Source: Sebastian Gabsch
Pick a subject, any subject: if Mark Turrell has time, he is happy for his lectures to continue for hours and he is willing to have āa conversation on pretty much any topicā
Mark Turrell, now an associate professor at the Hult International Business School, describes himself as āan extreme problem solverā who ācan pretty much fix anythingā. In 2007, he continues, āI gave myself a purpose that I exist to change the entire world for the better, ideally without anyone knowing itās me, because that makes it harderā.
āI just like fixing really, really hard things. For me thatās intellectually stimulating. I donāt do things for the money, but I do things where the money tends to come anyway, so I donāt have to care about it.ā
His first test came in 2008, when he says opposition leader Arthur Mutambara asked for his help in ensuring the fairness of the Zimbabwean presidential election (which in the end was mainly contested by Robert Mugabe and Morgan Tsvangirai, leader of a separate faction of the opposition, Movement for Democratic Change). There were only five weeks to go and no budget available, while laws against āharming Mugabeā meant that secrecy was essential.
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Turrell therefore proposed what he claims was the worldās first example of crowdsourced election monitoring, where 1,000 people stood at selected polling stations with charged-up mobile phones. They photographed the results briefly posted up on the doors and sent the images through to a website in South Africa so a press release could be sent out to international news agencies.
Turrell points to this as a major factor in Mugabeās being unable to claim that he had won, so that a further run-off was required. This may not have changed the entire world, Turrell admits, but he had done something significant to āchange the fate of a whole countryā.
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Since then, he has been involved in a dizzying range of remarkable projects. He has helped to develop systems for recording local levels of air pollution, so that citizens armed with better data can put greater pressure on their governments to take action. He claims to have provided details of āthe Libyan investment authorityās management accounts, snuck out of a bank in Benghaziā to help the charity Global Witness in its campaign for greater transparency in oil and gas contracts.
He also claims to have used ācitizen-sourced informationā to provide the British, Dutch and French military with intelligence on āwhere tanks and civilians wereā so as to minimise casualties during the 2011 Nato intervention in Libya. And he has acted as a consultant on the Global Teacher Prize, announced by the Varkey Gems Foundation in March, which will award $1 million (Ā£638,000) to someone voted the worldās best schoolteacher.
āI saw it was a tremendous opportunity for good,ā he explains. āWe can have more credibility for the teaching profession and create better role models for teachers and parents. But there are problems. The prize goes to the teacher, so what happens if the worldās best teacher gets a million and stops being a teacher? The prize criteria didnāt originally ask what people would do with the money, whether they would buy a Ferrari or set up a special unit for blind children within their school.
āI desperately wanted to get involved because I saw that the naturally occurring evolution could lead to potential catastrophes: if the first teacher buys a Ferrari and leaves teaching, it basically means that no one can do this again for 10 years [because it would discredit the very idea of a global teaching prize]. But, because I didnāt like the outcome, I could change it.ā
Seeking the truth
All this might make Turrell sound like a somewhat unusual academic. After two masterās degrees, he went on to a PhD on information management at the Cass Business School, while working in parallel at tech company Intel, and so never faced āthe problems students and academics have in eventually getting connections to corporatesā.
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He became a pioneer of using server log data to see what people actually did with their computers, rather than what they said they did in interviews. He says he thereby gained the nickname of āthe Fox Mulder of bootwareā (after the character in The X-Files television series), ābecause I knew the answers were out there and we just had to get more dataā.
He also discovered that āpeople were lying all the time! They would say they loved an IT system and I would be able to prove they had never touched it.ā
He has now developed a broad range of problem-solving, innovation and change-management tools that he has set out in a book (co-written with Menno van Dijk) called Scaling: Small Smart Moves for Outsized Results, as well as discussed in guest lectures, TEDx talks and presentations to the World Economic Forum. At Hult, he uses interactive lectures for his masterās and MBA students that ābring in leading-edge thinking to accelerate their start in the workplaceā.
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āItās exposing them to a new way of thinking,ā he says. āItās not just: hereās the lecture, here are some notes, hereās the exam with a multi-checkpoint box. Itās teaching people how systems thinking works. Itās how you get people immersed in this philosophical change.
āIf Iām free, I donāt stop [the lecture]. I did a session that went on for four hours and Iām quite open to having a conversation on pretty much any topic. Iāve had some bizarre ones come up. There might not even be a place in the academic agenda where students can pose questions of work-life balance, but Iām quite happy to answer the questions. Iāve even had relationship questions in the middle of a lectureā¦ā
On the familiar problem of how academics can make what students learn in business schools more relevant to the real world, Turrell also has his own distinctive take. āIf I decided to be evil,ā he reflects, āIād be very good at it, because I understand how all the tactics work. Yet many of the people who try to do good in the world donāt believe that evil exists, that resistance exists, and so donāt plan for it.ā
In order to teach his students some realism about the world, Turrell has therefore introduced an exercise called Play Bad Guy, where they āwork through the likely reactionsā of interested parties to developments that affect them. One recent discussion, for example, explored āhow the tobacco industry could thwart the plain-packaging initiative [for tobacco products] in Australiaā.
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