The C19 lockdown has underscored the struggle many business leaders have with their cyber capacity. The pandemic impacted everyone’s life and businesses faced abrupt transition to cyberspace only, to which only a few were prepared properly. This is the perfect time for you as a business leader and your networked teams to align your digital identity management consisting of measures and behaviours.
While the technical capabilities do reduce business risk, you still require leadership skills for the investment to turn into a competitive advantage.
Your teams’ displayed identity behaviours will finally help you turn around potential risks to become business benefits. This mindset must become the guiding principle across the value chain of your business. Let us deconstruct what we mean by your team’s identity behaviours.
Let us deconstruct what we mean by your team’s identity behaviours. If your networked team has been working remotely or is starting only now, how does identity come through in digital collaboration? If your business is more or less mobile, what then, is your digital identity based on? Most importantly, how can you leverage your digital identity in the future of work?
Going from Personality to Identity in Cyberspace
Many organisations use personality assessments to recognise, hire and motivate their workforce. Developed in the latter half of the 20th century, this personality-based approach is believed to be closely linked to an individual’s expected professional performance. Personalities are based on psychological and cognitive factors and regarded as permanent.
But what if, as we believe, identity not only describes who we are, but is constantly in motion. As a construct, it is made up of both non-changeable aspects as well as elements that develop as time goes on. Developed at the beginning of the digital era, an identity-based approach stems from the idea that people shape an organisation, and an individual’s identity is developed through social interaction and interpersonal relationships among other members of the organisation.
Establishing Your Privacy First Culture with an Identity-based Approach
Leading a business, you are ultimately responsible for proactively defining your identity and brand.
Unconstrained by management or the personality-based assessments of the human resources department idiosyncratic for larger organisations, you shape your privacy first culture based on digital identity. How then, can you shape and influence it to work in your favour?
Your behaviour-centric digital identity is dependent on a number of factors:
You: Your identity describes who you are. You have coexisting, multifaceted and overlapping identities. Identity is never static; it evolves over time.
Your interactions: Your interactions are key and your identity shapes the way you interact with others, face-to-face and virtually.
Your brand: You and your interactions inform your privacy first culture.
Your multi-faceted identity is also context-dependent. Individuals tend to emphasise different parts of their identity for example at home, surrounded by family, in comparison to work, where they are surrounded by their team. This therefore also extends to the way you exhibit yourself to your prospective clients, which will subsequently have an effect on your portfolio in the near future.
A significant advantage of this identity-based approach is its ability to recognise the individual’s entire self. As the highest level of Maslow’s hierarchy of needs, this type of self-actualisation would stimulate higher motivation in any remote worker and lead to greater productivity.
Integrating Identity with Privacy in Cyberspace
Three years ago, it was predicted that remote work will become the standard operating mode for at least 50% of the U.S. population by 2020. By now, it is clear that these numbers are likely to be much higher with the behavioural shifts that are taking place as a result of Covid-19. The world we are now entering, with even greater connectivity than first anticipated, requires the integration of your technical capabilities with your core identity. This combination establishes the foundation for a privacy-first culture.
A significant advantage of this identity-based approach is its ability to recognise the individual’s entire self. As the highest level of Maslow’s hierarchy of needs, this type of self-actualisation would stimulate higher motivation in any remote worker and lead to greater productivity.