Monday, December 24, 2012

3 Ways To Reduce Bad Hires - Recruiter.com

Note From Jim:


3 Ways To Reduce Bad Hires

As you'll note in the attached article, prioritizing "Quality of Hire" over "Speed Of Hire" will likley become the more compelling metric of staffing success. See Below.

Excerpts:

70 percent of employers have reported that they have been affected by a bad hire this year. And what constituted a bad hire?
1.Employee didn’t produce the proper quality of work – 67 percent

2.Employee didn’t work well with other employees – 60 percent

3.Employee had a negative attitude – 59 percent

4.Employee had immediate attendance problems – 54 percent

5.Customers complained about the employee – 44 percent

6.Employee didn’t meet deadlines – 44 percent
... set out several changes to a hiring process that can raise quality and minimize bad hires, while at the same time being mindful, but not held hostage to the need for speed.

1. Prioritize quality over speed

2. Focus on employee referral

3. Focus on the softer competencies during selection
Access Article: http://www.recruiter.com/i/3-ways-to-reduce-bad-hires/?utm_source=twitterfeed&utm_medium=linkedin



Wednesday, December 19, 2012

Learning to Prevail: When Dreams Disappoint and Hopes Fail - Leadership Wired

Note From Jim:

Do you embrace failure in a heatlhy way?  Follow John Maxwell's sage advice.  Access his artcile to find out.  Follow the teaser below:

By The John Maxwell Company.

Excerpts:
How should a leader respond when her dream dies? How does a leader recover when his hopes are dashed?

1) A failed dream doesn’t make you a failure.

... possess an internal self-image that’s unaffected by outcomes. People with an unhealthy view of failure personalize it, seeing the failure as a reflection of their inadequacy. Conversely, those with a healthy outlook on life externalize failure. They understand its inevitability, and they look for the lessons it brings. One mindset wallows in the emotions of failure; the other works through them in anticipation of future triumphs.

2) Even when dreams die, our purpose remains.

... you will never exhaust your capacity to grow toward your potential, nor will you run out of opportunities to help others. Your dreams may not come true, but the purpose for which you were created always endures.

3) By reflecting on our purpose, we can birth new dreams.

Peering into our life’s purpose inspires us to revise our dreams or to give birth to new ones... The specific dream I choose to follow may not work out, but I still have a purpose, and I can keep exploring new avenues to realize it.

Access Article & Blog: http://www.johnmaxwell.com/blog/learning-to-prevail-when-dreams-disappoint-and-hopes-fail

"This article is used by permission from Leadership Wired, John Maxwell's premiere leadership newsletter, available for free subscription at www.johnmaxwell.com/newsletters."

 











Tuesday, December 18, 2012

The Power of Concentration - NYTimes - MARIA KONNIKOVA

Note From Jim:  

Learn from Columbia Doctoral student Maria Konnikova,  how "Mindfulness" can enhance personal and professional emotional states as well as human performance - now and in your senior years.

Best Always - Jim

****

Excerpts:
Published: December 15, 2012

... the very thing that cognitive psychologists mean when they say mindfulness.

... when it comes to experimental psychology, mindfulness is less about spirituality and more about concentration: the ability to quiet your mind, focus your attention on the present, and dismiss any distractions that come your way. The formulation dates from the work of the psychologist Ellen Langer, who demonstrated in the 1970s that mindful thought could lead to improvements on measures of cognitive function and even vital functions in older adults.

Even in small doses, mindfulness can effect impressive changes in how we feel and think — and it does so at a basic neural level.

... meditation-like thought could shift frontal brain activity toward a pattern that is associated with what cognitive scientists call positive, approach-oriented emotional states — states that make us more likely to engage the world rather than to withdraw from it.

As little as five minutes a day of intense Holmes-like inactivity, and a happier outlook is yours for the taking

mindfulness goes beyond improving emotion regulation. An exercise in mindfulness can also help with that plague of modern existence: multitasking.

The only participants to show improvement were those who had received the mindfulness training. Not only did they report fewer negative emotions at the end of the assignment, but their ability to concentrate improved significantly. They could stay on task longer and they switched between tasks less frequently. While the overall time they devoted to the assignment didn’t differ much from that of other groups, they spent it more efficiently

The concentration benefits of mindfulness training aren’t just behavioral; they’re physical. In recent years, mindfulness has been shown to improve connectivity inside our brain’s attentional networks, as well as between attentional and medial frontal regions — changes that save us from distraction. Mindfulness, in other words, helps our attention networks communicate better and with fewer interruptions than they otherwise would.

... how well we can monitor our own feelings and thoughts and that is considered a key waypoint between our two major attention networks, the default and the executive.

...the core of mindfulness is the ability to pay attention.

That’s the thing about mindfulness. It seems to slow you down, but it actually gives you the resources you need to speed up your thinking.

... new evidence suggests that not only can we learn into old age, but the structure of our brains can continue to change and develop. In 2006, a team of psychologists demonstrated that the neural activation patterns of older adults (specifically, activation in the prefrontal cortex), began to resemble those of much younger subjects after just five one-hour training sessions on a task of attentional control. Their brains became more efficient at coordinating multiple tasks — and the benefit transferred to untrained activities, suggesting that it was symptomatic of general improvement.

Similar changes have been observed in the default network (the brain’s resting-state activity).

The precise areas that show increased connectivity with mindfulness are also known to be pathophysiological sites of Alzheimer’s disease.

The implications are tantalizing. Mindfulness may have a prophylactic effect: it can strengthen the areas that are most susceptible to cognitive decline

Maria Konnikova is the author of “Mastermind: How to Think Like Sherlock Holmes” and a doctoral candidate in psychology at Columbia.

Access Article: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/12/16/opinion/sunday/the-power-of-concentration.html?smid=pl-share

Friday, December 14, 2012

Modest pay increases the new normal - Articles - Employee Benefit News

Note from Jim: 

And the survey says: 3%.  Folks set your expectations for 2013 around 3%.  See the referenced article from Employee Benefit News.  This article references the results of a recent Buck Consulting compensation planning survey.

Modest pay increases the new normal - Articles - Employee Benefit News

Best Always - Jim

Tuesday, December 11, 2012

50 Ways to Foster a Sustainable Culture of Innovation - Idea Champions - Mitch Ditkoff


Note From Jim:

Are you innovative? Do you foster innovation? The 50 suggestions made by the very impressive Mitch Ditkoff are sure to assist your mastery. 

Of these 50, my top 10 favorites:

2. Wherever you can, whenever you can, always drive fear out of the workplace. Fear is "Public Enemy #1" of an innovative culture.

5. Make new mistakes.

6. As far as the future is concerned, don't speculate on what might happen, but imagine what you can make happen.

14. Embrace and celebrate failure. 50 to 70 per cent of all new product innovations fail at even the most successful companies. The main difference between companies who succeed at innovation and those who don't isn't their rate of success -- it's the fact that successful companies have a LOT of ideas, pilots, and product innovations in the pipeline.

23. Make sure people are working on the right issues. Identify specific business challenges to focus on. Be able to frame these issues as questions that start with the words, "How can we?"

27. Make customers your innovation partners, while realizing that customers are often limited to incremental innovations, not breakthrough ones.

32. Avoid analysis paralysis. Chaotic action is preferable to orderly inaction

33. Before reaching closure on any course of action, seek alternatives. Make it a discipline to seek the idea after the "best" idea emerges.

35. A great source of new ideas are people that are new to the company. Get new hires together and tap their brainpower and imagination.

42. Give your people specific, compelling, and measurable innovation goals.

Best everyway & always - Jim

*****
Access Mitch's Article: http://www.ideachampions.com/weblogs/archives/2012/12/50_ways_to_fost_1.shtml

Mitch Ditkoff is the co-founder and President of Idea Champions, a highly acclaimed management consulting and training company, headquartered in Woodstock, NY. He specializes in helping forward thinking organizations go beyond business as usual, originate breakthrough products and services, and establish dynamic, sustainable cultures of innovation.

Educated at Lafayette College and Brown University, Mitch has worked with a wide variety of Fortune 500 and mid-sized companies who have realized the need to do something different in order to succeed in today's rapidly changing marketplace. These clients include: GE, Merck, AT&T, Allianz, Lucent Technologies, NBC Universal, Goodyear, A&E Television Networks, General Mills, MTV Networks, PricewaterhouseCoopers, and a host of others.



Saturday, December 8, 2012

Try Meditation to Strengthen Your Resilience - Peter Bregman - HBR

Note from Jim: Great and quick lessons below from Peter Bregman.

Try It. Just 10 minutes a day. Separate your self from the messages that your mind produces.


Find your self. Watch / observe your breadth. Your breathing happens unconsciously. So does your thinking.

Observe what you mind is doing… what is it that your mind is thinking and saying.  Don't engage with the thoughts or the emotions they create. Just be a witness. The witness is your self, not your mind, or the thinking, the messages, and the images that your mind produces.


Best Always - Jim
-------------------
Try Meditation to Strengthen Your Resilience
by Peter Bregman - Harvard Business Review

http://blogs.hbr.org/bregman/2012/12/try-meditation-to-strengthen-y.html?referral=00563&cm_mmc=email-_-newsletter-_-daily_alert-_-alert_date&utm_source=newsletter_daily_alert&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=alert_date

Excerpts:

One of the great gifts of meditation is that it exposes your Self. As it turns out, it's surprisingly easy to find because it's always there, watching.

Follow your breath as it goes in and out of your body without thinking about anything in particular except your breath. soon enough, you will notice that your mind is thinking about something

The person noticing those thoughts? That's you. That's your Self. Your Self just noticed "thinking".

... no matter what happens,... you'll be fine. Even though everything around you may change — how much money you have, whether you have a job, whether you're married, and so on — your Self will still be there, observing.

... even in failure, you'll be able to let the part of you that did not change as a result of the failure see what it feels like to fail. Then, when you realize your Self is still intact, you'll get up and try again.

[REPEAT] The person noticing those thoughts? That's you. That's your Self. Your Self just noticed "thinking".

You are not your thinking. You are the person watching your thinking. That little distinction is the difference between feeling your feelings and being them — and it's critically important. When you feel anger, you're in control of what you do next. When you are angry, you've lost control.

The part of you that observes your thoughts and feelings is steady and wise and trustworthy. Identifying with your stable, predictable Self makes you a stable, predictable person and leader, one who doesn't get tossed around by random events and the decisions of the people around you.

PETER BREGMAN
Peter Bregman is a strategic advisor to CEOs and their leadership teams. His latest book is 18 Minutes: Find Your Focus, Master Distraction, and Get the Right Things Done.

http://blogs.hbr.org/bregman/2012/12/try-meditation-to-strengthen-y.html?referral=00563&cm_mmc=email-_-newsletter-_-daily_alert-_-alert_date&utm_source=newsletter_daily_alert&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=alert_date





Monday, November 26, 2012

Thrive - You are What You Believe

Note From Jim:

Ken and Denise offer inspiring wisdom that if believed, will enhance our ability to thrive personally and professionally. Believe! With good fortune, Ken Norwack of Envisa Learning invites me to regularly share his work with our readers. Many thanks to Ken and to you. Best Always - Jim

http://results.envisialearning.com/giving-thanks-you-are-what-you-belive/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+ResultsVsActivities+%28Results+vs.+Activities%29

Giving Thanks….You are What You Believe
November 25, 2012 by Ken Nowack


“It ain’t what they call you, it’s what you answer to.”

W.C. Fields
I’d like to thank all my family and friends and repeat a Blog from a few years ago that hopefully will be inspiring during this upcoming Thanksgiving holiday……

You are What You Believe….  by Denise and Ken Nowack


Believe that most “breaks” and “luck” in life happen at the intersection between preparation and opportunity…

Believe in the good of people (belief in God is optional)…

Believe that we all need things in life that we don’t want and want things in life we don’t need…

Believe that things wind up being the very best for those who make the very best of how things wind up…

Believe that few things in life are as bad as we anticipate they will be nor quite as good as we count on them to be…

Believe that we should always strive to feel good, rather than, to just have good feelings…

Believe that if at first you don’t succeed—you are pretty much about average…

Believe that some people dream of success and others work hard to make it happen…

Believe that the two most difficult things in life to handle are failure and success…

Believe that all families are a little bit like brownies—mostly sweet with a few nuts part of the mix…

Believe that when life tests us it’s always best to turn to family and friends…

Believe and cherish the moment you are in, as yesterday has died and tomorrow has not yet arrived…

Believe that forgiveness is the fertilizer to enhancing personal relations and intimacy…

Believe that giving gratitude for what you have is the true secret of happiness…

Believe that the best vitamin to take to become a compassionate person is B1…

Believe that jumping for joy is really a good form of exercise …

Believe that you can’t get what you want from others in life if you don’t risk to at least ask for it…

Believe that the simplest act of kindness can make a big difference to others…

Believe that “richness” is measured not by how much money we have but how much others love us…

Believe that life fulfillment comes from doing what you have the greatest passion for and what you most believe in …

Believe that the three words, “I am sorry” can almost always mend and improve relationships with others…

Believe that the only real power people have over us is what we give them…

Believe that the right path is always to follow your own heart…

Believe in yourself and others will always believe in you…

You are what you believe…Be well….


*** Kenneth M. Nowack, Ph.D.President & Chief Research Officer, Co-Founder
Dr. Ken Nowack is a licensed psychologist (PSY 13758) and President & Chief Research Officer of Envisia Learning. He provides strategic vision/leadership, conceptual product design and development, research, public relations, and advanced client relations.





Wednesday, November 21, 2012

Make It a Habit to Give Thanks - HBR - Ron Ashkenas

Note From Jim:  Ron, this advice is priceless.  Thank you!!! 


by Ron Ashkenas
12:00 PM November 20, 2012

Excerpts:

It's also a good reminder that "thankfulness" and "appreciation" are important managerial behaviors in effective organizations — behaviors that need to be fostered throughout the year, not just when there's a holiday.
[First] Interpersonal appreciation is the day-to-day ability to genuinely and graciously thank other people for what they do....  all of us need affirmation and positive feedback, at least occasionally... without some measure of day-to-day appreciation it's difficult to build relationships and trust, which are essential to a well-functioning workplace.... The challenge though is how to make the process of giving thanks more routine, so that it occurs without a reminder.

The second type of thanksgiving is appreciating how effectively your organization solves problems and gets things done. Many managers have a tendency to focus on the things that are not working well, the shortfalls and the misses. On the other hand, much of the power and potential in organizations is revealed by its success stories. By identifying these vignettes and shining a spotlight on them, managers can help to tease out important lessons, reinforce innovation, and unlock tremendous value.... an approach called positive deviance shows that finding people who succeed, when everyone else is struggling, can be a key to large-scale innovation.
... perhaps if all of us were more thankful and appreciative throughout the year, we'd have much more to be thankful for.


***Ron Ashkenas is a managing partner of Schaffer Consulting and a co-author of The GE Work-Out and The Boundaryless Organization. His latest book is Simply Effective.

***Access Article, HBR Website and Great Content: http://blogs.hbr.org/ashkenas/2012/11/make-it-a-habit-to-give-thanks.html?referral=00563&cm_mmc=email-_-newsletter-_-daily_alert-_-alert_date&utm_source=newsletter_daily_alert&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=alert_date

Monday, November 12, 2012

Embracing Uncertainty - Be Happy Zone - Lionel Ketchien

November 12th, 2012

[The Wisdom Of Dr.] Susan Jeffers


One truth that we can all agree on is the fact that we live in an uncertain world. It seems that this is true now more than ever before. Maybe we have always lived in an uncertain world and it is only now with the events we experience these days that seem to make that fact even more real to us.

In 2003 I finished reading a really great book called: Embracing Uncertainty by Susan Jeffers, Ph.D. This book is about exploring, understanding, and coping with the anxiety most people feel about the uncertain nature of everyday life. Susan wrote another great book that you may recognize. It is called Feel The Fear And Do It Anyway, It was also a truly wonderful and empowering book, and was the first of many books she has written.

I had the opportunity of doing an hour phone interview with Dr. Jeffers in April 2003. Susan lived with her husband in Los Angeles, California. Some of the things you should know about Susan is that she was great thinker and she has a wonderful way of putting her thoughts into a book for you to benefit from the wisdom acquired from her experiences. Dr. Jeffers really understands the basis of happiness, and explains, "Always remember that how we live our lives is a personal decision, not something that is put upon us from the outside world."

She discusses ways to create a "WONDERING LIFE" instead of a "HOPING LIFE." Instead of hoping things are different you can learn to create a wondering mind and wonder how things will turn out rather than worry about how they will turn out. This gives you the power of detaching from the outcome and reducing your stress and anxiousness, worry and fear. Dr. Jeffers recommends that people, "CHOOSE THE PATH OF TRUST." What does she mean by choosing the path of trust? This is what she says, "When you fully understand that you have little control in the external world, you then have two choices: you can choose to see yourself as a poor-me victim at the mercy of circumstances...or you can choose to develop the trust that, no matter what happens in your life or in the world, you will have the inner strength to create something good from it all. Hopefully you will choose the latter!"

I have found so much agreement with the things Dr. Jeffers talks about, such as this: "It makes us so much happier when we don't have the need to be right. Trust me when I tell you that you will feel so much freer with the power of MAYBE." Susan introduces us to this interesting concept, "the power of MAYBE." In her book Susan goes on to say, "You notice that I haven't mentioned peace of mind, joy, fun, creativity, or spontaneity. That is because these wonderful feelings go with a lack of expectations. The irony is that while we think our expectations are giving us a measure of control, our expectations are really controlling us!"

Can you imagine not letting worry get the best of you? You will if you understand what Dr. Jeffers says, "When you're feeling lousy about something happening in your life or in the world, it isn't about the something happening that is the problem, it's your inability to let go of the expectation of how it's supposed to be." She gives us the wisdom to understand that we can have more control by realizing we do not have control of the outside world and the many things that can happen that we wish did not happen.

Dr. Jeffers teaches us, "When attached to outcomes, by definition, we are attached to unhappiness. As hard as we try, as fast as we go, we can never feel the security of being in control of the outside world. When we break our attachment to our expectations of control, we become happier people. If you knew you could find happiness in whatever state you found yourself -- ill health or good health, rich or poor, in a great relationship or not, and so on -- then your worry about the uncertainty in your life would be greatly diminished."

Dr. Jeffers advises us to, "INCREASE YOUR INNER SENSE OF POWER. One way to help you develop trust in yourself is to cut off the negativity in the mind by saying to yourself over and over again, Whatever happens in my life, I'll handle it! While we can't control the world around us, we can certainly learn how to respond to all things -- yes, ALL THINGS - in a health-affirming way. We have the power to create a life that feels good, rather than one that feels bad -- despite the actual circumstances in our lives and in our world." Do you feel that life has treated you less than fairly? Well, as Dr. Jeffers says, "The prime cause of our suffering is our wanting things to be different than they are! Happiness is the best revenge!"

Access The Happiness Newsletter And Its Inspiring Content:  - http://campaign.r20.constantcontact.com/render?llr=svx5mvcab&v=001UIzoyTILna2iyLBFB7y5Hqjz5R-XYTSoSNmTkCIj5VmQsLQf8i5c0VkAp-cgQY8a0s3zj1wiXCMJgc7v5XLoDKepM6h9t9il4TWlZmAb7Xn5xC5oALEHIw%3D%3D

Wednesday, November 7, 2012

HBR Blog Network.Where You Sit Determines What You See - Ron Ashkenas

by Ron Ashkenas
8:00 AM November 6, 2012

Excerpts:

... all of us have biases that influence how we interpret events. To some extent we see what we unconsciously want to see

If you assume that these people perceive the assignment or challenge in the same way that you do, you'll be severely frustrated or disappointed. In fact, you'll be on much firmer ground if you start with the assumption that each person comes to the table with a different spin on the situation.
... [with] different perceptions of "the problem" the team easily could have become trapped in unproductive blaming or hardened their positions. Fortunately, the team leader understood the different perceptions and encouraged everyone to listen, repeat, and appreciate each others' starting points. Eventually each side realized that both positions were valid, which opened up the possibility of joint problem solving.

Of course, overcoming perceptual bias is not a one-time exercise. Just because the people in our example learned how to work together on one project doesn't mean that they won't revert back to their earlier blinders when they reenter their regular environments. In fact, there is a Stockholm syndrome effect for most people in organizations, in which they take on the biases and attitudes of those around them.

All of us see the world in different ways — which may make alignment that much harder, but at least makes things a lot more interesting.

Ron Ashkenas is a managing partner of Schaffer Consulting and a co-author of The GE Work-Out and The Boundaryless Organization. His latest book is Simply Effective.
More blog posts by Ron Ashkenas ...More on: Execution, Leading teams, Managing yourself :
http://blogs.hbr.org/ashkenas/2012/11/where-you-sit-determines-what.html?referral=00563&cm_mmc=email-_-newsletter-_-daily_alert-_-alert_date&utm_source=newsletter_daily_alert&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=alert_date

The Heart Grows Smarter - By DAVID BROOKS, New York Times


November 5, 2012


"The Men kept changing..... In case after case, the magic formula is capacity for intimacy combined with persistence, discipline, order and dependability. The men who could be affectionate about people and organized about things had very enjoyable lives."

Excerpts

... as this study — the Grant Study — progressed, the power of relationships became clear. The men who grew up in homes with warm parents were much more likely to become first lieutenants and majors in World War II. The men who grew up in cold, barren homes were much more likely to finish the war as privates.


... having a warm childhood was powerful. As George Vaillant, the study director, sums it up in “Triumphs of Experience,” his most recent summary of the research, “It was the capacity for intimate relationships that predicted flourishing in all aspects of these men’s lives.”

... as [George George Vaillant, the study director, “Triumphs of Experience,” his most recent summary of the research, ] Vaillant puts it, “What goes right is more important than what goes wrong.” The positive effect of one loving relative, mentor or friend can overwhelm the negative effects of the bad things that happen.


In case after case, the magic formula is capacity for intimacy combined with persistence, discipline, order and dependability. The men who could be affectionate about people and organized about things had very enjoyable lives.


But a childhood does not totally determine a life. The beauty of the Grant Study is that, as Vaillant emphasizes, it has followed its subjects for nine decades. The big finding is that you can teach an old dog new tricks. The men kept changing all the way through, even in their 80s and 90s.




Access Full Article and David Brook's Other Inspiring Content: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/11/06/opinion/brooks-the-heart-grows-smarter.html?emc=eta1&_r=0&pagewanted=print

Thursday, October 25, 2012

The Unhappiness Conspiracy - Lionel Ketchian

Be Happy Zone October 15th, 2012

Welcome to the Happiness Zone my Extraordinary Friend!

by Lionel Ketchian

I have uncovered The Unhappiness Conspiracy! People are conspiring against you and they are engaged in a "system" that is "designed" to take your power away from you. If you like "intrigue," this story is for you! It may cause you to want to take action to change things so you can take back your power.

You may start saying, "I'm Unhappy As Hell, And I'm Not Going To Take It Any More!

The plot thickens because you are not going to believe who is behind this conspiracy. The "story" of this conspiracy will amaze you. Everything we know is part of The Unhappiness Conspiracy. Such as government, politics, wars, religion, justice, psychology, medical, news reports, businesses and advertising commercials. Without giving it much thought, you could probably add many more categories to this list.

But first you will have to understand the "arrangement" that is made against you. There is a complete "system" at work against you, and you will need to learn the "format" for the conspiracy. If you don't learn how the "scheme" works you can't get free. There really is a "method" to the madness, but you need the ability to decipher it.

The Unhappiness Conspiracy is a "pain plan." There is plenty of preparation for the "TUC." There is a complete "strategy" to make it all work out "unhappily." The "idea" has been to keep you unhappy now. For generations the "design" has been worked out and engineered by the best minds in the world. You could make a "map out" the unhappiness that has been "contrived against you!"

But did you know who the main conspirator is? I am almost afraid to tell you who it is because my life could be in danger. If I tell you who it is, do you promise to protect me? If I don't tell you, than we are all in danger. I have no choice but to tell you who the main conspirator is. I am in danger either way, but at least you will be saved from the danger that exists. Will you promise not to keep it a secret?

The Unhappiness Conspiracy is alive and well. It breeds on thoughts of fear. It maintains power by manipulating others to hand over their power by using your unhappiness as a tool of choice. The Unhappiness Conspiracy only works because people go along with it. They do this willingly because they don't know how it conspires against them. The Unhappiness Conspiracy needs the cooperation of each and every one of you. That means you...most especially you! Without you The Unhappiness Conspiracy would collapse, because the scheme would be revealed.

Do you know who the prime suspect is? Let's play CSI; lets do a Crime Scene Investigation. Okay, we have someone who is experiencing unhappiness. This is a crime and we have to get to the bottom of it to find out...who done it! When we question the suspect we find no evidence linking anyone to this unhappiness crime seen but the suspect themselves. We find that the suspect has committed the crime all by himself but why would he or she commit a crime against him or her self?

Let's investigate this further. We have a human being that wants something. They can't seem to get what they think they want at the moment. So what do they do, they commit a crime, they become unhappy! It's an open and shut case. It is the basic motive of all crimes. Who stands to gain from getting what they wanted? You do! You were the one who wanted something, or did not get something you wanted! As a result of not getting what you wanted or getting what you didn't want, you did the crime! You made yourself unhappy.

As they say, "if you can't do the time, don't do the crime." Unhappiness is a crime, and it is punishable by life. Anyone who is unhappy will be imprisoned with himself or herself for a life sentence. I know it does not seem fair, but who says life is fair for the unhappy!

So if you want to know the facts and just the facts about The Unhappiness Conspiracy. Listen closely to me...You Are The Unhappiness Conspiracy! The conspiracy is real as long as you feed it with your thoughts about the unhappiness story you keep with you always. It is time to get rid of the "story line" so you can get rid of The Unhappiness Conspiracy.

The Unhappiness Conspiracy works to keep you a prisoner of your own crime so that others can get you to do what they want you to do. Since they are unhappy as well they need you to keep them in power by giving up your power to them.

If you are ever going to be free, then you need to become aware that The Unhappiness Conspiracy is going to include you. Why do others join in The Unhappiness Conspiracy? The reason is they do not know they are responsible for doing it. They are not aware they are dong it. They do not realize the consequences of their actions. Most of all they are not conscious of being unhappy. In fact, only a happy person is conscious.

So you are under a spell of The Unhappiness Conspiracy. The real crime is that you have put yourself there. Some good news for you is that if you have put yourself there, then you can take yourself out of there. Your parents, teachers, schools, businesses, religious institutions and the world has made you think you must be unhappy to get what you want. You were happy when you were a child. Become a child again and free yourself.

Cast off the chains of illusion and crawl out of the cave of craving. It is time to stand up strong and be counted amongst the happy. As few as we are The Unhappiness Conspiracy is being threatened with extinction by the happy. The numbers of happy people are growing stronger every hour and every day. Join Us, and Become One Of The Happy Freedom Fighters Overcoming The Unhappiness Conspiracy!

There is another conspiracy that has always been in effect. When you can live simply and happily you will have everything you need and really want. Realize you have enough and you have just added more to your life. But don't be fooled into thinking I am just a dreamer. You are witnessing the birth of "The Universal Happiness Conspiracy."

"The Universal Happiness Conspiracy," is a worldwide international sweeping whole, it is entire and complete and it is present and infinite and becoming widely accepted and very common indeed! Thank God! When you are happy the universe conspires to give you what you need.

Access The Happiness Zone And It's Great Content: http://campaign.r20.constantcontact.com/render?llr=svx5mvcab&v=001qNpDsySIaELtXYLfc_XpNvCXz7ZvgtEw4_MUKfN56hFhMigkN-_kpVdegDKVdEV1ZelFdLwGVvS0_-jsp_to5PS70w4P-fI9eQn7JErLacDEle3rX8suGA%3D%3D

How to Increase Business Using Goals - Influence At Work - Steve Martin

Influence At Work - October 2012

By Steve Martin, CMCT

Excerpts

...the Small-Area Hypothesis.

Put another way, at the beginning of a task people were more motivated to continue working towards that task when their attention was focused on the smaller number progress made so far, “You are already 20% of the way towards your goal” compared to “You have 80% of the way to go.” But when progress passed the half-way mark people were more motivated to complete the task when their focus shifted from the now larger progress they had made to the smaller progress that remained, “You have 20% left to achieve your goal” compared to “You are 80% of the way to achieving your goal”. 

So when seeking to persuade people to keep committed and consistent with a task or goal that they are working towards it appears that the science is telling us that we can increase our effectiveness by focusing their attention on the ‘small area’ whether that represents progress  already made or progress that is remaining.  

Practical Application: This Small-Area Hypothesis suggests that regardless of where a particular customer is on that reward journey, focusing on the small area will help frame subsequent actions as being more impactful in achieving that goal, potentially leading to more participation, adoption of new products, and increased spending over time.

Managers too might find focusing on the small area a useful way to keep staff motivated towards reaching sales and performance targets. In the early stages, providing feedback along the lines of “one week in and you have already achieved 15% of your quarterly target” and as target attainment gets closer “only 10% of your target to go now”.   

And when it comes to motivating ourselves, recording the small area as evidence of our progress towards a symbolic and specific goal should also prove useful. For example, a personal weight-loss or fitness program should be recording progress by emphasizing whichever is smaller: the weight we have already lost or how much we still need to lose to reach our desired goal.

Access Source And Its Great COntent: http://www.influenceatwork.com/inside-influence-report/

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Do you just hate everything? | TechRepublic

Do you just hate everything? | TechRepublic

By Toni Bowers


October 22, 2012, 4:14 AM PDT

Excerpt:
Takeaway: Chronic negativity can be a career killer. Here are some ways to know if you’re a chronic complainer and what you can do about it.


Access Article: http://www.techrepublic.com/blog/career/do-you-just-hate-everything/4665?tag=nl.e101&s_cid=e101



Thursday, October 11, 2012

Your Body Language Shapes Who You Are - Power Posing - Amy Cuddy - Harvard Business School Via TED


TED Video Filmed 6/2012 - 21 Minutes 

Note From Jim: This is a must watch video!!!!!


Create Your Future - "Do It Until You Become It"

Excerpts:

Body language affects how others see us, but it may also change how we see ourselves. Social psychologist Amy Cuddy shows how “power posing” -- standing in a posture of confidence, even when we don’t feel confident -- can affect testosterone and cortisol levels in the brain, and might even have an impact on our chances for success.


Amy Cuddy’s research on body language reveals that we can change other people’s perceptions — and even our own body chemistry — simply by changing body positions.

Cuddy is a professor and researcher at Harvard Business School, where she studies how nonverbal behavior and snap judgments affect people from the classroom to the boardroom. And her training as a classical dancer (another skill she regained after her injury) is evident in her fascinating work on "power posing" -- how your body position influences others and even your own brain.


Access TED and Its Great Content: http://www.ted.com/

Sixty-Nine Percent of Full-time Workers Regularly Search for New Job Opportunities, CareerBuilder Study Finds


Half of Workers Say They Just Have a Job, Not a Career

CHICAGO, Oct. 10, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- Having instant access to so many digital resources has turned today's workers into perpetual job seekers, according to a new study by CareerBuilder and Inavero. Sixty-nine percent of full-time workers reported that searching for new job opportunities is part of their regular routine. Thirty percent said job searching is a weekly activity. The survey included 1,078 full-time workers across industries and company sizes in the U.S. and Canada.

Infographic: http://cb.com/SytzW8

"Digital behavior has blurred the distinction between an active and a passive job candidate," said Brent Rasmussen, President of CareerBuilder North America. "The majority of workers are regularly exposed to new job opportunities and are willing to consider them. They may not leave their jobs right away, but they're keeping aware of possibilities and planning for their next career move."

In addition to heightened awareness about job openings, the ongoing pursuit of other positions is also driven by the perception of the overall work experience. Fifty-three percent of workers said they feel like they just have a job, not a career.*

Millennials Vs. Baby Boomers

Comparing age groups, Millennials are much more likely to seek greener pastures than seasoned workers. Seventy-nine percent of Millennials actively search for or are open to new jobs compared to 67 percent of Baby Boomers. Baby Boomers tend to stay in a position for eleven years on average while Millennials typically stay for three years.


How Workers Shop for Jobs

Workers often utilize more resources in job hunting than in some other activities that impact their households. On average, workers reported they use approximately 15 sources when searching for a job. This compares to an average of 12 sources for researching insurance providers, 11 sources for researching banks and 10 sources for researching vacations.

"Workers approach their job search much like a consumer purchase, using multiple avenues to evaluate potential employers months before they take action and apply to positions," Rasmussen added. "It's important for companies to engage candidates at every touch point."

The majority of workers primarily come across new jobs in three ways:
Online search – 74 percent

Traditional networking – 68 percent

Job boards – 67 percent
Once they've discovered job openings, they'll check out social media and company Web sites and conduct general searches to dig deeper into the company's culture, market standing and new developments. Prior to applying:

81 percent will research companies on social and professional networks

74 percent will read news about the company online

74 percent will read the company's Web site
For more information, visit www.careerbuilder.com/candidatebehavior

*CareerBuilder and Harris Interactive© survey of 3,976 full-time U.S. workers completed in September 2012.

Survey Methodology

This survey was conducted online within the U.S. and Canada by Inavero on behalf of CareerBuilder among 1,078 job seekers (employed full-time, not self-employed seeking a job or non-employed seeking a job). The study was fielded between March 28 and March 30, 2012 (percentages for some questions are based on a subset, based on their responses to certain questions). With a pure probability sample of 1,078, one could say with a 95 percent probability that the overall results have a sampling error of +/-2.98 percent. Sampling error for data from sub-samples is higher and varies.

About CareerBuilder®

CareerBuilder is the global leader in human capital solutions, helping companies target and attract their most important asset - their people. Its online career site, CareerBuilder.com®, is the largest in the United States with more than 24 million unique visitors, 1 million jobs and 49 million resumes. CareerBuilder works with the world's top employers, providing resources for everything from employment branding and talent intelligence to recruitment support. More than 10,000 websites, including 140 newspapers and broadband portals such as MSN and AOL, feature CareerBuilder's proprietary job search technology on their career sites. Owned by Gannett Co., Inc. (NYSE: GCI), Tribune Company and The McClatchy Company (NYSE: MNI), CareerBuilder and its subsidiaries operate in the United States, Europe, South America, Canada and Asia. For more information, visit www.careerbuilder.com.

Media Contact
Jennifer Grasz
773-527-1164
Jennifer.Grasz@careerbuilder.com
http://www.twitter.com/CareerBuilderPR

SOURCE CareerBuilde
RELATED LINKS

http://www.careerbuilder.com
PR Newswire (http://s.tt/1pFps)

Wednesday, October 10, 2012

Onboarding New Leaders October 8, 2012 by Ken Nowack - Envisia


“You can observe a lot just by watching.”  ~ Yogi Berra
Onboarding new and potential leaders for success is important.

About 40% of executives who change jobs or get promoted fail in the first 18 months.

Right now, we are grooming a new leader. HIs name is Indy and he is a 6-week guide dog in training owned by Guide Dogs of America. He is our 5th guide dog puppy we have raised and we will have the ability to shape his leadership skills for about 18 months.

Here are some onboarding lessons we have learned from our previous guide dog puppies and what we are applying to Indy.

Onboard Lesson 1: Effective Leaders Get to Know Critical Stakeholders

Effective leaders learn quickly to identify the political “movers and shakers” and key stakeholders within and outside the organization. New leaders should systematically be introduced to these key stakeholders and take the initiative in their first 90 days to establish rapport and a working knowledge of the key needs of these individuals.

Develop a plan to understand the stakeholder’s expectations of you and how you can support their performance. Take a personal interest in them and tune into special details about their likes, dislikes, and even family relations.

We are planning on introducing Indy to all of our favortite vendors and restaurant owners that have been so gracious over the years to support our work with the guide dog puppy raising program (special shout out to La Vecchia and their great staff over the years).

Onboard Lesson 2: Effective Leaders Play Well With Others

 Talent today don’t leave bad organizations, they leave bad leaders who are competent jerks. Most failures of leaders are primarily due to overuse of one’s strengths and interpersonal deficits. Understanding one’s own personality (bright side assests and dark side liabilities) will enable new leaders to foster positive relationships and nurture interpersonal trust.

Playing well with others also involves starting to create a new team identity. It starts with understanding and attempting to deploy the signature strengths of each direct report on one’s team. It also involves truly listening and understanding the team culture for the first 90 days without making too many significant changes or decisions that impact the organization unless you have a direct mandate to do so.

We have already begun puppy training for Indy–a lot of his learning is how to interact with other puppies. Truly learning to play well with others will allow him to become a great guide dog in the future.

Onboard Lesson 3: Effective Leaders Create a 90 Day Action Plan

Behavior change is very difficult for most of us. Starting new behaviors and maintaining it over time requires a different set of motives and skills.

Effective leaders should create both an organizational and personal plan of goals and activities to support these goals for 90 days.

Creating and espousing a vision without action is a waste of time and will diminish the credibility of new leaders. Demonstrating a connection between a vision and concrete actions and successes in the first 90 days is one of the most important metrics that new leaders are judged on.

Each month Indy will be going to our “guide dog” support group and training and it is during this time we have to demonstrate the 90 day core skills we are building with him (e.g., the basic commands needed to be a service dog in the future). We have some carefully mapped out exercises and activities that are age (maturity) dependent to social Indy to new sights and sounds and focus on deliberate practice of new skills until they become automatic.

Onboard Lesson 4: Effective Leaders Truly Manage Energy and Not Time

The most effective leaders understand that they don’t have enough time but, they have all the time that there is.

Effective leaders make sure to renew their energy and not run it down so they can be at the top of their game each day. Here are some behaviors that appear to differentiate the most effective leaders who manage their energy:

Develop Secondary Passions

Manage Energy and Not Time

Use Short-Term Goals to Accomplish Long Term Success

Seek Ongoing and Candid Feedback

Deliberate Practice Over 10 Years Makes You Better

Use “Ultradian Sprints” of no longer than 90 minutes to Minimize Interruptions

Compete with the Very Best to Get Better

Utilize a Balanced Success Scorecard with specific goals for enhancing relationships, happiness, achievements at work/life and their legacy/life meaning
Well, Indy is just waking up from one of his renewal naps so you probably can guess what I need to do now!

Stayed tuned for more leadership lessons with Indy….Be well….

Access Envisia Content Source And Its Great Stuff: http://results.envisialearning.com/onboarding-new-leaders/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+ResultsVsActivities+%28Results+vs.+Activities%29

Thursday, September 20, 2012

Passing on a Positive Legacy - Leadership Wired - John Maxwell


 September 2012, Issue 2


“There is a choice you make in everything you do. So keep in mind that in the end, the choice you make, makes you.” ~ John Wooden

A legacy isn’t something over which we have no control, like the shadow that follows us down the sidewalk. Rather, we can choose the way in which our influence will remain once we’re gone. Here are a few suggestions for how you can purposefully pass-on a positive legacy.

1. Integrate a daily focus with a long-term perspective.

Leaders who have an enduring influence keep one eye on the compass and the other eye on the clock. That is, they look ahead without losing sight of what needs to happen each day. They give their best to activities and appointments, or the daily doings of life, while not forgetting their orienting vision and values.
2. Establish a direction that is clearly observable.

When your time on this earth draws to a close, people will describe your life in a single sentence. Pick it now. Be intentional about the sort of influence you want to have on the world around you. I live each day with my legacy statement at the forefront of my mind: “John Maxwell added value to leaders who multiplied value to others.” Being aware of how I want to be remembered gives me perspective on what’s truly important.
3. Develop a network of meaningful relationships.

Leadership is influence, and relationships are the foundation of leadership. Throughout life, I’ve heeded the Law of the Inner Circle: “Those closest to me determine the level of my success.” Perhaps nothing is more predictive of your legacy than the quality of people surrounding you.
4. Commit to a positive learning attitude that guarantees growth.

Personal growth is linked to a teachable disposition. My friend and mentor John Wooden liked to say: “It’s what you learn after you know it all that counts.” I credit my growth as a leader to a set of learning attitudes that I developed early in life.

My Learning Attitudes

a) Everyday I will learn something.
b) Everyone will be my teacher.
c) Every experience will be a learning lab.
d) Every opportunity I will ask questions.
e) Every time I will apply what I’ve learned.

5. Continually experience inner renewal.

Since the cares of life easily crowd out space for reflection, it’s essential to schedule time to think. By itself, experience doesn’t teach us anything; it has to be evaluated. Learning to pause allows growth to catch up with you. My motto is that “you cannot travel without until you’ve traveled within.” In other words, you won’t have transformative influence on the world until you’ve been transformed yourself.

FINAL THOUGHTS

Each of us has received thousands of blessings that we did nothing to earn. Being a legacy-minded leader is an intentional way to give back out of gratitude for what we’ve been given.


This article is used by permission from Leadership Wired, John Maxwell's premiere leadership newsletter, available for free subscription at www.johnmaxwell.com/newsletters.






Legacy - Quotes - Leadership Wired


September 2012, Issue 2 • Quick Quotes

QUOTES


"LEGACY"

"You are not here merely to make a living. You are here to enable the world to live more amply, with greater vision, and with a finer spirit of hope and achievement. You are here to enrich the world. You impoverish yourself if you forget this errand."
~ Woodrow Wilson


"[What matters most] is not the honor that you take with you, but the heritage you leave behind."
~ Branch Rickey


"The future belongs to those who give the next generation reason for hope."
~ Pierre Teilhard de Chardin


"Carve your name on hearts, not tombstones. A legacy is etched into the minds of others and the stories they share about you."
~ Shannon L. Alder

This article is used by permission from Leadership Wired, John Maxwell's premiere leadership newsletter, available for free subscription at www.johnmaxwell.com/newsletters.

Tuesday, September 11, 2012

The Secret to Health, Performance and Success: The Positivity to Negativity Ratio - Envisia - Kenneth Nowack

September 9, 2012

“If you have nothing to say, say nothing.”

Mark Twain
Here’s the answer: at least 3:1 to 5:1.

What’s the question?

Is there a universal ratio (P/N) of positive to negative communications, interactions and behaviors that predicts individual health, longevity, performance, relationship success and how team’s perform?

Across different disciplines, researchers continue to find an interesting relationship between “positive to negative” expressions of thoughts, attitudes and behavior that seem to predict things as diverse as how long we will live to how effectively teams function and product great results. This is sometimes referred to as the positivity to negativity ratio. Here are a few examples:

Longevity in Life

Handwritten autobiographies from 180 Catholic nuns, composed when participants were a mean age of 22 years, were scored for emotional content and related to survival during ages 75 to 951. The autobiography was to contain no more than two to three hundred words and should be written on a single sheet of paper. The nuns were asked to include place of birth, parentage, interesting childhood events, schools attended, influences that led to the convent, religious life, and outstanding events.

Their study revealed that the nuns whose autobiographies contained the most sentences expressing positive emotions lived an average of seven years longer than nuns whose stories contained the fewest. Further, lifespan increased by 9.5 years for nuns whose autobiographies contained the most words referring to positive emotions and by 10.5 years for nuns who used the greatest variety of positive-emotion words.

Positive Feedback

When we use 360-degree feedback assessments we always include at least 1-2 open-ended questions at the end of the questionnaire asking raters about perceived strengths to leverage and behaviors the leader can do more, less or differently to become even more effective. Smither and Walker (2004) analyzed the impact of upward feedback ratings as well as narrative comments over a one-year period for 176 managers2.

They found that those who received a small number of unfavorable behaviorally based comments improved more than other managers but those who received a large number (relative to positive comments) significantly declined in performance more than other managers. This is the only study I know of that has found that qualitative feedback in 360 interventions might actually be disengaging and demoralizing to participants if the ratio of positive to negative feedback is low.

Marriage/Relationship Longevity

John Gottman (1994) followed 700 couples for 10 years and found that when there was less than a 5 to 1 positive to negative interactions in a videotaped interaction of fifteen minutes it predicted subsequent divorce with 90% to 94% accuracy3.

He has observed couples for over 30 years, at his apartment-style laboratory, the “love lab” at the University of Washington. A Positive-to-Negative Ratio of 0.8 or less is a strong indicator of divorce with the most corrosive behaviors including:

Criticism: Expressions indicating a defect in one’s partner’s personality (example: “You always talk about yourself”). Contempt: Expressions of superiority (example: “You just can’t get things right).”

Defensiveness: Expressions of righteous indignation (example: “It’s not my fault that we’re always late—you are the one holding us up”).

Stonewalling: Emotional withdrawal from interaction (e.g., ignoring the other individual).

Criticism predicted early divorcing (an average of 5.6 years after the wedding) and emotional withdrawal and anger predict later divorcing (an average of 16.2 years after the wedding).

Psychological Well-Being/Life Satisfaction

Fredrickson (2005) examined students’ month-long diaries and the positive/negative ratio of emotions seemed to differentiate those who were languishing from those who were high in psychological well-being4. She found that students who expressed a ratio of 3 times as many positive emotions than negative emotions reported significantly higher levels of life satisfaction and happiness than the other students.

Team Effectiveness

Over the years we have run developmental assessment centers that always have at least one leaderless group exericse. We can easily observe the differences between groups that appear to function effectively from those who don’t based on the communications and interpersonal behavior of the group members–not how smart any individual is or the collective experience or technical expertise of the members.

Recent studies have established that teams with positive to negative interaction ratios greater than 3 to 1 are significantly more productive than teams that do not reach this ratio (Things can worsen if the ratio goes higher than 13 to 1). Marcial Losada brought 60 management teams into a simulated board room where they could hold actual meetings5. Behind mirrors, researchers observed and coded every statement made by each individual on three scales:

1. Positive statements (support, optimism, appreciation) versus negative statements (disapproval, sarcasm, cynicism).

2. Self-focused statements (refer to the person speaking, the group present, or the company) versus other-focused statements (references to a person or group not part of the company).

3. Inquiry (questions aimed at exploring an idea) versus advocacy (arguments in favor of their own point of view).

Losada also measured something he called connectivity or how attuned or responsive the team members were to each other. Finally he gathered data on three dependent variables: profitability, customer satisfaction, and evaluations by superiors, peers and subordinates. In the study, positive to negative ratio (P/N) was measured by counting the instances of positive feedback (e.g. “that is a good idea”) vs. negative feedback (e.g. “this is not what I expected; I am disappointed”).

Overall, high performance teams had a P/N ratio of 5.6, medium performance teams a P/N of 1.9 and low performance teams a P/N of 0.36 (more negative than positive).

Taken together, it seems that the secret to individual and team health and productivity might be as simple as accentuating the positive to negative ratio of emotions and behaviors and being aware of when our own self-talk and expressions seem tilted in the wrong direction.

I will have to ask my wife, who is registered dietitian, if this ratio also applies to healthy eating….Be well….

1. Danner, D., Snowdon, D., & Friesen, W. (2001). Positive emotions in early life and longevity: Findings from the nun study. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 80, 804-813 [↩]

2. Smither, J. & Walker, A.G. (2004). Are the characteristics of narrative comments related to improvement in multirater feedback ratings over time? Personnel Psychology, 89, 575-581 [↩]

3. Gottman, J. M. (1994). What predicts divorce? The relationship between marital processes and marital outcomes. Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum [↩]

4. Fredrickson, B. L. & Losada, M. (2005). Positive affect and the complex dynamics of human flourishing. American Psychologist, 60, 678-686 [↩]
5. Losada, M., & Heaphy, E. (2004). The role of positivity and connectivity in the performance of business teams: A nonlinear dynamics model. American Behavioral Scientist, 47, 740–765 [↩]

Access Article, Source, And Great Ongoing Content: http://results.envisialearning.com/the-secret-to-health-performance-and-success-the-positivity-to-negativity-ratio/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+ResultsVsActivities+%28Results+vs.+Activities%29  



Saturday, August 25, 2012

Commitments, Towels, and “Two for One” Influence - Inside Influence Report


Thursday, 23 August, 2012
by Steve Martin, August 2012

Excerpts:

Guests who made a specific commitment at check-in were more likely to reuse their towels than the guests who made a general commitment (66% v 61%). Perhaps more interesting was the finding that guests who did make specific commitments to reuse their towels were also more likely to adopt other environmentally protective behaviors that were consistent with that initial commitment. For example they were more likely to turn off the lights, turn down the air conditioner unit and switch off the TV when leaving their room.


This latter finding might be an especially important insight to those of us who have the challenge of influencing multiple related behavior changes in others, highlighting a potential two-step approach. Step one will be to ensure that the initial commitment you seek is a specific one. Step two will be to arrange for the environment where that commitment will be enacted to include cues that could trigger other related and desirable behaviors consistent with that initial specific commitment.

This is consistent with Cialdini’s research showing in order for commitments to stand the best chance of being lived up to they need to be owned by the person making them, as well as being action-orientated and public. Accordingly, when persuading others to live up to their commitments a detective of influence will make arrangements for those commitments to be volunteered as well as stated specifically before providing ways for their target to publicly signal them too.


Access Article, Content Source And Other Great Stuff: http://www.influenceatwork.com/inside-influence-report/

Thursday, August 23, 2012

De-Constructing Executive Presence - HBR - John Beeson

by John Beeson
11:00 AM August 22, 2012

"Executive Presence - .... your ability to project mature self-confidence, a sense that you can take control of difficult, unpredictable situations; make tough decisions in a timely way and hold your own with other talented and strong-willed members of the executive team".

If you ask a group of managers who aspire to the C-suite what it takes to get there, they'll invariably mention executive presence, but they aren't always so clear about what it means. Not too long ago I conducted a series of off-the-record interviews with senior executives responsible for executive placement in their organizations. I asked them about the "make or break" factors they consider in making C-suite promotion decisions. Executive presence was one of the handful of decision criteria they cited, but even these experienced executives struggled to define what it is and why one person has it and another doesn't. In an increasingly diverse world where senior executives are no longer all 6 foot 2 inch tall males who look they were sent from central casting, what does it take to create a commanding executive presence? The right clothes? A firm handshake? Those matter, but they don't tell the whole story.

Although executive presence is highly intuitive and difficult to pin down, it ultimately boils down to your ability to project mature self-confidence, a sense that you can take control of difficult, unpredictable situations; make tough decisions in a timely way and hold your own with other talented and strong-willed members of the executive team. If that's the nub of the issue, what style, what behaviors combine to signal that level of self-confidence to others? For some answers consider three talented managers — two of whom didn't make it to the executive level and one who did.

Every manager would love to have a Frank Simmons on his or her management team. Experienced, results oriented, collaborative, and committed to the company, Frank showed up on succession lists for a number of years — but was never promoted. Although a top performer in his area, Frank always looked a little rumpled and his posture was a bit hunched. When he made presentations to the executive team, he was invariably well-prepared, but his lack of comfort was evident in his body language. Normally highly articulate, his presentations were long-winded and rambling. In the Q&A portion of his presentations, he tended to be overly deferential to members of the executive team, and he was hesitant to insert himself into the conversation when the executives got into a debate. As one senior executive said privately, "Frank's an incredible asset to the company, but I just can't envision putting him in front of a customer."

Alicia Wallace was a highly-trained marketing manager who had succeeded in every assignment she'd had. However, when it came time to select high-potential people for promotion to more senior levels, she always missed the cut. As much as the senior marketing executives liked and respected her, they were never quite comfortable moving her to the next level. The reason: her apparent disorganization. People would talk about "Alicia being Alicia" when she arrived late to yet another meeting: rushed, harried, and with her files askew. Was this trivial and petty? Perhaps, but on a visceral level it caused senior people to question her "bandwidth" to manage a larger staff and maintain the necessary focus on implementing key priorities.

If you entered a room filled with twenty managers, Lydia Taylor, a member of the legal department, wouldn't stand out — but that would change once the dialogue started. Although soft spoken and not terribly aggressive, she was highly respected by her peers as well as the executives with whom she worked. Lydia possessed outstanding listening skills and had an unerring sense of when to enter the conversation to make her point. Unrushed, straightforward, and unflappable, she maintained her calm, even demeanor when others got emotional, and she used her dry sense of humor to defuse difficult situations. When challenged by others, she stood her ground in a firm, non-confrontational way. Although highly supportive of her internal customers, she was prepared to put her foot down if anyone advocated a position that might put the company at risk. As a result, Lydia was identified as a top candidate and groomed to succeed the company's General Counsel.

The age-old question is whether executive presence can be developed? The answer is yes — if you have a baseline of self-confidence and a willingness to deal with the unpredictable situations that go with the territory at the executive level. Start by addressing the basics. Find a couple of trusted people who will give you unvarnished feedback about your dress and grooming and the level of self-confidence you project. As noted, dress and grooming aren't the whole deal, but major problems can create an impediment. One highly talented female manager was privately described by her peers as dressing like a "school marm" while others said a hard-charging manager came off like a "used car salesman." The connotations aren't flattering nor are they insignificant. People tend not to trust a used car salesman, and school marms aren't typically thought of as creative and risk taking, two qualities central to leading innovation and change at the executive level.

Look for opportunities to hone your presentation skills. Not only is public speaking an important executive requirement, but your ability to "stand and deliver" to an executive group or large audience is frequently viewed as an indicator of your ability to handle pressure. Rehearse major presentation until you can come off as relaxed and in command, and pay special attention to the Q&A portion since your poise when questioned and ability to think on your feet help you project a sense of self-confidence.

Most important, find your voice as an executive: that is, identify your assets and leverage them to the hilt. Some people are naturally gregarious and can fill a room with their personality. Others, like Lydia Taylor, rely on their listening ability, sense of timing, and ability to maintain their composure when others get emotional. In an increasingly diverse world, executive presence will look very different from one executive to another. However, the constant is building the confidence of others that you can step up as a leader when times get tough.


John Beeson


John Beeson is Principal of Beeson Consulting, a management consulting firm specializing in succession planning, executive assessment and coaching, and organization design. He is also the author of The Unwritten Rules: The Six Skills You Need to Get Promoted to the Executive Level (Jossey-Bass.). Follow him on twitter @johnrbeeson.

Access HBR Website, Article, And Other Great Stuff: http://blogs.hbr.org/cs/2012/08/de-constructing_executive_pres.html?awid=7248761852809504214-3271

Wednesday, August 22, 2012

Directors at Large U.S. Companies Seeing a More Standard Pay Rate - WorldAtWork Newsline

Aug. 14, 2012 — Director pay levels were relatively consistent among top U.S. companies in 2011, regardless of annual revenue, according to results from Hay Group's "2012 Director Compensation & Benefits Survey." For the second year in a row, Hay Group examined compensation and benefits packages for directors at the 300 largest companies that filed proxy statements between May 1, 2011, and April 30, 2012.

Among top U.S. companies both large and small, median total direct compensation varied by just 21% in 2011, despite dramatic differences in companies' annual revenue. According to the survey, in companies with revenue of more than $40 billion, median director pay was $252,500 in 2011, compared to $209,000 for directors of companies with revenue of less than $10 billion.

"As the accountabilities of public company governance have peaked, the price of director talent has been set. There's a minimum price to compensate directors for their increased exposure and complexity in this environment, independent of the size of the company," said WorldatWork author Irv Becker, national practice leader of the U.S. executive compensation practice at Hay Group. "As pay levels become less of a differentiator in attracting top board talent, it's going to become more critical for organizations to create and maintain positive boardroom cultures with strong values."

Compared to 2010, overall director pay levels increased only slightly in 2011. For the largest U.S. public companies, median total direct compensation for directors grew about 6% from $238,100 in 2010 to $252,500 in 2011. Similarly, pay for directors of public companies with revenue of less than $10 billion grew about 5% from $200,000 in 2010 to $209,000 in 2011. Median direct compensation for all companies, regardless of annual revenue, increased from $213,774 in 2010 to $227,250 in 2011.

Long-term incentive practices, on the other hand, saw a pronounced change. Companies granting stock options decreased from 23% in 2010 to 17% in 2011, while companies granting restricted stock and restricted stock units increased only slightly from 71% to 73%.

"Companies are continuing to remove risk and variation from their director pay packages," said David Wise, senior principal in the U.S. executive compensation practice at Hay Group. "Shareholders expect directors to be focused on protecting shareholder value, and we're seeing a significant shift toward fixed compensation that is more likely to promote balanced decision making over the long haul."

Other findings:


•Companies continued to eliminate board meeting fees. Organizations paying board meeting fees decreased from 35% in 2010 to 31% in 2011, while the median fee remained consistent at $2,000 year over year. Comparably, just 35% of companies paid meeting fees for attending Audit or Compensation Committee meetings. The median fee for the Audit Committee grew slightly to $2,000 in 2011 (vs. $1,500 in 2010), while the fee for Compensation Committee meetings remained at $1,500.

•Committee chairpersons more likely to receive an annual retainer fee. Of the companies surveyed, 94% paid Audit Committee chairs a retainer fee for annual service, compared to 39% that paid a retainer fee to Audit Committee members. For those receiving a retainer fee, the median pay for serving as Audit Committee chairperson in 2011 was $20,000 (the same as in 2010), while the median retainer for serving as an Audit Committee member was $10,000 (also the same as in 2010).

•Annual retainer fees for board service slightly increased. The percentage of companies that paid directors an annual retainer for board service in the form of cash and/or equity in 2011 remained flat at about 99%. The median annual retainer grew slightly from $80,000 in 2010 to $85,000 in 2011.

•Majority of directors received deferred compensation or at least one type of benefit. Nearly all of the companies surveyed had some form of deferred compensation arrangement or at least one type of director benefit. Deferred compensation programs were offered by 60% of companies and the most common form of benefits offered to directors were matching gifts (offered by 43% of companies), followed by spouse travel, accident/death insurance, and continuing education programs, which were all offered by 16% of companies.
Hay Group's "2012 Director Compensation & Benefits Survey" examined compensation and benefits for directors of the 300 largest companies that filed proxy statements between May 1, 2011, and April 30, 2012. Total direct compensation was calculated using the assumption that a director served as a member of the Audit Committee and a member of the Compensation Committee.



Contents © 2012 WorldatWork. For more information, contact the Copyright Department at WorldatWork.

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Wednesday, August 1, 2012

A "Happy Me!" - Happiness Newsletter - Lionel Ketchian

August 1.2012 Happiness Newsletter

Be Happy Zone


EXCERTED ARTICLE

A "Happy Me!"

By Lionel Ketchian

Dear Lionel,

"I read an article, via InnerSelf Magazine that brought me to the Happiness Club web page, and then to you a few weeks ago. Since then, I have been wondering about getting in touch with you in regard to Happiness coaching. For the past couple of years, I have started wondering and searching for a "happy me," that kind of disappeared. I would like to find it again and get it back. I have tried many things on my own. This includes counseling (for a few sessions) to the many books I have read like that of Napoleon Hill, Anthony Robbins, Rev. Norman Vincent Peale, Steven Covey, Wallace Wattles, Echkart Tolle, the Bible and many others in bits and pieces. But still, "I" elude myself it seems, and wonder how can I be happy. More so, when I look at all things around me, and feel so thankful and grateful for the life I have been blessed with, still "something" eludes me. Thank you in advance for your reply." - S.A.

Dear S.A.,

Thanks for your e-mail letter. I appreciate your finding me and asking me to answer your question. First of all let me congratulate you for being a person that has spent some time searching for answers. It is certainly true that the books you have been reading are some of the very best available in understanding our purpose and learning our way into happiness.

You say: "when I look at all things around me, and feel so thankful and grateful for the life I have been blessed with." My question to you is how often do you look at your life with thankfulness and gratitude? Are you doing it when you first get up in the morning and throughout the day, all day, as well? Are you being grateful for all the little things that happen to you and all the things that don't happen to you, thank God? Thankfulness and gratefulness are just about 95% of happiness. In fact it may well be impossible to be grateful and unhappy. The two states just do not go together.

The other thing that comes to my mind about happiness eluding you may well be that you are trying to hard. If you want something too much, you actually push it away from you and out of reach. Being too needy can make you more needy. Happiness comes naturally without struggle. Struggle will put space between you and happiness for sure. Why don't you try easy?

Let happiness happen. In regard to this very subject, let me tell you what Rev. Norman Vincent Peale said in his own words, "Believe in yourself! Have faith in your abilities! Without a humble but reasonable confidence in your own powers you cannot be successful or happy." So here we have another dimension to become aware of and that is your own self-confidence. If you don't act like you are happy, then you are probably not going to become happy.

One more thing that I think is very important about happiness. Remember that happiness is not something you will find outside of you. Happiness is inside of you my friend. Happiness will never be found in possessions, in a job, not even in family or friends. In fact happiness is not about what can make you happy. Happiness is not conditional on anything at all but you.

Happiness is an attitude you bring into being within yourself. It is, as a matter of fact, an altitude that you attain by rising higher within yourself. Nothing can take happiness away because happiness is unconditional. Nothing causes happiness; it is not the effect of something else. Happiness is cause within itself. If you look for happiness out there somewhere or with someone, than you are looking for happiness as an effect of something. That is what everyone is trying to do and not succeeding. Happiness is causative; it produces a state within you that makes you much more powerful than you can be when you are unhappy.

Dear S.A., when you say, "still "something" eludes me." I have the answer for you on that as well. You are eluding yourself. Wake up and smell the coffee and drink it now. It is very important to understand that when you are unconscious you can never be happy. This is the reason that so many people are unhappy because they are unconscious. Yes, they are using their mind and they are thinking, but they are either in the past or they are projecting into the future. They are certainly not present, only a conscious person can be happy.

Happiness is consciousness. It is a high degree of awareness that can only be experienced by a conscious person. Being tuned into the present moment allows you to experience happiness.

You said: "I have started wondering and searching for a "happy me," that kind of disappeared." OK S.A., it is time to stop letting the outside world tell you how to feel and act. If the "happy me disappeared," that means it was there once. That also means it is still there. Now it is up to you! Who you will nourish with you mind and thoughts and feelings? The unhappy me will always find something to complain about in your life. The happy me is there and is just waiting for you to give it permission to live your life to the fullest. It is always your choice my friend and it is up to you to decide right now.

This is not the end of the journey. This is just the beginning. We have so much support for you that if you did nothing but read these articles every other week that would be enough. Keep happiness first and foremost and it will serve you well my friend. Unhappiness is an epidemic that must come to an end because it causes so much turmoil. It makes people feel like they are helpless.

Let go of unhappiness and embrace happiness with all your heart and soul. When you get the happiness feeling back you will know that you made the right choice. Help yourself by making your decision to be happy no matter what. I wish happiness.

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Wednesday, July 25, 2012

When Picking a C.E.O. Is More Random Than Wise - NYTimes.com

When Picking a C.E.O. Is More Random Than Wise - NYTimes.com

Deal Professor 7/24/2012

About Board selection of CEO's: James Rodgers at Duke Energy and Marissa Mayer at Yahoo

EXCEPTS:

There is little solid research on what makes an effective chief executive, which makes choosing a candidate the product of a board’s vision and personalities rather than one of careful contemplation.

"I’m reminded of an exercise I once did at an old law firm retreat run by a group of consultants...
This result is in accord with research on small-group dynamics and decision-making. The selection of executives is influenced by directors’ own biases and backgrounds... This is influenced by a group negotiation process that depends on the people and personalities involved. In the end, these boards tend to pick people who reflect themselves and the world they already know — something that psychologists call the confirmation bias.

The decision to pick a chief executive is often steered by flocks of high-level recruitment consultants. Recruiters are paid millions to have a stable of candidates that they feed to boards, steering the process in pursuit of the board’s sometimes ill-defined wishes. This inherently limits the pool of candidates and further pushes boards to confirm their own biases in any selection.

Ms. Mayer and Mr. Rogers may do terrific jobs at their companies. But their appointments do not necessarily mean that they are the best candidates. Rather, their selection is a result of random and nonrandom factors."

Access Article And It's Insights: http://dealbook.nytimes.com/2012/07/24/when-picking-a-c-e-o-is-more-random-than-wise/?smid=pl-share

Thursday, July 19, 2012

2012 Property Casualty Ward's 50® Companies | Ward Group |

Property Casualty Ward's 50® Companies | Ward Group | Empowering Companies Through Knowledge.

The companies listed rank as the top performing property-casualty companies based on the Ward Group annual analysis of the insurance industry. They each have passed all safety and consistency screens and have achieved superior performance over the five years analyzed (2007-2011).

Companies are listed alphabetically. An important objective is to benchmark their performance as a group with the rest of the property-casualty insurance industry. The Ward's 50 list and comparisons based on benchmarks set by Ward's 50 companies are available in Ward's Results®, an insurance industry financial reference series.

Learn more about the 2012 Ward's 50 Property-Casualty Top Performers: http://www.wardinc.com/wards50/WardGroup-W50-12-PC-Article.pdf

Saturday, July 14, 2012

Bullying Is a Confidence Game - Whitney Johnson - Harvard Business Review

by Whitney Johnson

7:00 AM July 13, 2012
EXCERPTS


Bullying Is a Confidence Game - Whitney Johnson - Harvard Business Review: Remember that the lesson of Oz is to have have faith in yourself. Whatever it is you so dearly want, whether it's courage, a brain or a heart, or simply to be at home — all the things the alluring Wizard is promising — have been within your power to achieve all along. And while a bully may have almost conned you into believing you couldn't go home, a leader will never let you forget that you can.

Thursday, July 5, 2012

ACCEPTANCE - Lionel Ketchian - July 1, 2012 Happiness Newsletter

July 1, 2012 Happiness Newsletter - Be Happy Zone
By Lionel Ketchian

EXCERPTS

It is the resistance that is causing you all the problems. . If you just accept that you feel bad right now, then you can accept your feeling without making yourself feel worse that you feel something negative.

As Eckhart Tolle wrote in his book, The Power Of Now: "By watching the mechanics of the mind, you step out of its resistance patterns, and you can then allow the present moment to be.

Accepting the way you are for right now, for this moment only, you free yourself from wanting things to be different in the future.

You can't change what has already happened to you. You can only choose to accept it. Once you accept it, you have done more to change it than you ever could do by not accepting it.

Don't try to be happy, choose it and be happy. Being happy will allow you to take control of your thinking. Being unhappy allows your thinking to take control of you. By not having control of our thinking and happiness we create our problems. By not being accepting, we allow unhappiness to step in. We cannot change this moment. Acceptance of this moment allows us to experience peace. We may not like what has happened but we can be at peace with it. This allows us the peace of mind to see what our best choices are now.



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Thursday, June 14, 2012

Building Trust Through Skillful Self-Disclosure - Harvard Business Review

Building Trust Through Skillful Self-Disclosure - Lynn Offermann and Lisa Rosh - Harvard Business Review

by Lynn Offermann and Lisa Rosh

11:37 AM June 13, 2012



Excerpts:

Psychologists have long known that self-disclosure is one of the hallmarks of intimate relationships. Revealing your motives, intentions, goals, values, and emotions, can increase liking and feelings of intimacy. There is considerable evidence that leaders who disclose their authentic selves to followers can build not only trust, but generate greater cooperation and teamwork as well. Yet successful and strategic self-disclosure is a leadership competency that many leaders have yet to acquire. Used incorrectly, or in the wrong corporate environment, self-disclosure can backfire.


Access Source, Article And Other Great Stuff: http://blogs.hbr.org/cs/2012/06/instantaneous_intimacy_skillfu.html?referral=00563&cm_mmc=email-_-newsletter-_-daily_alert-_-alert_date&utm_source=newsletter_daily_alert&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=alert_date

Friday, June 8, 2012

Saving the Best for Last – Lessons from Pop Stars and Physicians | INFLUENCE AT WORK

Excerpt:

As far as your business interactions go, if you wish to persuade customers and clients to remember their experiences with you more favorably and to come back for more (and what business wouldn’t want this?) then you should be sure to focus an appropriate amount of attention on the final stages of your business interactions. Keep in mind that we are not minimizing the need for “what comes first” but simply also stating that there is a benefit to making sure customers and clients experience a high point of their interactions with you by ensuring a great send off!




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Thursday, May 31, 2012

The Incredible Disappearing Office - The Conference Board

Press Release / News - The Conference Board



29 May, 2012

NEW YORK, May 29, 2012…According to a new report from The Conference Board, the proportion of employees who work predominately from home (or another remote location) has, over the last decade, more than tripled in many industries, while nearly doubling nationwide among all full-time (non–self-employed) U.S. workers. Drawn from a number of recent surveys by the U.S. Census Bureau and private sources, The Incredible Disappearing Office : Making Telework Work finds employees taking more frequent advantage of such workplace flexibility across the board, with 84 percent of employees who telework more than once per month now working remotely at least one day per week. In 2008, that number was 72 percent.

Amy Lui Abel, director of human capital research at The Conference Board and a co-author of the report, explained: “A confluence of factors, led by the rapid expanse of sophisticated, secure, and relatively inexpensive communication technologies, has sparked a quiet revolution in where and how many Americans do their jobs. To take full advantage of the opportunities teleworking provides—while avoiding the many potential pitfalls—employers and employees must engage in an open dialog that establishes the mutual expectations and responsibilities that come with this new workplace culture. Our report should serve as a catalyst for beginning that conversation.”

Not Just for Writers and Door-to-Door Salesmen Anymore

The latest research finds that teleworking rates (just over 2 percent nationwide) remain highest in occupations traditionally associated with the practice—including child care workers (9.1% in 2010), writers and authors (9.3%), and sales representatives (10.8%). The fastest growth, however, has been outside these familiar work-from-home roles, with the most dramatic increases seen in computer-related positions and others reliant on remote access to technical systems. The advancements in home networking over the last decade have been accompanied by huge teleworking gains among records clerks, 5.5% of whom teleworked in 2008–10 (up 516% since 2001–2003); insurance underwriters (4.5%, up 275%); lawyers (2.0%, up 166%); computer software developers (6.1%, up 127%); and many similar professions.

These trends are fundamentally altering the profile of the average teleworker. Where employees of non-profit organizations were most likely to telework in 2000, by 2010 the for-profit sector had taken the lead. It may be unsurprising that workplace flexibility appeals both to older workers nearing (or delaying) retirement and Gen-Y new hires for whom virtual presence and multichannel communication are second nature. Steady technical refinement, however, has made teleworking an increasingly attractive business proposition as well. As a case study, Making Telework Work cites IBM’s long-term holistic strategy, which grew out of the 1970s and the idea of installing access “terminals” in employees’ homes. By 1995, 10,000 IBM employees were mobile, allowing the company to move from a traditional 1:1 workspace-to-worker ratio to 1:4. In just that first year, a $41.5 million investment in worker training returned $74 million in savings.

With today’s significantly cheaper, lighter-weight technology, organizations without IBM’s expertise can now achieve similar savings. It is little wonder, then, that the federal government is embracing the approach. Signed into law on December 9, 2010, the Telework Enhancement Act (TEA) established a framework of identifying and training eligible employees, backed by appropriate policy and support, effective management oversight, and timely reporting; it offers a model not only for public agencies but also private organizations seeking to implement their own telework programs.

Achieving Work–Life Balance when Home is Where the Job Is
In surveys, teleworkers cite a number of obvious lifestyle benefits. With no commute, employees enjoy time with loved ones during precious morning and evening hours. Based from home, they gain the flexibility to adjust their schedules as job and personal demands arise. Likewise, teleworkers often note improved performance and higher productivity, with the ability to focus on work priorities free of the stress of distractions and office politics.

At the same time, this very autonomy can have distinct drawbacks. Teleworkers may feel cut-off from their colleagues and weakened in their ability to influence both day-to-day decisions and larger strategic plans. They often lack sufficient professional and administrative support and fear that being “out of sight, out of mind” keeps them from being properly recognized and rewarded by management. With meetings and group projects more difficult to coordinate, teleworkers also risk resentment from office-based colleagues, who may assume additional responsibilities in their absence. Finally, the same “always on” technology that makes the modern home office possible can mean difficulties setting boundaries between home and work time, setting the stage for potential overwork and burnout.

Nurturing the Telework Ethic

According to Making Telework Work, extensive, proactive planning from the top is key to reaping the significant cost savings and worker-satisfaction gains of teleworking while maintaining organization-wide morale and cohesion. Whether opportunities for telework are reserved for the best-performing employees, promoted across an organization, or used to attract standout applicants from a wider talent pool (such as disabled veterans, semi-retired experts, and parents with young children), leaders must establish formal, transparent guidelines if the “virtual office” is to be a real success.

“Research concurs that the dual lynchpins of effective teleworking are strong management and robust IT,” explained co-author Gad Levanon, director of macroeconomic research at The Conference Board. “With support from HR, managers at all levels must make the ‘mental shift’ to trusting that employees are getting the job done without seeing them every day—and to have the strength to act decisively when they’re not. On the technology side, the right hardware and software choices backed up by abundant support staff can make the difference between a seamless transition and hundreds or thousands of man-hours lost to bugs and faulty connections.”

From these prerequisites, The Incredible Disappearing Office: Making Telework Work offers a guideline for “making telework work.” The report details best practices for:

Building strong team relationships that bring together teleworkers and others

Building a strong community of teleworkers that can share experiences and offer advice online or in-person

Promoting an organizational culture that recognizes the needs and talents of teleworkers

Growing the technical literacy of managers so they “buy in” to advantages of some employees working remotely and can identify potential telework opportunities

Refining performance and reward systems to maximize individual initiative and minimize “slacking off” and trust issues

Creating established no-meeting times or “isolation zones” to ease information overload for all employees

Implementing flexible policies tailored to family needs for retaining talented workers

Integrating support for traveling workers as part of a larger teleworking program

Broadening recruitment to attract talent especially well served by telework


Read this report http://www.conference-board.org/press/pressdetail.cfm?pressid=4498