Our vision is our fundamental purpose—our eternal North star that we aim for but can never reach. Our mission, by contrast, is our concrete goal over the next several years. How we make progress towards both is set by our values—our core beliefs which underpin everything we do.
Vision
To use mathematics to discover the laws of the universe and our place within it.
Mission
By the end of this decade, to discover more per person than any other research centre, and to reform the perception of theory through design and communication.
Values
Focus on discovery
Our scientists devote themselves full-time to doing fundamental research in the mathematical sciences. We do not teach or award degrees.
Measure what matters
We measure the Institute’s discoveries, normalised by the number of authors we employ on each, so we have a reliable indicator of success.
Track soft power
We track our soft power—in, for instance, our voice, relationships and organisational intelligence—and reward those who contribute to it.
Hire on merit
We hire our scientists and staff on the basis of their talents and the values that they share with us, without regard to anything else.
Elevate staff
We hire staff who are as exceptional as our scientists. Our staff and scientists are not segregated, but sit and work closely together.
Hire team players
We hire people who are curious about the work of their colleagues, and want to advance the London Institute as much as their own careers.
Be present
We all show up for work during business hours and keep our doors open, so that we can adapt quickly and be open to unplanned interactions.
Scout for talent
We continually track and invest in our convening power: quickly identifying talented scientists and staff and convincing them to join us.
Seek truth in beauty
We believe the environment in which we work influences the ambition of our discoveries, so we make our offices and meeting rooms beautiful.
Cut bureaucracy
Adding complexity to organisations is easier than removing it, so we are vigilant in cutting processes that are ugly, tedious or unnecessary.
Move fast
We believe that fundamental research is urgent, so we move fast—faster than other research organisations, funding agencies and journals.
Form rituals
Great organisations have strong cultures. We invent traditions and maintain rituals, which bring about joy, trust and shared adventure.
Embrace design
We design different aspects of our organisation out of reusable and interoperable modules that can be quickly recombined for new purposes.
Tell stories
Writing is harder than maths, so we train all our members to write clearly, plainly and concisely, and how to build and resolve tension.
Tell our story
Because we trade in ideas, our comprehensive and up-to-date website plays an outsized role in how others know us—and how we know ourselves.
Build scripts
We create minimal evolvable scripts—notes encapsulating how different aspects of our organisation operate—and make them available to others.
Fund to win
Low support costs are indicative of ineffectual organisations, not efficient ones. We invest in the help and training our scientists need.
Speak loudly
Public passion for physics, maths and AI is at an all-time high, so we write in the press about our discoveries and how to speed up research.
Build relationships
Our talks and other events are a means to building lasting relationships, so we socialise after each, which is where serendipity happens.