Everything Is Awesome
The LEGOⓇ approach to being an awesome coworker
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Paul Verbeek-Mast
(@paul_v_m)
Front-end developer @ Instapro
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“The great enemy of communication, we find, is the illusion of it.”
William H. Whyte
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“We have talked enough; but we have not listened.”
William H. Whyte
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“many leaders assume they are better at valuing diversity than
they actually are”
Havard Business Review – Leaders Aren’t Great at Judging How Inclusive They Are
https://hbr.org/2017/10/leaders-arent-great-at-judging-how-inclusive-they-are
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“The great enemy of inclusivity, we find, is the illusion of it.”
Paul Verbeek-Mast
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It’s about building a climate of trust, appreciation, and
openness to differences in thoughts, styles and backgrounds
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The early days of tech
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The early days of tech
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The early days of tech
ENIAC (Electronic Numerical Integrator and Computer)
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The early days of tech
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The early days of tech
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The early days of tech
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The rise of men
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The rise of men
In 1967 alone, 700,000 people took the IBM Aptitude test
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The rise of men
Of those 1378, only 186 were women
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The rise of men
“[Programmers] dislike activities
involving close personal interaction.”
A vocational interest scale for computer programmers
William M. Cannon & Dallis K. Perry
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The rise
of men
•
Antisocial personality disorder favours men
by 3:1 ratio;
•
Autism and Asperger’s is seen as high as
7:1;
•
Antisocial women are seen as “not liking
people”, while men are seen as a “lone
wolf”
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The rise of men
“[The] industry selected for antisocial,
mathematically inclined males, and
therefore antisocial and mathematically
inclined males were overrepresented in
the programmer population”
The Computer Boys Take Over
Nathan Ensmenger
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The rise
of men
“This in turn reinforced the popular
perception that programmers
ought
to be antisocial and mathematically
inclined (and therefore male).“
The Computer Boys Take Over
Nathan Ensmenger
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The rise
of men
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The rise
of men
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The bro culture
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The bro
culture
Joe Liemandt — Founder of Trilogy Software
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The bro
culture
“We’re elite talent; and it’s potential and
talent, not experience, that has merit.”
“only the best”
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The bro
culture
•
How many piano tuners are there in the
world?;
•
How many golf balls fit in standard double
decker bus?;
•
How much would you charge to wash all
the windows in San Francisco?
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The bro
culture
Holidays were called competitive
advantage days, because no one
else was working.
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The bro
culture
Insane work hours, drinking,
gambling and Vegas. Plus valuing
potential over experience, made the
culture male dominated.
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The bro
culture
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The bro
culture
•
Susan Fowler;
•
Niniane Wang;
•
Susan Ho;
•
Leiti Hsu;
•
Sarah Kunst;
•
Cheryl Yeoh.
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The bro
culture
•
Women;
•
People of colour;
•
LGBTQIA+;
•
People with a disability;
•
People in economic or social
hardships.
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Piece of Resistance
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A rant about "Inclusivity
and the LEGO Movie”
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</rant>
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If you let everyone be their unique selves, and value each other,
you can achieve great things
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Equality =
uniformity
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Equality =
uniformity
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Equality =
uniformity
Equality !=
uniformity
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Make everyone
feel welcome
and included
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Reach out to new colleagues
Make everyone
feel welcome
and included
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On-boarding buddy
Make everyone
feel welcome
and included
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Your whole team changes
Make everyone
feel welcome
and included
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Don’t assume that they will
eventually learn
Make everyone
feel welcome
and included
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Use inclusive language
Make everyone
feel welcome
and included
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•
Put people first;
Use inclusive language
Make everyone
feel welcome
and included
Blind man vs. A man who is blind
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Use inclusive language
Make everyone
feel welcome
and included
•
Put people first;
•
Avoid jargons and abbreviations;
“The key test for an acronym is to ask
whether it helps or
hurts
communication. An acronym that most engineers
outside of SpaceX already know, such as GUI, is fine to
use. It is also ok to make up a
few
acronyms/
contractions every now and again, […] but those need to
be kept to a minimum.”
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Use inclusive language
Make everyone
feel welcome
and included
•
Put people first;
•
Avoid jargons and abbreviations;
•
“Guys” is not gender neutral;
Instead of “guys”, use “people",
“folk”, “everyone" or “y’all”.
Instead of “he” or “she”, use “they”.
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Use inclusive language
Make everyone
feel welcome
and included
•
Put people first;
•
Avoid jargons and abbreviations;
•
“Guys” is not gender neutral;
•
Don’t underplay the impact of mental
disabilities;
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Use inclusive language
Make everyone
feel welcome
and included
•
Put people first;
•
Avoid jargons and abbreviations;
•
“Guys” is not gender neutral;
•
Don’t underplay the impact of mental
disabilities;
•
Coding is also communication;
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Be humble
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Accept your limitations
Be humble
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Listen
Be humble
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How many times do you
bring your phone or laptop
to a meeting?
Be humble
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Talk less, listen more
Be humble
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If someone needs to
vent, lend them an ear
Be humble
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Let people be heard
Be humble
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“When you have a contribution to make in a
meeting, how often are you able to do so?”
Be humble
Let people be heard
Only 35% felt they were always able to make
a contribution, when they had something to add
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•
Introverts;
•
Remote workers;
•
Women;
•
People of colour;
Be humble
Let people be heard
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•
Share the purpose of the meeting;
•
Include remote workers;
•
No talking over each other;
•
Keep it central;
•
Email a summary;
Be humble
Let people be heard
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•
Interrupt long discussions;
•
Ask for opinions;
•
Give credit where it is due;
•
Feedback round;
Be humble
Let people be heard
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Be humble
Be an ally
Someone who supports equal rights
for others, and
acts
when people
face exclusion and discrimination
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Be humble
•
Speak their name when they aren't around;
•
Share their career goals with influencers;
•
Invite them to high-profile meetings;
•
Endorse them publicly;
Be an ally
56% of leaders don’t value ideas they don’t
personally see a need for
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Be humble
Be an ally
•
Speak their name when they aren't around;
•
Share their career goals with influencers;
•
Invite them to high-profile meetings;
•
Endorse them publicly;
•
Stop with
mansplaining
and
manterrupting.
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Be humble
Mansplaining –
the act of explaining something in a
condescending and overconfident way;
Manterrupting –
when a man unnecessary interrupts a
women.
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@betterallies
Be humble
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Encourage
creativity
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Get everyone’s input
Encourage
creativity
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Create a safe
environment
Encourage
creativity
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Utilise diversity
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Know your colleagues
Utilise
diversity
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Learn from each other
Utilise
diversity
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You are
awesome too!
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Find people who
believe in you
You are
awesome too!
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Stand up for what you
believe in
You are
awesome too!
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Be yourself
You are
awesome too!
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A little bit of kindness
goes a long way
You are
awesome too!
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Thank you!
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Read this book! (Brotopia)
Paul Verbeek-Mast
(@paul_v_m)
Front-end developer @ Instapro