If You Could Fix One Thing, What Would It Be?

All day long we tolerate stuff we know is dumb because "that's just the way it is." We don't have the time to come up with solutions, or don't own the problem. But what if we could ask the world's brightest minds in business how they would fix the broken things we all know should — and can — be?

That's just what we've done for this LinkedIn series, "Let's Fix It." We asked more than 60 Influencers to identify a vexing problem — big or small — and propose a workable solution. Their scope ranged from global initiatives like reversing climate change to closer-to-home annoyances like seemingly-endless meetings.

But whether they chose to sketch out moon shots or just get that pebble out of our shoes, the common thread in their fixes was inventiveness — and viability.

Among the Influencers who went big was Richard Branson, who describes the decades-long war on drugs as “a spectacular failure — a waste of public resources and a boon to crime cartels.” His solution? Surprisingly more attainable than, say, space travel for the masses.

Merrill Lynch's John Thiel chose to take on cancer research, a subject that hit close to home: “I never had the opportunity to meet my father-in-law… He died of cancer around the time my wife and I started dating. The first time I met her family was when I drove her home to attend her father’s funeral… I want to believe that he would’ve approved of me.”

Influencers also shared their personal experiences with persistent problems in the workplace. Here’s how three Influencers would address the lack of diversity in the C-Suite, the problem of increasingly disengaged employees, and the unspoken issue of bias in recruiting:

Denise Morrison: There’s No Path for Women CEOs

What are the odds of two sisters growing up to be CEOs? Pretty good if you were raised with Denise Morrison, the CEO of Campbell Soup. (Morrison’s younger sister Maggie Wilderotter is the Chairman and CEO of Frontier Communications.) Their mother taught them “ambition is a part of femininity" while their father turned “family dinners into tutorials on business, money, sales and profit margins." He shared stories about her favorite childhood topic – new product launches, of course. With an upbringing like that, here’s how Morrison says more companies can bring diversity to the C-Suite.

Maynard Webb: Workers Must Abandon Corporate Loyalty

Maynard Webb recalls the pre-eBay days when his then-employer shuttered the manufacturing plant where he worked for 11 years. The experience crushed his “belief in the paternalistic company,” Webb writes. “I recognized that no corporation could take care of me forever.” As Webb quickly learned, workers must become the CEOs of their destinies while companies “must believe it’s a luxury to have them today, and work hard to keep them tomorrow.”

Google’s HR Chief: Stop Recruiter Bias

Unemployment has an undeniable “information symmetry problem” — neither recruiters nor job hunters really know what the other needs or wants, says Google’s HR Chief Laszlo Bock. “[Recruiters] all think we are great at assessing candidates. We’re not. We are biased, ask bad interview questions, rarely go back and check if our predictions were correct, and so on.” Here’s how Bock would systematically reverse bias in recruiting.

***

So how do we go about solving the world’s problems?

It’s clear we need more groundbreaking ideas. Perhaps it’s heeding Ray Chambers' call to develop a better global emergency health response system so we’re ready to respond to the next Ebola. Maybe it’s Angie Hicks' mission to end lead poisoning or Peter Guber’s advice to ditch the career ladder once and for all.

But as Gallup Chairman and CEO Jim Clifton warns: America is running out of entrepreneurs. “Great business builders are like great scientists or great quarterbacks — they will respond and accelerate with special attention. Without it, their potential is at risk of being underdeveloped, or worse, never developed at all.”

In the coming days, we’ll cover more problems — and reveal more innovative solutions: Jeffrey Selingo on the broken system of paying for college ($100K in student debt, anyone?); Yossi Sheffi on implementing a European-style gas tax; Paul Sagoo on radically changing the way cars work (“Over to you, Elon,” he writes); and more.

So, if you could fix one thing…

Would it be something that you can get done tomorrow, like Jeff Denneen's strategies to “Kill the weekly meeting!” (emphasis his). Or would it be something that might take a lifetime, like finding ways to cure cancer or reverse climate change?

No matter the issue, problem, or cause, Prezi CEO Peter Arvai urges us all to start with shattering the perfection myth. “I have come to realize that revealing my imperfections actually empowers my team,” Arvai writes. “Being vulnerable changes the conversation from one where team members feel they have to prove themselves to one where they are free to think big and take risks.”

Tell us: If you could solve one thing, what would it be?

Write your own post; be sure to include the hashtag #FixIt in the body of your post so we can find your great ideas.

Start writing now.

IN CASE YOU MISSED IT: Check out some of the Influencer posts in our latest series, Let's Fix It.

On Recruiting & Hiring
Laszlo Bock: Blame Unemployment on the Color Blue
Lou Adler: End the Talent Shortage by Hiring for Results, Not Skills
Richard Moran: Is It Easier to Find a Date Online Than a Job?
Tim Brown: How to Design a Winning Resume
Jerry Jacobs Jr.: Should We Hire for the Skills of Today — or Tomorrow?

On Managing Your Career
Jeff Denneen: Kill the Weekly Meeting
Maynard Webb: Disenchanted with Work? Be the CEO of Your Destiny
Peter Guber: Ditch the Career Ladder
Peter Arvai: Shattering the Perfection Myth
Elliot S. Weissbluth: It’s Not Personal, It’s Business
Stephanie Ruhle: The Self-Destructive Quest to Get an Edge

On Professional Women
Denise Morrison: Bring Diversity to the C-Suite
Neil Blumenthal: Stamp Out the Gender Gap
Linda Descano: It’s Time to Break the Cycle of Double Standards
Inge Geerdens: Create Some Breathing Space in Life and Work

On Entrepreneurship
Sramana Mitra: Entrepreneurship Does Not Equal Financing
Jim Clifton: America Is Running Out of Entrepreneurs
Kevin Chou: The H-1B Visa Process Needs Improvement
Sunil Paul: Teach the World How to Share
James Caan: Recognise Entrepreneurship as a Profession
Chih Ching Ong: Embrace the Power of Daydreamers

On Innovation
Paul Sagoo: This Is How Cars Should Work. Over to You, Elon
Sam Shank: Let’s End Human Driving
Meabh Quoirin: The Future Is Not Just Numerical, It’s Emotional
Dawn Strobel: We’re Living in the Stone Age of Innovation
Christopher Schroeder: The Rest of the World Is Rising With or Without the West
Deborah C. Hopkins: An Imperfect Process Sometimes Leads to the Perfect Solution

On Education
Jeffrey Selingo: How We Pay for College Is Broken
Jon Whitmore: To Help a Student Thrive, We Need to Start Earlier
Michael Powell: Crush the High School Dropout Rate
Cindy Fornelli: Illiteracy Is a Global Problem with Local Solutions

On Health
Richard Branson: End the War on Drugs
Ray Chambers: Getting Ready for the Next Ebola
John Thiel: Can We Cure Cancer? We’re Making Progress But...
Angie Hicks: Lead Paint Still Poisons. Who’s Protecting Your Kids?
Terri Ludwig: What If We Focused More on Prevention?
Swati Piramal: Stopping Cancer Is a Team Effort
Risa Lavizzo-Mourey: Opting out of Medicaid Hurts Everyone, Not Just the Uninsured
Mary Pat Whaley: Doctors and Patients Should Team Up to Demystify Prescription Drug Pricing

On Banking & Finance
Arthur Steinmetz: Stop Thinking ‘Hot’ Investments Will Shape Your Financial Future
Anne Finucane: Bridging the Financial Literacy Gap
Roger Ferguson: Something’s Gotta Give Before We Can Solve America’s Retirement Crunch

On Oil & Energy
Adam Goldstein: America’s Dependence on Oil Is Threatening Our Future
Yossi Sheffi: It’s Time for a European-Style Gas Tax in the U.S.
Nicholas Thompson: Geoengineering Is the Way to Reverse Climate Change
Deepak Chopra: Abandon the Helplessness That Hangs Over Climate Change
Robert Nardelli: Fuel Growth with Energy Independence
Jeff Miller: Change Your Perception of the Energy Industry

On Social Impact, Ethics & More
Ronnie Screwvala: You Need to Build Trust Before You Can Change Lives
Judith Rodin: We Can’t Solve Our Problems One at a Time
Robb Fraley: We Must Understand Hunger Before We Can Solve It
Naomi Simson: No One Needs to Feel Isolated
Tom Monahan: We All Move Forward When We Educate and Empower Women
Nicolas Bordas: What If Nations Recognized Their Interdependency?
Dan Ariely: Is It Religion’s Turn to Step Into the Confessional?
Craig Newmark: Why Is It So Hard to Find Ethics and Trust in the Media?

Katrina Smith

Talent Acquisition in Boise, Idaho

10 年

Love it! I write for social change as I am a product of incarcerated parents and the broken foster care system. I am now a writer, work in social service part time and corporate America full time. My primary topics are overcoming generational poverty, financial literacy, prison re-entry, job development, self-sufficiency, goal planning, social justice, women's issues and leadership development. Here is one of the ways that I believe we can #FixIt. Less Entertainment, more empowerment. https://www.dhirubhai.net/pulse/minimum-wage-corporate-america-one-year-katrina-smith

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Vishwarupa (Edie Wu)

Crossing new portals...following 30 Yrs. Art & Culture, Media Entertainment, & Ltd. Term Mgmt Support Opportunities

10 年

I believe Cleansing of the Self foremost and that daily practice of this 'innerview' remains a constant through life's end; it would be a great opportunity to not fix but transcend cultural & ethic differences.

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Warren Marr

Mail Room Technician at The J. Paul Getty Trust

10 年

miscommunication!!

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Richard Perez-Mongard

Traductor Inglés-Espa?ol-Inglés Certificado en Negocios, Medio Ambiente e Ingeniería

10 年

Before trying to fix the world, we should start by fixing our own homes. Big words don't change the world, being a model of change might. Which is your model Jeff Weiner? https://youtu.be/gAnG1Ry6KQI

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Mike Carter

Electronics Technician at U.S. Postal Service

10 年

Get DRUGS under CONTROL!

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