Nadya Zhexembayeva
Nadya Zhexembayeva | |
---|---|
Born | Almaty, Kazakhstan |
Occupation | Business owner, educator, author |
Language | English, Russian |
Alma mater | Hartwick College (B.A.) Case Western Reserve University (PhD) |
Genre | Non-fiction |
Notable works | The Chief Reinvention Officer Handbook; Overfished Ocean Strategy; Embedded Sustainability; Titanic Syndrome |
Website | |
https://www.learn2reinvent.com/ |
Nadya Zhexembayeva (Russian: Надя Жексембаева) is an author, educator and business owner. She has written four and contributed to six books about business, strategy, reinvention and sustainability.[1] In 2009, Dr. Zhexembayeva co-authored the concept of "embedded sustainability",[2][3] in 2015 introduced the term "Chief Reinvention Officer,"[4] and in 2015 introduced the concept of "Titanic Syndrome",[5][6] which she developed into a book in 2018.[7] Nadya is the author of The Reinvention Method, which as of 2021 consists of nine tools bridging the fields of strategy, foresight, design thinking, SCRUM/Agile, organization development, leadership and change management.[8][9] She is also a member of the Academic Committee of CEDEP.
Early life and career
[edit]Dr. Zhexembayeva grew up in Almaty, Kazakhstan (then part of the Soviet Union), at the time she claims the country was "going through immense deterioration".[10] While still at high school, Zhexembayeva started her business career selling insurance and later worked as a trainer at Association of Young Leaders, then went on to earn a Freedom Support Act scholarship that allowed her to complete two Bachelor of Arts degrees in Management and then Psychology from Hartwick College, where she was named a Faculty Scholar and John Christopher Hartwick Scholar – "the highest honor the College can confer upon a student".[11] In 2008, she obtained her Doctor of Philosophy degree from Case Western Reserve University, where she served as associate director of the Center for Business as an Agent of World Benefit at Weatherhead School of Management, where as of 2016, she continues to serve on the Board of Advisors.[12]
Dr. Zhexembayeva served as the Coca-Cola Chaired Professor of Sustainable Development at IEDC-Bled School of Management, an executive education center based in the Slovene Alps, where, as of 2016, she continues to teach courses in leadership, strategy, change management, design thinking, and sustainability. In addition to IEDC, Zhexembayeva has taught in other business schools, including CEDEP (France)[13] and IPADE Business School (Mexico).
As a speaker, she has shared her insights with audiences worldwide through keynotes, panel presentations, and workshops. She has delivered four TEDx talks in Austria,[14] Slovenia,[15] the US.,[10] and Romania.[16]
In 2007, Zhexembayeva co-founded WE EXIST Reinvention Agency. Based on Zhexembayeva's work with the Coca-Cola Company, ENRC Plc, IBM, CISCO, Erste Bank, Henkel, Knauf Insulation, and Vienna Insurance Group on reinventing products, processes, and leadership practices in Ventures magazine called Zhexembayeva ‘The Reinvention Guru’,[17] while TEDx Navasink named her ‘The Queen of Reinvention.’[18]
In 2014, Dr. Zhexembayeva co-founded Reinvention Academy, with the mission to provide 1 billion people with strong resilience and reinvention skills.[19]
Key Theoretical Contributions
[edit]Dr. Nadya Zhexembayeva coined the term "Titanic Syndrome," which she defines as "a corporate or individual disease in which organizations facing disruption bring about their own downfall through arrogance, excessive attachment to past success, or an inability to recognize the new and emerging reality."[20][6][7]
Together with Dr. Chris Laszlo, Dr. Zhexembayeva co-authored the concept of "Embedded Sustainability" (in contrast to "bolt-on" or "band-aid" sustainability, defined as "the incorporation of environmental, health, and social value into core business activities with no trade-off in price or quality."[2][3]
Books
[edit]Dr. Nadya Zhexembayeva has written four books and contributed to six others that focus on strategy, innovation, reinvention and sustainability.
Author:
- The Chief Reinvention Officer Handbook: How to Thrive in Chaos (2020)
- Titanic Syndrome: Why Companies Fail and How To Reinvent Your Way Out of Any Business Disaster (2018)
- Overfished Ocean Strategy: Powering Up Innovation for a Resource-Deprived World (2014)
- Embedded Sustainability: The Next Big Competitive Advantage (2011)
Chapter contributor:
- The Business of Building a Better World: The Leadership Revolution That Is Changing Everything (2021)
- Sustainable Business: A One Planet Approach (2017)
- Practicing Organization Development: Leading Transformation and Change (2015)
- Globally Responsible Leadership: Managing According to the UN Global Compact (2013)
- Positive Design and Appreciative Construction: From Sustainable Development to Sustainable Value (2010) (Full citation: Nadya Zhexembayeva (2010), A whole new value: Driving innovation, sustainability, and prosperity through appreciative inquiry, in Tojo Thatchenkery, David L. Cooperrider, Michel Avital (ed.) Positive Design and Appreciative Construction: From Sustainable Development to Sustainable Value (Advances in Appreciative Inquiry, Volume 3) Emerald Group Publishing Limited, pp. 77 – 96)
- Handbook of Transformative Cooperation: New Designs and Dynamics (2007)
Articles and reports
[edit]- "Titanic Syndrome: Why Companies Sink and How to Prevent it Happening to You". Real Leaders magazine. 15 June 2021.
- "Change Is Not a Project". The European Financial Review. November 2020.
- Zhexembayeva, Nadya (19 February 2020). "Stop Calling It Innovation". Harvard Business Review.
- "Titanic Syndrome: Why Companies Sink and How to Reinvent Your Way Out of Any Business Disaster". The European Financial Review. February 2018.
- "Overfished Ocean Strategy". Stanford Social Innovation Review. August 2014.
- "Overfished Ocean Strategy: Powering Up Innovation for a Resource-Deprived World". The European Financial Review. July 2014.
- "Embedded Sustainability: A Strategy for Market Leaders". The European Financial Review. April 2011.
- "Developing the Global Leaders of Tomorrow" (PDF). UN PRME Report. 2008.
Interviews and podcasts
[edit]- "50 Tips to Break Out of a Career Rut and Make Your Day Job Feel Like Your Dream Job". Parade magazine. 31 August 2021.
- "What to Do When Your Boss Doesn't Advocate for You at Work". Ladders. 30 August 2021.
- "Why Reinvention, Not Change, Is The New Game In Town". Forbes. 12 March 2021.
- "Laid Off, Furloughed or Fired: Understanding the Differences". The Wall Street Journal. 24 February 2021.
- "Conversation with Nadya Zhexembayeva on reinvention, sustainability and strategy". Ambitious Radio Podcast. August 2016.
- "Conversation with Nadya Zhexembayeva on scarcity and resource intelligence". Revolutionary Provocateur Podcast. April 2015.
- "Nadya Zhexembayeva on Innovation in a Resource-Deprived World". Triple Pundit. October 2014.
- "Innovation for Positive Sustainable Development". Positivity Strategist Podcast. December 2014.
- "Overfished Ocean Strategy by Nadya Zhexembayeva". The Entrepreneurs Library with Wade Danielson. September 2014.
References
[edit]- ^ "About – Nadya Zhexembayeva". Chiefreinventionofficer.com. 29 July 2015.
- ^ a b Caesar, Nicolas (6 May 2011). "Embedded sustainability – the next big competitive advantage?". The Guardian.
- ^ a b "How to Move From "Bolt-On" to Embedded Sustainability". Triplepundit.com. 13 June 2011.
- ^ "Built to Reinvent The Ten Commandments of Today's Sustainable Company" (PDF). Changethis.com. Retrieved 5 November 2016.
- ^ "Built to Reinvent The Ten Commandments of Today's Sustainable Company" (PDF). Changethis.com. Retrieved 5 November 2016.
- ^ a b "Titanic Syndrome: Why Companies Sink and How to Prevent it Happening to You". RealLeaders.com. Retrieved 15 June 2021.
- ^ a b "Titanic Syndrome: Why Companies Sink and How to Reinvent Your Way Out of Any Business Disaster". europeanfinancialreview.com. 27 February 2019. Retrieved 28 June 2019.
- ^ "Change Is Not a Project". TheEuropeanFinancialReview.com. 30 November 2020. Retrieved 30 November 2020.
- ^ "Why Reinvention, Not Change, Is The New Game In Town". Forbes.com. Retrieved 12 March 2021.
- ^ a b TEDx Talks (28 April 2015). "To Hold On, Let Go – Nadya Zhexembayeva – TEDxNavesink". YouTube.
- ^ "Honors Convocation – Hartwick College". Hartwick.edu.
- ^ "The Fowler Center for Business as an Agent of World Benefit – Weatherhead". Weatherhead.case.edu. 5 December 2022.
- ^ "Faculty – Cedep". Cedep.fr. Retrieved 31 October 2016.
- ^ TEDx Talks (25 November 2013). "Overfished ocean strategy: Nadya Zhexembayeva at TEDxKlagenfurt". YouTube.
- ^ TEDx Talks (30 December 2010). "TEDxLjubljanaWomen – Nadya Zhexembayeva – I Have Nothing To Say About Women". YouTube.
- ^ TEDx Talks (1 December 2018). "How to Kill Your Own Company: Nadya Zhexembayeva at TEDxBucharest". YouTube.
- ^ "The reinvention guru". Inventures.eu. 23 April 2015. Retrieved 13 August 2018.
- ^ "Nadya Zhexembayeva Is the Queen of Reinvention – TEDxNavesink – Monmouth County New Jersey". Tedxnavesink.com. 16 March 2015.
- ^ "Exclusive Interview with Dr. Nadya Zhexembayeva, Founder & CRO, Reinvention Academy". HR.com. Retrieved 3 March 2021.
- ^ "Built to Reinvent The Ten Commandments of Today's Sustainable Company" (PDF). Changethis.com. Retrieved 5 November 2016.
External links
[edit]- Official website
- "TEDx Talk on Why You Should Reinvent Every 3.5 Years". TEDx. April 2015.
- "TEDx Talk on How to Kill Your Own Company". TEDx. December 2018.