The year was 1939 and Bletchley Park, Buckinghamshire was a foundational bunker for wartime efforts against the Nazis. Having just begun, the War would ravage Europe for the next 6 years and citizens didn’t know how this conflict would ever be resolved.
Amid uncertainty and confusion, a small group of mathematicians were working to decipher the code the German military would use to plan operations, hit targets, and develop strategic goals for the war.
Among these, was Alan Turing.
Alan Turing and the other mathematicians worked tirelessly to decode the code being used by Germans through their Enigma machine—a machine with multiple iterations and changes throughout the years.
Eventually, they did it! They were able to decipher the code and create a machine that would decode all incoming messages from German Nazis and that key operation gave the Allied Powers a fighting chance and eventually the upper hand in the war.
On average, more than 39,000 messages per month were eventually decoded thanks to their efforts.
Fast forward to 2024.
The gig economy and the evolution of technology and social media has promised to connect us more than ever yet it feels like we are in a war. A war with each other that seems will never subside.
What war?
A war of communication.
Our coworkers, families, and friends are all talking and transmitting data. We just can’t understand them.
What’s worse is that we don’t feel they understand us!
But what if we had a code? It's a code to understand it all. A code like the one they use to fight the war. A code that could break the cipher.
Enter The Communication Code.
In this new economy, our ability to communicate in our organizations is more valuable than ever. Communicating with our friends keeps our relationships fulfilled. Communicating with loved ones helps us build beautiful lives with those we experience life daily.
Join me for this free Communication Code workshop to learn your default communication code and how to understand those around you!
It’s time we started to decode the cipher.
Don’t lose the war.