Friday, April 28, 2017

The Management Tip of the Day from Harvard Business Review

 


THE MANAGEMENT TIP OF THE DAY: Harvard Business Review

April 28, 2017

Give Criticism That Your Employees Can Act On


Constructive criticism can improve performance and enhance trust with your employees, but only if they perceive it as helpful and relevant. All too often, managers either offer feedback in general terms, leaving the receiver to guess what remedy is expected, or try to prescribe a solution that doesn’t feel right to the employee. To build your employees’ confidence and communicate respect for their opinions, ask them to come up with their own solutions, and link the criticism to something that is important to them. For example, consider someone who cares about being respected by peers but is habitually 10 minutes late to weekly staff meetings, blaming their tardiness on their busy schedule. You could simply reprimand them, either nicely (“Please make more of an effort to be on time”) or sharply (“Do we need to get you a new watch?”). But it would be much more effective to link the problem to what they care about (“How do you think coming in late affects your reputation with your colleagues?”) and ask them for a solution (“What could you do to help yourself be on time?”).

Adapted from "How to Deliver Criticism So Employees Pay Attention," by Deborah Bright


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Thursday, April 27, 2017

The Countries Most (and Least) Likely to be Affected by Automation

 


FINANCE NEWSLETTER Harvard Business Review

April 27, 2017

The Countries Most (and Least) Likely to be Affected by Automation

By Michael Chui, James Manyika, Mehdi Miremadi


How France's Brand of Populism Differs from What Drove Brexit and Trump by Curt Nickisch

An economist explains the French presidential election.


Prestigious Firms Make Riskier Acquisitions Than Other Firms by Mike Pfarrer, Jason T. Kiley, Jerayr Haleblian

And investors aren't always enthusiastic about it.


Why the U.S. Is Still Richer Than Every Other Large Country by Martin S. Feldstein

But can it maintain its advantage?


We Tracked Every Dollar 235 U.S. Households Spent for a Year, and Found Widespread Financial Vulnerability by Jonathan Morduch, Rachel Schneider

Salary data masks the true extent of the problem.


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