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Avoiding Burnout for Peak Performance
RESEARCH INSIGHTS
18 hours ago
7 min read
Faculty Entrepreneurship: Transforming Academic Expertise in the Evolving Higher Education Landscape
RESEARCH BRIEFS
2 days ago
12 min read
Behaviors of Leaders Who Embrace Change
RESEARCH INSIGHTS
3 days ago
7 min read
The Influence of Flexible Working Arrangements on Job Satisfaction: How Work-Life Balance Mediates Outcomes for Knowledge Workers
RESEARCH BRIEFS
3 days ago
11 min read
Cultivating a Culture for Engagement: How a Company's DNA shapes its People
RESEARCH INSIGHTS
5 days ago
6 min read
Unleashing Creativity throughout the Ranks: How Senior Leaders Can Cultivate Innovation at Every Level
RESEARCH INSIGHTS
5 days ago
7 min read
Why Apprenticeships Alone Won't Suffice in Today's Knowledge Economy
RESEARCH INSIGHTS
6 days ago
4 min read
The Tragic Cost of Toxic Leadership: How Micromanagement and Lack of Trust Are Driving Away Your Best Employees
RESEARCH INSIGHTS
Aug 28
5 min read
Spotting the Signs: How to Identify Ineffective Leadership
RESEARCH INSIGHTS
Aug 27
6 min read
Accommodating All Minds: Designing Inclusive Work Environments for Neurodiverse Talent
RESEARCH INSIGHTS
Aug 26
7 min read
Human Capital Leadership Review
Avoiding Burnout for Peak Performance
RESEARCH INSIGHTS
18 hours ago
7 min read
It Won’t Be Lonely At The Top If You See Leadership As A Shared Strength
22 hours ago
4 min read
Survey: In Corporate America, 2026 Pay Raise Budgets Projected to Hold Steady
2 days ago
3 min read
From Fiat to Crypto: Why the Future of Payroll Is Borderless
2 days ago
4 min read
Faculty Entrepreneurship: Transforming Academic Expertise in the Evolving Higher Education Landscape
RESEARCH BRIEFS
2 days ago
12 min read
Behaviors of Leaders Who Embrace Change
RESEARCH INSIGHTS
3 days ago
7 min read
The Influence of Flexible Working Arrangements on Job Satisfaction: How Work-Life Balance Mediates Outcomes for Knowledge Workers
RESEARCH BRIEFS
3 days ago
11 min read
Cultivating a Culture for Engagement: How a Company's DNA shapes its People
RESEARCH INSIGHTS
5 days ago
6 min read
Financial Health Network Releases New, First of its Kind Framework for Employers to Close Financial Health Gaps in their Workforce
5 days ago
3 min read
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HCL Review Videos
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01:30:06
Building Agile Talent Teams - Hacking HR Panel
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09:43
Unlock Peak Performance: The Burnout-Proof Workplace Formula
The video, based on Dr. Jonathan H. Westover’s article “Avoiding Burnout for Peak Performance,” addresses the critical issue of employee burnout in organizational settings and provides research-backed strategies for leaders to mitigate it. Burnout, conceptualized by Maslach and Jackson, consists of emotional exhaustion, depersonalization, and reduced personal accomplishment resulting from chronic work stress. This syndrome adversely affects both individual health—causing headaches, anxiety, depression, and relationship problems—and organizational outcomes, such as reduced productivity, increased absenteeism, high turnover, and elevated healthcare costs. Highlights 🔥 Burnout is a psychological syndrome involving emotional exhaustion, depersonalization, and reduced personal accomplishment due to chronic work stress. 📉 Burnout negatively impacts individual health and organizational productivity, leading to costly absenteeism and turnover. ⚖️ Managing workload by setting clear expectations, delegating tasks, and removing low-value activities is key to preventing burnout. 🛠️ Providing autonomy through decision rights, flexible scheduling, and encouraging initiative engages employees and reduces burnout risk. 🤝 Building a strong community with team-building events, collaboration, recognition, and open communication supports employee resilience. 🏥 Real-world application in healthcare showed that workload management and autonomy, combined with wellness programs, significantly reduce burnout. 🚀 Effective leadership and tailored strategies can transform workplace culture, enabling peak performance alongside employee well-being. Key Insights 🔥 Understanding Burnout as a Multifaceted Syndrome: Burnout is not merely fatigue but a complex psychological state involving emotional exhaustion (feeling drained), depersonalization (cynicism towards clients or work), and reduced personal accomplishment (feeling ineffective). Recognizing these dimensions helps leaders identify early signs and tailor interventions accordingly. ⚖️ Workload Imbalance as a Primary Burnout Driver: The Job Demands-Resources model highlights that excessive demands coupled with insufficient resources cause job strain and burnout. Leaders must rigorously assess workload distribution, set realistic goals, and prevent scope creep. Delegation not only reduces individual burden but also serves as a developmental tool, enhancing team capacity. 🛠️ Autonomy as a Shield Against Burnout: Autonomy empowers employees by granting control over how, when, and where they work—factors strongly correlated with engagement and job satisfaction. Delegating decision-making rights encourages ownership and innovation, which boosts morale. Flexible scheduling respects personal needs, reducing stress and enhancing work-life integration. 🤝 Community and Social Support Foster Resilience: Strong interpersonal connections in the workplace buffer against burnout by providing emotional support and a sense of belonging. Team-building activities, collaborative projects, and shared successes strengthen trust and cohesion. Recognition and appreciation make employees feel valued, enhancing motivation and loyalty. Open-door policies create approachable leadership, allowing stressors to be addressed early. 🏥 Practical Application in Healthcare Demonstrates Effectiveness: The case study of a major hospital system exemplifies how research-based strategies translate into real-world impact. Standardizing schedules, limiting shift lengths, delegating clinical and administrative tasks, and empowering teams to improve workflows reduced burnout and turnover. Wellness initiatives like on-site childcare and fitness facilities improved work-life balance. Social activities and networking groups enhanced community. 📊 Burnout’s Organizational Costs Extend Beyond Individuals: Burnout increases absenteeism, turnover, and healthcare expenses, while diminishing productivity and service quality. These costs accumulate to millions annually, making burnout a critical risk for organizational sustainability. Investing in prevention strategies yields high returns by retaining talent, maintaining morale, and improving customer satisfaction. 🚀 Tailoring Strategies to Industry and Team Needs is Crucial: While core principles—managing workload, fostering autonomy, and building community—are universal, their implementation must adapt to specific contexts. For example, creative industries may prioritize autonomy and flexible workflows, whereas healthcare might emphasize schedule standardization and support services. #burnoutprevention #PeakPerformance #Leadership #EmployeeWellbeing #HR #OrganizationalCulture #WorkplaceWellness OUTLINE: 00:00:00 - Introduction and Abstract 00:01:07 - Understanding Burnout 00:02:30 - Managing Workload 00:04:21 - Developing Autonomy 00:05:58 - Fostering Community 00:07:33 - Healthcare Example 00:08:59 - Conclusion
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11:23
Embracing Lifelong Learning: How Organizations Can Foster a Culture of Continuous Development Whi...
Abstract: This article presents a framework for cultivating an organizational culture that supports continuous learning within the context of achieving work goals and objectives. Drawing on literature from the fields of organizational learning, knowledge management, and adult education, the article outlines challenges to integrated learning and work. It proposes reframing learning as an inherent job responsibility, providing flexible learning pathways customized to individual needs, and protecting dedicated time for focused development. Metrics and practices for measuring progress are discussed, emphasizing multidimensional indicators beyond traditional training metrics. The value of sustained executive sponsorship to fully institutionalize learning is also covered. Case examples are used throughout to demonstrate practical application. The overarching aim is to establish habits and structures where ongoing skill development naturally occurs through daily work, empowering individuals and teams to adapt continuously to changing needs.
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10:26
How Professors Are Reinventing Higher Ed (And Why It Matters!)
The landscape of higher education is undergoing profound transformation driven by technological disruption, funding challenges, shifting student expectations, and evolving workforce demands. Within this changing environment, faculty entrepreneurship has emerged as a vital strategy for both individual academics and institutions to adapt and thrive. Faculty entrepreneurship involves applying academic expertise beyond traditional roles, including consulting, speaking, content creation, and launching knowledge ventures. Despite possessing valuable specialized knowledge, many faculty members face uncertainty about how to translate their expertise into entrepreneurial activities outside academia. Highlights 🚀 Faculty entrepreneurship is a strategic response to funding cuts and evolving demands in higher education. 📉 Public funding for higher education has declined by 13% per student over the past decade across OECD countries. 💼 Faculty entrepreneurship includes consulting, speaking, training, content creation, and launching startups. 📊 STEM and business faculty show the highest engagement in entrepreneurial activities; humanities and social sciences are rapidly increasing their participation. 💰 Faculty entrepreneurs earn substantial supplemental income, with some earning up to $220,000 annually. 🏛️ Institutional policies and support programs significantly influence faculty entrepreneurship success. 🌐 Digital transformation and alternative credentials are shaping the future of faculty entrepreneurship. Key Insights 📉 Funding Challenges Drive Entrepreneurial Necessity: With public funding for higher education falling by 13% per student (inflation-adjusted) over the last decade, institutions face growing financial pressure. This decline necessitates alternative revenue streams and knowledge application models, positioning faculty entrepreneurship as a critical adaptive strategy. 💼 Diversified Forms of Faculty Entrepreneurship Reflect Market Needs: Faculty entrepreneurship is not monolithic but spans consulting, advisory services, expert testimony, speaking, training, and knowledge product creation like books and courses. This diversity allows faculty from various disciplines to find suitable pathways aligned with their expertise and interests. For example, STEM and business faculty often engage in consulting and startups, while humanities and social sciences increasingly leverage speaking and content creation. 🔍 Entrepreneurship Enhances Academic Productivity and Satisfaction: Contrary to fears that entrepreneurial activities detract from scholarly work, data reveal that faculty entrepreneurs produce 22% more peer-reviewed publications and obtain 34% more research funding than their peers. Additionally, faculty engaged in entrepreneurship report 37% higher job satisfaction, indicating that entrepreneurial pathways can complement and reinforce traditional academic roles rather than compete with them. ⚠️ Institutional Barriers Limit Faculty Entrepreneurship Growth: Nearly half of U.S. universities impose restrictive policies limiting external work, often capping it at one day per week and requiring burdensome approvals. Promotion and tenure systems continue to undervalue entrepreneurial activities compared to traditional research outputs, discouraging faculty from pursuing these paths. 🏛️ Successful Faculty Entrepreneurship Ecosystems Depend on Clear Policies and Support: Institutions like Stanford University and the University of Michigan demonstrate that well-defined policies, equitable intellectual property frameworks, entrepreneurial education, peer mentoring, and infrastructure support foster robust faculty entrepreneurship. 🌐 Digital Platforms and Alternative Credentials Expand Reach and Opportunities: The rise of online platforms reduces market entry barriers, enabling faculty entrepreneurs to reach global audiences with minimal infrastructure. The growing demand for specialized professional education fuels opportunities to develop alternative credentials and certification programs, opening new revenue streams and enhancing knowledge dissemination. 🤝 Collaborative and Multidisciplinary Ventures Will Shape the Future: Increasingly complex societal challenges require multidisciplinary approaches, leading faculty to form collaborative entrepreneurial teams. This trend leverages diverse expertise to create innovative solutions and enhances the societal relevance of academic knowledge. OUTLINE: 00:00:00 - Introduction and Abstract 00:01:34 - The Changing Context of Higher Education 00:03:12 - Nature and Benefits of Faculty Entrepreneurship 00:05:09 - Barriers and Solutions 00:06:42 - Case Studies and Implementation 00:08:16 - Strategic Implications and Future
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12:28
When the Going Gets Tough: Identifying and Overcoming Burnout as a Sign it May be Time for a New ...
Abstract: Burnout is a significant issue facing professionals in a wide range of industries, yet it often goes unnoticed until the negative impacts emerge. This article explores the key dimensions of burnout as distinguished from temporary job stress, including emotional exhaustion, cynicism, and reduced professional efficacy. A review of common signs and objective assessment strategies helps practitioners recognize when stress has crossed over into burnout. Once identified, the research outlines actions individuals can take to address burnout through setting boundaries, managing workload demands, seeking formal or informal leave, and considering career changes if triggers cannot be resolved. Case studies demonstrate how identifying burnout prompted two professionals to pursue new roles better aligning their needs and skills. Overall, the article aims to raise awareness of burnout and promote its identification as an important indicator that a fresh job opportunity may be needed to restore well-being, passion, and optimal career functioning over the long term.
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24:15
The Evolving Role of HR Leaders, with Andy Lange
In this HCI Webinar, Dr. Jonathan H. Westover talks with Andy Lange about the evolving role of HR leaders. Andy Lange, MBA, PMP®, SHRM-SCP, is the Senior Vice President of People at Take Command, bringing over 15 years of combined HR, executive leadership, and operational experience. Prior to his current role, Andy served as CEO for seven years and as a partner and general manager, where he led business operations, talent strategy, and organizational growth. His career blends hands-on HR leadership with executive-level insight, enabling him to build scalable people programs that align with business objectives. Andy’s practical, real-world approach to helping HR leaders elevate their strategic impact through modern benefits strategies has been shared through speaking and editorial opportunities for BenefitsPro, HRSouthwest, business.com and SHRM. 🎙️ New to streaming or looking to level up? Check out StreamYard and get $10 discount! 😍 https://streamyard.com/pal/d/5000388458315776
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22:22
The Evolving Role of HR leaders, with Andy Lange
In this podcast episode, Dr. Jonathan H. Westover talks with Andy Lange about the evolving role of HR leaders. Andy Lange, MBA, PMP®, SHRM-SCP, is the Senior Vice President of People at Take Command, bringing over 15 years of combined HR, executive leadership, and operational experience. Prior to his current role, Andy served as CEO for seven years and as a partner and general manager, where he led business operations, talent strategy, and organizational growth. His career blends hands-on HR leadership with executive-level insight, enabling him to build scalable people programs that align with business objectives. Andy’s practical, real-world approach to helping HR leaders elevate their strategic impact through modern benefits strategies has been shared through speaking and editorial opportunities for BenefitsPro, HRSouthwest, business.com (http://business.com/) and SHRM. Check out his new e-book here: https://www.takecommandhealth.com/hr-leader-e-book Check out all of the podcasts in the HCI Podcast Network (https://www.podbean.com/podcast-network/HCI) !
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11:30
Unlock the Secrets of Change Leadership 5: Habits of Top CEOs
This article explores the essential leadership behaviors that enable effective organizational change, emphasizing that change is both inevitable and challenging. Successful change leadership demands courage, adaptability, and a willingness to challenge established mindsets and routines. The article identifies five core behaviors that highly effective change leaders consistently demonstrate: embracing ambiguity, building commitment through transparent and engaging communication, empowering others via distributed leadership, leading with compassion to address the human impacts of change, and cultivating a learning orientation that treats failures as opportunities for growth. These behaviors are supported by case studies from major organizations like Cisco, Coca-Cola, Prudential, Yahoo, and Johnson & Johnson, illustrating how leaders have successfully navigated complex transformations. Highlights 🔄 Leaders embrace ambiguity by exploring options through trial and error instead of seeking certainty. 🗣️ Transparent, multi-channel communication builds commitment and reduces resistance to change. 🤝 Empowering distributed teams mobilizes diverse perspectives and frontline insights for innovation. 💖 Compassionate leadership addresses the psychological impacts of change, supporting employee well-being. 📚 Learning from failures fosters a culture of experimentation and continuous improvement. 🌍 Case studies from Cisco, Coca-Cola, Prudential, Yahoo, and Johnson & Johnson illustrate these behaviors in practice. 🚀 An adaptive, empowering leadership style enables organizations to thrive amid ongoing disruption. Key Insights 🔍 Embracing Ambiguity as a Strategic Advantage: Highly effective leaders accept the inherent uncertainty in transformational change, understanding that rigid plans are often impractical. By fostering environments that encourage experimentation and tolerate failure, leaders like Cisco’s John Chambers create psychological safety, which unleashes creativity and accelerates adaptation. 🗨️ Communication as a Change Catalyst: Transparent, consistent, and multi-directional communication is fundamental for securing buy-in across all organizational levels. Leaders who proactively address concerns, listen deeply, and engage through diverse channels—such as town halls, small groups, and digital platforms—can transform resistance into engagement. 🤲 Distributed Empowerment Enhances Agility: Large-scale change cannot be driven solely from the top. Distributing decision rights and resources to cross-functional teams closer to the front lines unleashes collective intelligence and responsiveness. 💡 Compassionate Leadership Mitigates Human Costs: Change disrupts more than processes—it affects employees’ identities, relationships, and psychological safety. Leaders who lead with empathy, such as Marissa Mayer at Yahoo, recognize and address these emotional dimensions through personal engagement and inclusive cultures. 📈 Learning Orientation Drives Continuous Improvement: Successful change leaders view setbacks not as failures but as essential learning opportunities. By encouraging a growth mindset and transparent sharing of challenges—as modeled by Alex Gorski at Johnson & Johnson—leaders cultivate cultures where experimentation is valued, risk-taking is supported, and iterative progress is made. 🌐 Case Studies Validate Leadership Behaviors: The real-world examples from Cisco, Coca-Cola, Prudential, Yahoo, and Johnson & Johnson provide concrete evidence that these leadership behaviors are effective across industries and contexts. 🔄 Integrating Humanity and Strategy for Organizational Agility: The synthesis of these behaviors highlights a leadership paradigm that balances strategic direction with human-centered management. Leaders who roll up their sleeves to engage directly with teams, support psychological well-being, and empower distributed decision-making foster cultures capable of continuous adaptation. #ChangeLeadership #OrganizationalChange #LeadershipDevelopment #ChangeManagement OUTLINE: 00:00:00 - Introduction and Abstract 00:01:04 - Setting the Stage 00:01:41 - Embracing Ambiguity 00:03:08 - Building Commitment Through Communication 00:05:01 - Empowering Others Through Distributed Leadership 00:06:44 - Leading with Compassion Through Change 00:08:14 - Learning from Both Successes and Failures 00:09:32 - Summary and Conclusion
Blog: HCI Blog
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Dec 13, 2024
7 min read
LEADERSHIP IN PRACTICE
You Don’t Have to Be the Best at Everything at Work
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