#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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How to Identify Important Personal and Business Goals

How to Identify Important Personal and Business Goals | #HR #RRHH Making love and making personal #branding #leadership | Scoop.it
Looking for the process that is the heart of employee performance management? You can negotiate and share goals and expected outcomes with employees.

Via Ariana Amorim
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#HR Why Personality Tests are Popular in the Workplace

#HR Why Personality Tests are Popular in the Workplace | #HR #RRHH Making love and making personal #branding #leadership | Scoop.it
Why are personality tests so popular? How do they help managers lead their teams more effectively? And do they engage employees?

Via Ariana Amorim
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#HR Getting beyond "one-and-done" in performance management

#HR Getting beyond "one-and-done" in performance management | #HR #RRHH Making love and making personal #branding #leadership | Scoop.it

Change in employee performance management is universal: 88% of companies researched globally made changes to their performance management approach in 2016, according to a recent Mercer study. More are planning changes in the year ahead.

Traditionally, performance evaluation was a once-a-year event which often caused great angst in employees (especially if stacked ranking was tied to bonuses) and a major time-loss for their managers.

Moreover, research tells us it has little use to the organization in terms of productivity gain or performance improvement.

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#HR Coaching for performance – are you a judge or a facilitator?

#HR Coaching for performance – are you a judge or a facilitator? | #HR #RRHH Making love and making personal #branding #leadership | Scoop.it
With the pace of business faster than ever, it can be difficult for managers to justify spending hours each month in focused coaching sessions with employees

Via Ariana Amorim
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#HR After Action Review (AAR) Process: Learning from Your Actions Sooner Rather Than Later

#HR After Action Review (AAR) Process: Learning from Your Actions Sooner Rather Than Later | #HR #RRHH Making love and making personal #branding #leadership | Scoop.it
Monitoring and evaluating are common activities. But your methods and timing can make all the difference. Learn how the AAR process ensures continuous learning and improves organizational performance.

Via Ariana Amorim
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The Elusive Annual Performance Management Practice

The Elusive Annual Performance Management Practice | #HR #RRHH Making love and making personal #branding #leadership | Scoop.it
Today’s Performance management only offers an illusion of giving feedback to an employee to drive individual performance . In reality , the system serves
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Rescooped by Ricard Lloria from Business Brainpower with the Human Touch
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Turning Your Calendar Into A Peak Performance Tool

Turning Your Calendar Into A Peak Performance Tool | #HR #RRHH Making love and making personal #branding #leadership | Scoop.it

There is a world of difference between normal activity and peak performance.  It’s the glimpses into the peak state that fuel the intuition that we’re meant for greater things.  In this article, we’ll take a look at peak performance and a surprisingly simple strategy for more consistently tapping into our peak mode.

 

The Psychology of Peak Performance

Two elements turn ordinary activities into performance activities: 1) we keep score of the outcomes that matter and 2) we institute practice measures to systematically pursue the improvement of our scores.  Such deliberate practice lies at the heart of the development of chess players, athletes, Broadway stars, and elite medical facilities.  Once we keep score and devote ourselves to a continuous improvement in what we do and how we do it, we transform routine into growth.  Recreation is not a cumulative activity.  It is activity pursued at the time for its own sake.  Peak performance, on the other hand, is cumulative: it’s a focused, ongoing attempt at improvement.  We can go to the gym for enjoyment or we can go to the gym to train for aerobic conditioning.  The first activity is expressive and present-centered; the second is instrumental and forward-focused.

 


Via The Learning Factor
The Learning Factor's curator insight, October 23, 2016 6:01 PM

Many of the professionals I work with in financial markets, in their candid moments of introspection, express a heartfelt sentiment.  They are doing well, but could be doing better, much better.  They are good, but they could be great.  In their moments of particular success, they recognize that the level [...]

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#HR Performance Appraisals - Judge and Be Judged - 

#HR Performance Appraisals - Judge and Be Judged -  | #HR #RRHH Making love and making personal #branding #leadership | Scoop.it

To judge someone is a very difficult task. Even God who is almighty fixed a criterion for judging people, i.e. good deeds and bad deeds for reward and punishment. As their mind developed, humans too accepted its value for better control and they adopted it happily. When organizations came into being, its application increased further because of its acceptance as the best way to manage people, and performance appraisal was the outcome.

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#HR #RRHH Can #Networking at the Office Become Too Much of a Good Thing?

#HR #RRHH Can #Networking at the Office Become Too Much of a Good Thing? | #HR #RRHH Making love and making personal #branding #leadership | Scoop.it

In every office, some employees carry a little more sway than others. Perhaps they’ve amassed enough political capital in the workplace to trade favors with colleagues and persuade supervisors to see things from their point of view. Maybe they can schmooze their way through a sales negotiation or exploit relationships with support staff to smooth the progress of a budget meeting.

Recently, some research has suggested that employees who exhibit this type of political proficiency in the workplace also perform better on the job. After all, if politically savvy employees can network more effectively and rally support across different factions of their department or company, it stands to reason that they also have the ability to exert more positive influence over firm-wide affairs.


Via The Learning Factor
The Learning Factor's curator insight, November 26, 2015 4:18 AM

It’s generally presumed that employees who accrue political power at work are higher performers. But those who schmooze a little less are actually the best at their jobs.

rodrick rajive lal's curator insight, November 27, 2015 12:44 AM

This is an important ponderable for leaders of organisations, Managing Directors and so on.

Too much of a good thing or TMGT can often backfire in the long run! In many cases we have seen it all, especially how employees who have amassed political clout in the workplace might become too big for their shoes and thus enter into a confrontation with their seniors. People in leadership positions should beware of allowing too much of freedom to politically savvy employees. Yes it is true that such people perform very well at the workplace, often getting the work done in time and on time, in many cases they have the ability to cajole, or convince people to buy their point of view, however too much of a good thing in such cases might lead to others being undermined by the kind of success that politically savvy enjoy. Leadership is not only about guiding star perfomers to greater heights, it is also about bringing low performers to an optimum level.

 

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A 6-Year Study Reveals the Surprising Key to Team Performance (and 9 Ways to Enable It)

A 6-Year Study Reveals the Surprising Key to Team Performance (and 9 Ways to Enable It) | #HR #RRHH Making love and making personal #branding #leadership | Scoop.it

Psychologist John Gottman can predict whether or not a married couple will be together five years later with startling 90 percent accuracy. How does he do it?

 

He watches them argue.

 

The ability to engage in healthy, productive debate is not only essential for ensuring a long marriage--it's also the key determinant of high performing teams.

 

A recently released six-year study cites the ability to manage conflicting tensions as the most critical predictor of top-team performance. Berkeley research shows teams that debate their ideas have 25 percent more ideas altogether and that companies like Pixar embrace healthy debate as a vital part of their performance (in its case to make better films).

 


Via The Learning Factor
The Learning Factor's curator insight, October 11, 2017 5:37 PM

A recently reported six-year study revealed that high-performing teams need to be good at this (and it's not so easy).

CCM Consultancy's curator insight, October 12, 2017 1:42 AM

A six-year study cites the ability to manage conflicting tensions as the most critical predictor of top-team performance. Berkeley research shows teams that debate their ideas have 25 percent more ideas altogether and that companies like Pixar embrace healthy debate as a vital part of their performance.

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#HR The 1 Question All Your Employees Wish You Would Ask

#HR The 1 Question All Your Employees Wish You Would Ask | #HR #RRHH Making love and making personal #branding #leadership | Scoop.it

Having a discussion with your employees or manager about job performance is never an easy feat. If executed incorrectly, the process could produce counteractive results. Managers have to find ways to provide both motivation and constructive criticism, and employees have to share individual goals underneath the scrutiny of their bosses.

 

However, what if you could knock down these obstacles with a single process? A system that created a platform for managers to discuss improvement opportunities, and one question that encouraged employees to be open with their managers. Well, you're in luck. One such process and question exists. First, let's take a look at the process: 360 feedback.


Via The Learning Factor
The Learning Factor's curator insight, June 25, 2017 7:17 PM

Employee development conversations can be scary. These two approaches can help ease the nerves of all parties involved.

Vanessa Ong Li Wen's curator insight, June 26, 2017 2:55 AM
Reading this article really opened up my mind towards being an effective leader. As a senior and the oldest in Junior High, I have given many After Action Reviews (AAR) and talks towards my peers and juniors on their development and areas of improvement. Although many my age harbour fears of having to interact with others on such a personal level, I have always found it easy for me to provide both motivation and constructive criticism to someone. However, this article mentioned about a process named 360 feedback – something I was exposed to but unfamiliar with. To implement 360 feedback in a company, there were a few criteria that the company should have: have the continuous intention of growth and improvement of employees, emotionally mature and open leaders to be accepting of criticism, a platform to integrate data with support mechanisms that can prove the 360 feedback useful, and senior engagement with employees. In my opinion, the latter is the most important criteria that an organisation should have in order to establish good rapport between senior and junior, regardless of whether a 360 feedback implementation is in contention. As a senior and a leader, it is essential to be able to open up your juniors to open and insightful development talks. My peers have always opened up to me, saying that what they wish to gain most out of in a developmental talk, is insights on their journey thus far, and areas for improvement. I believe that the 360 feedback is a wonderful platform for individuals to understand their confidential, anonymous feedback from those they interact the most: their batch mates, seniors, juniors and teachers. The process ensures that we can draw feedback from objective, multiple perspectives to evaluate our overall effectiveness. I have always been intrigued by the idea of 360 feedback as I feel that it is an effective platform to provide constructive feedback. However, after reading this article, I realise that there are many criteria to consider in order to ensure that the 360 feedback becomes effective, depending on the nature and context of your organisation. Rather than brainstorming complex methods of improving development of employees, I believe what is more critical is to have leaders who know how to engage and motivate their employees. The essence of a good leader is someone who does not have to continually motivate employees, but rather leverages on their internal passions and desires to create sustainable engagement. An insight that I also gained from the article is that conversations with employees should not only center around yourself, but around them as well. By asking questions that encourage them to be more open and honest, this will allow me to channel their internal motivations and redirect it towards projects that enjoy my employees the most. When centering the conversation around THEM and not YOU, the talk will also take the form of mentoring rather than dictating, creating an atmosphere of trust and rapport between the two that will break barriers and lead to a more enjoyable working process in the company.
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#HR 11 ways to get feedback from your most introverted employee

#HR 11 ways to get feedback from your most introverted employee | #HR #RRHH Making love and making personal #branding #leadership | Scoop.it
I’m an introvert. Most people don’t believe me when I tell them this (I do a lot of public speaking for an introvert �), but I am an introvert through-and-through. When I need to recharge, I seek…

Via Ariana Amorim
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#HR Difficult conversations: Help managers tackle under-performance 

#HR Difficult conversations: Help managers tackle under-performance  | #HR #RRHH Making love and making personal #branding #leadership | Scoop.it

Performance management development is the bread and butter of many an L&D team. When it comes to looking at managing underperformance, it can be a challenge to make it stick.

L&D professionals are well-versed in the conversation with businesses about the need for follow up after a training intervention. When tackling underperformance, however - even with a good structure of follow up in place - the training needs certain features to overcome the hurdles and ensure it makes a difference.

These barriers manifest in a number of ways, such as managers claiming that the company’s procedures are ‘complex’ or ‘take too long’; or examples of underperformance never reaching the formal stage of the procedure. Instead, they are swept under the carpet or worked around. 

The barriers to ‘sticky’ training relate to three main issues that arise time and time again:

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#HR Plan-Do-Check-Act (PDCA): Continually Improving, in a Methodical Way

#HR Plan-Do-Check-Act (PDCA): Continually Improving, in a Methodical Way | #HR #RRHH Making love and making personal #branding #leadership | Scoop.it
PDCA stands for Plan-Do-Check-Act – a four-stage problem-solving model that enables organizations to continually improve processes, products or services.

Via Ariana Amorim
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How to take the fear out of feedback - Unstuck

How to take the fear out of feedback - Unstuck | #HR #RRHH Making love and making personal #branding #leadership | Scoop.it

Here are seven questions that can help you get to the heart of your feedback.


Via Ariana Amorim, Kevin Watson
Learning and leadership's curator insight, November 28, 2016 5:59 AM
Interesting to understand more about what feedback really means, how to give it and how to use it...
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#HR Performance #management after the annual appraisal

#HR Performance #management after the annual appraisal | #HR #RRHH Making love and making personal #branding #leadership | Scoop.it
Millions of hours are wasted on sub-standard appraisals every year. Managers fret whether they’ve done the process right; appraisees feel demoralised. We take an in-depth look at three examples of next-generation performance management, and ask whether these are a better way to get the most out of your people
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#HR 4 Strategies Proven to Make Performance Reviews Shorter

Our Performance Review Report found that the top problem employees have with reviews is that they're simply too long. It’s hard to blame them. Who would want to sit and listen to criticisms about themselves for an hour?

It turns out that both employees and managers hate performance reviews. Making them better starts with making them briefer. Here are some ways to cover everything you need to without making the process excruciating:
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From a Fear-Based to a Love-Based Leadership Using Global Leadership Coaching

From a Fear-Based to a Love-Based Leadership Using Global Leadership Coaching | #HR #RRHH Making love and making personal #branding #leadership | Scoop.it

In brief, short bursts, fear can be useful and powerful. Fear is distinguished from anxiety in that it indicates an immediate threat that can be responded to. In the shared past of the human species, the threat often took the form of a natural threat. The release of energy at the end of a brief encounter was a critical part of returning to healthy functioning. Now, unfortunately, the concept of leadership at many organizations has been clouded by perpetual fear. Fear arises throughout an organization when humane concerns are sacrificed to achieve short-term profit goals at the expense of team members and the future. Fear spreads unconsciously in response to an entirely profit-oriented environment and fear’s effects are usually not questioned by those who suffer from them.

A fearful, ego-centric view of business supplants true leadership in favor of focus on “managing” people as if they were unruly and untrustworthy. Fear-based management abides in the belief that those in an organization “would never get anything done” unless they are continuously threatened. Rather than resolving a problem, this attitude creates one: Lack of trust leads to lack of productivity and lack of engagement caused by acute but unspoken consciousness of oppression. Relentless focus on individual gain in the form of money and promotion worsens this issue not just in America, but worldwide. This results in limitation of growth for our communities or organizations and invests all leadership within one personality. When the leader departs, the “machine” left behind disintegrates: As a limited “physical and mental” machine, it cannot generate integrity from its ego-based approach to external data. So long as it is believed that the enterprise can aspire to no benefit other than profit, there is no basis for evolution. Under such conditions, everyone associated with an organization is shackled by a self-interest viewpoint. The effects of this on the psychology of the group are obvious.

The benefits of a Value Based Leadership

One antidote to the fear basis has been values-based leadership. This is one important step away from the mechanical conception of enterprise and toward a concept that encompasses physical, emotional, mental, and spiritual dimensions. Instead of seeing work as a job, an evolution takes place wherein it can be understood as a career. The transformation from a fear basis to a values basis is a profound one. Leaders in such an enterprise focus on the long term and their goals naturally serve the community in which the enterprise is embedded. “Win-win” opportunities emerge more naturally than before because all of the different constituencies and communities impacted by a given enterprise have something to gain rather than being locked in a web of mutual exploitation for the gain of the few.

A sense of social obligation creates a resilient basis for fulfillment among employees and customers while imbuing the entire community with shared understanding of its role in the ecological environment. Under the conditions of this awareness stage, the organization is empowered with its own identity separate from the leadership. It generates anabolic energy that motivates every member to undertake evolution in their values, beliefs and assumptions. The business is no longer chained to the tyranny of external data and is free to evolve on the basis of internal data and values. In an individual, we might call this self-knowledge. As the enterprise develops its own soul, leaders no longer focus on fear but on positive feedback, collaboration, and shared values. It focuses on transformation among individuals using an outsider perspective. Overall, there is a balance between “hard” and “soft” skills in the workplace environment just as there is in life. When all these elements are achieved, it then becomes possible for any enterprise to reach the final and highest stage.

How Bringing More Love in Leadership Enables Individuals and Organizations to Reach their Full Potential

Another way to approach any enterprise-level evolution is love-based leadership. In this final evolution, the enterprise supports society and continues to deepen its understanding of the matrix of needs and wants represented by customer and employee.Environmental and community stewardship is made a priority and there is an understanding of the continuum between the enterprise and what might appear to be “outside” of it, including the community at large. Work is now perceived as a mission: Because of this, it is possible to champion a higher level of energy and consciousness within the organization.

There is no more basis for narrowing of perspectives, so it is understood that what is done within the enterprise can freely benefit the local area, the nation and the world at large. Profit becomes more easy to obtain in this final stage of transformation because there is a wider recognition of the organization and its ability to provide love experiences. Members of the community and of the enterprise come to recognize that there is no duality or conflict between profit, internal benefit and the greater good: In fact, the apparent conflict between these things is an illusion fostered by a fearful environment. At this elevated level of energy and consciousness, profit derives from the activities of individuals acting in a harmonious concert with one another. The enterprise becomes the heart of a values-centered mission for each person involved — and it provides a structure that anchors each person to the core values of love and trust. This allows each employee to reach fullest potential in the context of a specific approach to generating value for all of society. One can think of the arrangement of energy and consciousness displayed here as a “spiritual spiral” where the enterprise is at the core and the individuals within it are constantly growing, nourished and reaching out further and further toward the most distant elements of the environment that are impacted by their work. In this state, the energy of the physical, mental, emotional and spiritual poles of human identity will all be fully activated. Everyone can benefit from this transformation by continuing to displace individual egos and seeking ways to express and achieve love more highly in a service orientation. Likewise, the world as a whole can benefit as the principles of this consciousness transformation ripple through similar and interconnected enterprises, further reducing the burden of fear.


Via Belinda MJ.B
Belinda MJ.B's curator insight, March 1, 2013 8:52 AM

A fearful, ego-centric view of business supplants true leadership in favor of focus on “managing” people as if they were unruly and untrustworthy.