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It highlights two common types of presentations: research-focused presentations and teaching-focused presentations. For research-focused presentations, the article suggests identifying the best story in one's portfolio and preparing visual materials that showcase accomplished research and future plans. It also recommends developing different versions of the presentation to fit various time frames. For teaching-focused presentations, the article suggests including elements such as a statement of the topic of instruction, description of learning objectives, didactic materials, experiential opportunities, and a wrap-up. The article provides guidance for candidates to effectively prepare for these types of interviews.":1,"#The article focuses on a Role Excellence (RolEx) function created at Microsoft Corp. to support key operational groups to improve its teams' performance. It is noted that Microsoft's operational structure is a unique approach to talent optimization and by working with various staff functions to align organizational structure, it provides incumbents with the integrated support they need to exceed expectations in their job.":1,"#Interview Presentations":1,"#Helping Every Team Exceed Expectations":1,"#More and more people are recognizing the value of a team check-in. Thinkers50 member Amy Edmondson provides 3 ingredients of a successful team check-in.":1,"#What to Cover in a Team Check-In":1,"#The article focuses on the role of job performance evaluation system as a tool for talent management in business. Topics discussed include the importance of employee's performance evaluation to promote an organization's values, evaluation of employee's performance on the basis of objectivity, consistency and accuracy and reviewing employee's job description.":1,"#Source: Business NH Magazine":1,"#ANDREA CHATFIELD":1,"#433 Results found for \"formato de examenes \"":1,"#No Results found for \"como evaluar conocimientos \"":1,"#You Need to Sell, Not Inform":1,"#How to Coach Performance with the KSA System":1,"#Whom Should You Ask for Feedback?":1,"#The Most Effective Source of Feedback":1,"#The article looks at two approaches to employee training that will put knowledge into practice, the traditional training approach and the performance-based approach. Topics discussed include the learning context of the knowing model, which depends primarily on classroom-type instruction to teach learners what they need to know, the learning strategies that should be used to teach the knowing model and the desired outcome of the knowing model.":1,"#JOHN H. COX":1,"#Closing Talent Development's Knowing-Doing Gap":1,"#Performance conversations are a necessary part of personnel management. Prepare for your next round of evaluations and turn great feedback into high performance.":1,"#Conducting Performance Conversations":1,"#Many leaders stress about acquiring and developing talent. Howard Guttman presents 5 factors to consider when you’re tasked with assessing talent in your company.":1,"#How to Effectively Assess Talent":1,"#Your success requires that both you and your subordinates regularly evaluate their on-the-job performance. If they don't know how well they are doing, you have missed a key step in developing an environment that will consistently produce cost-effective, high-quality, schedule-beating output. You should make sure you conduct at least an annual performance appraisal with each subordinate.":1,"#Can You Answer Their Questions?":1,"#To keep up in an information-saturated, fast-paced business landscape, organizations and individuals have no choice but to be constantly learning and adapting. As a result, interruptions to knowledge transfer within organizations due to workers retiring, switching jobs, and becoming isolated within narrow functions are a greater threat than ever to companies’ resilience and strength. In The Knowledge Café, Benjamin C. Anyacho presents knowledge management strategies companies can leverage to counter internal “brain drains” and enhance institutional flexibility to meet the unique challenges of today’s rapidly evolving markets.":1,"#Benjamin C. Anyacho":1,"#The Knowledge Café":1,"#The article focuses on knowledge-sharing practices at organizations in 2014, which include knowledge-centered support, organizational partnerships, and knowledge acquisition skills. Topics include the implementation of knowledge-sharing initiatives, the use of knowledge-sharing tools, and transformative design in employee training.":1,"#Partnering to Improve Time to Competency and Proficiency":1,"#419 Results found for \"como evaluar conocimientos \"":1,"#No Results found for \"elaborar pruebas diagnosticas de aprendizaje \"":1,"#Brenda Forgione":1,"#Improve Performance With a Comprehensive L&D Plan.":1,"#Develop a learning mindset to become the best version of yourself, both professionally and personally.":1,"#Developing a Learning Mindset":1,"#The article shares the views of some professionals on how to address challenges in talent development and learning. Topics discussed include the shift towards learning experiences which deliver behavior change, the adoption of adaptive learning, and the use of massive open online courses (MOOCs) and microlearning to deliver individual learning.":1,"#Alex Moore":1,"#A Learning Pulse Check":1,"#The article focuses on speed and complexity of the learning and development's ability with the limitations of modern workplace learning and the corporate learning and needs of a modern learning ecosystem. It mentions that performance support with list of subject matter experts with contact information and consideration such as content strategy, motivation and analytics. It also mentions that layers of a modern learning ecosystem and organizational learning philosophy.":1,"#To be inclusive of the neurodivergent learners who will consume training content, it is incumbent on instructional designers and e-learning developers to build to best practice.":1,"#J. D. DILLON":1,"#Learning in Layers":1,"#The article discusses how managers should use the cognitive domain to assess workers' performance to maintain a competitive advantage. Topics include details on lower level cognitive skills such as knowledge, comprehension, and application, details on the higher level cognitive skills such as analysis, synthesis, and evaluation, and the effect of appraising workers' performance on the organization.":1,"#Reginald L. Bell":1,"#Performance Appraisals and the Cognitive Domain":1,"#In our rapidly changing world, mastering new skills is essential for success. Erika Andersen discovered 4 mental skills that are essential to becoming a master learner.":1,"#How to Become a Master Learner":1,"#Design for Neurodiverse Learners":1,"#452 Results found for \"elaborar pruebas diagnosticas de aprendizaje \"":1,"#ISBN: 978-1-119-55144-7":1,"#testing-business-ideas":1,"#Dr. Alexander (Alex) Osterwalder is one of the world’s most influential strategy and innovation experts—a leading author, entrepreneur, and in-demand speaker whose work has changed the way established companies do business and how new ventures get started. Ranked fourth among the top 50 management thinkers worldwide, Osterwalder is known for simplifying the strategy development process and turning complex concepts into digestible visual models. He’s written several books, including the international best-sellers Business Model Generation, Value Proposition Design: How to Create Products and Services Customers Want, and The Invincible Company. Osterwalder holds the Strategy Award from Thinkers50 and the European Union’s inaugural Innovation Luminary Award. A frequent and popular keynote speaker, he travels the world discussing his ideas and strategies at Fortune 500 companies, premiere innovation conferences, and leading universities.":1,"#David J. Bland is a company founder, author, speaker, and advisor based in the San Francisco Bay Area. He helps companies find product market fit and growth using lean startup, design thinking, and business model innovation. In 2015, Bland created Precoil to help companies validate new products and services. He’s worked with companies such as GE, Adobe, Toyota, HP, Behr, and others all around the world. Prior to Precoil, he was a principal at both Neo and BigVisible. He made the switch to advising around 2010, and prior to that spent over 10 years of his career scaling technology startups. Bland continues to give back to the startup community by teaching at several startup accelerators in Silicon Valley.":1,"#Don’t let your company be held back by clunky Industrial Era business models. Instead of disconnected teams working in their own silos, experimentation cultures thrive on agile, cross-functional teams working toward the same goals. Because experimentation is a fluid process, apt to change direction with the evidence, it’s also worth addressing how your work is funded. If you’re budgeting in lump sums on an annual basis, consider switching to a “venture-capitalist-style” approach, investing incrementally in ideas under experimentation and watching them play out before doubling down on the successful ones.":1,"#©2020 by David Bland and Alex Osterwalder":1,"#Organize for Experiments":1,"#As a leader in an experimentation culture, you should take a light touch. Avoid the perception that you’re dictating where the evidence should lead. Instead, join your team in posing questions, and be open to being wrong. Give team members the autonomy to test ideas iteratively and act on their findings. You should, however, use your clout as a leader to remove any roadblocks that stand between your team and the resources they need.":1,"#Lead Through Experimentation":1,"#Experimentation pays off when you follow the process swiftly yet methodically. Don’t underestimate the time required to test ideas thoroughly, but don’t fall victim to “paralysis by analysis”—becoming so wrapped up in testing that you forget your goal is to decide and take action. Within your team, avoid differences of opinion through a commitment to following the evidence. Always be precise and consistent so you can repeat your process as necessary and trust your results.":1,"#Experiment Pitfalls":1,"#Section 4: Mindset":1,"#Other validation experiments include validation surveys, mock sales, presales, and “split tests” that compare two versions of your concept by randomly directing web traffic to one or the other.":1,"#Crowdfunding. An online crowdfunding campaign can bring in funding for your idea while gauging real demand—as interested customers vote with their wallets. By analyzing web traffic between your crowdfunding page, online ads, social media accounts, and elsewhere, you’ll also discover where you’re generating interest and converting clicks to paying customers. A successful crowdfunding campaign typically depends on a compelling, high-quality video spelling out the product’s value proposition. Set a realistic funding goal and establish tiered contribution levels linked to attractive perks. Prepare to refund contributions—and rethink your idea—if you don’t reach your funding goal.":1,"#Single feature MVP. Create a high-quality minimum viable product, with the single feature needed to test your key concept, to find out if it resonates with customers. Since this can be a costly, labor-intensive step, proceed only after identifying your key feature and refining your design through cheaper prototypes. Your single-feature MVP is both a test and a real commercial product: You should be seeking and evaluating customer feedback while also fulfilling paid orders—a test of your product’s viability.":1,"#Validation experiments are used to confirm the direction you’ve taken, providing strong evidence that your idea is likely to succeed. These are among the 15 validation experiments described by the authors:":1,"#by David J. Bland, Alexander Osterwalder":1,"#Validation":1,"#Other discovery experiments include partner and supplier interviews, discovery surveys, web traffic analyses, studies of discussion forums, sales force feedback, customer support analysis, and link tracking.":1,"#3D printing. Use 3D printing to create models of a prospective product that customers can handle and evaluate—without investing in the real thing. Because 3D printing is relatively inexpensive (when the printer is rented at a makerspace or elsewhere), this approach is good for turning out rapid iterations of a design in development. Present your model to potential customers and use their feedback to refine your product further.":1,"#Search trend analysis. Tracking online search terms is an effective way to do your own market research—especially on emerging trends—rather than relying on third-party data. Select a tool such as Google Trends or Google Keyword Planner, and define the geographic area of interest. Look at search terms relating to your idea in terms of customer jobs, gains, and pains—as well as indications that customers are dissatisfied with existing solutions. Analyze the nature and volume of popular search terms to gauge support for your hypothesis, uncover new directions, and pinpoint niches in need of solutions.":1,"#Customer interview. This is ideal for gauging the fit between a customer segment and your value proposition; customer interviews also make a good starting point for price-testing. Seek interviewees from a narrow target audience, using screener questions to identify people who stand to benefit from your idea. Be sure to follow an interview script focused on the customer jobs, pains, and gains that are central to your hypothesis—otherwise, the conversation can too easily digress. Immediately afterward, your team should exchange impressions, note body language, and discuss whether to adjust your script.":1,"#Discovery experiments are used to evaluate your general direction, test basic hypotheses, and course-correct based on initial findings. The following are a sample of the 29 discovery experiments detailed by the authors:":1,"#Discovery":1,"#To design the right experiment, first consider what you’re testing for: desirability, feasibility, or viability? Consider also how much certainty you already have for your hypothesis. With little certainty, don’t invest big: Start with quick, inexpensive experiments to establish basic facts. As your certainty grows, ramp up to more in-depth experiments that yield stronger evidence. Finally, know your level of urgency: With little time or money to defend your idea, it’s worth choosing the fastest possible experiment just to lay some evidence on the table. But avoid making important decisions—or actually building a product—based on preliminary evidence from a single experiment.":1,"#Select an Experiment":1,"#Section 3: Experiments":1,"#A Field Guide for Rapid Experimentation":1,"#You should be running multiple experiments over time, testing different facets of your idea—so map out your experiment flow in written columns. Establish a backlog column for experiments you plan to run eventually—moving them through setup, run, and learn columns as your process plays out. This way, your team knows at a glance where each experiment stands.":1,"#Within your team, establish a regular series of meetings and procedures—or experiment ceremonies—to manage your experiments and create a repeatable process you can turn to routinely. Schedule weekly planning meetings to organize and assign experiments. Use daily standups to exchange updates and address any obstacles (or blockers) that arise. Biweekly and monthly reviews should be used to reflect on big-picture findings, revisit your strategy, and update stakeholders.":1,"#Manage":1,"#Kill the idea, finding the evidence doesn’t support it.":1,"#Pivot, using what you’ve learned to alter your idea and take a new direction.":1,"#Persevere, testing your business idea through progressively stronger experiments and further hypotheses.":1,"#The market moves fast. Whatever the results of your initial experiments, they’ll only stay current for a short time—so decide promptly how to act on them. You may choose to do the following:":1,"#Decide":1,"#Beyond gathering raw information, study the evidence to gain insights—the deeper understanding to make informed decisions and discover new directions.":1,"#Assess the evidence generated by your experiment to determine whether it supports your hypothesis—and whether that evidence is strong or weak. Consider the evidence to be weak if it’s found only under laboratory conditions, if it depends solely on what people say they’ll do, or if it demonstrates only a small customer investment in your idea, such as subscribing to an email list. Your evidence is stronger if it’s found under real-world conditions, reflects observable behavior, and demonstrates a larger investment in your idea, such as a preorder. More data points—and multiple experiments—mean stronger evidence too.":1,"#Learn":1,"#Experiments test your hypotheses through the scientific method, reducing risk and uncertainty in your idea. Set the terms for your experiments by defining metrics (the data to be measured) and criteria (your standard for finding that the results support your hypothesis). Design each experiment with precision so you can later replicate it and compare results with confidence.":1,"#Experiment":1,"#Of all the hypotheses you test, focus especially on those that are both critical to your idea’s success and lacking in initial evidence—the key unknowns that must be better understood.":1,"#Viable: Is it profitable enough to succeed as a business?":1,"#Feasible: Can you marshal the resources to bring it to fruition?":1,"#Desirable: Is there a strong enough market for it?":1,"#Craft hypotheses to test whether your idea meets each of these standards:":1,"#It’s crucial to find out if your idea stands up to scrutiny before you take it further. Develop multiple hypotheses—beginning with, “We believe that…”—to reflect educated guesses as to why your idea will work. To avoid confirmation bias, it’s also worth playing devil’s advocate: posing alternate hypotheses on why your idea won’t work. Your hypotheses should be testable, precise, and discrete, tightly focused on one distinct question worth investigating.":1,"#Hypothesize":1,"#Section 2: Test":1,"#The Value Proposition Canvas depicts your concept’s value to the customer through a two-part template. Your value map defines your idea in terms of its key products and services, along with the gain creators and pain relievers it can offer customers. Your customer profile describes a specific segment of customers in terms of their jobs—their goals in work and life—as well as the gains they’re pursuing and the pains they’d like to avoid.":1,"#Through the Business Model Canvas, you’ll identify your target customer segments and the value proposition you can offer them—plus key considerations including costs, revenue streams, resources, and partnerships you’ll need to bring your idea to fruition.":1,"#Visual frameworks can also help you assess the strengths and weaknesses of each idea:":1,"#Assess: Probe each concept with key questions about its practicality, efficiency, and usefulness to potential customers.":1,"#Business prototype: Flesh out any viable concepts as “prototypes”—or just sketches—and systematically evaluate them to narrow down the possibilities.":1,"#Ideate: Brainstorm as many ways as possible to translate your initial concept into a business.":1,"#As you formulate and refine your business idea, visualize the process as a design loop in three phases:":1,"#Shape the Idea":1,"#As a leader, embrace uncertainty by posing constructive questions, and create an environment where it’s acceptable to learn through failure. Establish key performance indicators (KPIs) as objective reference points to measure progress. Bring your team into alignment by agreeing on the fundamentals of your work: your mission, individual responsibilities, resources, timetable, and risks.":1,"#Clicking this link will redirect to relevant products for the Authors David J. Bland.":1,"#As a leader, embrace uncertainty by posing constructive questions, and create an environment...":1,"#Whether you’re starting a business from scratch or launching a new venture within an existing company, your success depends on the team you assemble. Make diversity a primary goal to better calibrate the real-world impact of your concept and avoid baking biases into your work. Your team should be data influenced, experiment driven, customer centric, and willing to question assumptions. Refine your business idea through an iterative approach, cycling through multiple variations on your concept with an open mind toward finding the right solution.":1,"#Design the Team":1,"#Section 1: Design":1,"#Avoid “paralysis by analysis”: The goal of experimentation is to decide with confidence and take action.":1,"#Experimentation thrives in cultures dedicated to an open-minded search for solutions. They commit to following the evidence, avoid confirmation bias by testing alternate hypotheses, and cultivate diversity to avoid baking in-group assumptions into their work.":1,"#Your business idea must pass the tests of desirability, feasibility, and viability: You’ll need a market for it, a practical way to execute it, and a plan to make it profitable.":1,"#Use an iterative approach to refine ideas, cycling through multiple variations and progressively stronger experiments to solidify your evidence.":1,"#Testing business ideas through the scientific method reduces the risk and uncertainty in new ventures—identifying the surest path before you’ve invested heavily.":1,"#The scientific method holds that ideas must be tested through experimentation and supported by data before we act on them. By applying this approach to business strategy, holding up ideas to an evidence-based standard, you can guard against unwise risks and poor decision making. In Testing Business Ideas, David J. Bland and Alexander Osterwalder illustrate how to bring scientific rigor to your business ventures. Step-by-step instructions on conducting experiments and evaluating evidence make this a practical guide for business leaders and their teams.":1,"#Four Ways to Assess Learning":1,"#The article discusses the use of employee assessments to increase the value and effectiveness of the human resources (HR) and talent development functions. It stresses the importance of prehire assessments based on a systematic and scientific process to an organization's hiring success and cites factors to consider in creating a selection assessment system. It also talks about leveraging prehire assessment data after hiring and presents data on the validity of common screening methods.":1,"#WHITNEY MARTIN":1,"#Putting Talent to the Test":1,"#The article discusses the six principles that an instructional designer should keep in mind to creating a meaningful and engaging electronic learning (e-learning) experience. It includes making scripts that are more personal and avoiding passive scripts that are full of jargon, abstract and impersonal language, keeping the conversation light, with a bit of humor by using simpler language, and try aiming for a one idea per slide in a slide-based e-learning program.":1,"#Do you ever wonder if your point is getting across to your audience? By taking Joel Schwartzberg’s “I Believe That” test, you’ll convey your strongest point every time.":1,"#Identify Your Strongest Point by Using the \"I Believe That\" Test":1,"#The article discusses the Thomas-Kilmann Conflict Mode Instrument (TKI) developed by psychological researchers Ken Thomas and Ralph Kilmann related to approach towards conflicts and various aspects of workplace conflicts. Assertiveness and cooperativeness represented at different levels and intuitively qualifying a conflict through observation. The TKI model suggests competing, collaborating, and compromising as some of the people's approach towards conflicts.":1,"#PAMELA VALENCIA":1,"#Trouble Is Brewing":1,"#To become better at solving problems, you need to start with a carefully crafted question. David Komlos offers tips on constructing questions that will help you solve challenges more quickly and efficiently.":1,"#How to Define a Challenge with a Question":1,"#The scientific method holds that ideas must be tested through experimentation and supported by data before we act on them. By applying this approach to business strategy, holding up ideas to an evidence-based standard, you can guard against unwise risks and poor decision making. In Testing Business Ideas, David J. Bland and Alexander Osterwalder illustrate how to bring scientific rigor to your business ventures. Step-by-step instructions on conducting experiments and evaluating evidence make this a practical guide for business leaders and their teams.":1,"#David J. Bland, Alexander Osterwalder":1,"#Testing Business Ideas":1,"#CAMMY BEAN":1,"#Leadership at all levels is challenging work. People who recognize, confront, and address those challenges become better leaders and are more likely to advance in their careers. In The CEO Test, Adam Bryant and Kevin Sharer describe seven tests that CEOs in every industry face. These tests offer a useful lens for analyzing your own leadership performance, as well as that of other leaders, teams, and organizations.":1,"#The CEO Test":1,"#The article provides tips in effective business writing. It states that one must create an outline that lays out the main focus of the writing. It notes that mindmapping is a famous brainstorming tool because it takes out the linear thought pattern. It also mentions that techniques such as free-writing and brainstorming can be helpful in filling up one's own creativity in writing.":1,"#lynda mcdaniel":1,"#Business Writing Is Like a Road Trip":1,"#In this article, the author discusses the factors to be considered while decision making in business. He mentions that one should ask himself/herself six questions before taking any decision including enough information to construct tests properly, importance of problem, and clarity of problem. He suggests that if the problem is unimportant, one should make a decision immediately.":1,"#Carlos Pardo":1,"#Make Better Decisions":1,"#The article presents four methods of assessing learning designs. It comments on the need to define problems and outcomes so that learning-based projects can meet expectations and to avoid vague language in defining outcomes. It mentions assumption checking and states assumption checkers are skilled at recognizing cognitive biases and critical thinking. It talks about data gathering and the need to keep data brief and focused. It also comments on the recommendation development process. INSET: THREE WAYS TO RAPIDLY ASSESS NEEDS.":1,"#Six Tips for Writing Better E-Learning Scripts":1,"#422 Results found for \"como elaborar pruebas escritas\"":1,"# #2 Forcing: Here power and authority is exerted to manipulate others to change or accept change. Using position, authority and/or performance discussions to bring about change usually evokes anger, passive resistance, subtle sabotage and damage to relationships. If there is fear and anger present in your culture, there may be forcing occurring.":1,"# #1 Telling and Directing: The most common approach, this assumes that people are guided by reason. We know this is not always true. People are guided by beliefs and emotions, especially around change and uncertainty. This approach is not effective in situations requiring significant change, so when telling doesn't work managers often resort to forcing change.":1,"#There seems to be four commonly used strategies for implementing change":1,"#Our job as a leader is to look out ahead and say \"here's what I see coming,\" \"here's what is possible\" and \"how can we best prepare or adjust?\" Most managers deal with problems in the present and past versus preparing for what is to come tomorrow, next month and next year. Great leaders have vision, communicate the vision effectively and lead from there. They inspire a future that others want to share and follow. There is nothing more demoralizing to a team than a leader that can't articulate where they're going and why. What managers often do is tell and direct, rather than engage their employees in change by articulating a clear and compelling vision.":1,"#The world, business and of course each one of us is in a constant state of change. New trends and patterns of thought are always influencing us and changing every part of our business and lives. How we navigate change itself is vital to our success as a leader. Therefore, leading ourselves, our staff and our organizations through change is a key leadership competency for success.":1,"#www.PeopleBizinc.com":1,"#Visit":1,"#is an Executive Coach and Organizational Consultant for Peoplebiz Inc. and a facilitator for their award winning Leading Change Program of which this in an excerpt.":1,"#When vision is communicated well and repeatedly, people get inspired by their involvement because they discover their own vision inside of yours. It gives context and helps the people around you see the big picture. It gives meaning to all the little things they do. Then people start to share their own vision- it encourages them to reach, step up and create for themselves. They become engaged in the change and start stepping into that future.":1,"#You communicate vision through little conversational nuggets and consistent daily sound bites -- not speeches!":1,"#Feel challenged to outdo themselves, to stretch and reach. They find their vision in your vision.":1,"#Start sharing the vision themselves.":1,"#Believe they are part of something bigger than themselves and their daily work.":1,"#Inspire enthusiasm, belief, commitment and excitement in members of the project or team.":1,"#Be inspired and care by participating.":1,"#When Done Well And Consistently, Others Will:":1,"#4 Strategies For Implementing Change":1,"#It is clearly about the people and organization, not about you as a leader.":1,"#There is passion and enthusiasm present (If you're not engaged in it, they won't be either)":1,"#The person articulating the vision is clearly in the experience of what it will be like when the vision is realized, not just talking about it":1,"#It has a clearly set direction and purpose":1,"#It paints a visual picture of what it looks like when complete":1,"#It is easily understood by others":1,"#A Well-Articulated Vision Has These Qualities:":1,"#Most managers use the first two which are easiest, but also the least effective. Collaboration can work if people really have an opportunity to participate and provide input into change. Very few ever apply the fourth strategy. This is the sole strategy that not only works, but also defines us as leaders.":1,"# #4 Alternative | Engaging through Vision: Leading change by creating and articulating a clear and compelling vision, potential or possibility is a strategy that works, but is not often used. This is also called the transformational strategy model in organizational change models.":1,"# #3 Participating: A collaborative and participative approach to change welcoming input, inquiry and dialog. The emphasis is communication and win-win situations. It can actually work however it only works if leadership really wants to collaborate and is not just trying to manipulate people into being engaged in the change (if not it's just forcing in disguise). People can easily become cynical if leadership is not truly open, transparent and willing to let go of control.":1,"#Customer service is a proven way to create competitive differentiation for your brand in the marketplace. Perfection, however, can be difficult to achieve. In Can Your Customer Service Do This?, customer experience expert Micah Solomon explains how customer service leaders can cultivate the right employee behaviors through training, eLearning, reinforcement, and other best practices.":1,"#Can Your Customer Service Do This?":1,"#In The Front-Line Leader, Chris Van Gorder uses his vast wealth of experience as president and CEO of Scripps Health to highlight the importance of leadership from the front lines. He shares firsthand stories about overcoming adversity at the personal and organizational level in order to achieve status as a leader in the healthcare industry. His book promotes a horizontal business structure with open communication and accountability at all levels.":1,"#The Front-Line Leader":1,"#It can be frustrating to be on the front line yet not have the authority to solve customers’ problems. Sandy Rogers explains how empowering front-line workers to make customer-service decisions can earn that team’s loyalty, along with customer loyalty.":1,"#Empowering the Front Line to Solve Customer Issues":1,"#In What Great Service Leaders Know & Do, James L. Heskett, W. Earl Sasser Jr., and Leonard A. Schlesinger leverage their extensive research and personal experience at the forefront of the service industry to pinpoint what makes standout service firms like Southwest Airlines and IKEA so successful. The book takes an analytical approach but keeps the human element at its core, recognizing that success in service begins and ends with front-line employees.":1,"#What Great Service Leaders Know & Do":1,"#Keeping your team focused can be challenging. Michael Caito offers 3 concrete steps for helping your team to stay focused on its work.":1,"#As modern businesses increasingly digitalize their work processes and incorporate technology into daily operations, existing technological divides will lead to further economic disparity for people of color. In Upper Hand, Sherrell Dorsey addresses the threats of increasing automation to marginalized communities and offers practical steps toward leveraging technology opportunities and thriving in a changing world.":1,"#Upper Hand":1,"#America currently faces a crisis of skilled workers in the fields of science, technology, and engineering. While the trillion-dollar economy of Silicon Valley represents the potential financial power of immigrant-driven businesses and innovation, restrictive immigration policies are making it difficult for skilled immigrants to achieve permanent residency in the United States. In The Immigrant Exodus, Vivek Wadhwa (with Alex Salkever) details the legal and financial basis of the immigration crisis and offers a seven point, cost-neutral solution based on simple fixes to U.S. immigration process.":1,"#The Immigrant Exodus":1,"#Technology breakthroughs are changing how people share, connect, market, invest, and more. Leaders in all fields can capitalize on these breakthroughs by building on what’s useful, guarding against what threatens, and pivoting to prepare for any idea that can transform their markets. In The Year in Tech 2021 presented by Harvard Business Review Press, 21 industry thought leaders share research, strategies, and ideas that other leaders can use right away to address these emerging changes and prepare for what’s to come.":1,"#The Year in Tech 2021":1,"#Most people agree that technology has made the world a more connected, efficient, and informed place; however, few ever talk about its negative effects. In Your Happiness Was Hacked, Vivek Wadhwa and Alex Salkever explore the darker side of technology and its addictive stranglehold over the public. The authors argue that to create a happier, healthier society, people must aggressively reduce their technology use and take legal measures to protect themselves against technology’s aggressive invasion into their lives.":1,"#Vivek Wadhwa, Alex Salkever":1,"#Your Happiness Was Hacked":1,"#117 Results found for \"Computer Science under Trump\"":1,"#Data Strategy, 2nd Edition":1,"#A sales presentation should focus on the audience, not the presenter. Richard Goring provides tips on how you can structure an effective presentation.":1,"#Structuring Sales Presentations":1,"#Rather than worrying about how you’re going to deliver your presentation, give it a solid structure. Steve McDermott offers his 3-step solution for structuring a presentation worthy of your audience’s attention.":1,"#The digital age places an enormous amount of data at decision makers’ fingertips, but research shows that only 24 percent of them feel proficient enough to make the most of it. In Be Data Literate, Jordan Morrow argues that the key to maximizing the potential power of data is addressing the deficit of data literacy skills in the workforce.":1,"#Be Data Literate":1,"#Jordan Morrow":1,"#In The Visual Organization, Phil Simon asserts that traditional business intelligence tools are inadequate for managing and understanding big data. Major entertainment technology companies have solved that problem by becoming visual organizations. They use modern data visualization tools to make sense of big data. Visual organizations use big data to ask better questions and make better business decisions. Recognition of the value of data visualization is part of their corporate cultures. The best data visualization tools are simple enough to be used by all professional employees. They can visually represent data in easy-to-understand, often interactive ways to facilitate data exploration and new insights.":1,"#Phil Simon":1,"#The Visual Organization":1,"#Data science is advancing. New tools and techniques, like code scripts and automation, are replacing pivot tables and static spreadsheet models to help data scientists improve the ways they track metrics, identify correlations, and make data-driven predictions for the future of their businesses. These new tools require new forms of knowledge. In Business Data Science, data expert Matt Taddy introduces concepts from statistics, economics, and machine learning to help people advance their skills in this field. He explains the foundational concepts, tools, and best practices practitioners can employ to make an immediate impact on their businesses.":1,"#Business Data Science":1,"#Christopher Surdak":1,"#Data Crush":1,"#The increasing influx of data in an average person’s life may at times seem overwhelming. It is not uncommon, when presented, for some of this data to be misrepresented, misinterpreted, and misused. In Everydata, John H. Johnson and Mike Gluck explain how people can learn to assess, process, and utilize the data that surrounds them to improve their decision making. They define statistical and economical terms, reinforce the need to review information critically, and provide tips to help people become smart consumers of everyday data.":1,"#Everydata":1,"#Data can be the single most important factor in making or breaking a business. If you know what customers want and what they’re willing to pay, it’s easier to market products and services. The trouble with data is effectively analyzing it for best results. In the second edition of Data Strategy, Bernard Marr presents strategies to make data work for your company. Using these tools to tap data-driven insights will help you increase the value of your product or service.":1,"#How to Structure Your Presentation":1,"#181 Results found for \"estructura de datos\"":1,"#No Results found for \"ciencias computacionales\"":1,"#Nicklas Bergman":1,"#Navigating the Tech Storm":1,"#Ransomware, viruses, and hackers pose catastrophic threats to modern businesses. Effective cybersecurity requires executive awareness and technical readiness. In Cyber Mayday and the Day After, Dan Lohrmann and Shamane Tan present tactics, strategies, and responses to cyber emergencies and security failures. This book is for managers and executives who want to protect their organizations and stakeholders from digital crimes.":1,"#Dan Lohrmann and Shamane Tan":1,"#Cyber Mayday and the Day After":1,"#Analytics can be a powerful way for companies to develop a competitive advantage. However, utilizing analytics to their fullest requires new technologies, types of talent, and business models. In Competing on Analytics, Thomas H. Davenport and Jeanne G. Harris define what analytical competition means to organizations. They recommend a roadmap for folding analytics into a company’s culture and operations.":1,"#Jeanne G. Harris, Thomas H. Davenport":1,"#Artificial intelligence (AI) is behind some of the most important, compelling shifts taking place in modern business. Increasingly, companies are finding ways to harness the power of AI and use it to drive simple improvements to efficiency and radical, broad-scale changes to various parts of their operations. In The Intelligence Revolution, Bernard Marr explores AI’s role in the workplace and how, by pairing it with big data, robotics, virtual reality, 3D printing, cloud computing, and other emerging technologies, leaders can find new opportunities for success.":1,"#The Intelligence Revolution":1,"#Technological advances are changing the world in innumerable ways. Machine learning, artificial intelligence, the Internet, and more powerful computing platforms are altering the way that people understand themselves and their surroundings. In Everyday Chaos, David Weinberger explores how individuals and organizations are embracing complexity and chaos, while at the same time reconsidering their assumptions about how change occurs.":1,"#David Weinberger":1,"#Competing on Analytics":1,"#Everyday Chaos":1,"#While numerous companies may have implemented Agile, it’s not limited to specifically software or technology areas. Tim Clancy provides tips on how you can successfully deploy Agile throughout your organization.":1,"#Tips for Managing Agile Development":1,"#The key to succeeding in today’s business landscape is understanding how to work with digital technologies and data. In The Digital Mindset, Paul Leonardi and Tsedal Neeley provide a guide to the fundamentals of these topics, covering everything from AI to statistical analysis and creating a culture of experimentation. By adhering to their advice, you can help your organization stay competitive as it moves toward an exciting new future.":1,"#Paul Leonardi, Tsedal Neeley":1,"#The Digital Mindset":1,"#Technological breakthroughs, such as the mechanization of textile factories, the introduction of mass production, and the advent of the information age, have transformed the modern world of work and fueled a progression in society. New waves of technology are about to take hold, and it’s critical for leaders to prepare. In Navigating the Tech Storm, Nicklas Bergman provides a roadmap that leaders can use to assess trending technologies, think critically about their impacts, and plan for their adaption and adoption to stay competitive through change.":1,"#In HBR’s 10 Must Reads On AI, Analytics, and the New Machine Age from Harvard Business Review Press, 16 of the world’s foremost thought leaders and business experts share their ideas, experiences, and insight into how intelligent machines are revolutionizing modern business. The authors share 11 articles that cover a broad array of technology-driven topics, helping business leaders and professionals to better understand the capabilities of augmented reality, the possibilities that drones and driverless vehicles can unleash, and the power of humans and machines working together.":1,"#What if you could tap in to superhuman powers to improve in school, sports, business, or life in general? What if you could even use those powers to prolong your life? In Superhuman Innovation, Chris Duffey makes the case that artificial intelligence (AI) is like a superpower. Similar to how electricity transformed the word, AI will have immense impacts on individuals, businesses, and society as a whole. The AI SUPER framework will help improve speed, understanding, performance, experimentation, and results for businesses that want to differentiate themselves by offering superior customer experiences.":1,"#Superhuman Innovation":1,"#Technology continues to rapidly transform the business environment, presenting both opportunities and risks. In The Year in Tech 2024, contributors to Harvard Business Review offer a glimpse into the latest technology advancements. They also offer insights on how these advanced technologies are changing the way the world does business and how they could affect you and your company. Prepare your company to be competitive in this new iteration of technology-driven business with information and advice from the experts.":1,"#The Year in Tech 2024":1,"#In Bring Your Brain to Work, Art Markman demonstrates how cognitive science can play a tremendous role in your growth, advancement, and success at work. Cognitive science concepts can help you understand yourself and how the people around you think, motivate, and act. By learning to tap into your motivational, social, and cognitive mental systems, you’ll gain insight that will help you to have greater influence at work, make better decisions, and deal with stress more productively. Markman’s stories, ideas, and insights will help you put your brain to work and make your career path more productive, meaningful, and enjoyable.":1,"#Art Markman":1,"#Bring Your Brain to Work":1,"#With the rise of artificial intelligence, it’s has become even more important to strengthen our emotional intelligence. Janice Gassam Asare provides 5 tips for recognizing your own emotions and those of others, and improving your overall emotional intelligence.":1,"#New technologies like artificial intelligence and data analytics are already impacting the way people engage with organizations. Major trends like a dispersed workforce, social change, and value chain disruptions are altering expectations and behaviors in the workplace. In Humans at Work, employee and workplace experience experts Anna Tavis and Stela Lupushor advocate for human-centric practices as the key to creating the workplace of the future.":1,"#Humans at Work":1,"#In The Unintended Consequences of Technology, Chris Ategeka argues that unbridled technology is endangering our existence. Our lifestyles are algorithmic—technology decides what we buy, the news we read, the jobs we get, and the people we meet. Despite sweeping digital connectivity, depression is a public health crisis. The Internet proliferates untruths that polarize us. Most consequential, exponential innovation is depleting our resources and undermining sustainability imperatives. For technologists, business leaders, and concerned individuals, Ategeka outlines steps we can take to mitigate current and future harm.":1,"#The Unintended Consequences of Technology":1,"#According to Peter Semmelhack, by 2020, at least 50 billion products will be sharing information over the Internet. In Social Machines, he argues that the traditional business model of creating a product that does not use digital technology is obsolete, and companies that cling to this business model are doomed to fail. He explains the significance and benefits of designing and building social machines and presents several examples of companies that have already made the leap to integrating technology to improve the social presence of their products. He also provides practical advice for understanding the design requirements for building social machines and implementing digital technology in almost any industry.":1,"#Social Machines":1,"#In Collaborative Intelligence, scholar and researcher J. Richard Hackman uses his experience as an intelligence community consultant to present strategies for creating an environment that supports the success of a team. To begin, Hackman suggests that leaders should first consider the important question of whether a team approach is necessarily the best answer for the task at hand, and if the answer is yes, offers the critical design and formation of a successful team. With the team in place, Hackman defines the six enabling conditions that contribute to and support the team’s effectiveness in achieving its tasks and objectives. Using concrete examples of teams in action, Hackman illustrates how leaders can properly and effectively design their team, and ensure that the proper organizational supports are in place to allow them to navigate or avoid the inevitable challenges faced by all teams.":1,"#J.Richard Hackman":1,"#Collaborative Intelligence":1,"#Business in the Cloud":1},"version":200809}]