Welcome to the latest edition of Human-Centered Change & Innovation Weekly!
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Drum roll please… At the beginning of each month, we will profile the ten articles from the previous month that generated the most traffic to Human-Centered Change & Innovation. Did your favorite make the cut? » Read the article |
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Guest Post from Mike Shipulski
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If you could get another good job at the drop of a hat, how would you work differently? Would you speak your mind or bite your tongue? If you didn’t care about getting a promotion, would you succumb to groupthink or dissent? » Read the article |
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Guest Post from David Burkus |
Teams are how work gets done most of the time. In a knowledge work economy, up to 85% of an average employee’s time is spent in collaboration with other people—on one team or on multiple teams. And that makes effective collaboration and good teamwork a top tier ... » Read the article |
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Guest Post from Robyn Bolton |
Several years ago, my now-husband and I were in London. It was his first time in the city but my 4th or 5th so, naturally, I talked a big game about how well I knew the city and how I would be, with the help of our handy tourist map, our tour guide. » Read the article |
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Guest Post from Shep Hyken |
The short version of the story is this. At about 9:15 p.m., I pulled into one of my favorite fast-food restaurants. There was one customer ahead of me in the drive-through lane. I assumed he was placing an order. After several minutes, I realized something else was going on. I wasn’t sure what, but ... » Read the article |
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Guest Post from Geoffrey A. Moore |
A quote you often hear is, “Culture eats strategy for lunch,” typically attributed to Peter Drucker (whether correctly or not). Regardless, it puts a spotlight on the power of culture to resist even the most compelling strategic narratives. These days it’s hard to come up with a more compelling narrative than ... » Read the article |
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Guest Post from Greg Satell |
Many say that coding is the new literacy. Kids are encouraged to learn programming in school and take coding courses online. In that famous scene in The Graduate Dustin Hoffman’s character was encouraged by a family friend to go into plastics. If it were shot today, it would have probably been computer code. » Read the article |
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I hope you enjoyed this week's contributions from our guest authors. Future editions will arrive each Tuesday.
Please direct all speaking and workshop requests, commissioned writing inquiries, and podcast appearance queries to info@bradenkelley.com.
And, reply to this email if you would like to contribute articles to this newsletter.
Sincerely,
Your Host - Braden Kelley
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Human-Centered Change & Innovation Weekly hosted by Braden Kelley, Seattle, WA, USA |
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