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Stephen Dale

Why 'fungineering' your workplace won't work - 0 views

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    "Despite the sobering economic shocks of recent years, the Fun at Work movement seems irrepressible. Major companies boast of employing Chief Fun Officers or Happiness Engineers; corporations call upon a burgeoning industry of happiness consultants, who'll construct a Gross Happiness Index for your workplace, then advise you on ways to boost it."
Stephen Dale

http://assets.teradata.com/resourceCenter/downloads/WhitePapers/THE_VIRTUOUS_CIRCLE_OF_... - 2 views

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    Many companies have invested significantly in gathering vast amounts of data, yet they still struggle to extract insights, put them to work for the business and create truly data-driven organisations. The virtuous circle of data explores how organisations can spark a chain of events through top-down leadership and bottom-up employee engagement that creates a culture with data at the centre of decision-making.
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    Many companies have invested significantly in gathering vast amounts of data, yet they still struggle to extract insights, put them to work for the business and create truly data-driven organisations. The virtuous circle of data explores how organisations can spark a chain of events through top-down leadership and bottom-up employee engagement that creates a culture with data at the centre of decision-making.
kin wbs

working in global teams - 0 views

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    " article about how to effectivley work in global teams from TMA"
Phil Ridout

Strengths 2020 - realising the best of you - 0 views

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    " Dr Alex Linley website showing links articles and research in relation to developing strengths based organisations. Working with what people excel at rather than trying to develop their weaknesses."
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    "Dr Alex Linley website showing links articles and research in relation to developing strengths based organisations. Working with what people excel at rather than trying to develop their weaknesses."
Phil Ridout

Web 2.0 'crucial to attracting future talent' - People Management Magazine Online - 0 views

  • Organisations that ban social networking sites and other Web 2.0 technologies at work will not be able to attract future talent, delegates at the CIPD’s HRD conference were told.
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    Organisations that ban social networking sites and other Web 2.0 technologies at work will not be able to attract future talent, delegates at the CIPD's HRD conference were told.
Phil Ridout

YouTube - Web 2.0 and the Workspace - 0 views

  • Not sure what a Workspace is? Cisco employee Mark Spencer faces his technology fears and learns how to work more effectively in the Web 2.0 world.
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    Not sure what a Workspace is? Cisco employee Mark Spencer faces his technology fears and learns how to work more effectively in the Web 2.0 world.
Phil Ridout

Tim Harford - Adapt - 1 views

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    "In this groundbreaking book, Tim Harford shows us a new and inspiring approach to solving the most pressing problems in our lives. Harford argues that today's challenges simply cannot be tackled with ready-made solutions and expert opinions; the world has become far too unpredictable and profoundly complex. Instead, we must adapt-improvise rather than plan, work from the bottom up rather than the top down, and take baby steps rather than great leaps forward. "
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    Recommended by Nick Temple at Winter Workshop
Gary Colet

Britain's Longest-serving Blacksmith - try bottling that - 1 views

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    Fred Harriss is Britain's oldest backsmith. Still working at age 84, he has 74 years of wonderful experience. What a challenge helping Fred transfer that know-how would be.
Phil Ridout

Ban social media as a distraction? No, it boosts productivity | TechRepublic - 1 views

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    "Ban social media as a distraction? No, it boosts productivity" Any manager who thinks staff should be banned from using social media at work is seriously misguided and could be doing grave damage to the business.
Gary Colet

Work Less, Achieve More: Great Ideas to Get Your Life Back: Amazon.co.uk: Fergus O'Conn... - 1 views

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    Book recommended  by John Pierce
Stephen Dale

Google: Our Assistant Will Trigger the Next Era of AI - 0 views

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    How do we learn the meaning of text from data? In other words, how can a machine truly understand the phrases that human beings blab into its search fields and microphone? The researchers at Google and elsewhere have settled on an answer to that question: machine learning; specifically, a form of artificial intelligence called neural networks-self-organising systems modelled on the way the brain works.
Stephen Dale

Smart Wikis - rapidly connecting people to prime information, most relevant ata and bes... - 1 views

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    "Smart Wikis™ combine Artificial Intelligence and knowledge concepts with your existing IT to provide integrated collaborative working environments that anticipate each user's personal information needs and surround that user with seamless and non-obtrusive forms of assistance."
Stephen Dale

Where machines could replace humans--and where they can't (yet) | McKinsey & Company - 0 views

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    While automation will eliminate very few occupations entirely in the next decade, it will affect portions of almost all jobs to a greater or lesser degree, depending on the type of work they entail.
Stephen Dale

How To Lead In The Age Of Algorithms | POST*SHIFT - 0 views

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    Corporate leadership is already struggling to keep up with the connected workforce and increasing speed and complexity in the digital economy. But looking ahead to the rise of algorithmic and human-machine co-working, the situation is even more worrying. A reboot is overdue.
Stephen Dale

Blog - 0 views

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    The coming-of-age of artificial intelligence, 'social robots' and big data is having a massive impact on the way decisions are made in organisations. It follows that if we are to maximise know-how and expertise, the outputs from this technology-enabled channel must be integrated into how we work. Augmenting judgment and experience in this way also supports the move towards evidence-based decision making.
Gary Colet

Daniel Kahneman: The riddle of experience vs. memory | Video on TED.com - 0 views

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    This TED talk from Daniel Kahneman has huge relevance for anyone involved in Knowledge Transfer or Knowledge Elicitation work. We know that an individual's recall and their actual experience may be quite different. This excellent talk shows just how different the 'remembering self' can be from the 'experiencing self'.  Using examples from vacations to colonoscopies, Nobel laureate and founder of behavioral economics Daniel Kahneman reveals how our "experiencing selves" and our "remembering selves" perceive happiness differently. This new insight has profound implications for economics, public policy -- and our own self-awareness.
Phil Ridout

AnecdoteCollaborativeWorkplace_v1s.pdf - 0 views

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    Today we face an entirely new environment for innovation and getting things done. The days of the lone genius quietly toiling away in pursuit of that 'Eureka' moment to revolutionise an industry are all but over. We are now in the days of asking and listening to our customers and working with them in our innovation cycles. Innovation demands collaboration. So does production. In the past we could focus on a single task in an assembly-line fashion, handing our completed activity to the next person who would in turn do the same, until the job was finished. Now the jobs change fast, requiring learning new skills rather than merely repeating the old. We have to seek out people who have other pieces of the puzzle and work with them to tackle increasingly complex issues at a much faster pace.
Phil Ridout

Gareth Morgan (author) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

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    "Gareth Morgan (Porthcawl, Wales, 22 December, 1943) is a British / Canadian [organizational theorist]], management consultant and Distinguished Research Professor at York University in Toronto. He is known as creator of the "organisational metaphor" concept and writer of the bestsellers Images of Organization.[1], Imaginization: New Mindsets for Seeing, Organizing and Managing, Riding the Waves of Change and other books on management. He is also well known for his writings on social theory and research methodology, especially through his books Sociological Paradigms and Organizational Analysis (written with Gibson Burrell)and Beyond Method: Strategies for Social Research. The common theme uniting his work is that of challenging assumptions - to help develop new ways of thinking in social research, organization and management theory and practice, and, by implication, in everyday life."
Gary Colet

Business innovation and teamwork of a radical kind - Menlo Innovations - 0 views

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    If you want to move know-how around, this is a great model.If you thought business innovation was lacklustre, this is the extreme end - but it clearly works.
Stephen Dale

A storyteller's guide to knowledge #kmers - 0 views

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    "The problem is that too many 'lessons learned' programmes fail. Without falling into the trap of sweeping generalisations, I would suggest that more often than not the story itself is the problem; they just aren't interesting enough; they are shallow; they lack the richness that is needed to engage the intended audience; and they lack a structure that reflects the way adults learn. And that is the bottom line, all too often they just don't work in relation to the ways in which adults learn - I would argue in the vast majority of practice that there is actually little or no consideration for the the target audience of a lesson learned (the adult as a learner)."
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