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Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Working Harder Isn't The Answer; It's The Problem - Forbes - 0 views

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    blog post by Jennifer Gilhool, 6.4.2013 "You are connected to work 24/7. You don't need your lap top to be connected. You are connected via BlackBerry, iPhone and iPad to name just a few. These devices no longer provide flexibility. Instead, they tether you to the office. They enable you to work all the time and anywhere. And, now, many companies believe that is the definition of flexibility: "'What flexibility means today is not part time,' the head of work-life at one large organization told me recently. 'What people want is the ability to work anytime, anywhere.' That's true if your target labor pool is twenty-somethings and men married to homemakers. The head of HR at another large organization asked, when I described the hours problem, 'What do you mean, how can we get women to work more hours?'" - Why Men Work So Many Hours, Joan C. Williams, May 29, 2013 Harvard Business Review Why Your Manager Doesn't Want You To Innovate Ron Ashkenas Ron Ashkenas Contributor LinkedIn: Busting 8 Damaging Myths About What It Can Do For Your Career 85 Broads 85 Broads Contributor Someone has taken the "human" out of "Human Resources" departments across America. And, this behavior is not limited to operations in America. I work for a multi-national corporation that cannot seem to wean itself from the 24 hour work day. Colleagues in China often begin their day with a 6:00 a.m. meeting and end it with a meeting that begins at 10:00 p.m. or, worse, 11:00 p.m. To combat this problem, the company leadership agreed to a global meeting policy. The policy provides that global meetings should occur only between the hours of 6:00 a.m. and 9:00 p.m. and that no meetings should occur on Friday nights in Asia Pacific. Further, the policy provides a 10 hour fatigue rule. In other words, there should be 10 hours between your last meeting of the day and your first meeting on the next day. First, if you need a global meeting policy, you are in
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Sebastian Thrun and Udacity: Distance learning is unsuccessful for most students. - 0 views

  • The problem, of course, is that those students represent the precise group MOOCs are meant to serve. “MOOCs were supposed to be the device that would bring higher education to the masses,” Jonathan Rees noted. “However, the masses at San Jose State don’t appear to be ready for the commodified, impersonal higher education that MOOCs offer.” Thrun’s cavalier disregard for the SJSU students reveals his true vision of the target audience for MOOCs: students from the posh suburbs, with 10 tablets apiece and no challenges whatsoever—that is, the exact people who already have access to expensive higher education. It is more than galling that Thrun blames students for the failure of a medium that was invented to serve them, instead of blaming the medium that, in the storied history of the “correspondence” course (“TV/VCR repair”!), has never worked. For him, MOOCs don’t fail to educate the less privileged because the massive online model is itself a poor tool. No, apparently students fail MOOCs because those students have the gall to be poor, so let’s give up on them and move on to the corporate world, where we don’t have to be accountable to the hoi polloi anymore, or even have to look at them, because gross.
  • SG_Debug && SG_Debug.pagedebug && window.console && console.log && console.log('[' + (new Date()-SG_Debug.initialTime)/1000 + ']' + ' Bottom of header.jsp'); SlateEducationGetting schooled.Nov. 19 2013 11:43 AM The King of MOOCs Abdicates the Throne 7.3k 1.2k 101 Sebastian Thrun and Udacity’s “pivot” toward corporate training. By Rebecca Schuman &nbsp; Sebastian Thrun speaks during the Digital Life Design conference on Jan. 23, 2012, in Munich. Photo by Johannes Simon/Getty Images requirejs(["jquery"], function($) { if ($(window).width() < 640) { $(".slate_image figure").width("100%"); } }); Sebastian Thrun, godfather of the massive open online course, has quietly spread a plastic tarp on the floor, nudged his most famous educational invention into the center, and is about to pull the trigger. Thrun—former Stanford superprofessor, Silicon Valley demigod, and now CEO of online-course purveyor Udacity—just admitted to Fast Company’s openly smitten Max Chafkin that his company’s courses are often a “lousy product.” Rebecca Schuman Rebecca Schuman is an education columnist for Slate. Follow This is quite a “pivot” from the Sebastian Thrun, who less than two years ago crowed to Wired that the unstemmable tide of free online education would leave a mere 10 purveyors of higher learning in its wake, one of which would be Udacity. However, on the heels of the embarrassing failure of a loudly hyped partnership with San Jose State University, the “lousiness” of the product seems to have become apparent. The failures of massive online education come as no shock to those of us who actually educate students by being in the same room wit
  • nd why the answer is not the MOOC, but the tiny, for-credit, in-person seminar that has neither a sexy acronym nor a potential for huge corporate partnerships.
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    Slate article by Rebecca Schuman, November 19, on why MOOCs a la Udacity do not work except maybe for people who are already privileged, enjoy fast access to the Internet, have good study habits and time management skills, and time to craft their schedules to fit in MOOCs among other assets/strengths.
anonymous

9 Ways to Make Your First Online Sale From Your Corporate Blog - 0 views

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    "I learned this the hard way with KISSmetrics. When we first started our blog, we were quickly able to get it to over 100,000 visitors a month, but we weren't generating any extra sales from that traffic. In fact, we weren't generating any sales at all. Because of blogging costs, I had no choice but to figure out how to make it a profitable channel. I did the same for a handful of other corporate blogs and learned a few tricks that can help any blog convert visitors into customers. Here are 9 ways you can get your first online sale from your corporate blog:"
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Who actually creates jobs: Start-ups, small businesses or big corporations? - The Washi... - 0 views

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    interesting assessment in Washington Post from April 2013 of who creates jobs, big corporations, SBA-defined small businesses (t the smallest businesses.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Sisterhood Is Not Enough: Why Workplace Equality Needs Men, Too - The New York Times - 0 views

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    Preoccupations feature by Peggy Klaus, August 14, 2016, speaks to whether women-only conferences, corporate workshops, and networking soirees (single-sex type events) enable women to move up in the workplace. May be an overreliance in some corporations.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Corporate Learning: Turn Employees Into Lifetime Students - 0 views

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    blog post by Megan Conley/Emily Wilson, SAP Business Innovation, 12/22/14. Could have been written by us. Excerpt: "How can your business make sure it doesn't disappear? The answer may surprise corporate learningyou: Create a business culture that fosters life-long learning. Encourage employees to be students throughout their career Although this advice seems like a no-brainer, only a small number of companies are actually making this transformation. Fewer than 10 percent of businesses worldwide have succeeded in creating a learning culture. Yet, 70 percent of executives believe learning and development is a key part of business strategy."
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Creating partnerships for sustainability | McKinsey & Company - 0 views

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    Very good, practical article by Marco Albani and Kimberly Henderson, McKinsey & Company, July 2014 on companies and social groups joining forces to protect the environment. The seven tips to make such alliances successful work for all partnerships/odd couples IMO. 1. ID clear reasons to collaborate. "The effort needs to help each partner organization achieve something significant. Incentives such as 'we'll do this for good publicity' or 'we don't want to be left out' are not sufficient." -Nigel Twose, director of the Development Impact Department, International Finance Corporation, World Bank Group 2. Find a fairy godmother "It is important to have a core of totally committed, knowledgeable people who would die in a ditch for what the organization is trying to achieve." -Environmental NGO campaign head 3. Set simple, credible goals 4. Get professional help "It is very important to have an honest broker. The facilitator must be neutral and very structured and keep people moving along at a brutal pace. You need someone who can bring things to a close." -Darrel Webber, secretary general, Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO) 5. Dedicate good people to the cause "If a company like ours believes something is strategic, then we resource it like it is strategic." -Neil Hawkins, corporate vice president of sustainability, Dow Chemical LOVE #5--HAVE SEEN "COLLABORATIONS" FAIL IN STATE GOVT. BECAUSE GOOD PEOPLE AND SENIOR LEADERSHIP WERE NOT BEHIND IT. 6. Be flexible in defining success "Partners think that collaboration will change the world. Then it doesn't, and they think that it failed. But often the collaboration changed something-the way some part of the system works and delivers outcomes. It is a matter of understanding the nature of change itself." -Simon Zadek, visiting fellow, Tsinghua School of Economics and Management, Beijing 7. Prepare to let go "I've been absent from the FSC since 1997.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

How corporates co-opted the art of mindfulness to make us bear the unbearable - 0 views

  • They’ve been sold on meditation as a simple way to bear the unbearable.
  • In other words, if you’re stressed out, you’re not working hard enough on your personal focus strategy. You’re letting the team down.
  • the marketing of mindfulness as a solution to work stress and life balance rather than the complex spiritual approach to living it is meant to be.
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  • Rather than a difficult but easily accessible way to free your mind and body, mindfulness has been rebranded as a kind of gentle harness to help us heel to the corporate leg.
  • Mindfulness is a way of living, not a substitute for taking action.
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    a view on how mindfulness/meditation is used to manipulate us into complying with dysfunctional or unbearable workplaces
Lisa Levinson

Sheryl Sandberg: When Women Get Stuck, Corporate America Gets Stuck - WSJ - 0 views

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    Part of the series the Wall Street Journal did on the Women and Work 2015 report by Lean In and McKinsey.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Feminism for the 99 Percent - Progressive.org - 0 views

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    article by Sarah Haffee--interview with Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor on issues for women that must be addressed-glass ceilings for women in politics and corporate America. what about access to health care, reproductive health care, child care, living wage jobs? March 1, 2017
anonymous

Lynda.com - 0 views

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    The article on corporate learning said this site was very popular...and fun. It has a membership fee.
anonymous

Some Facts About Women Entrepreneurs - 0 views

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    "Today, more women are breaking free from the traditional, gender-specific roles and venturing into the business world. Not only are they holding high corporate positions but they are also successful women entrepreneurs who own almost half of all businesses in the United States. The steady rise in female entrepreneurs can be due to many different reasons, most of which share the same rational as their male counterparts-passion for their ideas, the desire to become their own boss, and the need to address philanthropic causes. A recent study indicated that 1 out of every 11 adult women is an entrepreneur in the United States. Women business owners contribute to the overall employment of 18 million workers and generate anywhere from $2 to $3 trillion in U.S. economy revenues. Many of the important facts that follow will support these findings."
Lisa Levinson

Top 10 e-Learning Statistics for 2014 You Need To Know - eLearning Industry - 1 views

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    From eLearning Industry: great infographic on corporate elearning stats, with citations of studies stats are from.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

What All Flourishing Creative Environments Need - The Curious Creative - 0 views

  • CHOICE, RESPONSIBILITY and RESPECT
  • Why does your desk have wheels? Think of those wheels as a symbolic reminder that you should always be considering where you could move yourself to be more valuable. But also think of those wheels as literal wheels, because that’s what they are, and you’ll be able to actually move your desk with them.
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    Love this blog post by Tom Barrett that cites Valve Corporation, an American video creation company that encourages innovation--uses the metaphor of desks with wheels to enable people to use their "open allocation" time to do the most important work and contribute the most--similar to the law of two feet
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Corporate Learning In A Volatile, Uncertain, Complex, Ambiguous World - Forbes - 0 views

  • Cultivating Learning agility is instilling (or re-instilling for many) a sense of curiosity in new ideas, and the willingness to explore the unfamiliar or established. It is developing the ability and instinct for a person to try to navigate uncharted areas to them or to their organization.
  • They particularly prepare people to best leverage emergent, dynamic, evolving and volatile contexts such as matrix- or network-organizations and teams, communities of practice, virtual teams and workplaces and external partnerships and ecosystems. These apply to any job role internal or external, in cross-functional or cross-team capacities.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Reinventing the LMS Market - Again | 2015-09-28 | CLOmedia - 0 views

  • here has also been an explosion of written content, published in blogs and articles, all generally easy to find and curate with mobile tools, social media and various products that recommend content. This new digital world now offers a veritable ocean of free or nearly free content, often authored by experts, seasoned professionals, business leaders and well-known academics. It’s not a world most traditional learning management systems, or LMS, were designed to manage.
  • struggle to help employees find, manage and track all the new content on the Internet.
  • learning today is often learner-driven.
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  • new LMS might be a video learning portal to which anyone can add links, a content aggregation tool, new open learning platforms, or an IT-developed platform that takes existing IT tools and extends them into knowledge management.
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    Very interesting blog post by Josh Bersin on how LMS is figuring out how to organize content generated by employees from online and other sources for corporations/employers
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Dear business community, stop thinking you are better than us nonprofit folks / Nonprof... - 0 views

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    Says it all about why nonprofit leaders might not jump on retiring corporate types to help run their nonprofits or volunteer for them.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

The Top 10 Workplace Trends Of 2013 - 0 views

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    article by Dan Schawbel, Forbes, October 21, 2013. 6. Freelance nation booms. We keep hearing about the surplus of freelancers out there and it's just the beginning. Next year, there will be millions more freelancers, replacing full-time workers. Companies will hire experts to solve problems instead of full-time employees and save on benefit packages. This is due to the economy and how corporations operate now. One third of American workers are freelancers, reports NBC News.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Chaos by design - October 2, 2006 - 0 views

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    Article in Fortune about Google and innovation Story of Sheryl Sandberg "Take the case of Sheryl Sandberg, a 37-year-old vice president whose fiefdom includes the company's automated advertising system. Sandberg recently committed an error that cost Google several million dollars -- "Bad decision, moved too quickly, no controls in place, wasted some money," is all she'll say about it -- and when she realized the magnitude of her mistake, she walked across the street to inform Larry Page, Google's co-founder and unofficial thought leader. "God, I feel really bad about this," Sandberg told Page, who accepted her apology. But as she turned to leave, Page said something that surprised her. "I'm so glad you made this mistake," he said. "Because I want to run a company where we are moving too quickly and doing too much, not being too cautious and doing too little. If we don't have any of these mistakes, we're just not taking enough risk." When a million-dollar mistake earns a pat on the back, it's obvious this isn't your normal corporation."
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