Human Capital Briefs
2016
-
Engaging Your Employees Through The Arts
April 27 | Americans for the Arts | Comments (0)By partnering with arts organizations, companies can provide employees with innovative opportunities for growth and development, which can in turn have positive effects on engagement, morale, retention, and performance.
-
Outsider CEOs Are on the Rise at the World’s Biggest Companies
April 20 | Curtis Nickisch | Comments (0)It was hard to be more of an insider at The Walt Disney Company than COO Thomas Staggs. The 26-year company veteran had been widely seen as the heir apparent to CEO Bob Iger — that is, until Staggs abruptly stepped down this month. News headlines trumpeted “Walt Disney Co Investors on Edge” and “Disney’s Succession Plan in Disarray.”
-
The Countries with the Boldest Business Leaders
April 20 | Jack Zenger, Co-Founder and Chief Executive Officer, Zenger Folkman | Joseph Folkman | Comments (0)Fortune favors the bold, goes the old Roman saying. Our research suggests fortune is not alone in this: so do the Americans and the Chinese. But although some cultures do like boldness in their leaders, and reward it when they see it, this isn’t universally true.
-
The Business Case for Homogeneity and Exclusion
April 19 | Rebekah Steele, Senior Fellow, Human Capital, The Conference Board | Comments (0)D&I professionals do not object to being relevant to the mission of their organizations or to leveraging D&I as an enabler of business strategy. Most agree that all elements of the business, including D&I, must deliver results to help achieve the collective goals of the organization.
-
Don’t Let Your Women’s Network Damage Female Advancement
April 08 | Alison Maitland, Senior Fellow, Human Capital, The Conference Board | Comments (0)Women’s networks – also known as affinity or employee resource groups – are typically viewed by businesses as an essential pillar of their efforts to increase the number of women in leadership roles. Yet, new research shows that networks frequently fail to make headway, leading to frustration and disengagement among female employees.
-
Metrics that Matter: More than Diversity ROI
March 07 | Rebekah Steele, Senior Fellow, Human Capital, The Conference Board | Comments (0)Measuring D&I’s ROI (return on investment) helps leaders demonstrate the impact of their work by comparing the cost of a solution to its monetary payback, and demand for this metric continues to grow. A challenge in our field, though, is the limited investment often devoted to D&I initiatives.
-
FedEx: Including Communities in its Diversity Mission
February 09 | Alex Parkinson, Former Communications Institute Co-Leader, The Conference Board | Comments (0)The way in which companies approach diversity and inclusion and corporate responsibility has come to define the corporate sector in the twenty-first century, as stakeholders demand an increasingly responsible approach to business by the world’s largest companies.
-
New Insights on the Finances of Americans Support Need for Financial Wellness Programs
February 03 | Anna M. Rappaport | Comments (0)The 2015 new study “How Americans Manage Their Finances”1 provides insights into financial management and at all ages. The study provides insights into use of financial products, debt, financial stresses, and planning for the future by age group. This article offers a few highlights from the study and my views about the implications for employers and employee benefits.
-
New Insights into the Finances of Older Americans
January 22 | Anna M. Rappaport | Comments (0)The most recent Society of Actuaries’ post-retirement risk research, released in January 2016, offers insights into financial shocks experienced by older Americans and into how older Americans perceive and manage financial risks. The focus groups were designed to understand how retirees were doing and how much they had been affected by shocks.