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Home Archive for category "People" (Page 10)

There is no talent shortage if you’re a great place to work.”

In his book, “What Were They Thinking?  Unconventional Wisdom About Management,” author Jeffrey Pfeffer devotes a chapter to “making companies more like communities.”  His premise is that a company’s human capital is the key to its success, and the key to attracting and retaining the best people is to develop a caring, community-like culture.  In

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Let’s get confrontational!

To many of us, confrontation is something to be avoided.  The word conjures up something unpleasant or uncomfortable.  We imagine two people standing toe-to-toe, their faces red, the veins in their necks bulging, and screaming at one another at the tops of their lungs.  Well, if that’s the way you think of confrontation, it’s easy

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“Extraordinary companies and teams . . . “

In his book, “True Alignment,” author Edgar Papke makes the point that in genuinely great organizations, everyone . . . every executive, every manager, every employee . . . pulls together toward the same goal, the same outcome.  Makes sense, doesn’t it?  After all, without this sort of “alignment,” members of an organization can work

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What’s the difference between a leader and a boss?

Leadership is an endlessly fascinating topic because it’s one of those things that we recognize when we see it in action, but it’s frustratingly difficult to define or quantify in terms we can all agree upon.  What does a great leader do that a not-so-great leader doesn’t do?  What does a not-so-great leader do that

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Why can’t we ever get anything done around here?

Our last posting talked about BHAGs (Big Hairy Audacious Goals) and we asked, “What’s Your New Year’s BHAG?”  But achieving a BHAG is just like keeping a New Year’s resolution: it’s all in the execution.  It’s all in the doing.  It’s one thing to dream up a BHAG, it’s quite another to put the wheels

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“In your business decisions, risk only money . . . never people or relationships.”

Business is all about relationships, isn’t it?  We need strong relationships with: Employees.  We set policies and give direction, but it’s our employees who do the work and get stuff done.  We will get their best, most energetic, most creative efforts only if we’ve nurtured the right relationships with them. Vendors.  If we’ve taken the

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How does your leadership style make people feel?

Bruna Martinuzzi is a consultant who specializes in teaching leadership and presentation skills.  She is also the author of two books, and while I have not read either book, I have read an article she published recently with the rather long-winded title, “If your leadership aura could use some polishing, try these 7 tips for

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What is your employee disaster plan?

As we’ve said here before, there are two keys to developing an outstanding workforce.  First, you have to get the right people on the bus.  That is, you have to hire people who have the right attitudes, behaviors, and values to fit well within your organization.  As the bus driver, you can’t let just anybody

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“Whoever said, ‘If it ain’t broke . . . ‘ “

It’s easy to get a little lax about taking care of your car.  That is, you get in, it starts right up, and then you’re zipping down the road.  No worries, right?  But then, warning lights start appearing on the dashboard or the brakes start to squeak, and you realize you haven’t had it serviced

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“The occupational disease of a poor executive is an inability to listen.”

If I had to pick one business skill above all others, I’d picked listening.  Not hearing.  Listening.  Hearing is passive, listening is active.  Actually, listening isn’t just a business skill, it’s more of a life skill.  And it’s a critical skill because whatever problem you’re facing, the clues to its solution are all around you

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