Organisation Development
63
Developing healthy organisations
Curated by David Hain
Follow
Rescooped by David Hain from Emergent Insights: People & Change News Feed onto Organisation Development
Scoop.it!

Measure Employee Productivity Accurately

Measure Employee Productivity Accurately | Organisation Development | Scoop.it
Francesca Gino, author of the HBR Press book Sidetracked, explains how managers can work around input bias to get a real picture of performance in their companies.

Via Emergent Consultants
No comment yet.
David Hain is also curating
Coaching Leaders Business change Positive futures Collaborationweb
Discover Topics David Hain is following
The 21st Century Content Curation World Digital Delights for Learners Digital Delights Amazing Science Designing design thinking driven operations
and 488 others
Your new post is loading...
Rescooped by David Hain from Training and HR Matters
Scoop.it!

It’s Not Easy, But Here’s Where HR Can Add Value to the Business

It’s Not Easy, But Here’s Where HR Can Add Value to the Business | Organisation Development | Scoop.it
We want a seat at the table? We want to add value? We want to positively influence the success of the business?
OK, then let’s stop giving away one of our best tools – the art and science of performance improvement!

Via ValerieMalaval, Tom Haak, Roger Francis
David Hain's insight:

Nice piece on HR being organisational developers rather tghan police or administrators.

No comment yet.
Rescooped by David Hain from Organizational Teamwork and Collaboration
Scoop.it!

Change Your Team » Top 10 Signs that Your Dysfunctional Team is Getting Better

Change Your Team » Top 10 Signs that Your Dysfunctional Team is Getting Better | Organisation Development | Scoop.it
David Hain's insight:

Some great points here about high functioning teams.

No comment yet.
Rescooped by David Hain from Ethics
Scoop.it!

Study: In business, women value ethics more than men - CNN International

Study: In business, women value ethics more than men - CNN International | Organisation Development | Scoop.it
Study: In business, women value ethics more than men
CNN International
(CNN) -- Women are less ready to compromise their ethics in pursuit of success at work, a recent study has suggested.

Via NANCY PETERS
No comment yet.
Rescooped by David Hain from Knowledge Broker
Scoop.it!

It Can Be Smart to Dumb Things Down

It Can Be Smart to Dumb Things Down | Organisation Development | Scoop.it

Keeping your message simple helps mobilize people in support of your goals. GREAT article from Stanford Social Innovation Review.  


Via Kenneth Mikkelsen
No comment yet.
Rescooped by David Hain from Empathy and Compassion
Scoop.it!

The Case Against the Case Against Empathy

The Case Against the Case Against Empathy | Organisation Development | Scoop.it
In our efforts to solve difficult social problems in particular, we rely too heavily on reason and numbers and econometrics, and not often enough on empathy.

 

Empathy," writes Paul Bloom in The New Yorker this week, "is parochial, narrow-minded, and innumerate. We're often at our best when we're smart enough not to rely on it." We'd be better off were we to supplant our flawed empathetic sensibilities with reason (that most flawless of human capacities).

 

His central argument is a utilitarian one: empathy is an often irrational emotional response that plays favorites, he says. It is thus a poor mechanism for solving real problems and making tough choices -- whether distributing international aid or making sacrifices today so that we don't warm our planet to oblivion tomorrow....

 

But to truly empathize is not easy. In this sense Bloom is right: we're more likely to do so with those who look and think like we do. So rather than dismiss empathy, why not commit ourselves to practicing it more deliberately and more often, and expanding our spheres of empathy to those who are not just different but who challenge some of our very own moral foundations?

 

by Michael Zakaras


Via Edwin Rutsch
David Hain's insight:

Liked the original article, also like this. A very good discussion.

No comment yet.
Rescooped by David Hain from #BetterLeadership
Scoop.it!

Your Boss Probably Wouldn't Pass Yale's Emotional Intelligence Assessment

Your Boss Probably Wouldn't Pass Yale's Emotional Intelligence Assessment | Organisation Development | Scoop.it
"Most leaders who take the test are surprised they 'don't have it all.'"

Via Christine Heine, AlGonzalezinfo
AlGonzalezinfo's curator insight, May 15, 10:19 PM

Very interesting... Can this be a sign of changing times? Fascinating read, thanks Christine!

 

From the article:

 

Before Yale can determine whether the test can help them enhance the admissions process, the results first have to prove that it can predict certain outcomes. For now, Yale's School of Management and School of Medicine are allowing applicants the option to take the test, then they will study the results in a few years to determine whether using the applicant's emotional intelligence quotient would have "led to different results, predicted problems, or predicted unusual achievement."

Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/yales-emotional-intelligence-assessment-2013-5#ixzz2TPyl7UtX

Emma Sue Prince's curator insight, May 16, 4:22 AM

This is all about self-awareness. The degree to which people have this, or not, varies greatly. But the good news is that self-awareness can be developed. How? By gradually building understanding of self and why we do what we do, behave as we do, react the way we do and what causese these. In this way we can then begin to control and manage our emotions more effectively.

Ivon Prefontaine's curator insight, May 16, 8:50 PM

Does this turn Emotional Intelligence into a cognitive exercise.

Rescooped by David Hain from The Future of HR
Scoop.it!

The Trickle-Down Effect

The Trickle-Down Effect | Organisation Development | Scoop.it

For decades companies have faced the conundrum of how to ensure managers can implement what they have learnt at business school when they are back at work. So what's new in executive development?


Via Kenneth Mikkelsen, Roy Sheneman, PhD, Tom Haak
David Hain's comment, May 16, 3:01 AM
“You should not send a changed person back into an unchanged organisation, but we always do.” Henry Minzberg
Rescooped by David Hain from People Discovery - HR
Scoop.it!

How to be an HR Superhero

How to be an HR Superhero | Organisation Development | Scoop.it
Faster than a
speeding stenographer. More powerful than aromas from the cafeteria microwave. Able
to solve employee problems in a single day. 
Look over in
that cubicle! It's a salesman! It's an administrator!

Via Christina Lattimer
No comment yet.
Rescooped by David Hain from :: The 4th Era ::
Scoop.it!

Voice of the Graduate | McKinsey & Co.

Jim Lerman's curator insight, May 14, 5:12 PM

From the introduction

 

"There’s a paradox facing American society today. The demonstrable economic benefit of investing in higher education has never been greater. Research in the United States shows an enduring positive impact on earnings directly associated with the level of postsecondary learning a person attains. And research from around the world shows a link between college education and levels of individual and national well-being more broadly.

 

"Yet at the same time, as the survey discussed in this report will show, this potential does not appear to be fully realized in the lived experience of many recent graduates.The gap between higher education’s undeniable value and the concerns many recent graduates nonetheless report should become the impetus for change. In a sense, the “voice of the graduate” revealed in this survey amounts to a cry for help—an urgent call to deepen the relevance of higher education to employment and entrepreneurship so that the promise of higher education is fulfilled.

"By focusing on the voice of America’s young people, this report, by design, raises more questions than it answers. Our hope is that the underappreciated student perspective can serve as a fresh spur to a conversation that seems overdue.

 

"As every thoughtful observer recognizes, the improvements today’s graduates are calling for cannot be pursued by any education stakeholder working alone. Instead, as McKinsey’s work around the world on its “education to employment” initiative suggests, it is only when employers,education providers, public officials, families, and youth advocates work together that effective solutions can be forged."

Rescooped by David Hain from Third Sector Innovation
Scoop.it!

CIPD: Voluntary sector leadership leads way on employee engagement

CIPD: Voluntary sector leadership leads way on employee engagement | Organisation Development | Scoop.it
Over half of employees in the voluntary sector felt engaged in their roles during the first quarter of the year, an increase on the previous three months despite...

Via Richard Andrews
No comment yet.
Rescooped by David Hain from Empathy and Compassion
Scoop.it!

Paul Bloom: The Case Against Empathy

Paul Bloom: The Case Against Empathy | Organisation Development | Scoop.it
Empathy research is thriving these days. Several new books enthusiastically champion an increase in empathy as a cure for humanity’s ills. This enthusiasm may be misplaced, however.

 

In 2008, Karina Encarnacion, an eight year-old girl from Missouri, wrote to President-elect Barack Obama with some advice about what kind of dog he should get for his daughters. She also suggested that he enforce recycling and ban unnecessary wars. Obama wrote to thank her, and offered some advice of his own: “If you don’t already know what it means, I want you to look up the word ‘empathy’ in the dictionary. I believe we don’t have enough empathy in our world today, and it is up to your generation to change that.

This wasn’t the first time Obama had spoken up for empathy.


Via Edwin Rutsch
David Hain's comment, May 14, 2:31 AM
Very interesting discussion that in my view belies it's title - must read.
AlGonzalezinfo's curator insight, May 14, 12:24 PM

Fantastic scoop David, thank you!

 

From the article:

 

In a thoughtful new book on bullying, “Sticks and Stones” (Random House), Emily Bazelon writes,

 

“The scariest aspect of bullying is the utter lack of empathy”—a diagnosis that she applies not only to the bullies but also to those who do nothing to help the victims.

 

Few of those involved in bullying, she cautions, will turn into full-blown psychopaths. Rather, the empathy gap is situational: bullies have come to see their victims as worthless; they have chosen to shut down their empathetic responses. But most will outgrow—and perhaps regret—their terrible behavior.

 

“The key is to remember that almost everyone has the capacity for empathy and decency—and to tend that seed as best as we possibly can,” she maintains.

Kevin Sutton's curator insight, May 21, 11:46 AM

Empathy alone is not enough.

Rescooped by David Hain from Art of Hosting
Scoop.it!

Cardinals, Don’t Squander This Conclave

Cardinals, Don’t Squander This Conclave | Organisation Development | Scoop.it

Memo
To: The College of Cardinals
From: Kristin Cobble
Re: Designing a Smarter Conclave
I’m not a cardinal or a Catholic. And I’m from California, so I don’t spend a lot of time at the Vatican. But as a professional designer and facilitator of conversations, I can tell from reports that your conclave this week will be an enormous missed opportunity.


Via F. Thunus
David Hain's insight:

Well worth a read!

F. Thunus's curator insight, May 10, 7:49 AM

Absolutely BRILLIANT. Witty, funny, and with substance :-)

Rescooped by David Hain from The Future of HR
Scoop.it!

3 More Key Predictions For the HR Department of 2020

3 More Key Predictions For the HR Department of 2020 | Organisation Development | Scoop.it
Second of two parts Editor's Note: For Part 1, see 3 Key Predictions for the Human Resources Department of 2020. 4: HR will utilize analytics and Big Data to augment its value In-house HR …

Via Tom Haak
No comment yet.
Scooped by David Hain
Scoop.it!

Bring Your Soul to Work: Part Three - Seeking Truth

Bring Your Soul to Work: Part Three - Seeking Truth | Organisation Development | Scoop.it
We speak of inconvenient truth, sad truth, unfortunate truth, painful truth, harsh truth and shocking truth. Why is it that so often the truth surprises us? And not in a good way? Truth is an elusi...
David Hain's insight:

Very heartfelt and peronal view on really important stuff from Scott Mabry (@scott-elumn8).

No comment yet.
Scooped by David Hain
Scoop.it!

Not looking after employees' mental health is expensive and damaging | Time To Change

Not looking after employees' mental health is expensive and damaging | Time To Change | Organisation Development | Scoop.it
If management and work forces were better informed about promoting better mental health in the workplace, we could all sleep a little a better at night, knowing tomorrow could be an altogether more enjoyable, productive and cost efficient day of...
David Hain's insight:

One in four of us will suffer from mental health problems.  That's a lot of productivity!

No comment yet.
Rescooped by David Hain from LeadershipABC
Scoop.it!

What Value Creation Will Look Like in the Future

What Value Creation Will Look Like in the Future | Organisation Development | Scoop.it

Organizational structure will have to change to meet the new reality of creativity as a core component of value and continuous innovation as the mechanism to sustain it. 


Via Kenneth Mikkelsen
John Michel's curator insight, May 18, 7:59 AM

If your organization draws value from optimizing repetitive work, you'll find that it will be increasingly difficult to extract that value.

Rescooped by David Hain from Leading the Innovative Organization
Scoop.it!

Millennials Are Rewriting the Rules of Work and Entrepreneurship

Millennials Are Rewriting the Rules of Work and Entrepreneurship | Organisation Development | Scoop.it

HR and communication challenge s ahead... What do Millennials want? Flexibility and independence top the list, according to a new study, “Millennials and the Future of Work,” from oDesk.... Millennial workers want freedom and the flexibility to work how they want. Many Millennials have a “freelance” attitude. Almost nine in 10 (89 percent) say they prefer to work when and where they choose (compared to a corporate, 9-to-5 job). When comparing freelance work to “regular” jobs, Millennials say freelancing gives them more freedom to: - Work wherever they like (92 percent). - Work whenever they like (87 percent). - Work on more interesting projects (69 percent). - Travel while working (half say they’d prefer this to taking vacation time). You Might Have a Closet Freelancer on Your Staff Many Millennials are biding their time at regular jobs and freelancing on the side until the time is right to leave. Nearly three-fourths (71 percent) of those who work regular jobs want to quit to be entirely independent; 61 percent say they likely will quit within two years, and 17 percent say they definitely will....


Via Jeff Domansky, Gabriela Grosseck, michel verstrepen, carol k, Wise Leader™, Eric Vanetti
carol k's curator insight, May 16, 11:25 AM

Very interesting, the technology certainly exists to make this real. Organisational structures however, are slower to change. The move to flexibility I think is a good one, affording a better work life balance.

plerudulier's curator insight, May 19, 6:19 AM

In redefining entrepreneurship what Milleniums truly expect is working from a Starbucks while typing a few lines of code and sipping coffee. When they realize it isn't that easy, that thousands like them are struggling to make ends meet, I bet you they'll think twice about that 9 to 5 steady job with a monthy pay check.

Rescooped by David Hain from Gestión del talento y comunicación organizacional- Talent Management and Communications
Scoop.it!

Gen Y employees seek flexible independent working over traditional corporate jobs, study reveals

Gen Y employees seek flexible independent working over traditional corporate jobs, study reveals | Organisation Development | Scoop.it

HR Magazine Most young people (84%) in traditional corporate jobs want to quit in favour of more flexible independent working, a study published today has found.


Via Fernanda Grimaldi
No comment yet.
Scooped by David Hain
Scoop.it!

The future of lifelong learning - FT.com

The future of lifelong learning - FT.com | Organisation Development | Scoop.it
Future shock, according to Alvin Toffler in his seminal book of that name, is what happens to people when they experience too much change within too short a period of time.
No comment yet.
Rescooped by David Hain from New Leadership
Scoop.it!

Organisations Unprepared for Gen X & Y Cultural Changes

Organisations Unprepared for Gen X & Y Cultural Changes | Organisation Development | Scoop.it

Organisations are not adequately prepared for the cultural changes that will occur as executives from the baby boomer generation retire and are replaced by their generation x and y counterparts, a study has found.


Via Roger Francis
No comment yet.
Scooped by David Hain
Scoop.it!

The Shocking Truth About Brand Loyalty | Help Scout

The Shocking Truth About Brand Loyalty | Help Scout | Organisation Development | Scoop.it
The conversation around brand loyalty has been on a steady decline since the advent of social media. Ever since the term
No comment yet.
Rescooped by David Hain from Mediocre Me
Scoop.it!

5 Ways to Create a Winning Culture

5 Ways to Create a Winning Culture | Organisation Development | Scoop.it
A strong culture isn't something you wish into place, or even will into place. It's something you build. Here's how.

Via John Michel
Scott Span, MSOD's comment, May 15, 10:53 AM
All great points... particularly # 3. Without trust, not much else can happen.
AlGonzalezinfo's curator insight, May 15, 1:17 PM

Tpotally agree with Don on item #5.  I also like #3.

 

Create an environment of trust.

Many organizations believe internal trust is nice to have but not a key factor for bottom line profitability. That simply isn’t true. Trust directly affects speed and cost. When trust diminishes, speed goes down and costs go up. These economic factors are usually disguised as other things, but when there isn’t trust between team members, or between the company and its customers, it is impossible to achieve real success. The myths are that trust is built solely on integrity, that you either have it or you don’t, that if lost it can’t be restored, and that it can’t be taught. The realities are that trust is a function of both character and competency, it can be both created and destroyed, it can be restored (in most cases), and be taught and developed into a measurable strategic advantage.

Mark Gregory , Programme Innovator's curator insight, May 24, 6:47 AM

5 steps to defining your winning culture explained succinctly for any leader looking to change their own organisational culture.

Rescooped by David Hain from #BetterLeadership
Scoop.it!

Leading Beyond the Status Quo – 3 Filters for Employee Engagement | WebTalkRadio.net

Leading Beyond the Status Quo – 3 Filters for Employee Engagement | WebTalkRadio.net | Organisation Development | Scoop.it

Studies show that around 80 percent of workers are not passionate about what they do. Here are 3 ways to start changing the status quo.


Via Maya Mathias, AlGonzalezinfo
David Hain's insight:

Nice interview between two people whi know what they are talking about.

Karin Sebelin's comment, May 14, 1:05 PM
We should never speak theoretically about empathy :-) Empathy is a practice!
Maya Mathias's comment, May 14, 5:12 PM
Thanks for all the shares and comments! It was truly a joy to serve and I'm glad it resonates.
Ivon Prefontaine's curator insight, May 14, 7:48 PM

We need different people running many organizations.

Rescooped by David Hain from "employee engagement enhancement"
Scoop.it!

Clearing Hurdles to Employee Engagement - TalentCulture - World of Work

Clearing Hurdles to Employee Engagement - TalentCulture - World of Work | Organisation Development | Scoop.it

In general, we see companies encountering six main hurdles on their journey:

 

 

Employee participation
Making time
Securing executive buy-in
Engaging managers
Budget
Measuring success

 

 

Each one presents a unique challenge, but none are insurmountable.

 


Via Jean-Philippe D'HALLUIN
David Hain's insight:

Nice infographic.

Jean-Philippe D'HALLUIN's curator insight, May 11, 1:54 AM

Don't forget the warm up. 

 

On your marks ...

Ivon Prefontaine's curator insight, May 11, 12:52 PM

We need a new leadership structure to emerge for this to happen.

Rescooped by David Hain from "employee engagement enhancement"
Scoop.it!

Givers take all: The hidden dimension of corporate culture

Givers take all: The hidden dimension of corporate culture | Organisation Development | Scoop.it
By encouraging employees to both seek and provide help, rewarding givers, and screening out takers, companies can reap significant and lasting benefits. A McKinsey Quarterly article.

Via Karima Hamadouche, Jean-Philippe D'HALLUIN
Jean-Philippe D'HALLUIN's curator insight, May 9, 4:00 PM

From this great article : "the strongest predictor of group effectiveness is the amount of help that is given to each other"