#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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Rescooped by Ricard Lloria from Blue Sky Change
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#HR Beyond Bias

#HR Beyond Bias | #HR #RRHH Making love and making personal #branding #leadership | Scoop.it
Neuroscience research shows how new organizational practices can shift ingrained thinking.

Via Virtual Global Coaching
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Rescooped by Ricard Lloria from Business Brainpower with the Human Touch
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#RRHH #Hr The True Cost of Hiring Yet Another Manager

#RRHH #Hr The True Cost of Hiring Yet Another Manager | #HR #RRHH Making love and making personal #branding #leadership | Scoop.it

You can have terrific people working in the right teams and still not see the financial results you’re hoping for. Why? It could be that your organization’s structure is creating obstacles that compromise your workforce’s performance.

 

One common culprit is out-of-control tooth-to-tail ratios. In a war zone, some soldiers fight on the front lines. Others maintain supply chains, handle logistics, and otherwise support those front-line troops. Military commanders know they can’t let the tooth-to-tail (or combat-to-support) ratio get too low, or they’ll wind up with a force that costs too much and can’t win the battle.

 

It’s the same in a company.


Via The Learning Factor
The Learning Factor's curator insight, June 3, 2014 7:20 AM

What is the true cost of hiring yet another manager?

Rescooped by Ricard Lloria from Organisation Development
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#HR Let Go of What Made Your Company Great

#HR Let Go of What Made Your Company Great | #HR #RRHH Making love and making personal #branding #leadership | Scoop.it
How can an organization both exploit and explore? Managers, consultants, and academics around the world have long wrestled with this question. Some have responded by developing a concept known as “ambidexterity,” an organizational capability of fulfilling both managerial imperatives at once. But simultaneously managing today’s business while creating tomorrow’s goes beyond being ambidextrous. There is a third, even more intractable problem: letting go of what made you great.

Managers exploiting current businesses develop mindsets based on what they have experienced in the past. Such mindsets become further embedded in systems, structures, processes, and cultures that are self-perpetuating. It’s hard for managers, especially those who excel in the current system, to explore new unchartered terrain. And even harder for them to notice that many entrenched mindsets have lost relevance in changing circumstances that require exploring for new businesses. Bottom line: Before you can create, you must forget.

Via David Hain
Miklos Szilagyi's curator insight, June 11, 2016 4:20 AM
Yeah... complacency could be deadly...