#HR #RRHH Making love and making personal #branding #leadership
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#HR #RRHH Making love and making personal #branding #leadership
Leadership, HR, Human Resources, Recursos Humanos, aptitudes and personal branding.May be you can find in there some spanish links.
Curated by Ricard Lloria
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Rescooped by Ricard Lloria from Business Brainpower with the Human Touch
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Does Your Company's Purpose Resonate With Everyone, Or Just Senior Leaders?

Does Your Company's Purpose Resonate With Everyone, Or Just Senior Leaders? | #HR #RRHH Making love and making personal #branding #leadership | Scoop.it

Discovering your company's "purpose" is tough. Sustaining it can be even tougher. Even if you've zeroed in on a mission that your executives love, it won't do your company much good if the rest of your team doesn't share the same sentiment.

 

The challenge is to make sure your entire organization is willing to buy into its stated purpose. The consulting firm Radley Yeldar, which ranks brands according to "social purpose," gives the top spot to Unilever for its sustainability efforts, among other causes beyond the company's bottom line to which it has shown commitment.


Via The Learning Factor
The Learning Factor's curator insight, November 10, 2016 5:58 PM

If your own employees write off your shiny new mission statement as just another marketing trick, so will your customers.

Peter Krull's curator insight, November 10, 2016 8:53 PM
Mission & purpose are critical at Krull & Company!
Pam Ross's curator insight, November 15, 2016 8:33 AM
Connecting employees to purpose is so important for culture, trust, engagement, accountability.
Rescooped by Ricard Lloria from Business Brainpower with the Human Touch
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Why the Next Steve Jobs Will Be a Woman

Why the Next Steve Jobs Will Be a Woman | #HR #RRHH Making love and making personal #branding #leadership | Scoop.it

Here's an experiment: Name five iconic entrepreneurs. Actually, don't bother, because we can pretty much predict your answer. Every year, we ask the Inc. 500 honorees to name the entrepreneurs they most admire. The answers: Steve Jobs, Elon Musk, Richard Branson, Mark Cuban, and Bill Gates. We've also seen Mark Zuckerberg and Tony Hsieh. The list varies a bit each year, but one constant remains: They're all men.

 

That may not seem like much of a problem. After all, the entire country, and in many cases much of the world, has benefited from the contributions of these men: the jobs they've created, the technologies they've built, the instant access to European footwear. So what does it matter if they're all sporting a Y chromosome?


Via The Learning Factor
The Learning Factor's curator insight, September 22, 2015 7:10 PM

A rising tide of female founders will produce the next iconic entrepreneur.