Natalia Kadia is a distinguished expert in neuromanagement, certified by the NeuroLeadership Institute in New York. She is a seasoned consultant specializing in organizational development, leadership, and human resources management, and she serves as a board member at the Centre for Social Change and Behavioural Economics.

With over a decade of experience, Natalia has successfully applied behavioural change strategies to enhance performance in both business and public organizations. Her work empowers leaders to unlock their leadership potential through evidence-based Neuromanagement methodologies. In her role as a lecturer at the Lviv Business School of UCU (LVBS), mentor, and certified coach from Erickson University International (ICF), Natalia guides leaders to improve their decision-making and build emotional intelligence using cutting-edge educational tools and coaching practices.

Beyond her consulting and teaching commitments, Natalia is a frequent media expert for the national 1+1 television channel, sharing her insights on leadership and organizational behavior.

We are delighted that Natalia is joining Friisberg in our Kyiv office. Her arrival marks an exciting chapter for our team, as her extensive expertise and innovative approach will further strengthen our consulting services and provide invaluable insights to our clients.

Natalia’s experience in driving behavioural change and developing leadership excellence aligns seamlessly with Friisberg’s commitment to empowering organizations and leaders.

Zoltan Petho, Chair of Friisberg said,

“We are thrilled to welcome Natalia Kadia to Friisberg. Her proven track record in neuromanagement and leadership development makes her an outstanding addition to our Kyiv team. Natalia’s deep understanding of organizational dynamics and her innovative methodologies will undoubtedly inspire growth and success for both our clients and our consultants. We look forward to the positive impact she will bring as we continue to support leaders and organizations in achieving their full potential.”

Friisberg is confident that her contributions will elevate our capabilities and reinforce our presence in the region.

Let’s bring up culture again

Great brands, great experiences, great organizations.

Declining brands, woeful experiences and toxic organizations.

Two sides of a cultural stick perhaps.

In the old days, structure told us how things were supposed to work – the designed organization. Something was also telling us that structure may not work as intended – the lived organization. We’ve moved a long way to appreciate the organization today as a place of living and expression as much as a place of processes, roles or corporate outcomes (if not more). Ultimately, culture plays a big part in corporate success, and failure.

Culture was a really trendy topic some thirty years ago, before we realized some challenges with validation and organization effectiveness. Maybe more cult than culture! There are more opportunities today to evaluate this critical feature of corporate and working life; more tried and tested methods. So, let’s use them.

The challenge with culture is what we are measuring and why. Is there ‘good’ and ‘bad’ culture? How do we decide on factors to assess values, beliefs and assumptions? And assuming we can identify dimensions of meaningful insights, how does it relate to effectiveness, individuals, groups, leaders, stakeholders and customers? Or, to change and adaptation? Good cultural insights need tailoring. But don’t wait for the crisis. Culture creeps silently, for better and for worse, surviving the quarter perhaps, but eventually…

There are so many issues from culture it seems impossible to ignore. Talent management, succession, retention, collaboration, communications, structure, risk, resilience, innovation, strategic planning…and yes, even profit. Leadership matters because of the ability to be attuned to culture, the intangible yet very tangible force behind success as well as ruination. However, culture can now be a little more visible and a little less reliant on someone’s intuition, speculation or the occasional away day. Cultural diagnosis may be somewhat science and somewhat art. But now there’s more science, which can help with the art of leadership!

Virtually all aspects of strategy, organization development and effectiveness take something from cultural insights. We meet leaders every day and see the situations they encounter – organization culture is definitely one of them. At Friisberg & Partners we are very well positioned to support incoming and existing leadership with rigorous methodologies and tools for cultural diagnosis and change.

How can we help you?

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