Talent Management
02.19.2013
Four Lessons From the Best Bosses I Ever Had
Deborah Mills-Scofield, writing in the Harvard Business School Blog, talks about four lessons she learned from the best bosses she had. Scofield calls herself a status quo challenger, an innovator, a strategist, and a disrupter. Her principle interest is in creating and implementing “highly actionable, measurable, and profitable strategic plans and cultures that foster innovation.” […]
10.02.2012
One Thing Employees Need (But Rarely Get)
The Tuesday Reading today is “One Thing Employees Need (But Rarely Get)”. Today’s reading, was written by Jeff Haden who says that he learned much of what he knows about business and technology by working his way up in the manufacturing industry and by ghostwriting for smart leaders, and appeared in Inc. Haden makes a very […]
09.25.2012
Smart Leaders Get More Out of the Employees They Have
Today’s reading, “Smart Leaders Get More Out of the Employees They Have”, is by Liz Wiseman, president of The Wiseman Group, a management research and development center in Silicon Valley and author of Multipliers: How the Best Leaders Make Everyone Smarter, and comes from the HBR Blog Network. Wiseman’s point in her article is simple: […]
09.04.2012
Are You Sure You’re Not A Bad Boss?
Today’s Tuesday Reading “Are You Sure You’re Not A Bad Boss?” first appeared in the Harvard Business Review’s Blog Network. Jack Zenger and Joseph Folkman are, respectively, the CEO and the president of Zenger | Folkman, a leadership development consultancy. They are co-authors of the October 2011 HBR article “Making Yourself Indispensable,” and the book How to Be Exceptional: […]
01.03.2012
I Was Impossible, but Then I Saw How to Lead
For today’s Tuesday Reading, we turn to an Adam Bryant interview of Brown University President Ruth J. Simmons which appeared in the December 3, 2011 NYTimes. IT Leaders Coach Greg Anderson called this interview – which can be found at <http://nyti.ms/tw4lR0> – to my attention. It seemed to be a particularly fitting way to begin the […]
09.27.2011
What Hiring Managers Really Look For
By selecting this article for today’s Tuesday Reading, I’m not suggesting that you should be out looking for a job. Rather, given the author, Steve Tobak, who has extensive experience on both sides of the hiring desk, I thought that his piece “What Hiring Managers Really Look For” was excellent advice for the hiring manager. So, […]
09.13.2011
Get Involved without Being a Micromanager: 3 Tips
I think we are all micromanagers at heart. This week’s reading is a short piece by John Baldoni, “Get Involved without Being a Micromanager: 3 Tips” which recently appeared in BNET’s leadership blog. We all dive deeply into the details; sometimes when we are the only one with the necessary skills and expertise. But, more often […]
08.23.2011
One Small Step for You – One Giant Leap for Employees
Today’s reading is a short piece by Jeff Haden, “One Small Step for You – One Giant Leap for Employees”. Haden learned much of what he knows about management as he worked his way up the printing business from forklift driver to manager of a 250-employee book plant. The rest he picked up from ghost writing books […]
05.10.2011
Managing Yourself: Stop Holding Yourself Back
Today’s reading is “Managing Yourself: Stop Holding Yourself Back”from the Harvard Business Review. The authors are Ann Morriss, managing director of the Concire Leadership Institute and Robin Ely and Frances Frei, both professors at the Harvard Business School. Morriss, Ely, and Frei have been studying for over a decade what gets in the way of […]