RE: Designing the Organizations and Social Innovations of Tomorrow
Made a few changes to the description based on feedback I am receiving. Here is a second draft:
Collaborative Teams Inspired by Nature
Discover a natural framework to stimulate teamwork across boundaries
Your business is not performing. You have all the best people, so what is the problem?
Organizational structures and relationships that once encouraged competition, today create silos of mistrust. Modern business success requires transdisciplinary partnerships and agile organizations capable of finding solutions across domains.
And you know who has been creating these types of systems for 3.8 billion years?
Nature.
Living organisms have evolved strategies to continually work as a team to develop and adapt to changing conditions. Many of the challenges your business is facing have already been solved by the natural world. Looking to nature, we can find patterns to survive and thrive on Earth, sustaining a circular way of working together that encourages collaboration and creative problem solving. Biological design is resilient, adaptable, multifunctional, and regenerative. Who better to learn from?!
With Tigrilla Gardenia's guidance, discover how to optimize organizational structures, build a cohesive team, and best use their talents by modeling your organization on the genius of nature.
Tigrilla uses her love of speaking, analytical mind, communications expertise, and gamification experience to design cross-functional team development inspired by nature. Her background in plant intelligence, cognition, and neurobiology and working with nature-based systems such as biomimicry layers perfectly over her ample experience in corporate developing projects and structures from high-tech to the arts.
Give your team the original antidote to stress and lack of creativity: using a Circular Innovation Design Process rooted in practical and theoretical experience with the plant world and biomimicry, create a work environment that functions as efficiently and cohesively as a forest.
So.... what do you think?