and this starts with auditing your business’s existing workplace culture. Productive, fruitful working relationships are conducive to success regardless of goal or initiative, and leaders can achieve this by implementing factors like more collaborative initiatives, opportunities for ongoing employee development and effective approaches to interpersonal communication. Above all, I suggest establishing a clear thread between expectation and recognition, taking care to acknowledge employees’ accomplishments and remaining open to feedback along the way; this helps normalize a blend of hard work and holistic design.
These changes can quickly create a sense of mutual empathy, stronger comprehension and boosted morale—all of which can enhance corporate efficiency and strengthen the consumer experience without sacrificing worker welfare.
Redefining Value
In dissecting the modern human-centered organization, IBM notes how important it is to challenge the notion of business value, comparing the human-centric model to traditional business metrics. While many traditional metrics remain relevant in a practical, revenue-focused sense, they ultimately fail to address drivers of true human-centric design—namely, “the value of an enterprise to its users and customers, the welfare of its employees and the resilience of the organization in the midst of external threats.”
I think these facts highlight the need for redefined value in a cultural, transactional and existential sense. In the wake of various macroeconomic events and societal shifts, the common thread between these fields is equity. As previously noted, workers should receive every opportunity to grow, succeed and remain safe and heard within your company’s unique operational parameters, but I believe that this equitable consciousness should also expand to the broader marketplace.
All developmental and marketing stages of a service or product should reflect a deep awareness of your consumer base, centering on crucial factors like social awareness, safety, inclusion and transparency. Such considerations are now a solidified, inevitable part of business viability in 2023 as the world evolves to become more progressive and forward-thinking.
Upholding Consistency
It may seem simple in theory, but consistency is perhaps the most vital principle for creating and upholding a human-centric business. It is not enough to lead a one-off audit of your company on behalf of workers and consumers; those changes should be a regular touchpoint in ongoing business development.
Retrain your leadership perceptions to include employee well-being, consumer-appropriate design and messaging—look to embody a dedication to social responsibility as an industry figure. To do this, you must constantly ask yourself: Are my intentions for human-centric design genuine? Do they stand to solve problems both internally and societally, putting such matters on a level field with bolstered efficiency and increased revenue? Anything less than a yes could be a quick path to performativity.
As real people sit at the core of human-centric design, I see this prevailing concept remaining a relevant part of business design and ideology. Adapting your business based on decency and consideration is not only a key part of staying competitive—it is a means of aligning your corporate values with the right side of history and doing your part to benefit the world at large.
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