
‘People want to be hopeful. People want to have agency.’
Reframe Your Inbox
Trajectories from Early 2000s to Today
Alison traces the split between ethics/compliance and sustainability functions and their parallel reversals.
Alison Taylor is a Clinical Associate Professor at the NYU Stern School of Business and former Executive Director of Ethical Systems. She is the author of Higher Ground: How Business Can Do the Right Thing in a Turbulent World, which the Financial Times named one of the best business books of 2024.
Over the past few years, Alison has cultivated a remarkably engaged and refreshingly human community of interesting people sharing interesting thoughts on LinkedIn. Fortunately for me, since I have not been on LinkedIn in a long time, Alison is now bringing this community to an email inbox near you with the launch of her Substack, Higher Ground:
https://findhigherground.substack.com/
I always learn a lot from Alison. She is one of those people whose perspective, no matter the topic or issue, is thoughtful, insightful, and routinely prescient. (This is why I have asked her, on numerous occasions, basically to predict the future.)
In this conversation, we cover a lot of ground, including:
* the state of corporate responsibility and sustainability;
* the impact (so far) of AI on the creative and consulting industries;
* the possibility that Gen Z will resist the phoniness and fakery that defines the digital age;
* the challenge of strengthening one’s attention muscles in said digital age;
* the trials and tribulations of building and sustaining a sense of community on platforms like LinkedIn and Substack;
* the uncomfortable overlap between elite corporate world-savers and the Democratic Party;
* the head-scratching shortage of companies willing to, as Alison puts it, “center human dignity and respect and treat people properly”; and,
* the hope-restoring power of connecting with people in person.
We even discuss the ethical leadership of—I can’t believe I’m writing this—JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon.
Speaking with Alison lifted my spirits at a moment when I needed it. I’m grateful for her willingness to surmount her own time constraints to record this conversation. It was delightful.
*****
Some interesting books and articles referenced:
Our prior Sunday Conversation:
https://adaml.substack.com/p/sunday-conversation-alison-taylor
My interview with Musa al-Gharbi, author of the phenomenal 2024 book, We Have Never Been Woke: The Cultural Contradictions of a New Elite, for The Ink:
https://the.ink/p/how-wokeness-enables-inequality
Alex McCann’s viral essay, “The death of the corporate job”:
https://thestillwandering.substack.com/p/the-death-of-the-corporate-job
The essay I published in January, which introduces some of the themes that Alison and I explore at the end of this conversation:
https://adaml.substack.com/p/on-choosing-patriotism-even-today
This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit adaml.substack.com


