


How do you decide?
- Share your facts. Earn the right to share your story by starting with the facts. Facts lay the groundwork for all delicate conversations.
- Tell your story. Why share your story in the first place? It’s the facts plus the conclusion that call for a face-to-face dialogue.
- Ask for others’ paths. Encourage others to share both their facts and their stories.
- Talk tentatively. State your story as a story – don’t disguise it as a fact.
- Encourage testing. Make it safe for others to express differing or even opposing views.

The key to organizational succession: millennials and women.

Are you hiring employees or people?

Are you an empathetic leader?
With the rise of the industrial revolution, management changed. Along with the new means of production, organizations gained scale. The focus was wholly on execution of mass production, and managerial solutions such as specialization of labor, standardized processes, quality control, workflow planning, and rudimentary accounting were brought to bear.
The next major era of management emphasized expertise. The mid-twentieth century was a period of remarkable growth in theories of management. Statistical and mathematical insights were forming the basis of the field that would become known as operations management. Peter Drucker, one of the first management specialists to achieve guru status, was representative of this era.
Today, we are in the midst of another fundamental rethinking of what organizations are and for what purpose they exist. If organizations existed in the execution era to create scale and in the expertise era to provide advanced services, today many are looking to organizations to create complete and meaningful experiences. Management has entered a new era of empathy.
This would mean figuring out what management looks like when work is done through networks rather than through lines of command, when “work” itself is tinged with emotions, and when individual managers are responsible for creating communities for those who work with them.