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Conscious Business: Evolving the World of Enterprise Episodes - | CB 024: Henry Mintzberg: On Moving Toward a Balanced Society | Henry Mintzberg, internationally renowned academic and author on business and management, joins us this week to discuss his insights into the conscious business movement. Find out why the conception that managers "plan, organize, coordinate, & control" isn't accurate, why innovation can't be institutionalized, and why efficiency can't sometimes kill creativity. Also listen in to hear Henry's perspective on what a balanced society, which has gone beyond Marx and Smith, might look like, as well as how socially responsible businesses play a part in this vision.
This is part 1 of two-part series. Listen to part 2, A Tool is Something you Use in Place of a Brain (airing next week).
Resources:
- Henry Mintzberg
- The Rise and Fall of Strategic Planning by Henry Mintzberg
- Managers Not MBAs: A Hard Look at the Soft Practice of Managing and Management Development by Henry Mintzberg
- The Psychology of Consciousness by Robert E. Ornstein
- Coaching Ourselves
- "Developing Theory about the Development of Theory" [pdf] by Henry Mintzberg | to send to friends | Download CB 024: Henry Mintzberg: On Moving Toward a Balanced Society | Play in Popup.
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| CB 023: We Need Leadership Not Just Heroic Leaders | How does business need to change to meet the growing complexity of the modern, global world? And what does development have to do with it? This week we continue our conversation with the author of Spiral Dynamics, Dr. Don Beck, and discuss the emergence of a more complex way of doing business. Topics we discussed included: issues of distributed leadership, the monitoring of vital signs, the significance of complimentary teams, and the growing importance of mutual trust and respect in business.
Don also discusses his relationship to Ken Wilber and his organization, the Integral Institute, as a way to highlight the difference between having high ideals (and wanting to grow) and the ability to actualize those ideals in a business environment.
This is part 2 of two-part series. Listen to part 1, Spiral Dynamics: A Theory about Making Theories.
Resources:
- Spiral Dynamics: Mastering Values, Leadership and Change
- Spiral Dynamics Integral by Don Beck and Christopher Cowan
- Global Values Network
- Corporate Lifecycles: How and Why Corporations Grow and Die and What to Do About It by Ichak Adizes | to send to friends | Download CB 023: We Need Leadership Not Just Heroic Leaders | Play in Popup.
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| CB 022: Spiral Dynamics: A Theory about Making Theories | Don Beck joins us to discuss a revolutionary model of human and cultural development called Spiral Dynamics. Originally developed by Professor Claire Graves, Spiral Dynamics is a theory that intends to make sense of the way that people respond and grow in the face of life conditions. Don Beck has been applying this model to a multitude of arenas, especially in business and culture. His most recent work in Israel, with Palestinian leaders, to help alleviate the conflict between the two groups is a perfect example of the way that Spiral Dynamics is being applied.
Also of interest is his work with companies like Southwest Airlines and Wholefoods. Listen in to hear how these companies have managed to apply the insight from Spiral Dynamics into the work place, helping create workplaces with more distributed intelligence (as in the case of Wholefoods) as well flight attendants who are also millionaires (in the cast of Southwest). Also hear about Don's five extra bottom lines (on top of the normal triple bottom-line model).
This is part 1 of two-part series. Listen to part 2, We Need Leadership Not Just Heroic Leaders.
Resources:
- Spiral Dynamics: Mastering Values, Leadership and Change by Don Beck & Christopher Cowan
- Spiral Dynamics Integral
- Global Values Network
- Whole Foods
- Southwest Airlines | to send to friends | Download CB 022: Spiral Dynamics: A Theory about Making Theories | Play in Popup.
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| CB 021: Big Business and LOHAS: How Green is Green Enough? | Are big businesses like Walmart and Monsanto more conscious then you might think? Why isn't the United States developing alternative energy technologies as quickly as other countries? And was the counter-cultural revolution of the 60's the beginning of a larger megatrend whose culmination we are now participating in?
Listen in as we discuss the trends, megatrends, and ubertrends happening within the LOHAS (lifestyles of health and sustainability) market, with the editor of LOHAS Journal, Ted Ning.
This is part 2 of two-part series. Listen to Part 1, LOHAS: The Largest Market that No One's Ever Heard Of.
Resources:
- LOHAS.com
- The LOHAS Forum | to send to friends | Download CB 021: Big Business and LOHAS: How Green is Green Enough? | Play in Popup.
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| CB 020: LOHAS: The Largest Market that No One's Ever Heard Of | If you buy products that are aligned with the values of health, sustainability, and environmental protection then you may be a member of the LOHAS market, one of "the largest markets that no one's ever heard of." LOHAS, which stands for Lifestyles of Health and Sustainability, is a $300+ billion dollar market-segment, or approx. %30 of the US consumer market.
Ted Ning, the director of LOHAS Journal, and expert on the LOHAS market joins us to discuss the importance of this growing movement, and helps us dissect it's many facets. Find out whether you are an early adopter, naturalite, drifter, conventional, or as the host Duff calls them "apathetic youth." Also listen in as we discuss Barack Obama and the interesting (but not often discussed) relationship between politics and business.
This is part 1 of two-part series. Listen to Part 2, Big Business and LOHAS: How Green is Green Enough?
Resources:
- LOHAS.com
- The LOHAS Forum | to send to friends | Download CB 020: LOHAS: The Largest Market that No One's Ever Heard Of | Play in Popup.
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| CB 019: The Non-Negotiables of Conscious Business: Transformation and Grooviness | Find out why transformative value and the quality of grooviness in the workplace are non-negotiables at Sounds True—a multimedia publishing company. Also listen in as Tami Simon, the founder of Sounds True, discusses the importance having a collaborative workplace tempered with strong leadership, and of choosing products that have both transformative potential and saleability. These general business practices apply to all kinds of businesses where multiple bottom lines are in effect, and where financial gain takes a backseat (at times) to making a meaningful contribution to the world.
This is part 2 of two-part series. Listen to Part 1, Why are the Employees at Sounds True So Happy?
Additional Resources:
- Sounds True
- Conscious Business CD by Fred Kofman [available from Sounds True]
- Megatrends 2010: The Rise of Conscious Capitalism by Patricia Aburdene | to send to friends | Download CB 019: The Non-Negotiables of Conscious Business: Transformation and Grooviness | Play in Popup.
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| CB 018: Why are the Employees at Sounds True So Happy? | "I don't value the financial growth of the business at the expense of our moment-to-moment experience." - Tami Simon
Are there really companies where you can come to work and simply be yourself, where your shared humanity is as, or even more, important than the "the bottom-line". Tami Simon, the founder of Sounds True—a multimedia publishing company dedicated to disseminating spiritual wisdom—claims that there is, and that her company Sounds True is just such a place.
Listen in to hear about the conscious work practices that Sounds True employs, including emotional intelligence training, conscious meeting practices, and a hiring system that filters out those people who aren't in "values alignment" with the rest of the company.
This is part 1 of two-part series.
Additional Resources:
- Sounds True
- Conscious Business CD by Fred Kofman (available from Sounds True) | to send to friends | Download CB 018: Why are the Employees at Sounds True So Happy? | Play in Popup.
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| CB 017: Global Breakdown ... or Breakthrough? | As we accelerate more and more quickly toward massive global change, one wonders if the culmination of this change will be a global breakdown or a global breakthrough? In this episode Anita Burke, former advisor to Shell International in the area of sustainable development, continues to share her vantage on global change, and also challenges us to begin looking beyond Conscious Business as an end-all solution in this rapidly changing atmosphere.
We explore the various solutions out on the table to help lead us to, not only surviving, but actually thriving as a global communiuty, including a move toward bio-regionalism, accelerating information technologies, and more conscious ways of doing business. In the end we conclude that it is going to take multiple solutions, and at this point it isn't really possible to predict which will be most important as we hurtle toward either a global breakdown or a global breakthrough.
This is part 2 of two-part series. Listen to Part 1, Changing the World - Is Conscious Business Enough?.
Additional Resources:
- www.catalystinstitute.com
- Spiral Dynamics
- The Fourth Turning by William Strauss and Neil Howe
- Integral Institute
- Ray Kurzweil
- Global Weirding
- Blessed Unrest by Paul Hawken | to send to friends | Download CB 017: Global Breakdown ... or Breakthrough? | Play in Popup.
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| CB 016: Changing the World - Is Conscious Business Enough? | Anita Burke, former advisor to Shell International in the area of sustainable development, answers the question of whether or not "conscious business" is enough when dealing with the complex systemic issues that we face across the globe. Her general distrust of consumptive behavior, even consumption "shaded with green", has her present a vision based on living a life of simplicity, converting to a largely bio-regional economy, using complimentary currencies, and engaging in intentional living communities.
Our hosts, who tend towards a more optimistic and developmental approach to systemic problems, challenge her views in this area and present many interesting alternative perspectives. This spirited dialogue highlights some of the core issues facing the development of the conscious business movement, and presents a provocative view that through the vehicle of business "large scale change isn't a possibility anymore."
This is part 1 of two-part series. Listen to Part 2, Global Breakdown ... or Breakthrough?.
Additional Resources:
- www.CatalystInstitute.com | to send to friends | Download CB 016: Changing the World - Is Conscious Business Enough? | Play in Popup.
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| CB 015: Integral Business: The Simplicity Beyond Complexity | In this dialogue, with the founders of the Boulder Center for Integral Living, we continue to explore what it means to live and work in-the-world with an "integral consciousness". Whether you are an entrepreneur looking to create a new business, someone who already works at a fairly conscious business, or if you are working in less then ideal circumstances—perhaps in a situation where the business you work for doesn't accurately reflect your highest values—listen in to find out how you might work in these different contexts.
This is Part 2 of a two-part series. Listen to Part 1: Integrating Warring Perspectives in Business.
Resources:
- Boulder Center for Integral Living
- Free Prize Inside: The Next Big Marketing Idea by Seth Godin
- Tom Peters
- Holacracy: A Practice for Conscious Business
- Why It's Okay to Break the Rules | to send to friends | Download CB 015: Integral Business: The Simplicity Beyond Complexity | Play in Popup.
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| CB 014: Integrating Warring Perspectives in Business | What would it be like if we could integrate all of the warring perspectives we commonly find in the world of business, and indeed in the world-at-large? In this episode we speak to two of the founders of the Boulder Center for Integral Living, a community inspired by the writings of Ken Wilber. They share with us what the Boulder Center for Integral Living is attempting to do, explain what "integral consciousness" is, and most importantly how that type of consciousness interacts in the world, and for the purposes of this show how it interacts in the world of enterprise.
This is Part 1 of a two-part series. Listen to Part 2: Integral Business: The Simplicity Beyond Complexity
Resources:
- Boulder Center for Integral Living
- Ken Wilber
- Growing a Business by Paul Hawken
- Spiral Dynamics
- Holacracy: A Practice for Conscious Business
- Why It's Okay to Break the Rules | to send to friends | Download CB 014: Integrating Warring Perspectives in Business | Play in Popup.
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| CB 013: Why Cooperatives Work: Love is More Effective Than Greed | Cooperatives have been shown to be 9 times more likely to succeed than normal businesses, but why!? In simple terms one could say that "love is more effective than greed", but it turns out that it's a bit more complex. Our guests discuss many different factors involved in creating a successful cooperative, including the amount and quality of education available to members, the depth of the participation of the members, their communication skills, and even the ability to attune oneself to the needs of the collective.
Our guests also drive home the point that the spiritual and psychological development of the individual plays a tremendously important role in these communities. They suggest, though not always agreeing on the terminology, that a leadership structure based on depth and skill, should be in the forefront of the minds of those who want to create a successful cooperative.
This is part 2 of a two-part series. Listen to Part 1, The Cooperative Movement: It's Not Me and Mine, It's We and Ours.
Additional Resources:
- The Cooperative Movement: Globalization from Below, by Dick Williams
- International Co-operative Alliance (ICA)
- Mondragon Cooerative | to send to friends | Download CB 013: Why Cooperatives Work: Love is More Effective Than Greed | Play in Popup.
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| CB 012: The Cooperative Movement: It's not Me and Mine, It's We and Ours | Did you know that there is a 40% chance you are a member of the cooperative movement? In this episode we speak with three brilliant voices behind the modern cooperative movement: Dick Williams, Alex Tsoucatos, and Karin Di Giacomo. At the center of the discussion is Dick's recent book, The Cooperative Movement: Globalization from Below. We explore what a cooperative actually is, looking at real life business examples including the agricultural cooperatives of the mid-west, credit unions, and other businesses you may not have even known were cooperatives.
We also discuss the history of the cooperative movement itself, seeing that in many ways the cooperative movement can be found throughout history in such basic institutions as religious monasteries and even families themselves. We finish off this intellectually engaging dialogue by debating whether or not the cooperative movement could be seen as a 3rd way to the usual dichotomy of capitalism and socialism. Listen in and find out what our guests think.
This is part 1 of a two-part series. Listen to part 2: Why Cooperatives Work: Love is More Effective Than Greed
Additional Resources:
The Cooperative Movement: Globalization from Below, by Dick Williams | to send to friends | Download CB 012: The Cooperative Movement: It's not Me and Mine, It's We and Ours | Play in Popup.
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| CB 011: Why It's Okay to Break the Rules | In Part 2 of our conversation with Brian and Tom of HolacracyOne, we dive deeper into the principles of Holacracy. We talk about the notion of dynamic steering, the opposite of predicting and controlling the direction of an organization, where new information can be quickly and effectively processed and used to steer in the moment. We also discuss individual action, or the holacratic principle of acting individually and breaking the rules when you have to. Brian also talks with us in more detail about Holacracy as a organizational practice and how it relates to a business as a whole becoming conscious and not just individuals within that organization. Join us for the dialogue and be sure to check out www.holacracy.org for more information.
This is part 2 of a two-part series. Listen to part 1: Holacracy: A Practice for Conscious Business
Resources:
- Holacracy.org
- Organization at the Leading Edge: Introducing Holacracy [pdf download] | to send to friends | Download CB 011: Why It's Okay to Break the Rules | Play in Popup.
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| CB 010: Holacracy: A Practice for Conscious Business | This week we converse with Brian Robertson and Tom Thomison of HolacracyOne and explore the organizational structure of Holacracy—what it is, how it is being used, and how it is helping organizations wake up. Brian explains to us the multi-faceted nature of Holacracy and how it functions as an organizational structure, a process for making decisions, and a concrete practice for organizational meetings. Brian and Tom also touch upon what is called a representative link and explain its practical function for carrying feedback from lower parts of an organization to the higher parts of an organization. Finally we touch on the idea of organizational tensions, and how Holacracy helps address issues and opportunities that arise in the day-to-day working of an organization.
Join us for the dialogue, as we explore what it means to put conscious business into practice. This is part 1 of a two-part series. Listen to part 2: Why It's Okay to Break the Rules.
Additional Resources
- Holacracy.org
- Organization at the Leading Edge: Introducing Holacracy [pdf download] | to send to friends | Download CB 010: Holacracy: A Practice for Conscious Business | Play in Popup.
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| CB 009: The Business of Being Spiritual | A great portion of the conscious business movement involves the sale of spiritual accessories and practices. This week we are back with Waylon Lewis, founder?editor of Elephant Journal, exploring whether or not businesses selling spiritual objects are necessarily conscious businesses. For example, can a business selling meditation cushions that have been made in sweat shops, shipped half-way around the globe, and sold by underpaid employees still be a conscious business? In this episode we dive into a number of interesting topics including the perils of spiritual materialism, the impact of business on spiritual traditions, and the politics of yoga studios.
This is part 2 of a two-part series. Listen to part 1: Independent Media: Keeping Away Big Daddy. | to send to friends | Download CB 009: The Business of Being Spiritual | Play in Popup.
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| CB 008: Independent Media: Keeping Away Big Daddy | This week we converse with Waylon Lewis, founder-editor of Elephant Journal, along with Dave Rogers and Abbey Smith. In our dialogue, Waylon describes his path starting Elephant Journal, moving from a small locally distributed magazine to what is now a nationally distributed journal. Abbey brings the perspective of someone working at Elephant describing the day to day culture, while Dave brings an outside business perspective of the magazine industry as former publisher of the Onion. Together we explore Elephant's vision for and relationship to the conscious business movement, the ethical challenges of the magazine industry, and the nature of democracy and independent media. Join us for this especially hilarious episode.
This is part 1 of a two-part series. Listen to part 2: The Business of Being Spiritual. | to send to friends | Download CB 008: Independent Media: Keeping Away Big Daddy | Play in Popup.
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| CB 007: Staying Small, Staying Virtual | This week we converse with Matt Westgate, co-founder of Lullabot, a Drupal development company. We first explore what Drupal is and how it relates to online community. We then talk about how Lullabot is a completely virtual company, meaning, none of its employees live in the same geographic location. We ask Matt about the challenges and the benefits of being a virtual company and how being virtual relates to being conscious. Bo Burlingham's book, Small Giants, also comes up in our conversation, and we explore what it means to be a great company and how that often relates to staying relatively small. | to send to friends | Download CB 007: Staying Small, Staying Virtual | Play in Popup.
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| CB 006: Conscious Business and the Internet | Would the conscious business movement be possible without the internet? This week we talk again with Mathew Gerson, founder and President of eConscious Marketplace, about the co-emergence of the internet and the conscious business movement. We explore how the internet has given people access to information they would never have had before and in doing so catalyzed awareness of the ethical conduct of businesses and the existence of socially and environmentally responsible alternatives. We also touch on viral marketing and the Long Tail phenomena, which explains the internet's role in the success of niche business ideas such as conscious business.
This is part 2 of a two-part series. Listen to part 1, Conscious Consumerism: Can We Buy Away Our Problems? | to send to friends | Download CB 006: Conscious Business and the Internet | Play in Popup.
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| CB 005: How Responsible Can Businesses Actually Be? | In the second part of our conversation with Joshua Onysko, we explore how socially and environmentally responsible a business can really be. We touch on a number of interesting topics including Natural Capitalism—a concept introduced by Paul Hawken, Amory Lovins, and Hunter Lovins—buy-cotting, and values as an inherent feature of a product. We explore the intricacies of small conscious businesses getting bought by large multinational corporations, and the benefits and drawbacks thereof. Joshua also shares with us an upcoming project that he is involved in, Full Transparency, that hopes to provide the customer with complete transparency of everything that goes into making Pangea products. Joshua hopes that Pangea will set a precedent that encourages other companies to follow suit. Finally, Joshua tells us about his book he is working on, Brands Are People Too, and the importance of creating brands that get better and better the deeper you dig.
This is part 2 of a two-part series. Listen to part 1: How to Build a Better Banana Peel. | to send to friends | Download CB 005: How Responsible Can Businesses Actually Be? | Play in Popup.
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| CB 004: How to Build a Better Banana Peel | In this episode we converse with Joshua Onysko, Founder and CEO of Pangea Organics, an organic soap and bodycare company. We kick off our conversation by digging deep into Joshua's story as well has his vision of Pangea Organics and it's non-profit counterpart Pangea Institute. During our conversation, Joshua shares with us the many innovations of his company, from the living wage he pays his employees to the all organic garden in his factory that feeds his team half the year to the fact that all his products begin to biodegrade within 48 hours of leaving their container.
Joshua also shares with us his entrepreneurial philosophy of starting a business with full integrity. He shares with us that if you want your business to only use organic ingredients, than you do it from the beginning, instead of hoping that someday down the road you'll get there.
As the conversation moves along we touch on a number of other topics including the importance of passion and empowerment in a business, biomimicry and packaging that grows herbs, and the necessity of creating new businesses that are addressing actual needs instead of artificially creating them.
Listen in and join the dialogue as we explore the cutting edge of what it means to be socially and environmentally responsible.
This is part 1 of a two-part series. Listen to part 1: How Responsible Can Businesses Actually Be? | to send to friends | Download CB 004: How to Build a Better Banana Peel | Play in Popup.
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| CB 003: Conscious Consumerism: Can We Buy Away Our Problems? | Is it possible to buy ourselves out of our social and environmental problems? This week we explore this question with Mathew Gerson, founder and President of eConscious Market, an online philanthropic eco-mall. In this dialogue we first dive into eConscious and its vision for becoming one of the world's largest online marketplaces for the exchange of socially and environmentally responsible goods. Mathew also tells us about eConscious' new hybird for-benefit business structure, where giving is the new getting, and 50% of all net profits are donated to a non-profit of the consumers choice.
As we dive more into our initial question, we begin to explore the contours and contributions of the conscious consumerism movement and examine its potential for social and environmental transformation. We look at how conscious consumerism is changing the nature of individual businesses, entire markets, and the individual consumer. We also examine how conscious consumerism is an opportunity for us to start bringing our values into the purchasing act.
As we go deeper still, we explore the aesthetics of care, or the trend to not only instill our prized objects with beauty and utility, but also with goodness, or a quality of being ethically created. We then bridge into the difficulty of wanting to think socially and ecologically with the reality of needing to think economically and what solutions might exist for this seeming paradox.
Finally, to close it out, we address the difficulty of wanting to encourage companies to make strides in their environmental and social impact, without validating their continued acts of irresponsibility.
So listen in and join the dialogue! And don't forget to visit Mathew and his wonderful team at www.econsciousmarket.com.
This is part 1 of a two-part series. Listen to part 2, Conscious Business and the Internet. | to send to friends | Download CB 003: Conscious Consumerism: Can We Buy Away Our Problems? | Play in Popup.
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| CB 002: Arete and the Hero's Journey | In this episode we talk with the founder and former CEO of Zaadz.com, Brian Johnson, and explore conscious business in relationship to areté, the classical Greek notion of living at one's highest potential, as well as the archetypal hero's journey. During our conversation we touch on how easy it is to look at people we admire and forget that they too struggled on their path to greatness. We also touch on the notion raised in Good Business by Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi's, that it is the institutions with the tallest buildings that are the ones creating the culture, and thus the immense need for us to work with business in the modern day to create the world we want to see.
To find out more about Brian's latest project, check out ThinkAreté.com. | to send to friends | Download CB 002: Arete and the Hero's Journey | Play in Popup.
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| CB 001: By the Way, What is a Conscious Business? | In episode 1 we introduce the conscious business show and preview what's to come. We talk with Mark Wilding about the purpose of the Marpa Center for Business and Economics and then dive into exploring what a conscious business is. During the conversation we touch on a number of issues including:
- The individual in the organization: how business founders get subsumed by their own creation.
- What it means to be conscious as an individual and as a business.
- Response-ability—the ability to choose how we respond.
Peter Senge and Otto Sharmar's U-Theory.
- The difference between intention and attention in a business.
- Metrics.
- Integration of bread and butter business skills with high values and inspiring mission and vision.
To find out more about Mark's work check out: www.naropa.edu/marpa | to send to friends | Download CB 001: By the Way, What is a Conscious Business? | Play in Popup.
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