I was talking with my effervescent friend CK over Twitter about how, sometimes, it just seems to be so damn hard for people and companies to be human. And it got me thinking hard about why that is. (She wrote about it, too, probably better than I did.)

We’ve always drawn lines between business and personal. We’ve been told not to cross the streams, that business and personal are expressed in different languages somehow, and as marketers, we sure as hell developed a vocabulary all our own for the “business” application (often whether or not anyone was speaking that way).

Insecurity.

Being human makes us vulnerable. It’s an admission that we’re fallible, that we’re susceptible to emotions and insecurities, and that we are not omnipotent. “Human” carries with it the connotation that you’ve got weaknesses as well as strengths. From a personal perspective, we welcome that in people, because it makes us feel less alone in our imperfection.

From a business perspective, we’re sometimes not sure we WANT to be seen as human. Wouldn’t that mean we’re admitting what we don’t know? That we’re not authoritative, convincing, and decisive? That maybe we didn’t think things through thoroughly, and that there’s a chink in our armor somewhere just waiting to be discovered?

Trust.

Being human means we put trust in others to judge  us based on the balance of our merits, warts and all. Being human as a business means we’re inviting people to judge us based on what’s up front AND what’s backstage, and let’s face it. Sometimes, our backstage is messy. If we let them see it, once again we have to trust that they’ll do something positive with that information instead of trying to find a way to bring us down.

We also don’t trust the rest of the world to understand our business as well as we do. We’ve built messaging for years and focused on making sure we saturate the world with our view of our own company, as opposed to encouraging others to tell us what our business is to THEM. It’s almost as if we have a complete lack of faith in people’s ability to understand and articulate our value as well as we can.

Improvisation.

Winging it makes businesses especially uncomfortable. We have strategic plans, business plans, processes, flowcharts, and procedures all designed to make sure we color inside the lines. That we reduce the variables and mitigate the unexpected.

Being human pulls the rug out from under some of that. Because when you’re personalizing conversation with people, you can’t cram it into a process or a flowchart. You have to think on your feet and improvise based on where the conversation takes you. Sometimes it’s where you expect, but sometimes not. And we just don’t much like the unknown when it comes to our company and our business.

Can You Teach This?

Here’s what’s really nagging at me. If you’re predisposed to burying your humanity in the face of business, can you be reformed? Is it going to become a world of the businesses that are human-driven, and those that aren’t? Is that going to start determining who wins and who flounders?

I wonder if being human is something you can teach. Like intuition or work ethic or attitude, can you teach this to businesses? And what’s the opposite of human?

I’m not done thinking on this, and I sure don’t have all the answers yet, but I hope you’ll help me get there. Chat with me about it?

photo credit: photo monkey

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