A Google director reveals one must-have trait for graduates
Shuvo Saha, director of Google's Digital Academy, says 'cultural intelligence' is the key skill graduates must pick up while at university.
榴莲视频>- Careers
Carly Minsky
Share
The director of Google鈥檚 Digital Academy has revealed a new talent test for the next generation of leaders, writing in the World University Rankings 2015-16 supplement released on 30 September.
Shuvo Saha, who recruits and works with ambitious graduates from all over the world, refers to this new type of talent as 鈥渃ultural intelligence鈥 or 鈥淐Q鈥.
The most successful graduates already display the key skills that make up cultural intelligence, but Mr Saha believes that employers should actively recruit and nurture students with these qualities.
鈥淐Q is about having a thirst to learn from people who are not like you,鈥 he wrote.
鈥淥f course it is about learning from different cultures in different countries, but equally, it could be about different cultures in different companies and sectors, even departments in the same company.鈥
Through his work running Google鈥檚 Squared programme for rising talents in the marketing industry, Mr Saha has identified the key traits that the best graduates share.
Self-awareness is of fundamental importance, since successful students 鈥渓earn consciously about how they lead 鈥 and how they don鈥檛鈥. They continuously reflect on their own development and actively seek feedback.
Just as important is openness to collaboration and learning from others. Mr Saha notices that the talented graduates are all 鈥渃onnectors鈥 who build relationships with people who have had different experiences, learning from them and offering their own perspective too.
Another strand of cultural intelligence is the ability to embrace and thrive off uncertainty.
According to both Mr Saha and dean of Harvard College Rakesh Khurana, those graduates who are motivated by 鈥渙ur brave new world and its contradictions鈥 and manage to find direction in ambiguity are exactly those who will come out on top.
To develop these skills, it is important to take up leadership roles outside an academic setting.
Connections, collaborations and flexibility are fostered when a diverse group of students work together and learn from each other.
These traits, perhaps more than any specific degree, will pave the way for student leaders to push boundaries in their future careers.