“Cultural intelligence” or CQ is showing up all over the place. I’m extremely grateful for a groundswell of interest in assessing and developing CQ. But CQ is not really the point of what we’re after at the Cultural Intelligence Center or at our first CQ Summit next month. It’s a means to far more important things.
Sometimes I talk to cross-cultural gurus who are all worked up about people who just “don’t care” about intercultural issues. These conversations usually include rants about corporate executives who are clueless about cultural differences and organizations that aren’t willing to invest in cultural training for their teams.
But hearing these conversations makes me wonder whether we’re missing the point. I confess. I’m not very interested discussing cultural differences in and of themselves. Sure, for a little while it’s interesting to hear which cultures peel a banana starting with the stem and which start with the other side. But so what?
Most organizations and leaders I encounter are really pressed for money and time. The reason I care so much about cultural intelligence is that it opens up all kinds of opportunities that may otherwise go missed. And this is what we’re going to talk about at the CQ Summit next month. What does the research say about the opportunities for leaders and organizations that improve CQ?
For those of us devoted to researching and applying CQ, I suggest this means a shift from how this topic is often approached.
From Diversity TO Innovation
Diversity is important to me. I’m the first to scan an organizations’ “Meet our Team” link on their website or a list of conference presenters to see if they have a diversity of perspectives. But diversity by itself isn’t enough. In fact, one of the research presentations that will be shared at the summit describes how homogenous teams actually outperform diverse ones when CQ is low. But with increased CQ, diverse teams significantly outperform homogenous ones in coming up with innovative ideas. Diversity PLUS cultural intelligence leads to innovation. Not either one by itself.
From Kumbuya TO Solutions
U.S. news outlets got a lot of mileage out of the collaborative spirit represented by political opponents President Obama and New Jersey governor Chris Christie in the wake of Superstorm Sandy. But they didn’t hang out together just to dialogue and have a conversation. A crisis brought them together and suddenly the arguments about private enterprise and big government became secondary to solving the immediate problem. Interfaith conversations and cross-cultural dialogues are usually filled with people who already believe that dialogue and understanding are important. But crises have a way of forcing unlikely partners to work together. I have little hope that sitting around signing resolutions and snapping Benetton inspired photos is going to do much to solve the biggest problems facing us. But as you and I bring our ideas together, with the help of cultural intelligence, we can create better solutions than either of us can apart.
From Silver Bullet TO Strategic Maneuver
Sometimes there’s the temptation to oversell cultural adaptability and cultural intelligence as if it alone will ensure profitability, leadership success, and world peace. In our ambitions to gain attention, let’s avoid overstating what CQ can do. I’m hard pressed to think of any objective you want to accomplish that won’t be enhanced with improved CQ. And it can be the critical difference between success and failure. But we’ll have more credibility when we demonstrate how it integrates with several other critical considerations that are necessary.
When cross-cultural experiences are moderated with higher levels of CQ, there’s a big difference. For example:
International Travel + Low CQ = Ethnocentrism and Confirmation Bias
International Travel + High CQ = Lifetime Impact
Diverse Teams + Low CQ = Frustration and Low Participation
Diverse Teams + High CQ = Engagement and Innovation
Expat Assignment + Low CQ = Stress, Burnout, and Financial Loss
Expat Assignment + High CQ = Satisfaction, Cost-Savings, and Profitability
Cross-Cultural Interactions + Low CQ = Judgment and Mistrust
Cross-Cultural Interactions + High CQ = Broadened Perspective and Effectiveness
Leadership Skills + Low CQ = Glass Ceiling
Leadership Skills + High CQ= Borderless Possibilities
This is what drives the work we do. We have the crazy idea that the world really can become a better place when we do the hard work of improving cultural intelligence.
CQ is not ultimately the point. But it is the difference between gridlock and innovation, frustration and insight, loss and opportunity. Thanks for your role in leveraging diverse perspectives to create better solutions. I hope you’ll join us in LA to take this conversation further.