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
Integrating the Work of the Team – When the Left Hand Disagrees with the Right
By Michelle Malay Carter on January 21, 2008
Managers own the output of their team.? Hence, seamless integration of each team member’s work?need be a critical managerial leadership accountability.? Is it?? Has your manager every held you specifically accountable for integrating the work of your team?? Did you discuss this concept in your MBA program? How Hierarchies Work? In a managerial hierarchy,?any given?manager […]
Filed Under Accountability, Corporate Values, Executive Leadership, Managerial Leadership, Requisite Organization | 3 Comments
Changing the Conversation about Work – A Friday Funny
By Michelle Malay Carter on January 17, 2008
Have you heard – I’m OK.? You’re OK.? Let’s fix the system?? If you hadn’t noticed, I’m determined to change the focus of the conversations?being had about talent management, organization design, and leadership.? Why?? Because I imagine what work could be, and I want that for people.? AT&T does a great job of capturing “what […]
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Liar, Liar, Pants on Fire. We Don’t Really Want Management Science
By Michelle Malay Carter on January 5, 2008
I?read a post at Slow Leadership about the need for more management science and the love of the quick fix by managers.? The love of the quick fix is pervasive, not just with managers but with executives, Wall Street, and Boards as well.? A lack of science?is not a problem.? A large body of science […]
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Making the High Road Accessible – My Hope for 2008 and 2009 and 2010…
By Michelle Malay Carter on December 28, 2007
I’m feeling philosophical at year’s end – an intriguing mix of sadness and restlessness?tempered by faithfulness and hopefulness. Systematically Building Trust?through Integrated, Consistent Systems Design One of the greatest attractors I have toward Elliott Jaques’ total-systems Requisite Organization model for organization design and managerial leadership?is that it is the epitome of the high road.??I believe […]
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When We Lose Hope, We Cope – A Friday Serious with a Funny Ending
By Michelle Malay Carter on December 14, 2007
We all have our default coping mechanisms for dealing with stressful situations.? Some try to?dominate and intimidate.? Others accommodate and people please.? Others try to hide and withdrawal. The raw material for our “mechanism of choice”?begins with our natural hard-wiring and then we develop and refine it in a delicate dance of trial-and-error with our […]
Filed Under Corporate Values, Employee Engagement, Executive Leadership, Managerial Leadership, Organization Design, Requisite Organization, Talent Management | 2 Comments
Managerial Leadership – What Doesn’t Get Measured, Doesn’t Get Done
By Michelle Malay Carter on December 11, 2007
One of the services we offer our clients is a Leadership Scan.? We interview employees about whether basic managerial leadership practices are occurring in their department.? Further, we check to see whether?these practices are a simply a positive anomaly or whether they are specifically codified and organizationally system-supported. One of the questions we ask is:? […]
Filed Under Accountability, Corporate Values, Employee Engagement, Executive Leadership, Managerial Leadership, Organization Design, Requisite Organization | 3 Comments
Innovation Snobbery is Not Serving Organizations
By Michelle Malay Carter on December 2, 2007
Harvard Business Online has posed the question, what is management?s role in innovation?? I ask, what isn’t management’s role in innovation? Executive management?s role is to ensure that it institutionalizes the?expectation that managers will lead the continuous?improvement of their teams AND that time is allotted?for them to lead?improvement initiatives.? Innovation should be an expectation of […]
Filed Under Accountability, Corporate Values, Employee Engagement, Executive Leadership, Managerial Leadership, Requisite Organization | 4 Comments
Short Term Versus Long Term Thinking – A Friday Funny
By Michelle Malay Carter on November 30, 2007
I stumbled across this old Subway ad on YouTube.? I only saw it a few times on TV, so it still makes me laugh.? I am really stretching to find a way to weave it into my blog for your Friday enjoyment. How about this? Short term gratification often rules in America. Corporations often meet […]
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Leadership by Proxy Causes Low Employee Engagement
By Michelle Malay Carter on November 29, 2007
A Wyatt Watson survey in India found that the adoption of well known HR practices does not necessarily?equate to higher?employee satisfaction and engagement scores. I could not discern specifically what “well known HR practices” the study is referring to, but I suspect it includes the current idea of managers handing over more of their managerial […]
Filed Under Corporate Values, Managerial Leadership, Requisite Organization, Talent Management | 8 Comments