#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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5 Reasons to Use MicroLearning

5 Reasons to Use MicroLearning | #HR #RRHH Making love and making personal #branding #leadership | Scoop.it

MicroLearning is a form of learning that delivers key concepts in as short an amount of time as possible. It is a short, sharp, just-in-time snippet. I like to think of microLearning as 'short enough to watch standing up on the job'. It's when you need a quick tip, brush up on a specific skill or have a moment to learn about new product between customers.

 

What are the 5 advantages of microLearning?

1.   Timely Learning.

The greatest advantage of microLearning is time. Imagine a manager racing through their day. They have a performance management meeting with an employee but have not had the time to read up on the correct procedure to follow. Or a railway engineer arriving at a broken down train and the broken axle is something he hasn't unbolted for 12 months. Neither of them have the time to scroll through three layers on the company's Intranet, find the LMS, log on and watch the 20-minute module. 

 

What they want is to go to their phone, open an App, and BAM! There is the 3-minute microLearning video. It's all about timely learning.

2.   Speed to Market.

One of our clients is a global Japanese car manufacturer. They require an eLearning module for every new model released. They don't have months to plan for product training. They need learning NOW! What companies require is microLearning with rapid development that matches their timeline for product delivery.

3.   Expiry Date

Learning's expiry date is faster than ever. It used to be that a learning program would last a few years before it needs refreshing but with changing products, people and systems, learning is being discarded faster and needs to be produced cheaply, yet with quality. MicroLearning is a cost effective and fast way to develop training content, making it a win/win for the companies and the learners.

4.   Pictures are powerful

Around 70% of millennials visit YouTube monthly. It is a large part of their life so it seems obvious that we should adapt learning to what they are familiar with. When millennials need to learn something, they watch a 2 minute YouTube video.

Research teaches us that if you hear something, after 3 days, you would have only retained 10% of what you learnt. If you then add a picture to that, retention increases to 65% - that's 6 times better! Using video in MicroLearning makes it stick. Our brain links what we hear to a picture and retention is greater.

5.   Mobile

One of our Pharma clients is investing in Asia. The people they are training in Asia have limited access to computers, but they all have smartphones. How do they train them? MicroLearning. They make it engaging, enjoyable, entertaining and most of all mobile compatible. The training is mobile, so that they can watch it standing up on the job, or sitting on the bus or train.

 

MicroLearning is certainly leading the way in creating new and exciting learning content, whilst making the process easier for both the companies and their employees. Send me a message if you'd like to find out more on our microLearning offering and what we can offer.

 

Chris Gaborit is managing director of The Learning Factor, an eLearning company who loves technology linked to learning. Follow him here on Linkedin, on Twitter @droneservicesAU and Instagram @idronefoto


Via The Learning Factor
Karine Fabiani-Lugez's curator insight, March 14, 2018 10:11 AM
Le leanring entre dans le quotidien avec le microlearning
Jean-Guy Frenette's curator insight, March 16, 2018 7:46 PM
PDGMan
Jerry Busone's curator insight, March 18, 2018 10:01 AM

That leader channel Im looking to deliver is closer than I think ... Micro learning is a key feature to set up and reinforce your core skills ...make them handy for associates to get to and keep them short... very short.

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How to Assess Your Company's Onboarding Program - #HR Bartender

How to Assess Your Company's Onboarding Program - #HR Bartender | #HR #RRHH Making love and making personal #branding #leadership | Scoop.it
Onboarding is more than just orientation. Done right, it helps retain and engage new hires. So, we need to assess our onboarding program for maximum effect.

Via Marta Torán
Marta Torán's curator insight, September 19, 2017 2:00 PM

Programas de acogida para nuevas incorporaciones. Cómo evaluarlos

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#HR 8 Creative Onboarding Practices That Take Employees Outside

#HR 8 Creative Onboarding Practices That Take Employees Outside | #HR #RRHH Making love and making personal #branding #leadership | Scoop.it

Most new hires spend their first few days on the job getting acclimated to the company, meeting their coworkers, and undergoing training. While these tasks are important, some companies like to immerse new employees in their culture by getting them outside and involved in activities that represent their values.

 

Here are eight creative onboarding practices businesses are using to engage new hires and help them get excited about their jobs.


Via The Learning Factor
The Learning Factor's curator insight, July 4, 2017 6:46 PM

These companies combine necessary training with fun activities that start team building from the first day on the job.

Shenae Outerbridge's curator insight, July 6, 2017 11:10 AM
As a senior executive it is important to engage your new hires.
Here are some great ways to do that. 
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#HR Engaging New Hires:A Step-by-Step Recipe for a Structured Onboarding Experience

#HR Engaging New Hires:A Step-by-Step Recipe for a Structured Onboarding Experience | #HR #RRHH Making love and making personal #branding #leadership | Scoop.it

The average job tenure has shrunk to two years in some industries, and it continues to shrink. Younger millennial and post-millennial workers (the largest cohort in the workforce) aren’t staying as long at their jobs and want more immediate feedback from management. So many companies blend their recognition/engagement programs with their hiring efforts to create a structured onboarding experience.

An engaging and rewarding onboarding experience can boost new hire retention and productivity, as well as making them more likely to stay beyond three years. Here is a brief run-down of all the major milestones and engagement opportunities that occur in the first year of employment, along with tips to prepare for them.

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#HR Should onboarding be like a travel guide?

#HR Should onboarding be like a travel guide? | #HR #RRHH Making love and making personal #branding #leadership | Scoop.it

When we go on holidays to a different country, we usually take a travel guide with us.
 
We want to know the basics like business hours, tips on restaurants, common expressions, but we also want to learn something about that country. Attractions, events, what people usually do there, its culture! And when we are able to talk to that country’s native people and get to know how they live and work it’s a whole learning experience.

I believe starting a new job is a bit like traveling to a foreign country. You don’t know anyone, you usually have zero inside knowledge on the company, its processes and projects.

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Three Reasons to Move Your Induction Online - Sarah Davie | The Learning Factor

Three Reasons to Move Your Induction Online - Sarah Davie | The Learning Factor | #HR #RRHH Making love and making personal #branding #leadership | Scoop.it

More and more organisations are choosing to complement their face-to-face inductions online or move to an entirely online induction model.  Here are 3 reasons why…

 

“The Day 1” experience

Sometimes it’s the time it takes to set new starters up on your systems or finalise the paperwork, sometimes it’s not having enough people start around the same time to justify the cost and resource of running a face to face induction session.  Whatever the reason, it’s rare that new starters experience a consistent, formal induction on their first day.

 

Sure, there’s the office tour, the meet and greets, but how do they understand where your organisation is headed, the values that drive you, and what’s expected of them… from day one?  Or even before their start date?

 

An online induction means these all-important messages that set the scene and communicate who you are and what you do are delivered from the get-go. This can include video of your CEO or MD talking conversationally about what your organisation’s vision and values mean to them. From Day 1, your new starters can have the impression that senior leaders are approachable and accessible.

 

Streamlined content

Often the content that new starters need to be aware of is housed in multiple locations: your web page, your intranet, your shared drive, in old emails, in people’s heads.  A new starter needs a map.

 

An online induction corrals all that must-know, or must-know-where-to-find information in a cohesive way.  It signposts people to the places they can access the information now, and return to later as needed. And if they need to find it later… it’s the most up to date version, not a new starter manual that is out of date as it’s too hard to maintain.

 

Getting connected

There is so much opportunity to connect new starters to each other and encourage that sense of belonging to a ‘cohort’.  Consider allocating someone the responsibility of being your “Induction community manager” and taking advantage of the discussion groups on your LMS, or standalone social networks. 

 

This means you can dish out work-integrated challenges or activities for them to complete, and come back to post and share their insights amongst the group.  Moving your induction online means new starters can form connections with colleagues across geographical and departmental boundaries – at a fraction of the cost and potential time lags involved in achieving this face to face.

To read more about moving your induction process online click here. And see a vignette of one of our Inductions.

 

Learn more about how to move your induction online

 

 

 

Sarah Davie is the Global Design Lead for The Learning Factor. Sarah has a passion for Onboarding and Induction solutions. She is an experienced learning consultant with a demonstrated history of delivering for clients from large Corporate organisations, Government sectors, global Consulting Firms and boutique Learning Agencies. 

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#HR 5 onboarding mistakes that drive away new staff

#HR 5 onboarding mistakes that drive away new staff | #HR #RRHH Making love and making personal #branding #leadership | Scoop.it
Nearly 90% of firms estimate that between 10% and 25% of new employees leave within the first six months.

According to the Korn Ferry Futurestep Survey, the top reason new recruits leave is their role is different from what they expected it would be during the hiring process. 19% revealed that they don’t like the company’s culture.

Often, it’s an accumulation of negative experiences that drive new recruits away, which is why it's crucial that the onboarding process isn't overlooked. 
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#HR Employee onboarding: how to get new starters off on the right foot

#HR Employee onboarding: how to get new starters off on the right foot | #HR #RRHH Making love and making personal #branding #leadership | Scoop.it

The first six months in a new job can be a difficult time for both the employee and the hiring company. For the former, they want to know that they have made the right choice, are settling in and feel they have the support and tools to show what they can do and become a productive member of the business.
 
For the hiring company, it is important to get someone settled and productive quickly. No business wants the upheaval of people starting and leaving quickly, least of all the existing staff who can find their routines further disrupted.

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#HR #RRHH Onboarding: How to succeed with your remote team

#HR #RRHH Onboarding: How to succeed with your remote team | #HR #RRHH Making love and making personal #branding #leadership | Scoop.it

We’ve already seen how hiring the remote candidate can pose unique issues owing to the location of your new hire. You need to search for dedicated and motivated workers (preferably with prior experience working remotely) who seem like a good fit for your culture. 
 
Whilst this is certainly true, all of these hiring checks will be for nought if you don’t apply the same care and special remote consideration to your employee onboarding process.

Remote employees are a wonderful mixed bag (admittedly I’m a little biased, being one myself); the more care you put into nurturing them and thoroughly onboarding them, the more tight-knit they will be with your company and the more motivated they will remain for the names in their Slack channel.

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Nonprofit Leader Partnerships: How to Achieve the Right Balance

Nonprofit Leader Partnerships: How to Achieve the Right Balance | #HR #RRHH Making love and making personal #branding #leadership | Scoop.it

"Like a well-played symphony, when nonprofit leaders partner well with their staff and volunteers, magic happens.  Leadership & Partnership in the nonprofit sector:"

_________________________

 

Shared leadership can catch new leaders off guard. 

_________________________
 

In this Part Two post from  “Seven Ways New Non-Profit Leaders Succeed The First Year on the Job," – co-authored with Jolene Knapp and Alan Davis, another Ideas for Action, LLC colleague, we offer solutions for nurturing a successful partnership.  Part One of the series recommended first steps of CEO listening and communicating with the specific titles of:

 

Listen to learnCommunicate, and communicate again
 

Below, we share details and links to resources on setting the leadership agenda as well as finding your rhythm with a new board chair or council president, as well as educating and encouraging volunteers.
 

_________________________
 
Co-creation is a powerful way to establish partnership.
_________________________
 

3. Set a Leadership Agenda

When things go wrong between CEOs and their boards, it’s often the result of a failure to reach a common understanding of what constitutes success. Co-create the new leadership agenda. One of the best tools we’ve seen is a simple but powerful template for articulating priorities and goals for the next 18 months, including the respective roles of the new leader, board, and senior staff in achieving them.   (See the Sample Leadership Agenda in this article from the Bridgespan Group.)

 

Do not overcommit yourself or your staff. Leaders, members, and other stakeholders are excited about a new CEO; they want projects or tasks implemented that may have been pending for a while or they have new ideas.

 

Establish a pattern of having strategic conversations with the board that set clear expectations about goals, roles, and ways to assess progress. In addition, it is important to assure that the chair/president is passing along information to the rest of the board.
 

4.  Establish a Rhythm for Building Shared Leadership with the Board Chair

In the complex world of governance, it’s important to find a communication pattern that builds solid leadership connection in your organization. One CEO we consulted said that in preparation for each new governance year, she facilitated an off-site leadership transition retreat with the incoming president, immediate past president, and new president-elect. (This will vary with the size and culture of your board.) In a private and relaxed setting, the goal was to orient the president-elect to current challenges, provide deep background on strategic priorities, and co-create a shared leadership vision for the year.

 

Related posts by Deb on Non-Profit Leadership in this series:

    

Courage for New Leaders To Listen & Learn in the New Year

  

 

Related posts by Deb on Strategy and Change:

   

Agile Leader Learning for Sustainable Change: Steps through Sharp Rocks

    

Beyond Resilience: Givers, Takers, Matchers and Anti-Fragile Systems

Via Deb Nystrom, REVELN
Deb Nystrom, REVELN's curator insight, January 6, 2016 3:53 PM

Shared leadership can catch new leaders off guard. In fact, it’s a challenge not only for brand new CEOs, but for seasoned CEOs whenever newly elected leaders take office.  


In working with my friend and colleague Jolene Knapp, for example, I learned about how she needed to become acquainted with a new board president EVERY YEAR, in her role as an Executive Director.  This added pressure to her role, and it also developed her agility in building new leader partnerships. It is from this perspective we share our insights in this blog series for nonprofit leaders.


Jaro Berce's curator insight, March 2, 2016 6:07 AM

Shared leadership can catch new leaders off guard. In fact, it’s a challenge not only for brand new CEOs, but for seasoned CEOs whenever newly elected leaders take office.  


In working with my friend and colleague Jolene Knapp, for example, I learned about how she needed to become acquainted with a new board president EVERY YEAR, in her role as an Executive Director.  This added pressure to her role, and it also developed her agility in building new leader partnerships. It is from this perspective we share our insights in this blog series for nonprofit leaders.