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When Algorithms Reshape the Social Contract: Leadership, Ethics, and the New Workforce Disruption
NEXUS INSTITUTE FOR WORK AND AI
18 hours ago
25 min read
People Don't Follow Strategy—They Follow Structure
2 days ago
24 min read
When Delegation Goes Wrong: The Hidden Vulnerabilities of Autonomous AI Agents
NEXUS INSTITUTE FOR WORK AND AI
3 days ago
40 min read
Misalignment or Misguidance? Understanding Youth Career Aspiration Gaps and Evidence-Based Policy Responses
CATALYST CENTER FOR WORK INNOVATION
4 days ago
24 min read
When Performance Becomes the Bridge: How Employee Capability Translates Human Resource Practices into Organizational Sustainability
CATALYST CENTER FOR WORK INNOVATION
5 days ago
22 min read
Navigating AI-Driven Workforce Transitions: Measuring Adaptive Capacity Beyond Job Exposure
NEXUS INSTITUTE FOR WORK AND AI
6 days ago
17 min read
Intelligent AI Delegation at Work: Getting More from Human-AI Collaboration
NEXUS INSTITUTE FOR WORK AND AI
7 days ago
20 min read
Automation Won't Save You—Workflow Redesign Will: The Strategic Imperative for Value Capture in the Age of Agentic AI
NEXUS INSTITUTE FOR WORK AND AI
Apr 25
14 min read
The Hidden Ethical Cost of Leading AI-Augmented Teams: What Research Reveals About Moral Drift in Human-AI Workplaces
NEXUS INSTITUTE FOR WORK AND AI
Apr 24
21 min read
AI Displacement Risk in the Labor Market: Evidence, Exposure, and the Imperative for Adaptive Organizational Strategy
NEXUS INSTITUTE FOR WORK AND AI
Apr 23
16 min read
Human Capital Leadership Review
The Human Skills AI Cannot Replace, According To New Study
16 hours ago
4 min read
When Algorithms Reshape the Social Contract: Leadership, Ethics, and the New Workforce Disruption
NEXUS INSTITUTE FOR WORK AND AI
18 hours ago
25 min read
People Don't Follow Strategy—They Follow Structure
2 days ago
24 min read
Top U.S. Cities Where Work Takes Over Life, New Study Says
2 days ago
4 min read
When Delegation Goes Wrong: The Hidden Vulnerabilities of Autonomous AI Agents
NEXUS INSTITUTE FOR WORK AND AI
3 days ago
40 min read
Misalignment or Misguidance? Understanding Youth Career Aspiration Gaps and Evidence-Based Policy Responses
CATALYST CENTER FOR WORK INNOVATION
4 days ago
24 min read
How Managers Can Help Employees Sort Out Office Issues Without AI
4 days ago
4 min read
When Performance Becomes the Bridge: How Employee Capability Translates Human Resource Practices into Organizational Sustainability
CATALYST CENTER FOR WORK INNOVATION
5 days ago
22 min read
AI Was Supposed to Be the Great Equalizer. Who It Names as an ICT Expert Says Otherwise
6 days ago
5 min read
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HCL Review Research Videos
HCL Review Research Infographics
Blog: HCI Blog
Human Capital Leadership Review
Featuring scholarly and practitioner insights from HR and people leaders, industry experts, and researchers.
Human Capital Innovations
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Play Video
04:26
Transforming Workplaces - The Power of Psychosocial Interventions
For decades, the prevailing narrative has been that if work causes misery, the fault lies with the individual rather than the job. Employees are urged to manage stress through mindfulness, work-life balance, and wellness programs. However, this approach misses the root cause: unhealthy work environments themselves. High-stress, low-control jobs lead to serious health risks such as depression, anxiety, and heart disease, while organizations suffer from absenteeism, presenteeism, and costly turnover. For example, replacing a single nurse can cost a hospital up to $60,000, illustrating the financial impact of toxic workplaces. Highlights 🔍 The root cause of workplace misery is often the job design, not the individual. 💔 High-stress, low-control jobs increase risks of depression, anxiety, and heart disease. 💸 Replacing employees, such as nurses, can cost organizations tens of thousands of dollars. 🌱 Better work environments lead to improved health outcomes and organizational performance. 🛠️ Wellness programs alone fail without systemic changes to work structure and culture. 🤝 Participatory, employee-driven solutions yield the most sustainable improvements. 🚀 Leadership commitment to redesign work is critical for lasting organizational success. Key Insights 🧠 The fundamental flaw lies in job design, not individual resilience: The conventional wisdom that stresses managing stress through personal coping strategies overlooks the systemic nature of workplace distress. When jobs impose high demands with little control, employees suffer physically and mentally. The implication is that organizational policies must focus on redesigning jobs rather than solely improving individual coping mechanisms. 💔 Health risks from toxic workplaces extend beyond mental health: Chronic stress in the workplace elevates risks for serious physical illnesses such as heart disease, illustrating how work environment impacts overall health. This broadens the scope of workplace well-being beyond psychological interventions to include physical health outcomes, underlining the urgency for systemic change. 💸 Financial consequences of poor work environments are substantial: The example of nurse turnover costing hospitals up to $60,000 demonstrates the economic burden of unhealthy workplaces. This cost includes recruitment, training, and lost productivity. Investing in better job design and employee well-being is economically prudent and can reduce costly turnover. 🌟 Improved work environments enhance organizational outcomes like patient mortality: Research shows that environments with better job control, support, and manageable demands lead to lower mortality rates in healthcare settings. This insight connects employee well-being directly to organizational performance and quality outcomes, making it a strategic priority. 🛠️ Symptom-focused interventions are necessary but insufficient: While wellness programs, meditation apps, and stress workshops can help employees cope, they do not address root causes such as toxic culture, unmanageable workloads, or lack of autonomy. Without systemic redesign, these programs are akin to temporary relief rather than cures. 🤝 Employee participation in problem-solving drives lasting change: The Dutch hospital case demonstrates that participatory action planning, where employees identify stressors and co-create solutions, leads to meaningful improvements in exhaustion and team climate. Empowerment and inclusion foster ownership and sustainable transformation. 🚀 Leadership commitment and systemic redesign are prerequisites for thriving workplaces: Transforming work involves leadership listening to employees, employing tools like surveys and forums to detect real hazards, granting autonomy, and fostering psychological safety. These elements create environments where employees feel energized and engaged, which is essential for both individual and organizational success.
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Employee Well-being and Engagement, with Amy Spurling
In this HCI Webinar, I talk with Amy Spurling about employee well-being and engagement. Amy Spurling is the Founder and CEO of Compt, HR software that revolutionizes employee benefits through personalized, inclusive, and tax-compliant Lifestyle Spending Accounts (LSAs). With a distinguished background as a three-time CFO and two-time COO, Amy is dedicated to fostering symbiotic growth between companies and their employees. Under her leadership, Compt has become a pivotal tool in enhancing employee satisfaction and productivity with LSAs. With over two decades of experience in venture-backed startups, Amy has driven over $200M in financing and successfully led two acquisitions to close. Her expertise and innovative approach have made her a leading voice in the HR and tech industries. Amy holds an MBA from Simmons School of Management and a BA from the University of Rochester.
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Play Video
03:29
Upstream Work Architecture
This research evaluates organizational-level interventions designed to enhance employee wellbeing by modifying the psychosocial work environment. Research indicates that strategies providing workers with greater control over their schedules and influence over work organization are particularly effective at reducing burnout and improving work-life balance. Conversely, the evidence remains inconclusive for leadership training and general stress reduction, often due to variations in how these programs are implemented. The research emphasizes that implementation quality and management commitment are just as vital as the design of the intervention itself. Ultimately, the research argues that integrating psychosocial risk management into core organizational systems is essential for building sustainable and healthy workplaces. This comprehensive synthesis serves as an evidence-based framework for practitioners to address modern labor challenges like retention and mental health.
Play Video
Play Video
56:58
A Conversation about Designing Evidence-Based Organizational Interventions for Workplace Wellbeing
This research evaluates organizational-level interventions designed to enhance employee wellbeing by modifying the psychosocial work environment. Research indicates that strategies providing workers with greater control over their schedules and influence over work organization are particularly effective at reducing burnout and improving work-life balance. Conversely, the evidence remains inconclusive for leadership training and general stress reduction, often due to variations in how these programs are implemented. The research emphasizes that implementation quality and management commitment are just as vital as the design of the intervention itself. Ultimately, the research argues that integrating psychosocial risk management into core organizational systems is essential for building sustainable and healthy workplaces. This comprehensive synthesis serves as an evidence-based framework for practitioners to address modern labor challenges like retention and mental health. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Play Video
Play Video
23:45
A Debate about Designing Evidence-Based Organizational Interventions for Workplace Wellbeing
This research evaluates organizational-level interventions designed to enhance employee wellbeing by modifying the psychosocial work environment. Research indicates that strategies providing workers with greater control over their schedules and influence over work organization are particularly effective at reducing burnout and improving work-life balance. Conversely, the evidence remains inconclusive for leadership training and general stress reduction, often due to variations in how these programs are implemented. The research emphasizes that implementation quality and management commitment are just as vital as the design of the intervention itself. Ultimately, the research argues that integrating psychosocial risk management into core organizational systems is essential for building sustainable and healthy workplaces. This comprehensive synthesis serves as an evidence-based framework for practitioners to address modern labor challenges like retention and mental health. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Play Video
Play Video
23:45
A Conversation about Designing Evidence-Based Organizational Interventions for Workplace Wellbeing
This research evaluates organizational-level interventions designed to enhance employee wellbeing by modifying the psychosocial work environment. Research indicates that strategies providing workers with greater control over their schedules and influence over work organization are particularly effective at reducing burnout and improving work-life balance. Conversely, the evidence remains inconclusive for leadership training and general stress reduction, often due to variations in how these programs are implemented. The research emphasizes that implementation quality and management commitment are just as vital as the design of the intervention itself. Ultimately, the research argues that integrating psychosocial risk management into core organizational systems is essential for building sustainable and healthy workplaces. This comprehensive synthesis serves as an evidence-based framework for practitioners to address modern labor challenges like retention and mental health. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Play Video
Play Video
23:45
Organizational Interventions and the Psychosocial Work Environment: Building Healthier, More Sust...
Abstract: Organizations worldwide face mounting pressure to address employee wellbeing while maintaining productivity and retention. This article synthesizes evidence from systematic reviews examining organizational-level interventions targeting the psychosocial work environment. Drawing on research covering nearly 1,000 primary intervention studies, we identify intervention approaches with strong-to-moderate evidence of effectiveness, including working time flexibility, employee influence on work organization, comprehensive psychosocial improvements, and burnout reduction programs. While certain interventions demonstrate clear benefits—particularly those enhancing worker control and addressing work-life integration—evidence remains inconclusive for leadership development and stress reduction initiatives. We examine why some interventions succeed while others fail, highlighting the critical roles of implementation quality, contextual factors, and the distinction between proximal (work environment) and distal (health and retention) outcomes. The article concludes with actionable frameworks for practitioners designing evidence-based workplace interventions and identifies priorities for advancing both intervention science and practice. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Play Video
23:17
Help Them Grow or Watch Them Go, with Julie Winkle Giulioni
In this HCI Webinar, I talk with Julie Winkle Giulioni about her book, Help Them Grow or Watch Them Go. Julie Winkle Giulioni is a champion for workplace growth and development. She believes that everyone deserves the opportunity to reach their potential. And she supports organizations and leaders who want to make that happen with keynote speeches, consulting and training. Julie is the co-author of the international bestseller, Help Them Grow or Watch Them Go: Career Conversations Organizations Need and Employees Still Want, translated into seven languages and coming out in its third edition in September. Her most recent book, Promotions Are So Yesterday: Redefine Career Development. Help Employees Thrive, has been recognized with Nautilus and Axiom Business Book Awards. She is a regular columnist for Training Industry Magazine and SmartBrief and contributes articles on leadership, career development, and workplace trends to numerous publications including Fast Company and The Economist. Named by Inc. Magazine as a Top 100 Leadership Speaker, Julie’s in-person and virtual keynotes and presentations offer fresh, inspiring, yet actionable strategies for leaders who are interested in their own growth as well as supporting the growth of others. Her firm, DesignArounds, creates and offers training to organizations worldwide and has earned praise and awards from Human Resource Executive Magazine’s Top Ten Training Products, New York Film Festival, Brandon Hall, and Global HR Excellence Council.
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Mar 14
3 min read
The Burnout Crisis: 5 Employer Fixes to Stop Losing High‑Performing Women
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