Tidbits, titbits or tipbits?
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Tidbits, titbits or tipbits?
Engaging leadership ideas to get your dendrites firing
Curated by Jess Chalmers
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Rescooped by Jess Chalmers from Business Brainpower with the Human Touch
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This Silicon Valley–Style Meeting Can Transform Your Whole Team

This Silicon Valley–Style Meeting Can Transform Your Whole Team | Tidbits, titbits or tipbits? | Scoop.it

It happens to high- and low-performing teams alike: The ties that bind everyone together just aren’t as strong as they could be. Maybe you’ve inherited a team that’s always been sluggish and uninspired, or one that’s usually steady, but the trust is eroding under pressure. Or perhaps you’re just trying to take your team to the next level. Whatever the case, every team needs to reflect once in a while on what could be improved. It’s human nature to be conflict-averse, but it’s every manager’s job to bring points of conflict out into the open and move forward together.

 

Unfortunately, most meetings aren’t the best venues for doing that. Typical team meetings focus on planning what’s ahead–an upcoming project, the next quarter’s top goals and metrics, expectations moving forward. But there’s a simple alternative, focused on reviewing the immediate past, that can change how your team works for the better.


Via The Learning Factor
The Learning Factor's curator insight, November 21, 2017 4:30 PM

“Retrospectives” are common at tech companies and startups but still underused everywhere else. They shouldn’t be.

Laura Richards's curator insight, November 21, 2017 4:47 PM
Makes sense .....
Rescooped by Jess Chalmers from Business Brainpower with the Human Touch
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Google's Head Of HR Shares His Hiring Secrets

Google's Head Of HR Shares His Hiring Secrets | Tidbits, titbits or tipbits? | Scoop.it

Shifting Through 2 Million Résumés

 

It's no secret the company is incredibly choosy with who it picks to become "Googlers." Bock says the company gets more than 2 million applications every year, a flood of correspondence that also includes the occasional oddity.

 

He got the job, in addition to something rare: an extraordinary perch from which to watch and eventually exert some influence over how a fast-moving web company with plenty of money to spend and people to study conducts itself and maintains its idiosyncratic culture.

 


Via The Learning Factor
The Learning Factor's curator insight, April 7, 2015 6:34 PM

We give our people tremendous freedom. We use science to figure out what makes teams work.

Andrée Laforge's curator insight, April 7, 2015 8:47 PM

L'utilisation de l'analytique RH à son meilleur!