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The magic “I” of CIO sparks many imaginations: Chief information officer, chief infrastructure officer , Chief Integration Officer, chief International officer, Chief Inspiration Officer, Chief Innovation Officer, Chief Influence Office etc. The future of CIO is entrepreneur driven, situation oriented, value-added,she or he will take many paradoxical roles: both as business strategist and technology visionary,talent master and effective communicator,savvy business enabler and relentless cost cutter, and transform the business into "Digital Master"!

The future of CIO is digital strategist, global thought leader, and talent master: leading IT to enlighten the customers; enable business success via influence.

Saturday, February 14, 2026

Innerconnectivity

Universal Love provides the energy; it is the fuel that makes us want to uphold values and protect humanity, even when it’s a thorny journey.

The holiday weekend isn't just about relaxing, it's about thinking ahead and thinking profoundly. 
At the intersection of Common Values, Humanity, and Universal Love weaves the blueprint for a functioning to advanced global society. While these terms often sound like "fluff" in a boardroom, they are actually the "hard" infrastructure of human cooperation, and multithreaded perspectives to weave a better global world.


In fact, in a world that is technologically connected but ideologically fragmented, these concepts act as the universal thread hold that allows us to build across borders.


Common Values: The "Social Protocol": Common values are the shared standards that allow strangers to trust one another. In sociology, this is often referred to as the Social Contract.


The Baseline: Across nearly every culture, values like Reciprocity (The Golden Rule), Justice, and Honesty appear as constants.


The Shift: We are moving from inherited values (what your tribe told you) to negotiated values (what we agree upon to survive as a species) to common value (what we appreciate together to harmonize global society)


The Challenge: Common values are often hidden under "surface differences." The wisdom lies in identifying the Shared Intent behind conflicting methods.


Universal Love (Agape): The Operating System: Universal love, or Agape, is distinct from romantic or familial love. It is a deliberate orientation toward the well-being of others, regardless of whether you know them or like them.


Love as Logic: In a complex system, universal love is the ultimate "low-friction" strategy. When you act out of universal love, you reduce the need for controls, contracts, and defensive posturing.


The Expanding Circle: Humanity began by caring only for the "self," then the "team," then the "community," then the "nation." The current strategic frontier is expanding that circle to include all of humanity and the ecosystem.


Humanity: The Shared Vulnerability: "Humanity" is both our species and our capacity for Humaneness. as AI emerges to take care of the "intellectual" tasks, our humanity is defined increasingly by our creativity and empathy.


The Interdisciplinary Synthesis: How do these three forces work together to influence a complex world? Humanity provides the Context: It reminds us that we are all flawed, vulnerable, and interconnected biological beings. Common Values provide the Framework: They give us the "rules of the road" so we can interact without chaos.


Universal Love provides the energy; it is the fuel that makes us want to uphold values and protect humanity, even when it’s a thorny journey. We are no longer just individuals inhabiting a planet; we are a single 'humanity' inhabiting a dynamic system. Common values aren't just moral choices—they are survival requirements.



Influence

Making influence on transformative changes at the global stage cannot be accomplished without a vision, updated knowledge, cross-disciplinary understanding.

In a world saturated with algorithmic trends and "vanity" romance, true influence is no longer about how many roses you buy—it is about the wisdom you bring to your connections and human society.

Influence via wisdom means moving from transactional love to transformational love (how can we all grow? In fact, universal love can be conveyed via wisdom based influence. 


The Virtue of Flourishing: Love is like sowing the seeds of benevolence, in order to nurture talent growth. Influence is born when you prioritize the values of humanity over the convenience of the moment. In the digital era, the greatest gift isn't just about data; it’s how to refine information and bring value via it. In an age of hyperconnectivity, the wisdom of being "fully there" is the ultimate power move for advancing humanity. 


-Mirroring: Instead of asking "What can you do for me?", a wise leader or partner asks, "What do you aspire to become, and how can I hold the mirror for you?"


-Growth-Centricity: Influence is when your presence makes someone else feel more capable, not more dependent.


-Practicing "Soft Power" Today: Wisdom allows you to influence your environment without force.

Here is how to apply it:

-The Gift of Feedback: As a feedback giver, you should take the responsibility of the words you say, or how to say it to make a positive influence.

-Radical Humility: Humility is not about being unsure or afraid to try new ways to do things. Rather, it speaks to a person’s openness to feedback, learning agility and continuous improvement.

-Widening the Circle: We recognize that love isn't just romantic. Influence your audiences by extending "Agape" (universal love) to organizations and societies.

Making influence on transformative changes at the global stage cannot be accomplished without a vision, updated knowledge, cross-disciplinary understanding. Contemporary professionals with persuasive influence present the strong "intellectual persuasiveness" skills and make influence consistently. Influence via deep observation, persuasive communication, constant knowledge-sharing.  


Universal Love

 Universal love, simple and strong. The value we carry, the future to which we belong to.

Across the sky,
where day meets night,
We trace the threads of-
value of different kinds.
Every change initiative,
every truth we find.
Speak the language,
that unites humankind.

 No borders drawn in the pulse we share,
A profound understanding connects-

 the humanity across the world.


Universal love,

like the sunlight, 

 spill over us,
in the nature's embrace.
From every corner, 

every distant shore,
We are in global societies, 

with different stories to tell. 

.

 In whispered kindness, in open eyes,
In quiet hope beneath the hilltops.
A breeze’s gentle touch,

A stranger’s warm greeting, 

 Remind us we’ve all been through-

the history rivers of 

 human evolution. 


Where upset bends, empathy stands,
We bridge the distance with open minds. 

 When fear divides and shadows fall,
Love can answer inner calls.
A beam of light that multiplies,
Seen in the truth behind all mundane realms.

Universal love,

simple and strong.
The value we carry, 

the future to which we all belong to.


Influence of innovation

 The multiplier effect comes from deliberately composing people, incentives, processes, and portfolios so each mode complements the others rather than dominating.

Organizations strive to take the "best practices" for innovation throughout their organization, they also need to explore the next practices for riding change curves The practices that are "best" today are almost always not "best" in the future since practices, as well as technologies and markets, are constantly morphing under pressure from the waves of creative destruction that keep the business in innovation mode. So it’s always important to discover patterns and behavior mode to innovate the innovation practices. 

There are three behavioral modes that appear in innovation teams and leaders:

-Obsessive — intense focus on a goal, significant detail, or vision; long attention span; relentless refinement.

-Compulsive — ritualized habits, process-driven repetition, and checklist discipline that ensure work gets done predictably.

-Responsive — adaptive, customer‑ or signal-driven adjustments; fast feedback and agility.

Strengths & contributions to innovation: All three can help or hurt innovation depending on how they’re balanced. 

Obsessive: Deep domain mastery, vision persistence, ability to carry projects through long uncertainty, exceptional craft and product-market fit work. Such as: Breakthrough R&D, complex product/technical challenges, founder-led vision work.

Compulsive: Operational rigor, reproducibility, high-quality execution, risk control, and scaling discipline. Such as: Scaling pilots, regulatory compliance, reliable delivery, onboarding repeatable processes.

Responsive: Speed of learning, customer alignment, ability to pivot, short cycle experimentation. Such as Early validation, market-fit discovery, iterative product development, rapid adaptation to external shocks.

Failure modes & risks

-Obsessive Risk: Tunnel vision; ignoring market signals; over-optimizing for an internally coherent vision that customers don’t want; changes fatigue, burnout.

-Compulsive Risk: Bureaucracy and slow decision-making; stifling creativity; ritual over outcome; checklist-driven “box-ticking.”

Responsive Risk: Shallow solutions, lack of coherence, constant pivoting without scaling, chasing fad signals; lack of long-term betting.

How they interact (compositional dynamics)

Obsessive + Responsive = focused exploration: Obsession supplies sustained vision; responsiveness injects reality checks. This combo is powerful when visionaries accept iterative user feedback.

Obsessive + Compulsive = disciplined craftsmanship: Rigor converts deep insight into high-quality, reliable products—but tolerates less experimentation.

Compulsive + Responsive = scalable discovery: Processes and practices support rapid experiments repeatedly and safely; good for organizations that need many validated small bets.

All three balanced = creative durability: Vision + discipline + feedback enables big bets that can be iterated and scaled responsibly.

Organizational patterns to support each mode

-For Obsessive talent: Give autonomy, long time horizons, protected “innovation time” (20% time, research labs), and tolerance for failure. Provide deep mentorship, funding runway, and quiet focus environments.

-For Compulsive roles: Provide playbooks,  checklists, compliance tooling, and clear escalation rules. Reward process improvements and operational excellence.

-For Responsive teams: Provide fast feedback infrastructure (instrumentation, user research), micro-grants for experiments, and short-cycle review cadences (weekly sprints, demo days).

Practical levers to balance the three modes

-Portfolio design: Allocate resources across horizon bets: 60% core, 30% adjacent, 10% exploratory. Match modes to horizons (compulsive for core, responsive for adjacent, obsessive for exploratory deep tech).

-Dual operating rhythms: Long-cycle cadences for deep work (quarterly/annual roadmaps) and short-cycle cadences for experiments (weekly demos, monthly validation gates).

-Role clarity & teaming: Compose teams deliberately: pair obsessive founders/lead engineers with compulsive program managers and responsive product researchers. Use T-shaped skill maps.

-Guardrails & exit rules: Define clear go/no-go criteria and timeboxes to prevent obsession from becoming sunk-cost bias or responsiveness from becoming perpetual pivoting.

-Demo & artifacts: Pre-mortems (compulsive), demo days (responsive), research sabbaticals (obsessive), public lesson boards (compulsive + responsive).

Incentives with Mix rewards: credit for validated learning (responsive), recognition for craftsmanship and long-term impact (obsessive), and bonuses for operational reliability (compulsive).

Hiring and development signals

-Obsessive indicators: deep portfolio work, sustained side projects, long-term research contributions, high depth of knowledge.

-Compulsive indicators: delivery track record, process design, documentation habits, incident post-mortem quality.

-Responsive indicators: rapid experiment velocity, user research artifacts, A/B testing success, cross-functional facilitation.

Development: rotate people through different modes (stretch assignments) to build balanced capability and empathy.

Simple diagnostics (quick assessment)

-Too obsessive? Signs: long projects with little external validation; frequent excuses for ignoring market feedback.

-Too compulsive? Signs: slow approvals, many checklists but poor outcomes, low experiment rate.

-Too responsive? Signs: high churn of directions, low scaling success, lack of coherent roadmap.

Use simple metrics:

Experiment velocity (responsive)

-Deployment & error rates (compulsive)

-Long-term impact ratio (obsessive — fraction of bets that yield strategic advantage over 2–5 years)

-Minimal playbook for leaders (30/90 day)

0–30 days

-Map team modes: who is obsessive/compulsive/responsive today?

-Identify major friction points ( obsessions blocked by process, experiments starved of rigor).

-Introduce one ritual: weekly demo + 1-page experiment log.

30–90 days

-Rebalance portfolio: ensure resource split across horizons.

-Pilot paired teams: obsessive lead + compulsive program manager + responsive researcher on 1–2 projects.

-Set clear go/no-go gates with metrics and timeboxes.

Cultural norms to cultivate

-Humble conviction: hold strong views but stay ready to update them with evidence.

-Practiced humility: regular pre-mortems and postmortems with psychological safety.

-Documentation culture: make obsession visible (research notes), make compulsion useful (playbooks), make responsiveness traceable (experiment logs).

-Reward cross-mode collaboration and learning swaps.

Obsessive, compulsive, and responsive modes each have essential roles in innovation. The multiplier effect comes from deliberately composing people, incentives, processes, and portfolios so each mode complements the others rather than dominating.


 


Impact of Universal Love

We practice unbound universal love when we act with empathy, compassion and justice; design systems to sustain life across species and generations...

Unbound universal love is an expansive, unconditional orientation of care and regard that extends beyond personal attachments: embracing strangers, other species, systems, and future generations. It’s not sentimentalism. It’s a deliberate ethic that combines empathy. compassion, justice, and responsibility with clear action.

Three dimensions

-Affective: Openness, empathy, compassion that embrace diversity and cultivates care.

-Ethical clarity: Principles and discernment: justice, non‑harm, reciprocity, and respect for autonomy.

-Actionable behavior: Policies, institutions and daily acts that concretely express care at scale.

Why it matters now: Systems crises (climate, inequality, biodiversity loss) demand moral frameworks that scale beyond tribal loyalties. Unbound love reframes policy and design questions: it asks not only “Who benefits?” but “Who is owed care?” across time, species, and geographies. It motivates stewardship, cooperation, and long‑term thinking without requiring everyone to share the same beliefs.

Core principles

-Non-exclusivity — extend concern beyond kin and nation to all sentient beings and ecosystems.

-Reciprocity — give and receive in ways that sustain relationships and avoid unconscious bias .

-Justice-oriented compassion — pair empathy with structural change; feeling should lead to fair redistribution and respect.

-Responsibility to future lives — include unborn generations in moral calculus and decision-making.

-Humility and learning — recognize limits of understanding, center local knowledge, and avoid immorality.

P-ractical benevolence — convert feeling into measurable acts that improve wellbeing and resilience.

Practices to cultivate it personally

-Regular contemplative practice: loving-kindness (metta) meditations or secular equivalents that systematically extend care from self to close others, strangers, difficult people, animals, and the planet.

-Active listening & perspective-taking: seek stories that humanize distant others; read across cultures.

-Compassionate action habit: commit to one concrete monthly action (volunteer, climate‑positive purchase, vote, support local commons).

-Slow generosity: practice giving that respects agency (time, mentorship, shared resources) rather than performative charity.

-Stewardship routines: care for a plot of land, a tree, or a community resource to build durable attachment.

Organizational and civic translation

Design policies that embed care:

-Universal basic services: guarantee healthcare, education, and clean water as expressions of social love.

-Rights of nature and guardianship laws: legally recognize ecosystems’ interests and appoint stewards.

-Intergenerational institutions: create trusts, future councils, or climate legacy funds with fiduciary duty to future lives.

Governance practices:

-Inclusive deliberation: grant deliberative seats to underrepresented groups, youth, and Indigenous custodians.

-Repair-first adjudication: emphasize restoration and reconciliation in dispute resolution.

-Measure wellbeing, not just GDP: use indices that include health, social cohesion, and ecological integrity.

Economics and finance: Redirect capital toward regenerative enterprises, social infrastructure, and public goods. Implement progressive taxation and reparative finance to correct historic harms and redistribute capacity to care.

Design & technology: Build tech that preserves dignity: privacy-by-design, consent flows, and transparency. Prioritize accessible, low-energy, long‑lived systems over planned obsolescence.

Institutional infrastructures

-Care budgets: municipal line-items for caregiving, mutual aid, and commons maintenance.

-Education: curricula that combine empathy training, systems thinking, and stewardship practicums.

-Time for care: labor policy that values caregiving (paid parental leave, care credits for pension).

Ethical tensions and cautions

-Avoid unfairness: unconditional care must respect agency; help should not disempower recipients.

-Scope creep and moral fatigue: infinite caring risks burnout—embed shared responsibility and institutional supports.

-Cultural specificity: expressions of love differ; translate principles through local practices rather than imposing forms.

-Trade-offs: caring at scale may require hard choices (land use for food vs. conservation); use deliberative processes and evidence to weigh options.

Concrete starter actions (individuals, orgs, governments)

-Individual: adopt a monthly "circle of care" — identify one person, one community initiative, one ecosystem, and one policy to support.

-Team/Org: run a “care audit” — map who the org’s decisions help or harm, then create one policy change.

-City/Government: establish a Future Generations Office with legal power to review major projects for intergenerational impacts.

-Philanthropy/Investors: require social & ecological return metrics; prioritize long‑term stewardship projects and community-led initiatives.

Measuring impact

Use blended indicators:

-Social: care economy size, caregiving hours paid/unpaid, social cohesion indexes.

-Ecological: ecosystem health metrics, biodiversity trends, carbon sequestration.

-Institutional: participatory seats filled, reparations or restoration funds disbursed.

-Temporal: presence and effectiveness of intergenerational governance instruments.

We practice unbound universal love when we act with empathy, compassion and justice; design systems to sustain life across species and generations; listen to those most affected; and build institutions that translate care into durable change.