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Organizations

How companies, institutions, and movements embody the sixteen values.

Filter by value
Growth · SECD
Business

Google

Curiosity as infrastructure

Google organized itself around the premise that information access is the most important problem in the world and that the right people given enough freedom will figure out how to solve it. Its famous 20% time policy, its hiring of PhDs to drive trucks as a test of ambition, and its willingness to launch half-finished products into public beta all reflect a growth-oriented culture that prizes exploration over execution and treats the current state of any product as a working hypothesis.

Growth · SECD
Business

Netflix

Curiosity about what people actually want

Netflix built its advantage through data-informed curiosity: a genuine willingness to investigate what viewers actually watch, when they watch it, and what keeps them watching, and to use those findings to make counter-intuitive decisions. Releasing full seasons at once contradicted every broadcast television intuition about maintaining weekly engagement. Investing in foreign-language content while American studios thought it was unscalable. Canceling shows based on completion rates rather than premiere ratings. The culture document Reed Hastings published is one of the most honest descriptions of a corporate value system ever written.

Growth · SECD
Business

OpenAI

Growth toward something the world is not ready for

OpenAI operates in a distinctive tension: a growth-oriented research organization built on the premise that artificial general intelligence is coming and that it is safer to have safety-focused researchers at the frontier than to cede that position to less safety-conscious actors. The tension between its nonprofit mission and its commercial partnerships is not hypocrisy so much as a genuine strategic dilemma about whether the goal of beneficial AI is better served by leading the field or by not participating in it.

Growth · SECD
Government

DARPA

Creating technologies before there is a use for them

DARPA was created in 1958 in direct response to Sputnik, on the recognition that the United States had been surprised by a technological development it should have anticipated, and that preventing future surprise required funding research at the frontier of what was possible rather than what was needed. The DARPA model - small teams, large bets, tolerance for failure, program managers with unusual authority - is the most effective known institutional structure for producing transformative technological breakthroughs from government funding.

Growth · SECD
Education

MIT

The mind and the hand

MIT was founded on the premise that scientific knowledge and practical application are inseparable, and that the university’s obligation is to develop both simultaneously. The mens et manus (mind and hand) motto expresses a growth-orientation that treats the development of technical capability as the primary educational mission rather than the transmission of existing knowledge. The undergraduate research culture, the lab-based pedagogy, and the institutionalized connection between academic research and commercial application are all expressions of the belief that learning is most valuable when it produces new things.

Growth · SECD
Non-profit

Khan Academy

A free, world-class education for anyone, anywhere

Khan Academy began as Sal Khan tutoring his cousins in mathematics over the phone, posting the explanatory videos to YouTube when he ran out of time for live sessions, and discovering that millions of other students found them useful. The organization grew from this accident into the most significant free educational resource in the world, with 120 million registered learners and content covering mathematics, science, and history in multiple languages. The growth-orientation is literal: Khan Academy exists to expand the educational capacity of the learner through structured, self-paced, mastery-based progression.

Meaning · SECF
Media

TED Conferences

The 18-minute search for significance

TED was built on the premise that ideas can be communicated with the emotional force of performance and that the most important thing a person can do with genuine insight is share it accessibly with a large audience. The 18-minute format, the curation process, and the stage design all serve a single purpose: making meaning transmissible. The expansion from invitation-only conference to global media platform multiplied the ambition while creating the quality control problem that the original format had solved through scarcity.

Meaning · SECF
Media

The New Yorker

Depth as the product

The New Yorker was founded on the conviction that quality writing, developed at the length it requires and given the editorial attention it demands, is commercially viable. Harold Ross's founding vision was a magazine that applied the standards of literary fiction, criticism, and journalism without compromise or format constraint. The fact-checking department is the most rigorous in American journalism. Long-form essays routinely run to lengths no other general-interest publication sustains. The meaning-orientation is expressed in the editorial willingness to let a piece become what it needs to be rather than what fits a word count.

Meaning · SECF
Media

NPR

Radio as a search for meaning

NPR was created to serve an audience that wanted more from broadcasting than entertainment: information contextualized rather than just reported, ideas explored at length, culture presented with genuine enthusiasm for its depth. The founding mandate, public radio as a space for the total environment of ideas, is a meaning-orientation expressed as broadcasting policy. The long-form interview, the documentary feature, the willingness to spend twenty minutes on a single story - all reflect the premise that the search for understanding is worth the time it requires.

Meaning · SECF
Business

Pixar Animation Studios

What if the cartoon was actually about something

Pixar was built on the conviction that animated films could carry genuine emotional and philosophical weight without sacrificing the entertainment value that made animation commercially viable. John Lasseter, Pete Docter, and Andrew Stanton developed a storytelling philosophy that treated children as capable of confronting death, grief, loss, and longing and that treated those themes as the actual source of the film's emotional power rather than a risk to be managed. The internal creative review process, nicknamed the Braintrust, institutionalized the pursuit of meaning over comfort in every production.

Meaning · SECF
Business

Spotify

Music as a search engine for feeling

Spotify was built on the premise that access to all recorded music as a continuous discovery environment is a categorically different product than owning music. Daniel Ek’s insight was that the music listener is not looking for specific songs but for the feeling those songs produce, and that algorithmic curation can map the listener’s emotional state to music they have not yet heard. Discover Weekly, Daily Mix, and the Wrapped annual summary are all expressions of the meaning-orientation: music as an instrument of self-understanding.

Achievement · SEJD
Business

Amazon

Achievement as operational religion

Amazon runs on the achievement axis with a specificity that most companies only claim. Jeff Bezos's shareholder letters established a compounding philosophy: every decision is evaluated against whether it serves the customer ten years from now, all metrics are tracked obsessively, and acceptable failure is the failure to learn from failure. The Leadership Principles are read as scripture and evaluated in performance reviews. Frugality is a named virtue. Day One is a permanent posture. The pressure to achieve is not rhetorical.

Achievement · SEJD
Business

Microsoft

Achievement by ubiquity

Microsoft under Gates pursued dominance as an explicit strategy: win the market, then control the standards, then collect rent from the position. The operating system was a tax on every PC sold. Office was a tax on every knowledge worker. The culture was intensely competitive internally and externally, famously cutthroat in performance reviews, and organized around the premise that intelligence aggressively applied to competitive problems produces winning. Satya Nadella's tenure shifted the primary value from achievement to growth, which is its own story.

Achievement · SEJD
Business

Goldman Sachs

Achievement in its most concentrated form

Goldman Sachs has organized itself around a single value - being the best investment bank, as measured by deal size, client access, and return - with a consistency and intensity that makes it the defining institution of achievement-orientation in finance. The culture of demanding excellence from incoming analysts, of staffing deals with the most accomplished people available, of competing for the most prestigious mandates regardless of their complexity, reflects an achievement axis that has never meaningfully wavered across 150 years.

Achievement · SEJD
Business

JPMorgan Chase

The most complete franchise in finance

JPMorgan Chase under Jamie Dimon built its position through a consistent application of achievement-orientation to the full range of financial services: the ambition to be the best investment bank, the best commercial bank, the best retail bank, and the best wealth manager simultaneously at global scale. The culture is intensely competitive, highly analytical, and organized around the conviction that dominant market position is achievable through superior talent, infrastructure investment, and institutional discipline.

Achievement · SEJD
Business

Olympic Movement

The achievement of nations expressed as individual performance

The modern Olympics were revived by Pierre de Coubertin on the explicit premise that organized athletic competition at the highest level represents a form of achievement with unique cultural and political value. The Games aggregate the most extreme instances of physical and athletic performance from every participating country and present them as a shared standard of human excellence. The four-year cycle, the selection process, and the public character of the competition all serve the purpose of marking achievement with a specificity and visibility that no other institution provides.