Yes, I Can Do That! – A Friday Funny

By Michelle Malay Carter on February 14, 2008 

I’m off?on vacation?for a few days so I am posting my Friday Funny on Thursday.? I could set up this entry to auto post?tomorrow, but I have?trouble getting video clips to? save properly.? I wanted to make sure it posted correctly so I could?RELAX.? Do We Deceive Ourselves or Others? Have you ever had a […]

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Talent Management Systems Design – The Best Defense is a Good Offence

By Michelle Malay Carter on February 13, 2008 

In my last post, I took a stand against annual, mandatory low performing employee cuts popularized by Jack Welch at GE.? I believe this practice is rooted in an untrue, negative belief set. Cutting the bottom 10% annually is a defensive, compensatory system for lack of understanding of work levels, human capability, and an inadequate […]

Filed Under Accountability, Corporate Values, Employee Engagement, Executive Leadership, Managerial Leadership, Organization Design, Requisite Organization, Strategy, Talent Management | 6 Comments

Where Jack Welch Got It Wrong – The Mandatory, Annual Low-Performer Cut

By Michelle Malay Carter on February 12, 2008 

Don’t Hack Jack! Our underlying beliefs and values drive our behaviors.? Jack Welch believed, ?If you?ve got 16 employees, at least two are turkeys.??? From this belief flowed the talent management systems at GE.? One of the most controversial (and unfortunately?emulated) practices was that of cutting the bottom performing 10% of employees annually. Judy at […]

Filed Under Accountability, Corporate Values, Employee Engagement, Executive Leadership, Managerial Leadership, Organization Design, Requisite Organization, Strategy, Talent Management, Work Levels | 13 Comments

Felt Fair Compensation – She Said What?

By Michelle Malay Carter on February 7, 2008 

Since my last two posts on felt fair pay were more technical in nature, I thought I would create a post on the subject that was more conversational. If a friend were to ask me about felt fair pay, here is what I would say: As it turns out, we humans have an internal sense […]

Filed Under Employee Engagement, Felt Fair Compensation, Organization Design, Requisite Organization, Strategy, Work Levels | 4 Comments

How the Compensation Industry Machine Silenced a Circumventor – A True Story

By Michelle Malay Carter on February 5, 2008 

A Quashed Circumvention of the Compensation Industry Machine In the late sixties and early seventies, the compensation industry was abuzz with the groundbreaking Honeywell study I talked about in my last post that found that time span of discretion was correlated with felt fair pay at the +0.86 level. Defensiveness Rather than Curiosity Instead of […]

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If We Really Understood Work, Compensation Would Be a No Brainer

By Michelle Malay Carter on February 4, 2008 

Excavating A 50-Year Old Groundbreaking Compensation Study A major compensation study was conducted at Honeywell in the 1960’s.? The results of that study, which was the PhD dissertation of Roy Richardson, were published in the book, Fair Pay and Work.? Click here for a book review excerpt?with summary results?displayed along with corroborative study information. The […]

Filed Under Executive Leadership, Felt Fair Compensation, Organization Design, Requisite Organization, Strategy, Talent Management, Work Levels | 3 Comments

Just Fix the System Please – A Friday Funny

By Michelle Malay Carter on January 31, 2008 

I’ve been called irreverent.? Sometimes I use sarcasm to get a point across, but Despair, Inc. has found a way to turn cynicism into cash-flow with an entire line of products for people?interested in responding to the well-intentioned but?impotent motivational words and techniques that?organizations attempt.? Just fix the system please! Below are my personal favorites.??They […]

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Declaring a Major at 18 When We Don’t Know Who We Are Until We’re 30

By Michelle Malay Carter on January 30, 2008 

I think most people reach about 30 years of age before they really know who they are and how that might translate into a job, and for some it happens later than that.? Some of this likely stems from our current education and work paradigms. My 15 year old neighbor is already being pressured as […]

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Circumventing the Four-Year University Machine

By Michelle Malay Carter on January 29, 2008 

I’m not a futurist, but my last post about Management Megatrends got?me thinking about other potential “machines” that may become either irrelevant or reinvented in my lifetime.?? So this post is mostly musing and is more about questions than answers.? I’d love to get your perspective as I go out on a limb and poke […]

Filed Under Corporate Values, Organization Design, Personal Observation, Strategy, Talent Management | 5 Comments

Circumventing the Machine – Wake Up! The World is Changing

By Michelle Malay Carter on January 27, 2008 

I watched a video presentation by two futurists called Media Megatrends.? In it, Glen Hiemstra mentions that his assistant, a member of the?younger?”digital native” generation, remarked that once her phone/mobile device?had projection capability, she would no longer need a computer.? With projection, she could watch video on any wall, and she could type on any […]

Filed Under Accountability, Corporate Values, Employee Engagement, Executive Leadership, Managerial Leadership, Organization Design, Requisite Organization, Strategy, Talent Management | 1 Comment

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