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What If Curiosity Was the Culture?

Imagine starting every meeting with one question:

What’s one thing you just learned from someone else?

This simple habit signals something powerful: this is a space to learn, not to judge. It builds psychological safety and shifts the tone from performance to exploration.

One leader shared how their team now splits meetings into two parts: first, a space to share knowledge and insights, and only then a decision-making space. The result?

💡 More open conversations

💡More thoughtful decisions

💡 Less defensiveness

This is the power of designing for curiosity.

It doesn’t happen by accident. Stress, fear, and pressure to perform shut curiosity down. That’s why inclusive leadership means creating the conditions where curiosity isn’t just allowed, it’s expected.

Try it this week: Pause before a big decision. Ask, What more could I learn here?

That moment of curiosity might change everything.

Blogs

Neuroinclusion and intersectionality in the workplace

Inclusion is rarely experienced through a single identity, yet much of how organisations approach it still assumes exactly that. A 2026 narrative review by Calvard and colleagues, brings this into sharp focus....
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Blogs

Rethinking meetings as spaces for inclusion

A 2026 review by Rogelberg and colleagues, synthesises thirty years of research on meeting science and offers a compelling insight. Meetings are not simply operational necessities, they are one of the most influential, and often overlooked, mechanisms through which inclusion is experienced at work....
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Blogs

Not all expertise is what it seems

A recent paper by Mergen and colleagues (2026), published in Organization, introduces a powerful and timely concept: toxic experts. These are individuals who, despite appearing credible, use their perceived expertise to promote misleading or harmful claims, often for personal or commercial gain....
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