Archive for Thought Provokers

Unlease Creativity, Mobilize Talent, Capitalize on Collective IntellligenceExcerpt from A-CHIEVE! (May 2011)

UNLEASH CREATIVITY | MOBILIZE TALENT | CAPITALIZE ON COLLECTIVE INTELLLIGENCE

“…while businesses have traditionally managed their workforces with an eye toward operational efficiency, they have not necessarily done so with the creativity, flexibility and speed to capitalize on the growth opportunities that spring from an ever-more dynamic global marketplace.”

Working Beyond Borders, IBM Study, 2010 | Summary Insights from 700 organizations across 61 countries

We thank companies like IBM who have the capital and reach to conduct expansive and thoughtful global surveys and share results with us so we can leverage their work within our own organizational microcosms. Unfortunately, great surveys like “Working Beyond Borders” come and go with little fanfare because we read a title, and in our age of information overload, quickly decide “Oh, that doesn’t apply to me and my organization because:

  • We don’t have a global footprint 
  • Our industry and culture are unique
  • We’re just fine the way we are
  • The study is ‘blue sky’ thinking
  • IBM is just trying to sell their services”

– when, in fact, the over-arching concepts apply to each and every one of us. Even more ironic, the study’s first of three challenges – cultivating creative leaders – defined as “nimbly leading in complex global environments”, speaks to our inability of being open to then creatively translating (connect-the-dots between) high-level concepts, trends and statistics into goal-driven, realistic and practical strategies and tactics that scream competitive advantage, unique differentiators, exceptional results, continuous improvement and marketplace relevancy. We love studies like IBM’s because we are anecdotally seeing and experiencing within small, mid size and large organizations, exactly what the study’s 707 Chief Human Resource Officers (CHRO) and Workforce Strategists are seeing and experiencing across the globe. So what are the “top 3″ challenges and how can they be remediated?

Click to continue reading ““Top 3″ Forward-Looking Trends”

Employee Disengagement – A Case Study Lone man silhouette

In our February professional development newsletter A-CHIEVE! , our feature article addressed The Disengagement Epidemic – a pervasive problem impacting approximately 33%+ (or 25 million) of the U.S. workforce resulting in a $416 billion productivity drain (per Gallup). In fact several of you, our newsletter subscribers, reached out to let us know that YOU’RE part of the 33% — either ‘disengaged’ or ‘actively disengaged’. Overwhelmingly our readership asked us “Why doesn’t leadership ‘get it’ and why aren’t they doing anything about it?” One of our readers, let’s call him ‘Jeff’, agreed to be interviewed so we could better understand how an employee could arrive at a place of being ‘actively disengaged’ — which is where Jeff is at. His story is all too familiar.

Click to continue reading “Disengaged Employees – A Case Study”

Excerpt from A-CHIEVE! (February 2011)

How Engaged are You, Your Team and Your Organization?

Did you know that we’re in the midst of a Disengagement Epidemic? According to PricewaterhouseCoopers’ 2010 data, 33% of the workforce is highly disengaged as compared to 20% in 2008 and 10% pre 2008. And they’re not the only ones presenting alarming statistics. Gallup 2010 reports that 33% of employees in world-class organizations are either not engaged or actively disengaged and 67% of employees in average organizations are either not engaged or actively disengaged – which equates to a 1.83:1 ratio of disengaged to engaged employees. Gallup further reports that “more than 25 million people are actively disengaged with their jobs and workplace at a cost to U.S. employers of $416 billion in lost productivity.” But the picture is even worse than that. Gallup 2010 research statistics show that organizations comprised of not engaged or actively disengaged employees additionally experience the following:

Click to continue reading “The Disengagement Epidemic”