How to Get Your Team to Stop Asking You Every Little Question
Jamie Dimon says you only need to talk to someone for this many minutes to change your life
“You can learn more from speaking to someone in 15 minutes than spending your life doing something. I learned a lot about what to do and what not to do by watching other people,” he said.
We think to add before destroying, editing, or refining what exists
Our natural tendency to add rather than subtract stems, in part, from it being much harder to “demonstrate competence by subtracting,” Klotz explains. Monumental feats of architecture, like the Great Pyramids and Great Wall of China, stick in our minds because of their grand scale, and are integral to how towering civilizations demonstrated their superiority.
Employers must check vaccination status for workers to go maskless - News Break
Labor and Industries is responsible for keeping the workplace safe. Their guidelines say employers must confirm the vaccination status of employees before allowing them to take off their masks and no longer socially distance. While the employer doesn’t need to keep a copy of the vaccination card or an attestation letter, they do need to keep a record that it was checked, and use the same method for all employees.
Why Narcissists Make Life So Exhausting for Everyone Else | Psychology Today
"...people whose narcissism leads them to manipulate and exploit others may have difficulties in distinguishing themselves from others. They see your goals as the same as theirs, so why wouldn’t you want to throw your personal interests by the wayside to satisfy theirs? Aren’t you willing to be that tool they need to succeed."
50 Amazing New Nonfiction Books to Kick Off Your Summer Reading
And today, we’re excited to share our list of nominees for Summer 2021. Neither our staff nor our curators have read each and every title below, but we believe that the two best nonfiction books of the season are among them. So if you’re looking for summer reading, the nominees are…
Hiring Remotely? These 6 Interview Questions Will Tell You All You Need to Know | Inc.com
How Men Can Be More Inclusive Leaders
3 Ways Leaders Can Get the Best out of Their Employees in the Hybrid Work Age | Inc.com
In PwC's latest US Remote Work Survey, PwC surveyed 133 US executives and 1,200 US office workers between November 24 and December 5, 2020, to determine how effective remote work has been. According to their findings, 80% of organizations are planning a hybrid work environment for the long term.
PwC's Digital Products Leader, Tom Puthiyamadam, an expert who coaches teams on how to bring the best ideas to life, shared with me three best practices for navigating this transition to a hybrid model.
The One Rule You Need to Follow to Succeed With A Hybrid Work Model | Inc.com
The 60-30-10 Rule was developed by leading teams researchers, Ruth Wageman and the late Harvard Professor, Richard Hackman. The rule explains variance in team performance, specifically it says that:
60 percent of the variance in team performance is attributed to the way a team is designed.
30 percent of the variance in team performance is attributed to the quality of team launches.
And only 10 percent is attributed to how well the leader coaches the team.
There’s a Perfect Number of Days to Work From Home, and It’s 2 - Route Fifty
What would be best for most office workers—and what’s most likely to happen for many of them—is something between the extremes of old-school office work and digital nomadism. What’s right for you might end up being a little further in either direction, depending on how social or siloed your job is, or if you’re a particularly extreme introvert or extrovert. But I’m here to argue for a particular baseline: three days in the office, and two at home.
Resist Old Routines When Returning to the Office
How to Nail a Hybrid Presentation
We recently spoke to a CEO who was feeling anxious about public speaking in the hybrid office. “When I give presentations now, it’s simple. Everyone’s on Zoom,” he told us. “What happens when some people go back while others still work from home?”
What Mix of WFH and Office Time Is Right for You?
Over the past year, many of us have found things to love about working from home like flexibility, the ability to focus, and no commute. Now that offices are starting re-open, you might start to remember that there is a lot to love about the office, too: social interaction, the joys of collaboration, and of course, that endless pot of coffee.
Many companies intend to give us the best of both worlds by allowing employees to split their time between home and the workplace. But it will only give you the best of both worlds if you figure out how to combine home and office time in a way that maximizes your productivity and personal wellbeing. That means figuring out which days to spend at home, which days to spend at the office, and just as crucial, how to sell your boss on that plan.
Pension Plans Are Disappearing. Now What? Defined Ben... - Ticker Tape
Pensions are a type of “defined benefit” plan. Typically, you’d pay into it (or technically your employer would pay into it on your behalf) during your working years, and once you retired, you’d have a guaranteed income stream for life...“Defined contribution” plans like 401(k)s encourage employees to save on their own while offering tax-deferred savings features. Plus, employers often match a percentage of their employees’ contributions, which both encourages them to save more and provides an added benefit in the form of additional money from the employer in excess of a salary.
What's the Curse of Knowledge, and How Can You Break It? | Psychology Today
Once you know something, it can be difficult to take the perspective of someone who doesn't.
This phenomenon, known as the curse of knowledge, can lead to miscommunication, conflict, and professional stumbles.
To avoid this pitfall, one should slow down, think about what their audience needs to know, and try to catch themselves making assumptions.
The Pandemic Is Changing Employee Benefits
Survey shows rural-urban divide in Oregon over remote working | Rural Life | capitalpress.com
Residents of rural areas think working from home is temporary and as soon as the threat of the pandemic ends, everyone will return to the office.
The Cultural Life Cycle of Organizations | Psychology Today
As organizations grow, they progress through somewhat predictable patterns of culture change. This happens because culture is an expression of how a group of people works together to solve collective problems...
The Age Of Automation Is Now: Here's How To 'Futureproof' Yourself | Spokane Public Radio
Are robots coming for your job? New York Times tech columnist Kevin Roose says companies and governments are increasingly using automation and artificial intelligence to cut costs, transform workplaces and eliminate jobs — and more changes are coming.
Employers Must Ensure the Safety of Home Workspaces
The Secret of Adaptable Organizations Is Trust
However, the real issue is not successfully transforming your organization on a one-time basis — it’s writing the ability to adapt and transform into the company’s DNA. It’s developing a mechanism or reflex for dealing with whatever crisis comes along, be it financial, technological, environmental, or health related.
Cyberattacks Are Inevitable. Is Your Company Prepared?
Cyberattacks always happen when you least expect them. And when they happen, they happen quickly. Responding appropriately is not just the responsibility of your cybersecurity team; everyone in the organization has a role to play.
The pandemic forced a massive remote-work experiment. Now comes the hard part - CNN
"Many companies succeeded working remotely in 2020 largely because everyone was doing it -- there was no built-in preference for office workers or stigma against remote workers," said Andrew Hewitt, senior analyst at market research firm Forrester. "Hybrid is going to make managing this difference harder."
Research: Becoming a Manager Doesn’t Always Feel Like a Step Up
There is, however, evidence that some people experience “managerial blues,” or disenchantment with their managerial job, viewing it as less meaningful than their previous one. Such disenchantment can easily push people to exit the managerial ranks not long after joining them, creating potentially a huge loss for the employee’s career and the organization.
What to Do When Your Employee Is Totally Checked Out
It’s frustrating when a member of your team has mentally checked out. In some cases, this person does only the bare minimum. In other cases, they fail to meet important deadlines, or they drop the ball on critical projects.
Learning is everywhere
Learning is acquiring necessary information to do your job. Learning can be formal or informal, a big deal or simply getting a question answered. You can learn by taking a class, or just leaning over and watching a more experienced colleague do their job. The problem with learning is that it's difficult to quantify for a performance review or checklist.
Research: When New IT Systems Shift the Burden onto Employees
"...managers must become aware of the workload shift that occurs when they invest in new IT products."
Ten habits of bad management
5 ways startup founders can stop being such control freaks
This cybersecurity startup cofounder lays out 5 ways to trust your teams and stop obsessively controlling every detail of your business.