Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Talent, Passion, and the Creativity Maze - HBR

HBR Blog Network.


Teresa Amabile and Steve Kramer


12:25 PM Monday February 27, 2012

by Teresa Amabile and Steve Kramer
Comments (7)

HBR FEATURED PRODUCTS

Nine Things Successful People Do Differently
by Heidi Halvorson     $3.99     Buy it now »

 Betterness: Economics for Humans
by Umair Haque     $2.99     Buy it now »


We live in a world mad for talent. From Hollywood and sports to executive search firms and HR departments around the globe, everyone seeks that special mix of natural abilities and attitudes that will make performance pop. A few months ago, Douglas Conant wrote a terrific blog post on how to find talented candidates for a job. When evaluating a potential hire, Conant looks for a strong mix of three qualities — competence, character, and skill as a team player. He gives great advice on how to find such a person. But he's missing a crucial ingredient.

That ingredient, at least as important as the talent package described by Conant, is passion for the work — what psychologists call intrinsic motivation. Without it, no amount of talent will yield great performance. For 35 years, we have been exploring how motivation affects creativity. In studies involving groups as diverse as children, college students, professional artists, and knowledge workers, we have found that people are more creative when they are more strongly intrinsically motivated — driven by interest, enjoyment, satisfaction, and a sense of personal challenge in the work they are doing.

Arthur Schawlow, a Nobel laureate in physics, said it eloquently: "The labor of love aspect is important. The successful scientists often are not the most talented, but the ones who are just impelled by curiosity. They've got to know what the answer is."

Intrinsically motivated people are more creative because they engage more deeply with the work. Imagine a task you have to do — say, an important marketing problem you have to solve at work — as a maze you need to get through. Most business problems have multiple solutions that would work, multiple exits from that maze. Often, there is one clear, straight path out of the maze — the standard solution that everyone uses for this type of problem. If you're extrinsically motivated, perhaps by a looming deadline or fear of a negative evaluation, you're likely to take that safe path. The solution works, but it's boring; it doesn't move things forward. But if you're intrinsically motivated, you love the hunt through the maze for a more interesting — and likely more creative — solution.

As a manager, you can leverage the link between passion and creativity by following three guidelines:

First, hire for passion as much as for talent. If you don't look for passion in the people you hire, you could end up with employees who never engage deeply enough to dazzle you with their creative productivity. As Conant advises, get to know potential hires for important positions as thoroughly as possible, long before you might have an opening for them. When you talk to them, ask why they do what they do, what disappointments they've had, what their dream job would be. Look for fire in their eyes as they talk about the work itself, and listen for a deep desire to do something that hasn't been done before. When you talk to their references, watch for mentions of passion.

Second, nourish that passion. Unfortunately, standard management approaches often (unwittingly) end up dousing passion and killing creativity. But keeping it alive isn't rocket science. We have found that the single most important thing you can do to fuel intrinsic motivation is to support people's progress in the work that they are so passionate about. This is the progress principle, and it applies even to the seemingly minor small wins that can lead to great breakthroughs. You can use the progress principle by understanding what progress and setbacks your people are experiencing day by day, getting at the root causes, and doing whatever you can to remove the inhibitors and enhance the catalysts to progress.

For example, be vigilant about whether your creative professionals have sufficient resources to make progress without a constant struggle. Give them autonomy in how to achieve a project's goals, because there's no point in hiring people with great talent if you don't let them use it. And support them in learning from both successes and failures, because talent is not a fixed quantity; it can and should grow over time. Give talented people every opportunity to develop, keeping in mind the "10,000 hour rule" cited by Malcolm Gladwell: You can't become expert enough to create an innovative breakthrough in a field unless you have put in at least 10,000 hours of practice. That kind of persistence is fueled by passion.

Finally, look to yourself. If you don't have passion for your own work, you'll end up disappointing both yourself and those who count on you. And you're unlikely to develop your own best talents. One of us, Steve, is an avid photographer of landscapes. An important mentor, the photographer Craig Tanner, has taught both of us a great deal about the connection between passion and the development of talent. In a brilliant essay on "The Myth of Talent," Craig says: "Long-term, focused, practice powered by the energy of passion [...] leads to amazing transformations. The bumbling beginner becomes the exalted expert. The trapped and depressed become the liberated and empowered."

Ask yourself: Am I liberated and empowered by passion in my work? Are the people around me?


Teresa Amabile is Edsel Bryant Ford Professor of Business Administration at Harvard Business School. She researches what makes people creative, productive, happy, and motivated at work. Steven Kramer is a psychologist and independent researcher. They are coauthors of The Progress Principle (Harvard Business Review Press, 2011); visit its website.


Access Source And Its Great Content: http://blogs.hbr.org/hbsfaculty/2012/02/talent-passion-and-the-creativ.html?referral=00563&cm_mmc=email-_-newsletter-_-daily_alert-_-alert_date&utm_source=newsletter_daily_alert&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=alert_date

Sunday, February 26, 2012

4 Reasons We Procrastinate Despite Knowing Better - CIO.com

A deeper understanding of why we brush aside important work even when we know we should tackle it can help us overcome the urge to procrastinate the moment it tempts us.

By Meridith Levinson

Wed, February 22, 2012

EXCERPTS:
 

Vaden compares procrastination to buying on credit. Credit allows people to purchase more than they can realistically afford. Buying that pricey new gadget, flashy car or sprawling home on credit makes us feel good in the moment, he says, but long-term, we become prisoners of that debt. ... "Procrastination is nothing more than a creditor that charges us interest," he says. "Easy, short-term choices—whether to buy something we can't afford or put off work—lead to difficult, long-term consequences."

Why We Procrastinate Anyway...  Vaden says people procrastinate because they're blind to its impact. People also procrastinate, he adds, out of fear, a sense of entitlement or a desire to achieve perfectionism.

To resist the temptation to procrastinate, Vaden says workers need a clear vision of how getting on top of their work will make their lives easier or advance their goals.

If those people could realize how the work advances their goals, says Vaden, they could get on top of it. Managers who supervise employees with such an attitude should take note.

Sometimes just getting started helps people overcome any fear they may have about the work they need to do.

Perfectionists, meanwhile, sometimes fail to get started on their work because they want to have a perfect plan in place to ensure success, says Vaden. "They don't realize that while they're waiting for the perfect plan, the law of diminishing intent sets in. ... With each passing moment, the likelihood that we'll act on that intent decreases exponentially."    Thus, the anti-procrastination strategy Vaden prescribes for perfectionists: Focus on making progress rather than on perfection.

One final thought Vaden hopes will help people make the right choice when it comes to getting started vs. procrastinating: "The shortest guaranteed path to success comes from doing the things we know we should be doing but don't want to."

Rory Vaden, co-founder of the training company Southwestern Consulting, studies the psychology of procrastination and the habits of successful, self-disciplined individuals.

Meridith Levinson covers Careers, Security and Cloud Computing for CIO.com. Follow Meridith on Twitter @meridith . Follow everything from CIO.com on Twitter @CIOonline and on Facebook . Email Meridith at mlevinson@cio.com.


Access Article, Source And Its Great Content: http://www.cio.com/article/700638/4_Reasons_We_Procrastinate_Despite_Knowing_Better?page=2&taxonomyId=3123

Wednesday, February 22, 2012

8 Qualities of Remarkable Employees - Inc

OWNERS' MANUAL Jeff Haden

Feb 21, 2012

EXCERPTS:
Forget good to great. Here's what makes a great employee remarkable.

1. They ignore job descriptions

2. They’re eccentric

3. But they know when to dial it back

4. They publicly praise

5. And they privately complain

6. They speak when others won’t.

7. They like to prove others wrong

8. They’re always fiddling.
Jeff Haden:   learned much of what he knows about business and technology as he worked his way up in the manufacturing industry. Everything else he picks up from ghostwriting books for some of the smartest leaders he knows in business. @jeff_haden


Access Article, Source And Great Content: http://www.inc.com/jeff-haden/the-8-qualities-of-remarkable-employees.html

Tuesday, February 21, 2012

Forecasted 2012 U.S. Base Salary Increases Remain Steady - WorldatWork Newsline

Feb. 6, 2012 — U.S. employees can expect median base salary increases of 3.0% in 2012, according to recently released Hay Group research. The median increase of 3.0% is consistent for executives, middle management, supervisory and clerical positions. This picture is relatively steady across most industry sectors, and after factoring in annualized consumer price index growth at 3.0%, expected employee wage growth is in line with inflation.

While most industry sectors are also consistent with this 3.0% median base salary increase, including industrial, retail and financial services sectors, the economy impacts industry sectors differently. Certain job families in health-care systems, such as nursing and clinical employees, are trending at 2.5% median increases, while employees in the oil and gas sectors are faring better with 4.0% median increases planned for 2012.

"Even though the economy continues to show signs of a slow recovery, we do not expect most employees to receive increases at the levels seen in the years prior to 2008 for awhile, when median increases were tracking between 3.5% and 4.0%," said Tom McMullen, Hay Group's North American reward practice leader. "Slower growth in base salary increases is causing most organizations to be innovative in their approach to reward management. We see most organizations having a continued focus on managing their fixed costs in base salary and benefits programs while placing renewed attention on retention and engagement strategies for the talent needed to run their business. Differentiating all rewards and ensuring that top performers receive rewards that are greater than average performers is a continued focus area for organizations. Organizations are quite happy to pay for performance, but only if they get it."


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

Access Source And Its Great Content: http://www.worldatwork.org/waw/adimComment?id=58496&from=ww_editorial_0712

Employers Worry About Scarcity of Talent - WorldatWork Newsline

Feb. 7, 2012 — Lack of potential leaders is the most pressing human resource challenge organizations expect to face in 2012, according to a survey by Right Management, the talent and career management experts within ManpowerGroup.
Thirty-one percent of respondents cited their organization’s lack of high-potential leaders, while 23% indicated a shortage of talent at all levels.

Right Management surveyed senior executives at more than 600 firms across the U.S. representing government, non-profit, public and private organizations.

Survey respondents were asked what they expect to be their organization's most pressing HR challenge in 2012:

Latest            Year ago

Lack of high-potential leaders in the organization

31%                    30%

Low engagement and lagging productivity

26%                    22%

Shortage of talent at all levels

23%                    18%

Defection of top talent to other organizations

19%                    30%
"After three years of organizational contraction and less internal investment, companies are taking a hard look at their onboard talent and aren't pleased with what they find," said Michael Haid, senior vice president of talent management for Right Management. "Lean times make it hard for organizations seeking to recruit, retain or develop future leaders. And they're keenly aware of the tough competitive environment they're in and the need to hold onto and build leadership."

Defection of top talent is also a ranking concern of many employers, observed Haid. "In fact, for nearly one-in-five of our respondents it's the main worry…losing strong performers to other companies which may be enticing to individuals who may feel stifled with their present employer. This is the kind of concern that HR people lose sleep over."


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

Access Source And Its Great Content: http://www.worldatwork.org/waw/adimComment?id=58537&from=ww_editorial_0712

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Overcoming the Blues! - The Happy Zone - The Happiness Club

By Lionel Ketchian 02/01/2012

2000 years ago, Epictetus said: "There is only one way to happiness and that is to cease worrying about things which are beyond the power of our will." If you are unhappy now, then in the next moment you will be no happier than you have been now. The good news is that this can work the other way for you. If you decide to be happy now, your next moment will be no less than what is has been.

Your happiness or unhappiness is your intention to decide how things will continue to be. If you decide to be happy than you have set that intention ahead of you to act as your trailblazer for the path you shall travel. Life is hard enough the way it is without being your own worst enemy!

In March of 2001, Researchers at the University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston reached their conclusions about the protective effect of happiness after analyzing data on 2,478 men and women. They were all 65 years of age or older. These people were all given a questionnaire that consisted of twenty questions or statements that required a yes or no response. Sixteen of these were negative pronouncements such as "I felt that I could not shake off the blues, even with the help of my family and friends," "I thought that my life had been a failure" and "I felt fearful." The other four statements were positive, such as "I felt that I was just as good as other people," and "I felt hopeful about the future."

None of the participants had ever had a stroke at the time the questionnaire was completed. The researchers then followed the participants over a six-year period to see how their health had changed. During that time, out of the 2,478 people who took the study, 340 had strokes, and 75 of these people died. The researchers then tried to connect those occurrences to the participants' original answers to the questionnaire.

For each "yes" answer to a positive statement there was a 26% decrease in the risk of stroke. Let's take a close look at this study. There were 20 questions or statements, 16 negative ones that dealt with unhappiness, and 4 positive ones that were about being happy and optimistic. If you answered yes to all 4 positive statements there was a 100% chance of not having a stroke. Strokes are the third most common cause of death and they are the leading cause of long-term disability among the elderly.

This study was published on Friday, March 23, 2001, in the Journal of the American Psychosomatic Society. Researchers said that this study shows that "high levels of positive effect" seem to shield older people from having a stroke. Elderly folks who often feel blue tend to have more strokes than those who are not depressed, according to the study.

You have a choice right now to look at things differently. Now you know that having an unhappy outlook may result in hurting you. Is unhappiness worth the price you may have to pay? No, the price is much too high. Take control of your happiness, it is the one thing you have control over. Do you really think you can control all the people and circumstances in your life? No, you will wear yourself out first. Take control of yourself, that is where your power lies.

In this case I am very happy that this study has been done so that you can see the positive effect of "Being Happy," on your health, the quality of your life, and length of your life. If you are the type of person that needs proof, then here you have it - "Proof Positive," it is here for you to see!

Twenty-three years ago I wrote a book called Food for Thought. Dr. Bernie Siegel endorsed it as well as Rev. Norman Vincent Peale, and Ken Blanchard, Ph.D. Dr. Bernie Siegel, who wrote, Love, Medicine and Miracles, has changed the way people think about being responsible for their health and attitude.

In 2004, Dr. Bernie S. Siegel and I had video tapped a two hour interview in his home in Connecticut. It was an important opportunity to learn more life lessons from one of the most compassionate doctors that has ever lived. We talked about his new book, called 365 Prescriptions for the Soul, (Daily Messages of Inspiration, Hope, and Love.) We also talked about attitudes, pain, suffering, health, healing, and happiness. Bernie shared his personal thoughts in this video interview. The interview was aired on PBS, where Bernie and I appeared live in person during the evening and the show is also aired on The Happiness Show on cable TV stations.

It is time to we taught happiness in school for every child in the system. Happiness, or emotional intelligence, as it is also know by, is just as important as learning facts. Do we need to remain stressed out all our lives and find out that the price we are paying is much too high? The need to become happy is one that we must learn to embrace. If it is not enough to know that it affects your health, now you know it is nothing less than a life and death matter. Your thinking, your state of mind, and the way you feel all have a direct effect on your health.

Walk around with happiness, get the feel of it in your stride, and in your heart, and your head. You will experience the very best that life has to offer you. Of course you will encounter negative things along the way, just like anyone else. But you will be taking the high road in life and you will be doing the best you can with what you have. You will feel happiness within yourself and you will spread it naturally and effortlessly to everyone you meet, even the unhappy.

By taking happiness for yourself you will be able to give it to others. How can you give what you do not have? Another important aspect about living a happy life is the fact that you will be spreading happiness in the world. This world needs happiness more than anything. What a wonderful gift your happiness will make. You will make all the difference in the world, and you do it by "Being Happy."

Meet some new friends and get yourself in a happy mood attend a Happiness Club Meeting or start your own club now. Admission is free. Be Happy! Live Longer!


About Lionel Ketchian   Lionel is the past President of LRK Communications Inc in Fairfield, CT since 1979. He is the author of the book, Food for Thought, published in 1989. He was co-host of: "Successful Living," a live, call-in Radio Talk Show from 1986-1993. Lionel taught classes on Happiness, at Sacred Heart University from 1999-2002. Lionel is the founder of the Happiness Clubs, which holds free monthly meetings at over 80 clubs around the world. He started the web site www.HappinessClub.com in 1999 and offers free happiness newsletters by e-mail. Lionel wrote the column called the Be Happy Zone, published by the Fairfield Citizen-News, from 2000 - 2011. He is the co-host of "The Happiness Show," broadcast on TV by Cablevision of Connecticut. Lionel has been married since 1968 and is the father of three wonderful kids and the grandfather to three terrific grand kids.



Access Source And Its Great Content: http://campaign.r20.constantcontact.com/render?llr=svx5mvcab&v=001s0rRepf3dPamF3KHIasuJFodBbwfTUKUHwfGT3wuoJswmoBKBGO85Au6yaoa7yulltwJiQSNeNTAvGNhDuiNZ3piq7TnXP6ADYx9ZcQrscjlK84L7Pm7pg%3D%3D

Saturday, February 11, 2012

It’s Tempting to Skip This Blog - Envisia

February 10, 2012 by Ken Nowack


EXCERPTS:

I bet you can’t stop reading the rest of this Blog as it contains a hint about becoming more effective at resisting temptation.

In a series of recent interesting experiments, Matt Gailliot at the University of Amsterdam have shown that increasing glucose can actually help individuals master temptation on willpower-demanding tasks2. These researchers have demonstrated that glucose may indeed be an important impulse control fuel that plays a key role in how leaders think, make decisions, take risks, and cope with ambiguity.

What a great execuse to eat some chocolate I thought–at least until I asked my wife who is a registered dietitian if this was a great idea (she is the one who always tells me there are “no good or bad foods–just good and bad diets”). She reminded me that our body metabolizes sugar quickly but some food groups (e.g., fruits and vegetables) maintain a steady supply of glucose to our brain throughout the day (damn dietitians).


Access Source, Its Great Content And This Article:  http://results.envisialearning.com/

Friday, February 10, 2012

CIOs as Revolutionaries? Technology Spurring Change Among Carriers - PropertyCasualty360.com

http://www.propertycasualty360.com/2012/02/09/cios-as-revolutionaries-technology-spurring-change
No longer supporting players, Deloitte views CIOs as leaders in innovation.

By ROBERT REGIS HYLE, PROPERTYCASUALTY360.COM

February 9, 2012

In its 2012 Global Insurance Outlook, Deloitte Research insurance leader Sam Friedman issues an interesting description of technology leaders in the insurance industry. He describes their work as “revolutionary,” and points out the important decisions CIOs make today are less about software or reengineering processes than they are about transformation.

“CIOs are evolving into key players within the C-suite to develop and execute strategy,” he says. “They are expected to be transformational.”

Technology today is viewed as a way to change the business culture within an insurance company.

“Maybe it’s a culture that’s insulated in the sense they always do things in-house, work with existing systems, and adapt the best they can with the systems in place,” says Friedman. “Now [CIOs] are being asked to come up with more ambitious game plans to change the culture and the approach—and not just technologically, but from a business operations standpoint. Technology facilitates the business operation.”

The C-suite within an insurance company has expanded in the last few years, explains Friedman. The CEOs, CFOs, and COOs remain lead players, but newer titles—chief risk officers, chief information officers or chief technology officers—are playing important roles in the enterprise.

“Their roles are not simply to take marching orders from the C-suite and execute strategies,” he says. “They have a more influential seat at the table in terms of setting strategy, planning how that strategy will be executed, and having a say on what resources will be available—particularly outside resources like software and the people involved.”

Because so much technology today is being outsourced—in part because of the current growth in cloud computing—technology leaders need to perform a tremendous amount of due diligence, explains Friedman. Outsourcing requires carriers to put a great deal of faith in the infrastructure and the personnel from outside the organization.

Friedman concedes it is difficult to look at insurance CIOs as revolutionaries since the insurance has been known as a less than revolutionary type of business.

“Insurance tends to change slowly,” he says. “Product development is incremental. You don’t have the introduction of a revolutionary product that changes the landscape very often. Technology is an area where you can bring transformational change within insurance. The whole decision to outsource to a cloud is revolutionary to many insurance companies that either kept patching their legacy systems or kept reinventing the wheel in house.”

Social media is not viewed as a transformative tool and is mostly used as a marketing tool for insurance carriers to interact with policyholders on social networking sites such as Facebook. But Friedman believes IT leaders need to look at social media as a collaboration tool within an organization, particularly for multi-state or multi-national carriers where employees are not in the same office or even in the same country.

Friedman points out that at Deloitte, the social media site Yammer is becoming an important tool the research firm uses to conduct business day to day. Deloitte facilitates knowledge management by setting up internal Yammer sites to discuss issues in real time rather than brainstorming on a conference call.

“Why do that instead of using the telephone?” Friedman asks. “What we found is on a call someone is leading it and sometimes people are hesitant to speak out. The experience we’ve had with Yammer is people are much more interactive in the social media platform rather than on the telephone. There seems to be more content generated and information exchanged than on the phone or in a live meeting. [Workers] seem to be more open on the social media platform.”

Friedman believes the same thing is happening within insurance organizations. For example, the person in charge of distributor relations at a carrier could hold a session to deal with their independent agents to discuss a new product or a new twist on an existing product like telematics, or strategic planning for product development.

“Rather than having conference calls and live meetings, maybe it’s less expensive and perhaps more effective through social media,” he says. “There are many other services out there. The software itself is secondary. It’s really about transformation for the business operation. The CIO can lead that.”

Most insurers have a social media policy in place, but Friedman wonders how carriers are quantifying and benchmarking what they are accomplishing—particularly in contrast to their competition. Carriers need analytics tools to answer those questions.

“There’s work going on to try and solve [benchmarking issues] through advanced analytics, it’s just a matter of what the field of information is going to be and how it is weighed against the competition,” he says.

Analytics is the wave that is overcoming any sort of internal objections, points out Friedman.

“It’s such a natural transition to the business,” he says. “My only surprise is it’s taken so long to take off. It’s being heavily leveraged to red flag inflated or fraudulent claims. [Analytics] always had a strong element in underwriting and with smaller accounts you can leverage it to make decisions and save the underwriter’s expertise for more complex accounts.”

Friedman also is excited by the new hardware for agents and consumers: the smartphone.

“Think of all the things you can do from a smartphone,” he says. “It is the most insurance-friendly device invented in a long time.”

Policyholders can document an accident with a still photo or a video, write all the details of the accident on the phone’s memo function and email it to the insurance company, and go online through the an insurance app and the GPS function will tell them where the closest repair facility is located. Customers also can get quotes on their smartphone.

“It’s an amazing device,” says Friedman. “It can transform how an insurance company does business and it’s all under the CIOs purview.”

Many functions also are delivered for tablets. A life salesperson can sit down with a prospect and rather than printing out policy details or having the prospect hunch over and look at the laptop, they can present the policy to the customer on their tablet.

“This is the revolution being led by the CIOs,” says Friedman. “CIOs are the ones bringing these ideas to the C-suite and the board of directors to differentiate [the insurer] from the competition. CIOs are no longer just middle managers.”



Access Source And Its Great Content: http://www.propertycasualty360.com/2012/02/09/cios-as-revolutionaries-technology-spurring-change


Access Deloitte Insurance Outlook 2012: http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&frm=1&source=web&cd=2&ved=0CCoQFjAB&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.deloitte.com%2Fassets%2FDcom-Sweden%2FLocal%2520Assets%2FDocuments%2FDeloitte-FSI-Global-Insurance-Outlook-2012.pdf&ei=ryU1T8TzHOP00gGHq-HQCQ&usg=AFQjCNFL42xA35uXRtec-ztP-jBYqqHJdg&sig2=gm9ZBcYvVVST9uZkJTD1JA

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

The 10 Worst Things to Say When You Fire Someone | Inc.com

Jeff Haden
02.06.2012


EXCERPTS:

1. "Look, this is really hard for me."
2. "We've decided we need to make a change."
3. "We will work out some of the details later."
4. "You just aren't cutting it compared to Mary."
5. "Okay, let’s talk about that. Here’s why..."
6. "You’ve been a solid employee but we simply have to cut staffing."
7. "We both know you aren't happy here, so down the road you’ll be glad."
8. "I need to walk you to the door."
9. "We have decided to let you go."
10. "If there is anything I can do for you, just let me know."

GET IT RIGHT. ACCESS ARTICLE
Access Article: http://www.inc.com/jeff-haden/the-10-worst-things-to-say-when-you-fire-an-employee.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+inc%2Fheadlines+%28Inc.com+Headlines%29

Tuesday, February 7, 2012

Can Resilience be Developed? Envisia

February 5, 2012 by Ken Nowack


EXCERPTS:

Profile of Hardy Talent

  • Experience and report less work and family stress on a daily basis
  • Maintain a high level of physical activity/exercise despite travel and work/family demands (e.g., work out at least 3 days a week for 60 minutes).
  • Maintain heart healthy eating/nutrition habits (e.g., eat breakfast, avoid convenience food, and manage weight).
  • Are non-smokers and drink alcohol in moderation (e.g., no more than 2 alcoholic drinks per day).
  • Consistently maintain an adequate level of sleep and practice sound sleep hygiene (e.g., avoid building a sleep debt and get adequate sleep required to avoid being inappropriate sleepy during the day).
  • Minimize hostile, impatient and aggressive behaviors towards others that are associated with eliciting the “fight or flight” response.
  • Practice some type of daily mental or physical activity that elicits the “relaxation response” (e.g., meditation or yoga) reversing stress activation.
  • Cultivate and utilize a strong social and professional support network by spending time with those who are satisfying to be around and avoiding those who are “energy zappers” in our life.
  • Possess a hardy outlook on life including viewing change as a challenge, identifying and spending time on his/her passions and develop an external set of attributions for failures4.
  • Identify and emotionally express strong feelings in writing or verbally to others on a daily basis.
  • Stop obsessive thoughts that create tension and explore action plans to resolve the stressor.
  • Minimize the use of defeating and perfectionist “self-talk” (e.g., constantly using the words “must” or “always”).
  • Actively ruminate and express gratitude for his/her life situation
  • Identify and act on his/her signature strengths to maximize career and life satisfaction.
Being resilient isn’t something that we are necessarily born with although there appears to certainly be a genetic predisposition to possessing biological wiring favoring the release of neuropeptide Y and other hormones that may damper the stress response. We have also seen in our own research and others the capacity to develop hardiness or resilience:


Hardy talent appear to develop an ongoing commitment to maintain a lifestyle that enables them to balance the demands at work and home while remaining energized, productive and healthy.


If you are interested in seeing how resilient you are and would like a free trial of StressScan (www.getlifehub.com/stress_scan) just email me at ken@envisiaonline.com and I will be happy to set you up! 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.


Access Source And Its Great Content: http://results.envisialearning.com/

Monday, February 6, 2012

Great Leadership: A Performance Management Model

Great Leadership: A Performance Management Model


Note From Jim:  Dan McCarthy of the Whittmore School Of Business offers great advice for coaching performance.  Find his post at the link below:  Best Always - Jim

EXCERPTS

As a follow-up to the recent post and comments "Are You Managing or Just Nagging?", here's everything you need to facilitate a robust dialog on performance management, with lots of room for grey areas.

Dan McCarthy is the Director of Executive Development Programs (EDP) at the Whittemore School of Business and Economics. He is responsible for all administrative, fiscal, operational, and policy matters associated with the development, delivery, and marketing of Executive Development Programs at the Whittemore School.


The Whittemore School’s Executive Development Program offers executive development designed to meet the specific educational and training needs of individual businesses. For more than 30 years, the Whittemore School has worked collaboratively with companies on a variety of short- and long-term programs, offering intensive study for companies who want to strengthen their management skills, develop leadership capabilities or enhance specific business skills
 
Access Source And All of Dan's Great Content: http://www.greatleadershipbydan.com/2012/01/performance-management-model.html

Saturday, February 4, 2012

Influence PEOPLE: 700,000 Great Reasons To Use Yellow Sticky Notes

Monday 1/30/2012

by Brian Ahearn


EXCERPTS:

Yes: 50 Scientifically Proven Ways to Be Persuasive, the authors (Cialdini, Goldstein, Martin) cite two studies on the use of yellow sticky notes to show how they engage people and can increase the response rate. In both studies, when a sticky note with a hand written message was attached to a survey cover letter, the response rate to the survey more than doubled when compared to just sending out the survey cover letter

Why does the sticky note with the short message work so well? Because of reciprocity; the principle of influence that alerts us to the reality that people feel obligated to give back when they sense someone has done something for them. Using a sticky note with a handwritten message takes extra time and personalizes the request. Consciously or unconsciously, recipients of the survey responded to that small act in a big way. After all, it’s hard to deny a doubling of the response rate in two separate studies.


Brian Ahearn - Columbus, Ohio, United States  - I’ve been in the insurance industry for more than 25 years and have been a part of the State Auto Insurance Group since 1990. A Chartered Property Casualty Underwriter (CPCU) and Competent Toastmaster (CTM), I've been involved in the development and delivery of sales training programs for more than 15 years. In addition to training I'm a sales coach for a dozen regional vice presidents across the country. The focus of my sales training and coaching revolves around ethical influence and persuasion. Having trained under Robert Cialdini, PhD, I'm currently one of only 27 Cialdini Method Certified Trainers (CMCT) worldwide. There’s more than 60 years of behavioral science research to back up this claim - there are scientifically proven ways to get people to say “Yes” to you when you make a request. My goal is to help you understand how to apply that science so you can enjoy more success at work and home.




Access Source And Its Great Content: http://www.influence-people-brian.blogspot.com/2012/01/700000-great-reasons-to-use-yellow.html

Thursday, February 2, 2012

Three States to Require Insurers to Disclose Climate-Change Response Plans - New York Times

February 1, 2012
By FELICITY BARRINGER

EXCERPTS:

Insurance commissioners in California, New York and Washington State will require that companies disclose how they intend to respond to the risks their businesses and customers face from increasingly severe storms and wildfires, rising sea levels and other consequences of climate change, California’s commissioner said Wednesday.

 “Our goal is to have the most complete, best and accurate information possible for investors, the insurance industry, regulators and the broader public.”

Last year’s level of natural disasters was unprecedented, according to an August report by the A. M. Best Company, which rates the financial strength of insurers. By late June, the estimated $27 billion in losses suffered by the American industry exceeded the 2010 total.

The disclosure survey will be mandatory for companies writing policies worth more than $300 million nationwide. It was created by Ceres, a Boston-based nonprofit group that leads a coalition of investors and environmental groups in gathering information about business responses to climate change, and prods them to do more.

Robert Hartwig, president and economist at the Insurance Information Institute, an industry trade group,.... He added, “If insurers have shown anything over the course of the centuries in which they have oared it is that they are capable of managing changes in the weather on both the micro and the macro scale.”

Roughly 25 percent of the industry’s large property, casualty and life insurance companies participated in an earlier version of the survey sent out by California and five other states last year. A rule change, combined with California’s partnership with New York and Washington, will mean that 300 of the larger insurers will have to comply. Companies that do not complete the survey could face fines, although it is highly unusual for companies to ignore such directives.

The survey’s contents, Mr. Logan said, “are pretty basic. What the regulators are trying to get a sense of is whether companies have thought about the cost implications for their businesses.”

He added: “The big takeaway from the survey last year is that there is a high level of concern among insurers about the impacts of climate change that is not matched by concrete plans to deal with those impacts. There is a real gap between the risk that’s been identified and plans to address it.” Eleven of the 88 companies surveyed last year, he said, reported having formal policies to manage climate change.

Another group that might benefit from such disclosures, said California’s insurance commissioner, Mr. Jones, are investors in the insurance industry.

“If we feel insurance or energy companies are not incorporating climate risk into their analyses and their boards of directors are not recognizing it,” he said, “that failure to do so endangers the value of that investment.” The result, he said, would not be disinvestment but “engagement with those companies,” because “they are not caretaking their business very well.”

Access Article: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/02/02/business/energy-environment/three-states-tell-insurers-to-disclose-responses-to-climate-change.html?_r=1