Feedback
07.20.2015
Pre-Conference Survey – Organizational Adaptability Assessment
In the weeks leading up to the 2015 MOR Leaders Conference, we invited 2,051 members of the MOR IT Leaders community to participate in a nineteen-question survey designed to gather their impressions of their IT organizations’ current levels of adaptability. We received a total of 589 responses. The survey posed nineteen questions in the form […]
07.14.2015
Emotional Intelligence in Tough Conversations
Today’s Tuesday Reading is a short video Emotional Intelligence in Tough Conversations from the Harvard Business School’s “The Management Tip” series. The presenter is Susan David, CEO, Evidence Based Psychology and Codirector, Institute of Coaching, McLean Hospital. David is also co-author of Emotional Agility, which appeared in the November 2013 issue of the Harvard Business Review. […]
06.30.2015
Feedback 103 – Asking for and Receiving Feedback
Two weeks ago I began a series of Tuesday Readings focusing on feedback. In the first reading, I suggested that feedback was the sharing of information between co-workers about the impact of their behavior on the team’s results, its processes, and/or its relationships. This past week I focused on giving feedback and suggested six simple, […]
06.23.2015
Feedback 102 – Giving Feedback
Last week we began a series of Tuesday Readings on the subject of feedback: Feedback in the workplace is the sharing of information between co-workers about the impact that their behavior is having on the team’s results, its processes, and/or its relationships. It can be positive in the form of affirmation of specific good work a […]
06.16.2015
Feedback 101 – What Is It?
“We all live in the world with only the vaguest notion of our impact, and sometimes that matters. Clearly, when we’re effective or helpful, we ought to know it. And when our actions are working against us or others, we ought to know that too. Given how most of us put our heads down and […]
11.11.2014
7 Ways You’re Unconsciously Undermining Yourself
The Tuesday Reading today is 7 Ways You’re Unconsciously Undermining Yourself. The essay was written by Gwen Moran for FastCompany.com. Moran writes about business, money and assorted other topics for leading publications and web sites. She is co-author of The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Business Plans. There are things we all do that undermine ourselves, that make others think we’re not effective […]
09.23.2014
To Get Honest Feedback, Leaders Need to Ask
Today’s Tuesday Reading is “To Get Honest Feedback, Leaders Need to Ask”, as essay from the pens of Jim Kouzes and Barry Posner which appeared on the HBR Blog Network. Kouzes and Posner are coauthors of The Leadership Challenge: How to Make Extraordinary Things Happen in Organizations. Both are at Santa Clara University where Posner […]
09.02.2014
How to Communicate Effectively at Work
Today’s Tuesday Reading, “How to Communicate Effectively at Work” first appeared two years ago as a nine picture slide deck embedded in a Forbes’ article that reports on Karen Friedman’s book Shut Up And Say Something: Business Communication Strategies to Overcome Challenges and Influence Listeners. The author of the article is by Susan Adams. For me, […]
05.13.2014
Overcome the Eight Barriers to Confidence
Today’s Tuesday Reading turns to the subject of confidence by considering Professor Rosabeth Moss Kanter’s essay “Overcome the Eight Barriers to Confidence”. Professor Kanter is Ernest L. Arbuckle Professor at the Harvard Business School and the author of Confidence: How Winning Streaks and Losing Streaks Begin and End. Kanter notes that to be a more confident […]
04.01.2014
How to Ask Better Questions
Today’s Tuesday Reading is How to Ask Better Questions. The essay’s author is Judity Ross, a contributing writer and columnist for Talking Writing, an online literary magazine. She has written numerous articles and reports for academy, corporate, and nonprofit organizations, including the Harvard Business School.
Several weeks ago, the Tuesday Reading was “Increase Your Team’s Curiosity” […]