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kxmant13

Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter Factor In to How Job Recruiters Hire Candidates | TIME.com - 1 views

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    By now, we've all heard about how employers scope out the Tweets and Facebook profiles of job seekers to winnow down the field of applicants. But job seekers may be surprised to hear just how many recruiters now use social media throughout the hiring process.
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    Ah, the joys of social media! It truly does expand the meaning that "big brother" is watching. I've found myself pulling back on Facebook posts by trying to stick to only positive things. LinkedIn, I feel I need a to hire a PR rep to make sure everything is in order there. Twitter, I'm not a fan of it period. But from the sounds of the article, I better learn to like and use it. Thanks for the link to the article, very good information.
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    I always enjoy this dynamic. It is a double edged sword and not every organization should want the use of social media in their candidates. I have conducted surveillance in law enforcement, research on teachers while working in the education field, and pre-screened inbound young Officers in the military. Its important to see what you are getting. It has become suspicious if someone doesn't have a linked in account. If a person has too many accomplishments on their linked in account however while simultaneously not having an active personal social media account as senior management I find it suspicious. We are all aware that if you want to know who a person truly is, the last place to look is linked in.
mjmiles35

The DOs and DON'Ts of Performance Reviews - 4 views

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    Interesting info on the Do's and Don'ts as the title of this article indicates.  Sometimes just need the reminder.   Kind of interesting how we (all businesses, organizations and agencies) seem to understand how bad these things are but just keep doing them (wrong) anyway
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    Very interesting article....I see a lot of those "mistakes" working in HR. :)
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    I found the pay for performance interesting as often time an employee needs to meet certain "basic" expectations in a review to get a raise. If they don't get the review they want and are in a union then it can be grieved. I wonder if this is why most managers of union employees don't bother to give accurate reviews because it creates more paper work and documentation of a job they don't want to do anyway (performance reviews)
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    The pay for performance seems to the norm in the past three organizations I have worked for. The mistake pointed out in this part is accurate, small difference in percentages between performers only goes to promote an imbalance between team members.
mjmiles35

In search of the X factor candidates - 2 views

  • "Why should we be meeting people in an office building?" adds Saller. "Why not in their favourite bar and have them tell us why it is their favourite? We work in a terrific industry and we should be bringing some of the excitement of working in this industry into the interview process."
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    We have a game show for everything else...  Again-  Good information, not too old and wants to throw out the rulebook.
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    Wow! Immediately has an HR person I begin to get nervous about the potential illegal interview questions or practices that these companies could be sued for. It's a risky line between innovative and unethical in terms of hiring. I like the idea and concept of thinking outside the box though!
Kathy Houghtaling

Four Future Trends in Leadership Development - Nick Petrie and Phil Willburn - YouTube - 0 views

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    The trends discussed in this interview are ones I have noticed in my organization; vertical development, innovation, group versus individual, and greater emphasis on development being owned by the individual.
mjmiles35

Disney College Program - Florida Onboarding Home | Jobs and Careers - 3 views

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    I am a Disney fan but now knowing a person who works there and seeing their on boarding process (via this website) it is no wonder that they are such a huge and successful company.   The website goes through, what looks like, everything a person would need to know in getting started at Disney.   I could see how helpful a website such as this would be to almost any profession.  Disney obviously has enough money to produce this website and keep it current, but I do not think that would be too hard or expensive for a school district, police agency, banking industry, military, or many other professions to implement.
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    I did my undergraduate at the U of WI Stout and they had a huge partnership with Disney and doing internships. I heard some really great stuff from friends that did their internship there and had positive things to say about the onboarding.
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    I really like the idea of a website once you are hired. I would be a great resource for so many things and even though labor intensive to get up an running should be easily maintained. Wouldn't need to be as elaborate as Disney just so the information is accurate. Thanks for the article
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    My niece just completed an intership this summer with Disney. She was pleasantly surprised by how comprehensive the website and training was for interns. Eventhough she was scheduled to intern for six months, everything about the training and experience won her over to want to be a lifetime employee of Disney. Many companies could learn from this model.
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    I heard that the first two days of employee orientation is strictly story telling. They use the 'cast' members to acclimate employees to the Disney culture using stories. I feel like this is really in sync with Disney culture and would also be a very effective way to get employee excited about their role in the bigger Disney 'story'.
Eric Walling

Taking Measure of Talent by Harvard Business Review Analytic Services - YouTube - 0 views

shared by Eric Walling on 03 Sep 14 - No Cached
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    Human Capital and Data Management go hand-in-hand in managing today's global organizations.  
rodel123

No ready for the big leagues - 0 views

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    Appointments in the United Kingdom sustain scrutiny from all angles. Perhaps the United States should take some lessons in the appointment of its politicians.
Eric Walling

Capitalizing on Capabilities - Harvard Business Review - 1 views

shared by Eric Walling on 03 Sep 14 - No Cached
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    The collective skills, abilities, and expertise of an organization-are the outcome of investments in staffing, training, compensation, communication, and other human resources areas.
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    A lot of good points are made in this article. In particular, the belief that organizational capabilities can only emerge after an organization consistently delivers on the combined or shared competencies and abilities of the people it employs. It provides another way to validate the notion that people either help an organization succeed or fail. If the organization has a lot of employees that are skilled but they are unable to work together towards a common goal, those individuals' skills are useless.
Kathy Houghtaling

Recruiting, Reinvented: How Companies Are Using Social Media In The Hiring Process - Fo... - 2 views

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    While many people have expressed concern about the trend of employers using social media to screen job candidates, can social media actually be a benefit to job seekers or employers? Find out in this Q and A interview with Chirag Nangia, CEO of Reppify.
mjmiles35

9 Sensational Traits of Highly Promotable Employees | Inc.com - 2 views

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    Week 2 related
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    Good article to remind one what to look for in employees and self. One of the aspects of the behavioral interview for leadership in my organization focuses on servant leadership questions. It is hard to leaders others when "what's in it for me" is the primary focus.
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    Hi Jen, I love this article! Though it's the hard truth that many times we see people promoted over us that do not display this characteristics. However, when I think about the best leaders or the people I would pick to work with in a team, they definitely display these characteristics.
kxmant13

Improving employee performance reviews - The Washington Post - 3 views

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    The term performance management often strikes fear in the hearts of supervisors and employees alike.
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    Having the right leader in place who sees that performance management is an ever evolving piece of the puzzle is the key to empowering employees to deliver their fullest potential.
Kathy Houghtaling

Future Trends in Leadership Development - 0 views

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    This is a good article describing the changes in the skills needed for leaders. Business is more complex and adaptive thinking abilities are needed. It speaks to why vertical development is needed
Cindy Penny

First Minutes Are Critical in New-Employee Orientation - 0 views

  • But research suggests that employee orientation ought to be less about the company and more about the employee.
  • “Breaking Them In or Eliciting Their Best? Reframing Socialization around Newcomers’ Self-expression
  • Considering we just changed one hour on the first day of orientation, the results were amazing,” Gino says.
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  • “This is a pivotal stage of the employee/employer relationship, and there are ways to emphasize people’s individuality so they can bring it out into their jobs.
stephen_meade

Sarah-Jayne Blakemore: The mysterious workings of the adolescent brain | Talk Video | T... - 2 views

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    Although this video contains the word adolescent in the title the speaker makes a case for cognitive development into the thirties which is really interesting as we deal with younger workers and trying to identify potential.
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    I agree, good information on younger employees and indentify how they can contribute more fully to an organization.
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    Interesting and helpful having teenager in the house but great insight into working with "younger" employees.
stephen_meade

The 7 C's: How to Find and Hire Great Employees - 6 views

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    Forbes article
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    Wow 7 C's….my article only at 4….this has some great "additional" information.
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    Good article, nice to see the 7 C's and an observation point from a leadership level owning up to be a contributing factor for new employee success rate.
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    There it is again with that compatible non-sense. That is why organizations get jammed up in lawsuits, and lose huge sums of money. Its a whole new generation of employers thinking that they should hire based on "Cultural matches" which are made up in the first place. That is a preference, and it cannot be articulated on the bench in front of a jury of 12. If you can't defend it, then don't make it a core competency or requirement. Make it a subfield, or a preference.
stephen_meade

http://www.ihrim.org/Pubonline/Wire/Oct11/Bersin_TMS%20study%20article.pdf - 1 views

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    Figure 6 on page 9 and the conclusion were very illuminating. I am still looking for the follow-up study referenced in this article.
kxmant13

5 Keys For Developing Talent In Your Organization - Forbes - 1 views

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    Ten years after publishing its research on the War for Talent, McKinsey produced follow-on work reemphasizing the need to make talent a strategic priority. Despite launching expensive programs to attract and retain talented employees, many senior executives remain frustrated with the results and admit their own failure
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    Good solid basic principles of walking the walk and talking the talk to create a culture of development.
mjmiles35

http://c.ymcdn.com/sites/www.hrps.org/resource/resmgr/Pepsico_A_40_Year_Retrospect.pdf - 0 views

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    I would not choose Pepsi on a normal basis but this is good supplemental material and background to the information in our text.
Kathy Houghtaling

Succession Planning: How Everyone Does It Wrong - 0 views

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    Two mistakes that often occur when replacing a CEO ; either choosing someone in his own likeness when what the company really needed was someone different, or choosing someone of lesser stature to preserve his own legacy. This often happens with other senior management roles.
mjmiles35

Performance Management | CSOD - 1 views

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    Some interesting points
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    Fun fact - this is actually the system my organization uses. I am on system administrator on the roll out and implementation of Cornerstone into our organization. This year will be the first year our employees are setting goals in the system so next year we will actually being doing performance reviews in the technology. We currently just have a paper performance review process, so using Cornerstone will hopefully be more efficient.
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