Increase Your Cultural Agility with Paula Caligiuri
Play • 25 min

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Paula Caligiuri is a Distinguished Professor of International Business and Strategy at Northeastern University. Paula has authored award-winning articles and books – including her most recent book Build Your Cultural Agility: The Nine Competencies of Successful Global Professionals. She has been a frequent expert guest on CNN and is an instructor for a LinkedIn Learning course entitled Managing Globally. Paula co-founded a public benefit corporation, Skiilify, to help foster cultural understanding, and she holds a Ph.D. from Penn State University in Organizational Psychology.

 

LEADERSHIP INSIGHTS

  • A multicultural environment is any environment that is demographically different (not just ethnic/national).
  • Getting in an extreme cultural situation does more harm than good for cultural agility.
  • Americans tend to smile a lot. This can look a little strange or un-credible.
  • Be aware of the level of formality if you are working with people from another culture/demographic.
  • In some cultures, silence means you are engaged. Sometimes it means you are disengaged.
  • Push against the desire to seek the familiar and find someone who is demographically diverse.

  

QUESTIONS TO INSPIRE US TO ACTION

  • What is some lesson, saying, or experience that continues to influence your leadership to this day? Having to get a job to make it during a study-abroad experience in Europe.
  • Use three descriptors to finish this sentence: “A leader is…” Courageous, authentic, transparent.
  • What is a question that leaders should be asking either themselves or others? How much time am I really spending understanding the environment I’m in and the people I’m with?
  • What book would you recommend to leaders? Thinking, Fast and Slow by Daniel Kahneman
  • If you could get every listener to start doing something THIS week to help them be a better leader, what would it be? Ask two more questions in any situation you’re in (no matter your natural level of curiosity).
  • As a general life principle, is it better to ask “why?” or “why not?” “Why not?” because we can offer vision and hope and make a change whatever corner of the world we’re in.

 

CONNECT WITH PAULA


 

CONNECT WITH JOSH


 

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