Role of the Manager is One of the Most Critical In Any Business
Managers: You are one, and you have had them. You have loved some and loathed others - but now that you’re in the role of manager, you realize just what a tough job it is!
in Talent Management, Middle Managers, Management Training, HBDI, Management development, Whole Brain Thinking
Role of the Manager is One of the Most Critical In Any Business
Managers: You are one, and you have had them. You have loved some and loathed others - but now that you’re in the role of manager, you realize just what a tough job it is!
in Middle Managers, Management development, Teamwork, Remote Work, resilience, Energy Management, burn out
One year into the global COVID-19 pandemic, many remote teams are feeling like they’re constantly running on fumes. Beyond the stresses of the health and economic situations, days spent on endless, back-to-back virtual meetings, sharing your workspace with family… it is easy to feel drained. For years, a top productivity concern was time management -- now it has shifted to energy management. Here are some of the best techniques we’ve learned for energy management to support wellness and resilience and avoid burn-out in remote work.
With all the chatter about employee engagement and its impact on productivity and retention, we know that employee motivation is a key issue at all levels of leadership.
But people who lead continue to make a fundamental mistake in this area: They believe and behave as if they are responsible for an employee's motivation.
Here’s a news flash: Motivation of an employee doesn’t come from the manager; it comes from within the employee.
Why is this so hard to grasp? One possible reason is we’ve established a cadre of leaders who think that visible action on their part is the primary way to lead—that you must do something or you won’t be viewed as a leader by those who are led.
in Learning, Middle Managers, High potentials, White Papers, human resources, Training and Development, Management Training, Training, Emerging Leaders, Learning and Development, Whole Brain Manager, Management development, Whole Brain Thinking
“Agility” has become one of the hot buzzwords of the workplace today. As we settle in to a reality of rapid changes, continual uncertainty and new circumstances that have very little precedent and no clear-cut answers, everyone is feeling the pressure to adapt, to flex, to shift on a dime.
In many organizations, it’s the managers and emerging leaders who are on the front lines of this pressure. As Tom Davenport of Towers Watson put it, "Creating a resilient workplace that can deal with trauma and come out engaged on the other end is not a senior executive's role. It's a line manager's job."
in HR.com, Middle Managers, High potentials, leadership development, human resources, Management Training, Webinars, Emerging Leaders, Learning and Development, Whole Brain Manager, Whole Brain Thinking
High-potential leaders are critical to ensuring businesses can meet their goals now and in years to come, and that’s why one of the most pressing human resource challenges today is a lack of up-and-coming managerial talent to quickly and effectively execute on critical strategies and initiatives.
A recent PWC survey found that 50% of business leaders say their biggest challenge is recruiting and retaining high-potential middle managers. The impact, they report, is being felt across the business, from cancelled or delayed strategic initiatives to missed market opportunities and an inability to innovative effectively.
in Middle Managers, High potentials, leadership development, Training and Development, Management Training, Training, Emerging Leaders, Whole Brain Manager, Whole Brain Thinking
We’re living in an environment in which there always seems to be too much work and not enough time. That’s one of the reasons why agility, speed and adaptability are being touted as the new competitive advantages for organizations.
At the level of execution in particular, agility has never been more critical to organizational success, and the responsibilities are lying squarely on the shoulders of today’s managers. Being able to move the organization from Point A to Point B quickly and effectively requires managers who can optimize communications, workflows, problem solving and performance.
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