Blogger: Meghan M. Biro

Meghan M. Biro, founder of TalentCulture, is a serial entrepreneur and globally recognized career leader in talent acquisition and creative personal and corporate branding. Meghan has conducted more than 300 successful career searches for clients ranging from Fortune 500s to the most innovative software start-up companies. Meghan is also a new media strategist who enjoys accelerating collaborative business and community goals. When not recruiting, blogging, and innovating she manages a dynamic coaching practice to empower corporate leaders, mid-level managers, software technologists, and recent college graduates. Meghan is a member of the National Association of Personnel Services (NAPS), The Society for Human Resources Management (SHRM) and several entrepreneurial organizations. She serves on the Alumni Council for Greens Farms Academy, acting as a career mentor to high school and college students. Founder and co-host of "#TChat, The World of Work," a long-running, weekly Twitter chat and radio show, Meghan's ideas have appeared on Forbes, CBS Moneywatch and she blogs regularly at Monster, The 12 Most, Ragan's HR Communication and several additional online destinations of note.

Social Community: A metaphor for the workplace. Find your intent.

Photo by Joe Shiabotnik

Recently I wrote about models of interaction within cultures and social communities that foster progress. I’d like to push the theme a bit further and look at social communities – which are really communities of intent – and how they can serve as a useful metaphor for the workplace.

Intent is one of those words that have taken on new meaning with the advent of search and search marketing. The trick that Google mastered so well is serving up information to consumers at the moment of intent (thanks to John Battelle, Andrei Broder and others; see some older material on intent here) – intent to act, to purchase, to decide. “Intent” is not only an action the searcher takes; it is a commitment the provider of information (the vendor or service), and the search service (Google, Yahoo, Bing), make to the individual searching for information.

In social communities, intent is more than interest, more than commitment, more than an informed notion. It’s the true power behind the community, because people come to communities with a purpose, an intent. They are looking for a place to be, a place to learn, a place to grow and interact in a meaningful way.

The trick then, for companies, is to behave as social communities. It’s a powerful and new metaphor for the workplace.

In a typical workplace there are people with many different personalities, personal brands, goals, aspirations, skill sets and attributes. In a healthy workplace, meaning one that focuses on ensuring personality/culture fit between employees and the organization, people of diverse skill sets and temperaments can collaborate and succeed – because they have the intent to succeed, and the social context – the community – in which to realize their intent.

TalentCulture, for example, is a collaborative social community, a community of intent, a metaphor for the workplace. Our contributors come from many backgrounds: executive leadership,  human resources, recruiting, marketing, new media, research, public relations, law, branding, innovation, venture capital, career coaching, entrepreneurship and software technology. The shared intent is to create and share the very latest perspectives and trends on growing your business and reaching your individual career goals – using them to grow and foster innovation.

So here’s a challenge: find your intent. Share it with others. Be passionate. Be creative. Make every action resonate with the intent to do something positive, something to improve your workplace or advance the idea of what a collaborative workplace or social community should be.

And keep us in the loop.

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Thank you for stopping by Lise! I appreciate your valuable insight. Intent means being willing to work consistently to find the "right" workplace culture. I realize there are many people, organizations that are perhaps feeling stuck in the past or simply not willing to see the options for a different/more dynamic workplace outcome. Culture is such a large topic. The first step is the willingness to change or to examine case studies of companies, communities that are striving to be better and more engaged.

Please know that I share these views from a career vantage point of experiencing the very good, the very bad, and the very ugly of workplace environments. Look to the future and keep striving - no matter what :-)

Meghan, I love this post (like so many others):

"The trick then, for companies, is to behave as social communities. It’s a powerful and new metaphor for the workplace."

I feel like I'm in a clear fresh wind reading these sorts of posts, sadly it reflects the sort of work environment I'm in and have been in for some time. Its as if the health based area I work is stuck in a time warp, intent is something that exists in sci fi land as far as they are concerned.

I am so grateful to have found your blog with such envigorating information, posts & feedback from other wonderful souls searching for a divine career like myself!

My intent is to leave everywhere I work in a better place than it was before I started (oh and obviously have fun, create, enjoy & make a great salary!).

Warmest wishes@carmilla5
)

GL - Thank you. I view collaboration 2.0 as a key catalyst + new paradigm for connectivity + creating new business channels. I'm a firm believer in the notion that it will never replace IRL contact. You know by now this means "In Real Life" :-) but certainly has various interesting dimensions that I'm exploring now.

Lex - So glad you enjoyed the read. Intent is a very important theme in my life. It's essentially shaping how I view people + culture + business + meaningful collaboration. Details are important but so often cloud a much larger view!

Kevin - "Right on" is right on - Yes, it starts with leadership + building a workplace culture that injects these core values. Great news - in a 2.0 setting there is even more possibility to explore the angles! Case studies are very important.

Kirsten - You summed it up nicely. Community is power. More importantly, it forms as meaning. Ok, twist my arm, let's find adventure :-)

Dawn - Nice to connect. Thank you for stopping by. New energy is much needed now. Change = together!

Andrea - Appreciate your thoughts. We are driven to explore innovation further ;-) As you know, an eclectic collaboration brings novel energy to outcomes, brainstorms, projects, you name it. Plus, it's downright exciting.

Great post, Meghan, and I love what you're doing with TalentCulture!

Meghan,
I love your post! Your final challenge: "find your intent. Share it with others. Be passionate. Be creative." can revolutionize working relationships, and rejuvenate a "bruised and battered" workplace. The massive stress that most are experiencing, due to financial hardships - has left many with a lack of hope for the future. Nothing less than renewal, from within is called for, in my opinion.

Right on! you have articulated it! A call for change, for passion, for creative, energizing realignment.

- Dawn

Meghan,

Great post - you illustrate a very underrated factor of success (intent) well. Community is power. That's one of the most exciting aspects of TalentCulture - our community shapes its purpose, gives it life, and best of all, we feed off each others energy. We're a true community finding it's intent and making an impression on the larger online community. Let's see where it takes us!
-Kirsten

Right on, Meghan. I couldn't agree more. But not everyone comes to the workplace with intent beyond "I need to a paycheck."

How do we encourage purpose of intent to the greater workplace? In other words, how does the workplace become healthy and a place to be, a place to learn, a place to grow and interact in a meaningful way?

Does that start with leadership and then the recruitment of those who own their own development of intent?

Whatever the case, hopefully our collective can inspire organizations to be better!

Enjoyed this post Meghan! I especially hear you on this point:

"In social communities, intent is more than interest... It’s the true power behind the community, because people come to communities with a purpose... They are looking for a place to be, a place to learn, a place to grow and interact in a meaningful way."

About purpose... I'm personally fascinated by how easily and quickly purpose gets lost for individuals and organizations. Even when people/companies know what their larger purpose is, or what the purpose behind a particular project is, it's remarkably easy to get distracted or lost in to-do lists that may or may not support that purpose.

And then this idea about how people naturally look for workplaces where they can learn and grow, where they can essentially act on purpose... It's so basic, but I'm sure plenty of managers forget this one. I think the more we see people as human beings first (rather than just employees with a list of tasks to complete), the better chance we have at building committed, creative teams.

Thanks again for sharing this!

I agree with Jason, who said it perfectly. Collaboration these days is not something one can do within 140 character tweets. I am sensing a return to more traditional methods, if only to distinguish oneself from the others, who rely on the newer, easier forms of communication. Don't get me wrong, the new ones are not going away but neither are they replacing face to face talking, or the phone...

Thank you Jason. I appreciate your thoughts. This is certainly an interesting + dynamic group collaboration. Every day brings new ideas + excitement for the mission. We are having a great time. Passion is so important.

Insightful point. Absolutely, Intent is a metaphor that relates to how the current model developed and a future to unfold in a way that is meaningful + relevant in these innovative times. I am currently condensing topics + continuing deeper re: collaboration opportunities. You will see a clearer focus on career + culture + innovation. Stay tuned for updates here. A true work/workplace in progress - Just like in real life :-)

Good post Meghan. I like what TalentCulture is doing by bringing a diverse group of talented individuals together with a collaborative focus on innovation, culture, and career advancement.

It's interesting, it could be argued that your initial intent, as an individual, was to create an environment that would foster a collaborative social community, and now that you have done that, the intent shifts to focus on what to do with that community.

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