Leadership Advice & Tips
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Leadership Advice & Tips
Helping Leaders Be on Brand, Live on Purpose, and Accelerate a Successful Career
Curated by Trish Sadar
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Rescooped by Trish Sadar from Business Brainpower with the Human Touch
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The New Rules of Talent Management

The New Rules of Talent Management | Leadership Advice & Tips | Scoop.it

You could say HR is going “agile lite,” applying the general principles without adopting all the tools and protocols from the tech world. It’s a move away from a rules- and planning-based approach toward a simpler and faster model driven by feedback from participants. This new paradigm has really taken off in the area of performance management. (In a 2017 Deloitte survey, 79% of global executives rated agile performance management as a high organizational priority.) But other HR processes are starting to change too.

In many companies that’s happening gradually, almost organically, as a spillover from IT, where more than 90% of organizations already use agile practices. At the Bank of Montreal (BMO), for example, the shift began as tech employees joined cross-functional product-development teams to make the bank more customer focused. The business side has learned agile principles from IT colleagues, and IT has learned about customer needs from the business. One result is that BMO now thinks about performance management in terms of teams, not just individuals. Elsewhere the move to agile HR has been faster and more deliberate. GE is a prime example. Seen for many years as a paragon of management through control systems, it switched to FastWorks, a lean approach that cuts back on top-down financial controls and empowers teams to manage projects as needs evolve.


Via The Learning Factor
The Learning Factor's curator insight, May 17, 2018 9:07 PM

Agile isn’t just for tech anymore—it’s transforming how organizations hire, develop, and manage their people. This package provides a guide to the transition.

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Reacting vs. Responding on Brand

Reacting vs. Responding on Brand | Leadership Advice & Tips | Scoop.it
Trish Sadar's insight:

There are times when I find myself reacting to a situation instead of responding on brand.  When this happens I don't beat myself up...instead I say "Wow, this is good, I just found another one of my hot buttons!"

 

We don't have control over what happens to us; however, we do have control over how we choose to respond to what happens to us.    

 

Being intelligent about emotions is so powerful -- it means that we are in control and driving. 

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