A Choice Shaped by Shared Values
- News Article
- April 10, 2026
For many organisations, values are easy to state but harder to see in everyday practice. More often, they are revealed in the smaller decisions, in what is prioritised, what is recognised, and where support is intentionally directed.
At Eagles Flight, we believe culture is shaped not only by what organisations say, but by what they choose to do consistently. A recent event gave us an opportunity to reflect this in a small but meaningful way, through pieces featured from The Art Faculty, a social enterprise by Autism Resource Centre (Singapore).
This choice resonated with values we care deeply about: recognising strengths, creating opportunity, and valuing people for their contribution. These are principles that also sit close to the work we do with organisations every day, helping leaders and teams see potential more clearly, create the right conditions for people to contribute, and build cultures where strengths can be applied with purpose.
The Art Faculty’s work stood out to us because it reflects those ideas in a visible and practical way. Through products featuring original artwork by artists on the autism spectrum, it creates recognition for individual talent while also supporting meaningful opportunities for contribution and independence.
As Sandra Lee, Head of Operations at Eagles Flight Asia, shared:
“We believe the best gifts tell a story. By choosing items from The Art Faculty, we’re not just showing appreciation to our clients, but also supporting a meaningful cause and celebrating the creativity of artists on the autism spectrum. It reflects who we are at Eagles Flight: thoughtful, purposeful, and people-focused.”





For us, featuring these gifts was a small but intentional decision. It was one way of putting values into action,not as a statement, but as a choice.
It also reinforces something we often see in organisations: culture is not shaped by words alone. It is shaped by what people notice, what they reward, and the decisions they make over time.
Often, it is the smaller choices that reflect values most clearly.