In honour of World Book Month, we reached out to Kevin Kapapiro from our team to talk to us about our Book Club. Kevin heads up the book club by hosting biweekly meets on Zoom and shortlisting a selection of books each month. He believes there’s a book out there for everyone, even if you don’t like reading.
We love how reading as a collective builds community. And since we’re in the business of helping brands activate their own communities through our ambassador marketing software, we caught up with Kevin to chat to him about how our book club helps to build and engage our own internal community.
I’ve worked as a Sales Development Representative for the last 8 months. My role includes helping brands leverage their loyal customers, fans and supporters to create an ambassador community that drives sales, user-generated content, social media buzz, and brand awareness.
The Book Club is a community we've built that includes employees who are interested in reading and exchanging ideas around what we've read. We vote every month for which book we want to read, then we meet twice a month to share different ideas and perspectives around what we've read.
We've recently just finished reading The Checklist Manifesto by Atul Gawande. The book was initially recommended by Sir Clive Woodward and it was fantastic! From the book, I have learnt that even the simplest of things are worth putting on a checklist, just to make sure you don't make mistakes — especially when working on large-scale projects with multiple people.
The Book Club helps build its own internal community by bringing together our employees to talk about something different to work. With all of us working from home, it's really nice to belong to a community and chat on Zoom as we can't meet each other at the office.
The shared reading experience allows us all to learn more about each other and our different perspectives — especially explaining how some of our life experiences may have led to a particular perspective. The book club isn't just about talking about the text, it's also about talking about life outside the book. While reading as a collective, we cheer each other on to get to the end of the book, as well as get the most out of the book.
The Miracle Morning by Hal Elrod.
My advice is that there's a book out there for everyone, so if you feel like you don't like reading books, then it just means you haven't yet found the book that's right for you. But it's out there!