Future of Work Briefs
2015
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Presenting A Compelling Diversity Business Case To C-Suite Executives
September 22 | Dr. Shelton Goode, Executive Director, Diversity and Inclusion, Metropolitan Atlanta Rapid Transit Authority | Comments (0)The challenges inherent in presenting a business case for diversity management become further complex when there are more C-Suite executives involved. If you think it is hard to keep the CEO focused, imagine what it’s like to have the CEO and 10 of his or her direct report sitting around the table. There is a strong probability that your presentation will get derailed, probably more than once.
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The Factors That Lead to High CEO Pay
September 18 | Gretchen Gavett , Associate Editor, Harvard Business Review | Comments (0)No matter where you live, the difference between how much CEOs are paid and how much the average worker takes home is, well, big. Probably even bigger than most people think.
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Becoming a Manager in a New Country
September 18 | Andy Molinsky, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Organizational Behavior, Brandeis International Business School | Comments (0)It’s doubly difficult to command authority and lead a team for the first time in a new culture where the nuts and bolts of how to manage are completely different. What can new managers in foreign cultures do to ease what will inevitably be a challenging transition?
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Piecing Together the Tesla Strategy Puzzle
September 17 | Brian Halla, Former Chairman and CEO, National Semiconductor Corporation | Comments (0)A message sent out by the company suddenly made Tesla’s long-term strategy clear to me. And that strategy is so stunning that it may revolutionize ground transportation and, if the company can pull it off, make Tesla one of the most valuable corporations in the world.
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Amazon Is Right That Disagreement Results in Better Decisions
September 11 | Cass R. Sunstein, Robert Walmsley University Professor, Harvard Law School | Comments (0)The lengthy New York Times story, detailing some apparently brutal features of the culture at Amazon, should be taken with many grains of salt. But even if the story is full of inaccuracies, and if we put the company’s alleged harshness to one side, Amazon’s approach offers indispensable guidance for companies both large and small when they are deciding how to make group decisions.
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Jack Welch’s Approach to Breaking Down Silos Still Works Ron Ashkenas
September 10 | Ron Ashkenas, Managing Partner, Schaffer Consulting | Comments (0)Working across organizational boundaries was a new way of thinking 25 years ago — one that was largely championed by Jack Welch. Fast forward to today, and we live in a different world. Our communications technologies have dramatically improved, and we have instantaneous access to massive amounts of information. Welch’s “boundaryless organization” should seemingly be the de facto reality for most companies.
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What Facebook’s Anti-Bias Training Program Gets Right
September 04 | Francesca Gino, Associate Professor, Business Administration, Harvard Business School | Comments (1)No matter how highly you think of your organization, chances are its members—including you—are biased in ways that harm both you and others. The consequences of such insidious biases can be quite costly to an organization, from leading it to hire or promote the wrong candidates to investing in less innovative ideas just because of who proposed them to crossing ethical boundaries.
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How to Make Your Workplace Safe for Transgender Employees
September 04 | Jeffrey W. Hull, Ph.D, Director of Education and Business Development, Institute of Coaching | Comments (0)Recent polls in the U.S. show that over 70% of Americans believe transgender people should be protected from discrimination in the workplace. Perhaps all of this publicity creates an opening—a moment of opportunity—for the “real” work to get done: making the world a safe place for trans people to live, work, and succeed.
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Supporting Your Own: A Look Inside McKesson’s Employee Relief Program
July 13 | Laura Meyer Wellman, President & CEO, E4E Relief | Comments (0)In my most recent post, I described how a growing number of companies are working to support their employees in times of disaster or unexpected hardship. This week, let’s take a deeper dive into McKesson’s employee relief program.
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Why the Gettysburg Address Is Still a Great Case Study in Persuasion
July 10 | Tim David, Author, Magic Words: The Science and Secrets Behind Seven Words That Motivate, Engage, and Influence | Comments (0)It was just a month after the inauguration of President Abraham Lincoln. He had not won a majority vote – far from it. He’d only won about 40% of the popular vote, and some states didn’t even put him on the ballot. He only scraped a victory thanks to a very close four-way race. But despite this unlikely beginning during turbulent times, Lincoln went on to become one of the country’s most revered presidents, and one of its best orators. His best-known speech is, of course, the Gettysburg Address.