All Briefs
2015
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Teach For America: How a Core Purpose Helps to Engage Employees and Extend Impact
February 09 | Alex Parkinson, Former Communications Institute Co-Leader, The Conference Board | Comments (1)Highly engaged organizations emphasize a core purpose that does not entail mere financial or operational objectives. These organizations create a common understanding among employees that they play a role in creating value for the entire community.
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The Container Store’s CEO on Finding and Keeping Front-Line Talent
February 05 | Kip Tindell, Chairman and CEO, The Container Store | Comments (0)We’re always looking for those exceptional new hires who can develop a deep understanding of our products, cultivate strong relationships with customers, inspire their co-workers and, as a result, create significant value for our business and shareholders. But how do you find those standouts?
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Are Most CEOs Too Old to Innovate?
February 05 | Walter Frick, Editor, Harvard Business Review | Comments (0)The youngest executive on HBR’s list of the 100 Best-Performing CEOs is Simon Wolfson of Next, at age 46. According to research on age and innovation, even he may be beyond his creative peak.
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Retirement Planning And Long-Term Care – Can You Influence the Future?
February 05 | Anna M. Rappaport | Comments (0)This blog serves as a follow-up on my recent post: Retirement Planning And Long-Term Care— The Impact on Your Employees and Workplace. This article deals with the challenges to the long-term care system and ideas for the future.
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CEOs Get Paid Too Much, According to Pretty Much Everyone in the World
February 04 | Gretchen Gavett , Associate Editor, Harvard Business Review | Comments (0)Rumblings of discontent about executive wages, the 1%, and wealth gaps know no borders. And neither does fierce debate about income inequality in general. But until now, it’s been relatively unclear how much people think CEOs should really make compared to other workers on a global scale.
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What It Will Take to Change the Culture of Wall Street
February 04 | Steven G. Mandis, Adjunct Professor, Columbia Business School | Comments (0)Financial interdependence is important as a self-regulator … leaders should disproportionately and jointly share in fines, settlements, and other consequences out of their compensation plan or their stock. Meaningful restrictions on leaders’ ability to sell or hedge shares should be imposed.
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How Boards Can Rein in CEO Pay
February 04 | Graham Kenny, Managing Director, Strategic Factors | Comments (0)Boards have unwittingly increased the pressure on themselves to come up with outsized rewards for chief executives. They’re told that CEOs have to be “incentivized” (beyond a base salary) to do the job they’re hired for. It’s quite bizarre.
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Clay Christensen on Peter Drucker
January 28 | Julia Kirby, Editor, Harvard Business Review | Comments (0)On the eve of the 6th Annual Global Drucker Forum in Vienna, where Professor Christensen will provide a keynote address, I asked for a preview of the territory he will cover. The following is a lightly edited transcript of our conversation.
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10 Remarkable People on Having a Career That Matters
January 23 | Harvard Business Review | Comments (0)Every year, HBR interviews 10 people who’ve had fascinating careers. Here, a few highlights from 2014.
2014
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Uber-Style Talent Poaching Happens in All Industries
December 19 | John W. Boudreau, Ph.D., Professor and Research Director, USC Marshall School of Business | Comments (0)How much does it cost you when your employees are chatting with recruiters from other organizations? The dust-up between two popular app-based car services, Uber and Lyft, has produced some very heated competing calculations of the economic damage of aggressive recruitment.