The document discusses the importance of providing regular feedback to employees. It cites studies that found 72% of employees feel their performance would improve with corrective feedback, and 57% prefer corrective feedback over only praise. Regular feedback reinforces that employees' work has value and purpose, and a lack of feedback can lead to disengagement. The research showed highly engaged employees receive feedback at least weekly, while low engagement employees receive it less often. Feedback also opens communication channels and helps resolve issues between colleagues. The document recommends giving informal feedback regularly in small chunks, and formal feedback when informal is not working.
Motivating employees is about more than charisma and vision. To help employees perform their best, a great leader will provide feedback — the right kind, at the right time. Feedback is an essential tool for any manager, whether in a small business or a large corporation.
If you want to learn more about this topic: https://www.newsteer.com/resources/how-to-give-employee-feedback
Employee Engagement: What is it? How Do You Improve it? 10 Best Practices fro...Qualtrics
Engaged employees are more productive, contribute more to the bottom line, generate higher customer ratings, and help you attract new talent. On the flip side, actively disengaged employees cost the US approximately half a trillion dollars per year.
Join us to learn the best practices from Mike Schroeder, CEO of TNS Employee Insights, on how to design employee engagement surveys, measure engagement and, most importantly, improve employee engagement in your organization.
Motivating employees is about more than charisma and vision. To help employees perform their best, a great leader will provide feedback — the right kind, at the right time. Feedback is an essential tool for any manager, whether in a small business or a large corporation.
If you want to learn more about this topic: https://www.newsteer.com/resources/how-to-give-employee-feedback
Employee Engagement: What is it? How Do You Improve it? 10 Best Practices fro...Qualtrics
Engaged employees are more productive, contribute more to the bottom line, generate higher customer ratings, and help you attract new talent. On the flip side, actively disengaged employees cost the US approximately half a trillion dollars per year.
Join us to learn the best practices from Mike Schroeder, CEO of TNS Employee Insights, on how to design employee engagement surveys, measure engagement and, most importantly, improve employee engagement in your organization.
Reliable Teams Communicate Reliably: The I.N.U.P Process (U of U Health)University of Utah
Incremental improvements, like introducing team members to a patient, can have a big impact on a patient’s experience. Neurologist Pete Hannon shares how his team has improved communication to earn trust and confidence.
5 points to giving great employee feedbackPsych Press
You don't have to be a business owner or manager to find yourself in situations where giving well-structured feedback can be the difference between positive work results, or work that leaves much to the imagination where nothing is learnt. While not rocket science, there are certainly ways of giving feedback that are more effective than others, and to make sure you're helping yourself by helping your colleagues it's important to work on your feedback skills! Here are our top four tips for giving feedback the right way…
Survey after survey indicates most employees are disengaged at work. These results are across all industries. Naturally, there’s a lot of advice about ways to improve employee engagement. Much of this information is relevant and useful. In this webinar, we look at feedback and its relationship to employee engagement levels.
Research suggests that more feedback boosts engagement levels.
Feedback can be positive or constructive. Employees say over and over again in surveys that they want more feedback, both positive and constructive.
We explore the relationship between engagement levels and feedback frequency in this webinar.
This comes from Dr. Tim Baker's latest book: Mastering Feedback: A Practical Guide for Better Leadership Conversations.
Managing Global Teams remotely by Aun CommunicationEmilyPalmer47
This 20-mins-slide deck with audio was used in the webinar targeted at Japanese business managers on 30 April 2020 by Aun Communication - a coaching & consulting firm specialising in intercultural communication.
Understanding Lean & Agile Coaching Agile and Beyond 2018Paul Boos
This was my presentation for Agile & Beyond 2018 about Agile Coaching. This covers some basics of Agile Coaching in terms of the many dimensions to consider and how skills play out. It does not go into any of these skills deeply.
Toolkit for Employees: Giving and Receiving FeedbackNext Jump
This is the Next Jump tool kit for employees to get started giving and receiving feedback. This is focused on building the habits of feedback, based on the lessons and insights from Next Jump.
Understanding Workplace Stress by Buddha TravelJames Brodie
Buddha Travel undertook a small sample anonymous survey to look at some of the factors that cause and help to eliminate workplace stress. Here are the results & outcomes from that survey.
How to get Executive Buy-in for Employee RecognitionGloboforce
Executive buy-in has been proven to make the critical difference in driving both the adoption and the effectiveness of your employee recognition program. But how do you engage the execs and obtain the support necessary to launch an effective program?
Members of Connect: Professional Women’s Network share advice for effectively delivering the good, bad and ugly.
Connect: Professional Women’s Network is online community with more than 300,000 members that discusses issues relevant to women and their success. The free LinkedIn group powered by Citi also features videos interviews with influential businesswomen, live Q&As with experts and slideshows with career advice. To learn more and join the conversation in the largest women's group on LinkedIn, visit http://www.linkedin.com/womenconnect.
14 Startling Statistics on Employee Feedback & How We Can Do BetteriCoachFirst
There are a lot of studies on feedback in the workplace, and together, they can be startling – because they often seem contradictory.
We want more feedback, and in particular critical feedback, but we are also stressed out giving and receiving feedback. When we get feedback right, it can make a huge difference driving engagement, retention and productivity.
Reliable Teams Communicate Reliably: The I.N.U.P Process (U of U Health)University of Utah
Incremental improvements, like introducing team members to a patient, can have a big impact on a patient’s experience. Neurologist Pete Hannon shares how his team has improved communication to earn trust and confidence.
5 points to giving great employee feedbackPsych Press
You don't have to be a business owner or manager to find yourself in situations where giving well-structured feedback can be the difference between positive work results, or work that leaves much to the imagination where nothing is learnt. While not rocket science, there are certainly ways of giving feedback that are more effective than others, and to make sure you're helping yourself by helping your colleagues it's important to work on your feedback skills! Here are our top four tips for giving feedback the right way…
Survey after survey indicates most employees are disengaged at work. These results are across all industries. Naturally, there’s a lot of advice about ways to improve employee engagement. Much of this information is relevant and useful. In this webinar, we look at feedback and its relationship to employee engagement levels.
Research suggests that more feedback boosts engagement levels.
Feedback can be positive or constructive. Employees say over and over again in surveys that they want more feedback, both positive and constructive.
We explore the relationship between engagement levels and feedback frequency in this webinar.
This comes from Dr. Tim Baker's latest book: Mastering Feedback: A Practical Guide for Better Leadership Conversations.
Managing Global Teams remotely by Aun CommunicationEmilyPalmer47
This 20-mins-slide deck with audio was used in the webinar targeted at Japanese business managers on 30 April 2020 by Aun Communication - a coaching & consulting firm specialising in intercultural communication.
Understanding Lean & Agile Coaching Agile and Beyond 2018Paul Boos
This was my presentation for Agile & Beyond 2018 about Agile Coaching. This covers some basics of Agile Coaching in terms of the many dimensions to consider and how skills play out. It does not go into any of these skills deeply.
Toolkit for Employees: Giving and Receiving FeedbackNext Jump
This is the Next Jump tool kit for employees to get started giving and receiving feedback. This is focused on building the habits of feedback, based on the lessons and insights from Next Jump.
Understanding Workplace Stress by Buddha TravelJames Brodie
Buddha Travel undertook a small sample anonymous survey to look at some of the factors that cause and help to eliminate workplace stress. Here are the results & outcomes from that survey.
How to get Executive Buy-in for Employee RecognitionGloboforce
Executive buy-in has been proven to make the critical difference in driving both the adoption and the effectiveness of your employee recognition program. But how do you engage the execs and obtain the support necessary to launch an effective program?
Members of Connect: Professional Women’s Network share advice for effectively delivering the good, bad and ugly.
Connect: Professional Women’s Network is online community with more than 300,000 members that discusses issues relevant to women and their success. The free LinkedIn group powered by Citi also features videos interviews with influential businesswomen, live Q&As with experts and slideshows with career advice. To learn more and join the conversation in the largest women's group on LinkedIn, visit http://www.linkedin.com/womenconnect.
14 Startling Statistics on Employee Feedback & How We Can Do BetteriCoachFirst
There are a lot of studies on feedback in the workplace, and together, they can be startling – because they often seem contradictory.
We want more feedback, and in particular critical feedback, but we are also stressed out giving and receiving feedback. When we get feedback right, it can make a huge difference driving engagement, retention and productivity.
디지털 시대의 새로운 변화 - ‘직원 행동주의(Employee Activism)’ 급부상 관련 전문 리포트
글로벌 최대 PR커뮤니케이션 기업 웨버 샌드윅(Weber Shandwick) 연구 조사 발표
-직원 5명 중 한 명꼴로 본인의 회사와 고용주 보호, 기업 브랜드 지지자 역할 수행
-아태지역 직원 5명 중 3명이 고용주에 대한 콘텐츠를 소셜 미디어에 올려
-6가지 유형의 ‘직장 행동주의 스펙트럼’ 모델, 직원 행동주의를 통한 기회 발굴에 도움
Aż 56% pracowników aktywnie broni swoich firm przed krytyką i odgrywa rolę ich rzeczników, zarówno online jak i offline – wynika z najnowszego badania Weber Shandwick
Social activists. Environmental activists. Consumer activists. Activist shareholders. Today, there is no shortage of activists affecting business operations in some way. These stand-up-for-what-is-right campaigners may either be an employer’s best advocates or its worst opponents. In either case, they are change agents.
Measurement is the first step that leads to control and eventually to improvement. If you cannot measure something, you cannot understand it. If you cannot understand it, you cannot control it. If you cannot control it, you cannot improve it.” ― H. James Harrington
Workplace surveys are one of the most common tools used to sense employee pulse and learn what is important to employees. They are generally used to measure satisfaction levels, concerns, and confidence at work. Surveys provide hidden insights on specific as well as broad issues that go unnoticed by the management.
However, conducting a survey is only the first step towards greater engagement. The biggest failure of a survey happens when a survey is conducted before any action is taken for the last survey conducted. Creating a plan to act on the results and implement changes that are visible to others is equally important.
Lori Goler is the head of People at Facebook. Janelle Gal.docxjeremylockett77
Lori Goler is the head
of People at Facebook.
Janelle Gale is the head
of HR Business Partners
at Facebook. Adam Grant
is a professor at Wharton,
a Facebook consultant,
and the author of Originals
and Give and Take.
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Let’s Not Kill
Performance
Evaluations Yet
Facebook’s experience shows
why they can still be valuable.
BY LORI GOLER, JANELLE GALE, AND ADAM GRANT
November 2016 Harvard Business Review 91
LET’S NOT KILL PERFORMANCE EVALUATIONS YET
tThe reality is, even when companies get rid of performance evaluations, ratings still exist. Employees just can’t see them. Ratings are done sub-jectively, behind the scenes, and without input from the people being evaluated.
Performance is the value of employees’ contribu-
tions to the organization over time. And that value
needs to be assessed in some way. Decisions about
pay and promotions have to be made. As research-
ers pointed out in a recent debate in Industrial and
Organizational Psychology, “Performance is always
rated in some manner.” If you don’t have formal
evaluations, the ratings will be hidden in a black box.
At Facebook we analyzed our performance man-
agement system a few years ago. We conducted fo-
cus groups and a follow-up survey with more than
300 people. The feedback was clear: 87% of people
wanted to keep performance ratings.
Yes, performance evaluations have costs—but
they have benefits, too. We decided to hang on
to them for three reasons: fairness, transparency,
and development.
Making Things Fair
We all want performance evaluations to be fair. That
isn’t always the outcome, but as more than 9,000
managers and employees reported in a global sur-
vey by CEB, not having evaluations is worse. Every
organization has people who are unhappy with their
bonuses or disappointed that they weren’t pro-
moted. But research has long shown that when the
process is fair, employees are more willing to accept
undesirable outcomes. A fair process exists when
evaluators are credible and motivated to get it right,
and employees have a voice. Without evaluations,
people are left in the dark about who is gauging their
contributions and how.
At Facebook, to mitigate bias and do things sys-
tematically, we start by having peers write evalua-
tions. They share them not just with managers but
also, in most cases, with one another—which reflects
the company’s core values of openness and transpar-
ency. Then decisions are made about performance:
Managers sit together and discuss their reports
face-to-face, defending and championing, debating
and deliberating, and incorporating peer feedback.
Here the goal is to minimize the “idiosyncratic rater
effect”—also known as personal opinion. People
aren’t unduly punished when individual managers
are hard graders or unfairly rewarded when they’re
easy graders.
Next managers write the performance reviews.
We have a team of analysts who examine evalua-
tions f.
Medical Institution’s Staff Motivation through Satisfying Their Needsinventionjournals
In the context of the external marketing for staff, the primary goal is that the hospital attracts the interest of potential new employees on the competitive market. For that purpose an employer’s own individual brand, if possible, should be created. The desired positive effect may be achieved by contemporary marketing tools attractive for the target group. In the process of staff recruitment, due to the lack of candidates, the requirements for the new jobs are often degraded. The less choice however does not mean that no selection is to be made. When a new employee is interested in and has chosen a given organisation it is of great significance to achieve integration during the period of induction. This includes the professional as well as the personal and social integration. Clearly expressed efforts in the sensitive induction period are a key precondition for the long-term emotional connection between any (new) employee and the organisation. Also with the individual support in the context of staff development it is possible to attract new employees and to retain the existing ones. Another aspect is the respectful situational or flexible management of employees to which the modern management and the human resources management shall actively devote to. The survey was conducted among 100 medical specialists and administrative employees in the period January – December 2016 at the Medical Complex Doverie, Sofia City, Bulgaria.
Proko's Guide to Positivity and Effective Employee EngagementLeeWills3
Proko allows your employees to easily share good things about your culture and career opportunities, or simply acknowledge the people that are making work great.
Create e-cards and other sharable assets that employees can select, personalize, and share.
Import content to an easy-to-use, customizable microsite.
Track sharing activity and leverage those insights for future employer branding and employee advocacy activities.
Website: https://www.proko.co/product
In this presentation, we cover the 5 signs of a disengaged employee. These are some of the things Business Leaders need to keep in mind when trying to engage and retain their employees.
The workplace is less happy than ever. New evidence from Gallup suggests that employee engagement is at an historic low. How should we respond to this challenge? We know managers are a crucial element regarding employee wellness and employee engagement - in fact managers account for at least 70% of the variance in employee engagement- they are a good place to focus if morale is low in your organization. The research found a number of key themes that can create a positive work environment that will promote engagement and increased productivity.
Readalong slides used in the Inspired Leadership information session for potential partners, prospects and clients.
Get in touch: angela.del@inspiredleadership.world
Artificial intelligence (AI) offers new opportunities to radically reinvent the way we do business. This study explores how CEOs and top decision makers around the world are responding to the transformative potential of AI.
The case study discusses the potential of drone delivery and the challenges that need to be addressed before it becomes widespread.
Key takeaways:
Drone delivery is in its early stages: Amazon's trial in the UK demonstrates the potential for faster deliveries, but it's still limited by regulations and technology.
Regulations are a major hurdle: Safety concerns around drone collisions with airplanes and people have led to restrictions on flight height and location.
Other challenges exist: Who will use drone delivery the most? Is it cost-effective compared to traditional delivery trucks?
Discussion questions:
Managerial challenges: Integrating drones requires planning for new infrastructure, training staff, and navigating regulations. There are also marketing and recruitment considerations specific to this technology.
External forces vary by country: Regulations, consumer acceptance, and infrastructure all differ between countries.
Demographics matter: Younger generations might be more receptive to drone delivery, while older populations might have concerns.
Stakeholders for Amazon: Customers, regulators, aviation authorities, and competitors are all stakeholders. Regulators likely hold the greatest influence as they determine the feasibility of drone delivery.
Senior Project and Engineering Leader Jim Smith.pdfJim Smith
I am a Project and Engineering Leader with extensive experience as a Business Operations Leader, Technical Project Manager, Engineering Manager and Operations Experience for Domestic and International companies such as Electrolux, Carrier, and Deutz. I have developed new products using Stage Gate development/MS Project/JIRA, for the pro-duction of Medical Equipment, Large Commercial Refrigeration Systems, Appliances, HVAC, and Diesel engines.
My experience includes:
Managed customized engineered refrigeration system projects with high voltage power panels from quote to ship, coordinating actions between electrical engineering, mechanical design and application engineering, purchasing, production, test, quality assurance and field installation. Managed projects $25k to $1M per project; 4-8 per month. (Hussmann refrigeration)
Successfully developed the $15-20M yearly corporate capital strategy for manufacturing, with the Executive Team and key stakeholders. Created project scope and specifications, business case, ROI, managed project plans with key personnel for nine consumer product manufacturing and distribution sites; to support the company’s strategic sales plan.
Over 15 years of experience managing and developing cost improvement projects with key Stakeholders, site Manufacturing Engineers, Mechanical Engineers, Maintenance, and facility support personnel to optimize pro-duction operations, safety, EHS, and new product development. (BioLab, Deutz, Caire)
Experience working as a Technical Manager developing new products with chemical engineers and packaging engineers to enhance and reduce the cost of retail products. I have led the activities of multiple engineering groups with diverse backgrounds.
Great experience managing the product development of products which utilize complex electrical controls, high voltage power panels, product testing, and commissioning.
Created project scope, business case, ROI for multiple capital projects to support electrotechnical assembly and CPG goods. Identified project cost, risk, success criteria, and performed equipment qualifications. (Carrier, Electrolux, Biolab, Price, Hussmann)
Created detailed projects plans using MS Project, Gant charts in excel, and updated new product development in Jira for stakeholders and project team members including critical path.
Great knowledge of ISO9001, NFPA, OSHA regulations.
User level knowledge of MRP/SAP, MS Project, Powerpoint, Visio, Mastercontrol, JIRA, Power BI and Tableau.
I appreciate your consideration, and look forward to discussing this role with you, and how I can lead your company’s growth and profitability. I can be contacted via LinkedIn via phone or E Mail.
Jim Smith
678-993-7195
jimsmith30024@gmail.com
The Team Member and Guest Experience - Lead and Take Care of your restaurant team. They are the people closest to and delivering Hospitality to your paying Guests!
Make the call, and we can assist you.
408-784-7371
Foodservice Consulting + Design
Oprah Winfrey: A Leader in Media, Philanthropy, and Empowerment | CIO Women M...CIOWomenMagazine
This person is none other than Oprah Winfrey, a highly influential figure whose impact extends beyond television. This article will delve into the remarkable life and lasting legacy of Oprah. Her story serves as a reminder of the importance of perseverance, compassion, and firm determination.
2. According to Harvard Business Review, 72% of
people feel their performance would improve if
their managers provided corrective feedback.
In fact, the same survey found that 57% of people
prefer corrective feedback to purely praise and
recognition.
3. Giving regular feedback is one way we can show
employees that they are valued and useful. Even
negative feedback can spur people on to want to
do better.
Any feedback, good or bad, will reinforce to your
employees that there is a point to what they are
doing.
4. A study by Officevibe shows that 4 in 10 workers are
actively disengaged when they receive little or no
feedback.
The research also highlighted how important it is for
employees to receive regular feedback.
43% of highly engaged employees receive feedback at
least once a week compared to only 18% of employees
with low engagement.
5. Peer to peer feedback opens up the communication
channels between employees. This can be particularly
useful if there is conflict or tension between colleagues.
Giving feedback is an opportunity to get things out in
the open so that issues can be resolved and they can
find ways to work together better.
7. • After you have calmed down
• As soon as possible
• Informally, regularly & in small chunks
e.g. after a meeting or at the coffee point
• Formally, when informal feedback isn’t working
i.e. book an appointment, write it down