The Click Code

is about realizing that the

magic of a team that clicks

is not really magic at all.

But a code that is teachable,

learnable, and repeatable.

It’s not the Magic,

it’s the Code.

 
This book will forever change the way you view collaboration and teamwork. This is by far one of the most important books I’ve read this year...
— Goodreads Review
 
A readable, well-researched work on the factors that make teams succeed.
— Kirkus Reviews

Learn the code

Why do some teams click while others don’t?

Because great teams learn the code of great teamwork. And just like DNA provides the code to who we are the Click Code provides the blueprint to create exceptional teamwork.

However, after reading the Click Code you will realize that great teamwork is not the result of magic but a code that is learnable, repeatable, and applicable.

"Bruce Stewart has masterfully provided a clear, well structured book on how to create teams that are smart, effective and embrace the fullness of diversity and inclusion. The Click Code: Why Some Teams Click and Others Don't" builds upon itself laying out the type of people and processes that make a team work to its peak performance. He is a world renowned expert and practitioner of diversity and inclusion having worked with many governments and organizations to improve their performance.

Laura Liswood, author of "The Loudest Duck, Moving Beyond Diversity While Embracing Differences to Achieve Success at Work",  Wiley & Sons

 
If there’s one thing we understand about ourselves, it’s that humans are social creatures. We need to connect to other people. Teamwork is in our DNA.

— The Click Code
 

Addiction and the Mystery of Rat Park

If you were an isolated rat in a cage—instead of a rat who got to socialize with other rats—would you be more likely to become addicted to morphine? Read why the Rat Park experiment provides the secret to teamwork.

Removing the myth of independent success whether as an individual or team. To replace it with the notion that we are embedded in interdependent networks and should not exist in silos.
— The Click Code

The science behind the click code…

Learn the fascinating science and research behind The Click Code. Such as social capital, small world networks, inclusive intelligence, the plus/minus metric, the rat park experiment, and more…

This book will forever change the way you view collaboration and teamwork. This is by far one of the most important books I’ve read this year...This book effectively, extensively, and efficiently gives the formulaic secret to what makes a successful team.
— Goodreads review

In this episode

The reasons segregation persists

The brain science of bias

The origins of systemic racism

The importance of racial reconciliation

Overcoming structural racism

Rosa Parks Was Badass
She was not a lone actor.
She was not a physically tired, old black seamstress who would not give up her bus seat to a white man. Rosa Parks was 42 years old and a pillar of Montgomery, Alabama society at the time of her arrest in 1955. When she broke the bus segregation laws, her contacts and networks spanned the city’s economic and social hierarchies. ..
— The Click Code

Reviews and Summary of the Click Code

"Having led teams into combat and throughout corporate, if there's one thing I've learned is that without solid teamwork, nothing happens. And Dr. Stewart's book breaks down the ever elusive tactics of how to create, structure and lead teams so that they truly click. If you want your teams to click, this is the book to guide your journey."

Kelvin Dixon, Rear Admiral Upper Half, USN Ret. Corporate Risk Manager.