About Mercedes Martin: She has over two decades of experience in strategic business consulting, inclusion coaching, global diversity and leadership development. Prior to launching her current consultancy, Mercedes worked at Ernst and Young for almost ten years in talent development, organizational, change and as an executive coach. After Ernst and Young, she was Executive Vice President of Business, Transformation and Innovation at Ashton212 consulting firm. Mercedes served as staff development officer in the United States AirForce early in her career.
Mercedes is a native Spanish speaker and a master corporate coach. She has worked with Fortune 500 companies including PepsiCo, Proctor and Gamble, Shell Oil, and Kellogs. Her global engagements have been across Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Columbia, Costa Rica, Denmark, El Salvador, England, Mexico, Nigeria, Spain, and the United States.
In this episode, Jordan and Mercedes discuss:
What really keeps corporate leaders from responding to social issues and what a “safe and brave space” looks like
Mercedes conversation with the leader of the Proud Boys and with a North Carolina Trump supporter who carried a gun and had a tattoo of the Buddha.
How to set up learning experiences or conversations where people can learn and exchange information without blame or shame
Finding another perspective and another way of navigating polarity
Why people find it so hard to navigate through polarizing issues and what the problem really is
Key Takeaways
Create a safe and brave space for people to be able to talk freely without fear of judgement - to be able to go against the status quo and still be respected and included
Listen to all the sides of an issue - don’t drown in your confirmation bias by just listening to what you already believe in. Get out of your own “echo chamber”.
Be mature enough to discuss and respond to issues that have any aspect of VUCA (volatility, uncertainty, complexity and ambiguity)
Oftentimes, it’s not really the data that sets people off - it’s the historical and emotional aspect of it that could “trigger” a negative response. Understanding this is the key to having better conversations with others
“first, model curiosity; second, make it okay to say ‘I don’t know’; third, make it okay to say ‘I need help’. ” — Mercedes Martin
Get the complimentary guide: How To Select An Executive Coach at www.selectcoach.workplacewarrior.com
Get the Am I Abrasive Self Test at abrasive.workplacewarrior.com
Connect with Mercedes Martin:
Website: https://mercedesmartin.co/
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mercedesemartin/
Connect with Jordan:
Get the complimentary guide: How To Select An Executive Coach at www.selectcoach.workplacewarrior.com
Get the Am I Abrasive Self Test at abrasive.workplacewarrior.com
Website: www.workplacewarriorinc.com
Twitter: https://twitter.com/jordangoldrich1
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/jordan.goldrich
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jordangoldrich/
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jgoldrich/
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