Human Capital Briefs
2013
-
Should CEOs Get Involved in Politics?
January 18 | Sarah Green Carmichael, Opinion Columnist and Editor, Bloomberg | Comments (0)Business leaders have no choice but to get involved in politics in a world where political gridlock is as real a threat to one's business as your competitor's new killer product or a hurricane bearing down on your warehouse. To do otherwise is not just short-sighted, it's an abdication of responsibility.
-
Petraeus and the Rise of Narcissistic Leaders
January 09 | Jeffrey Pfeffer, Thomas D. Dee II Professor of Organizational Behavior, Stanford University | Comments (0)There is a simple power story often told about such behavior: research shows that people with more power tend to pay less attention to others. They are more action-oriented, pursue their own goals, and exhibit disinhibited behavior in part because they believe that rules don't apply to them; they are special and invulnerable.
-
Morning Advantage: When Google Employees Die
January 09 | Dana Rousmaniere, Managing Editor, HBR's Insight Centers | Comments (0)Google’s reputation for being a great place to work precedes itself. But who knew that it’s also a great place to die? Meghan Casserly at Forbes recently reported on a little-known Google employee benefit: If a U.S. Google employee passes away, the surviving spouse or domestic partner will receive a check for 50% of their salary every year for ten years.
-
Sinofsky Led at Microsoft, but That Doesn't Make Him a Leader
January 07 | Eric McNulty, Former Managing Director of Conferences for Harvard Business School Publishing., Harvard Business School Publishing | Comments (0)"My boss has started picking at me over tiny, stupid things," she said. "He told me at my review that he was going to send me to our France office to help them build a messaging strategy, but when I asked him about it recently he said, 'That's something we have to look at down the road,' and walked away. It's like I've gone from being his favorite employee to dog meat."