Be inspired
You don’t tend to act unless you’re inspired. And time is precious. So here are ideas and thoughts worth making a little time for.
Understanding and overcoming procrastination
Fuschia Sirois is a professor at Durham University’s Department of Psychology. She is particularly interested in how procrastination, perfectionism, loneliness and traits linked to negative mood adversely affect health, and the qualities that play a role in improving well-being.
Estimates suggest that anywhere between 15% and 25% of the adult population procrastinate regularly. So what this means is that about one in five members of your team are going to be prone to procrastination.
Fuschia Sirois, Professor at Durham University’s Department of Psychology
What I try to do best I can is put together and pull some times that are meant to be sort of one on ones, and even if they're a little bit shorter, I try to turn off other things so that I'm fully focused on that individual and what they're sharing with me at that time.
Chia-Lin Simmons, CEO of LogicMark
Chia-Lin Simmons, CEO of LogicMark
Chia-Lin Simmons is the CEO of LogicMark and an early leader in AI and IoT.
How well are you harnessing complexity?
Now more than ever, firms need agility to navigate challenges. Tim Sullivan, former editorial director of Harvard Business Review Press, talks about complex adaptive systems, which are characterised by the relationship between heterogeneous agents making decisions, interaction between these agents, and the emergence of a global system. Organisations are examples of this.
Our problem-solving skills improve when there is a high level of intellectual curiosity and a combination of different skills and experiences...
Jennifer Nuckles, CEO at R-Zero
Jennifer Nuckles is Chairperson & CEO at R-Zero, the biosafety technology company dedicated to making indoor spaces safer, healthier and more productive.
My role is to develop the next generation of leaders and get out of their ways so they can have success.
Jennifer Nuckles, Chairperson & CEO at R-Zero
The benefits of being a connector within organisations
Martin Kilduff is a professor at UCL School of Management. In his research, he focusses on the importance of social network connections between people and the ways those connections help or hinder in their job performance, career, and their lives more generally.
Social network brokerage means connecting across people who are otherwise disconnected and looking for those ideas that are important in organisational life as well as in everyday life.
Martin Kilduff, Professor of Organisational Behavior at University College London