Some companies think political discussions belong in any part of their work space. Others feel they get in the way of other communication.
A suggestion to reject false trade-offs: actively create spaces for these conversations.
At Asana, this primarily takes the form of employee resource groups. We have them for many kinds of identity, and some spaces are for those groups only and some are ally-friendly. They each have Asana team pages (with projects, e.g. to share articles) and Slack channels.
When shocking events happen, people need to be able to share and process their feelings together. So we create dedicated live venues, like an open-mic zoom.
Before COVID, we did this in person (and encouraged smaller events in our other offices if someone was interested).
We do *nothing* to restrict speech elsewhere, but I rarely see it. The conversations that are happening do not get in the way, and everyone is more effective for having access to them.
People bring all their feelings to work, even if you don't let them show. Let them show.
I want to be clear, none of the above is about the company itself taking a stand. Asana chooses to, in certain areas, and many other companies do not, or choose different areas. I don't know where that's headed, but I see it as separate from how employees talk to each other.
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Friends and others have been asking us what we’re doing to respond to COVID-19, given that @open_phil has supported work on pandemic preparedness for several years and that this is exactly the kind of threat many of our grantees have been warning about.
Our highest aspiration for our program work is to prevent pandemics like COVID-19 before they start and secondarily to minimize their spread. We're heartbroken to see this one get so far so fast.
Some of our most important efforts to mitigate COVID-19 are grants we made ahead of time. That includes support for @JHSPH_CHS, which runs exercises to prepare public officials for the kinds of scenarios they find themselves in today openphilanthropy.org/focus/global-c…
I recently read The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People and was surprised at how familiar the topics felt. Many of the other great books I've read in recent years are deep dives on individual habits, as detailed below. Do you have any suggestions of your own?
1: Be Proactive
Man’s Search for Meaning by Victor Frankl (cited in book)
The 15 Commitments of Conscious Leadership by Jim Dethmer and Diana Chapman (esp. commitment #1: Responsibility)