Want to build a world-leading product or service? Team culture is a critical part of success.
Last month, I spoke at the Canterbury Tech Summit about why culture matters for better performance and innovation on our teams. Below, I’ve included some of my highlights from the Summit as well as a summary of my talk and a link to watch the full video. At the very end of this post, I also share a bit more information about Multitudes, a new product to measure culture from passive data, without surveys; Multitudes was born out of insights from our Ally Skills NZ work.
Highlights from the Canterbury Tech Summit
The Canterbury Tech Summit is the South Island’s largest annual tech conference that brings together leaders in innovation, technology and business to share ideas, grow their networks, and be inspired.
Kit Hindin did a great job as the MC, and there were some amazing speakers. I especially enjoyed the talk by Brooke Roberts, of Sharesies, about building a purpose-led business. For Sharesies, their purpose is giving everyone the opportunity to grow their wealth. They’re a New Zealand company that makes it easy to invest with as little as $1. Their approach has meant that they’ve been able to bring in customers who aren’t typically active in investment—50% of their investors are women, and 80% are less than 40 years old. It just goes to show that the issue wasn’t that women and young people weren’t interested in investing; they just needed a product that was designed for them.
Why team culture matters
During my talk, I covered three key things:
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Why culture matters if we want innovative, high-performing teams
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Better ways to measure culture
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Tips for taking action next week to improve your team’s culture
If you’d like to watch the full video, check out the link at the end of this article. For a quick Tweet summary of the talk, read on below (or check it out on Twitter here):
The highlight of my day was definitely when Nigel Latta mentioned my talk as part of his closing keynote—though he forgot my last name and the company name, and by the time I realised that he was speaking about me, he’d already moved on to his next point. 🙂 Luckily, we always have Twitter:
To watch the whole talk (it’s ~30 minutes, including questions), follow the link below: