Hierarchies into wirearchies!
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YqxcckkVM18]
Just another WordPress site
by admin
Hierarchies into wirearchies!
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YqxcckkVM18]
by admin
This is the title of an interesting post by Adrian Ashton over at Social Enterprise.
Adrian cites major problems with both pay and prospects with 60% of those working in the sector expecting to leave it within the next 5 years.
there are various strategies and policies around how social enterprise is going to save the world, but in all the hype and excitement we must be careful to remember that it can only do so if our people feel valued in doing so and we can retain them for the journey.
So social enterprises must join the ‘War for Talent‘.
At the heart of talent acquisition and retention is a single, simple question. What is our winning Employee Value Proposition (EVP)? What value can we offer employees that means they will join us, stay and develop their impact?
And this is where the social enterprise sector has a potential significant advantage over many for profits. But an advantage that many social enterprises squander.
A social enterprise can offer meaning, purpose, authenticity (the chance to do what I am ‘meant’ to be doing, to express who I really am through my contribution – to do ‘good’ work) and impact. It is not about pursuing profits but pursuing social justice. About building a better world. Make sure that you build this into your EVP and there will be no problem retaining top people – even if you are not paying top dollar.
But I see many social enterprises lose sight of their purpose. They become more interested in writing finding applications than in the pursuit of social justice. They will do whatever the funders ask them to – even if this makes them dependent and compliant. Working in the best interests of the funder rather than in the best interests of those whom they are meant to serve.
If social enterprise is to have a future then managers and leaders in the sector must learn how to:
They need to become Progressive Managers.
by admin
Sensible reflections from Trevor Gay’s Simplicity blog
I am sure that you will agree with much of it.
But do you ACT on it?
Or do you let ‘the system’ get in the way?
by admin
If we want engagement, and the mediocrity busting results it produces, we have to make sure people have autonomy over the four most important aspects of their work:
- Task – What they do
- Time – When they do it
- Technique – How they do it
- Team – Whom they do it with.
After a decade of truly spectacular underachievement, what we need now is less management and more freedom – fewer individual automatons and more autonomous individuals.
by admin
I often meet managers who are obsessed with plans and performance. As a result they tend to focus on deviance. Things that go wrong, that don’t meet the plan.
As a result they find it hard to see and acknowledge the good stuff. The vast majority of their feedback is about problems and they fail to acknowledge or even see the good work that is done every day.
If you need convincing that you only see what you are looking for try this video for size.
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ubNF9QNEQLA]
Share this Post