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59 votes
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The business of bad medicine
4 votes -
Netflix and Apple open door to bundling with streaming rivals
18 votes -
Muse Group acquires Hal Leonard
4 votes -
Denmark's largest trade union has joined strike action by Swedish Tesla workers, piling pressure on the US electric car company to agree to collective bargaining rights
21 votes -
In the wake of substantial growth, Novo Nordisk's stock price climbs to near-peak levels – investors are asking whether the stock is now hovering in overvalued territory
6 votes -
Ruby Tuesday | Bankrupt
6 votes -
Construction spend on US manufacturing plants jumps to more than 18 billion in 2023
16 votes -
Former Twitter employees give advice to companies who want to replace it
15 votes -
Amazon is warning employees they risk undermining their own promotion prospects unless they return to the office (RTO) for three days a week, as was mandated by CEO Andy Jassy months ago
60 votes -
According to IRS leaked US data Warren Buffett sometimes privately traded stocks that Berkshire Hathaway was buying and selling
14 votes -
How to enforce documentation / file structure at an organization
Hey Tildes, I work at an international company which, over the course of COVID, probably had a turnover rate of 80% over two-three years. This was less due to the company, and more due to the...
Hey Tildes,
I work at an international company which, over the course of COVID, probably had a turnover rate of 80% over two-three years. This was less due to the company, and more due to the incredibly restrictive COVID policies that the country we are located in tried to enforce. I was brought on in 2020, and due to the hemorrhaging of long term employees, a large gap in institutional knowledge was created.
We aren't a tech company, and use Google Workspace/Drive for a lot of our storage and documentation. Within my department I recently put in a lot of effort to create a file organization structure and proper documentation so that we would no longer lose resources and knowledge when people left - and a main purpose was to make it as easy for people to use, cut down on work, find information faster, and provide an easy way to leave with a bunch of resources if they wanted to move to a different company (we aren't in a field where we really compete with others or would lose an intellectual property). It was received with a ton of positive feedback from my peers and direct superiors.
This effort was recently noticed by management and I have been tasked with providing a rollout plan to get the entire organization on a similar structure with documentation processes for every department. My issue is, how does one enforce usage and standardization of documentation and following a certain file organizational structure? While I can think of a ton of ways to structure my process, communicate, and demonstrate the benefits to people, I know that there will be resistance (and in some cases, non-compliance) from staff. I am more than willing to work with them, provide training, and do a lot of the leg work myself, but I am wondering if anyone here has gone through something similar and has good strategies on what I can only describe as leading without authority.
My initial plan was to use the results from my department to get the more enthusiastic departments on board first, and then hopefully good word will spread to help reduce friction with other departments that may be more resistance and not as technologically inclined. However, I know that no matter what I do, I will hit resistance at some point.
The only two times I have had a similar task at a previous employer I had absolute full reign over everything, and it was a completely solo endeavour, or was working with such a small tight-knit group that I didn't have to worry about non-compliance. This is my first time working on such a project in a larger organization and could really use tips from others experience.
I'm trying to not dox myself here - but hope I provided enough information to get some overall tips and comments.
20 votes -
Sam Altman’s second coming sparks new fears of the AI apocalypse
28 votes -
Tesla has filed a lawsuit against the Swedish Transport Agency as striking workers halted the delivery of licence plates of new vehicles manufactured by the US automaker
29 votes -
Sweden's Northvolt says new lithium-free sodium-ion battery is cheaper, more sustainable and doesn't rely on scarce raw materials
49 votes -
Inside OpenAI, a rift between billionaires and altruistic researchers unravelled over the future of artificial intelligence
20 votes -
AI belongs to the capitalists now
31 votes -
Aardman Animation only has enough clay for one more movie
46 votes -
Sam Altman to return as OpenAI CEO with new board members
47 votes -
How meltdowns brought professional advocacy groups to a standstill at a critical moment (2022)
19 votes -
Sam Altman will join Microsoft to lead a new advanced Al research team following his ouster from OpenAl, CEO Satya Nadella said
52 votes -
Cybersecurity firm CEO pleads guilty to hacking hospitals to boost his company's business
36 votes -
‘Star Wars’ vet Dave Filoni named Lucasfilm chief creative officer
23 votes -
Emmett Shear becomes interim OpenAI CEO as Sam Altman talks break down
14 votes -
Tesla may have picked an unwinnable fight with Sweden's powerful unions
23 votes -
Texas businesses file amicus brief saying abortion ban costs state nearly $15 billion a year
24 votes -
Why do you think Sam Altman was fired from OpenAI?
Anybody have some greater amount of background or context on this? I certainly don't see it helping anything, but I know nothing of the Valley or its ways
36 votes -
How Norway's EV rising star Easee fell foul of Swedish regulators, which took it to the brink of bankruptcy
8 votes -
Newsweek's World's Most Trustworthy Companies listing
2 votes -
OpenAI staff threaten to quit unless board resigns
53 votes -
OpenAI announces leadership transition
65 votes -
OpenAI’s new CEO is Twitch co-founder Emmett Shear
5 votes -
OpenAI board in discussions with Sam Altman to return as CEO
45 votes -
US court orders Balance of Nature to stop sales of supplements after FDA lawsuits
7 votes -
Novo Nordisk suggested to senior UK government officials that they could “profile” benefit claimants – those who are most likely to return to the labour market
17 votes -
US increased number of limited liability company landlords leads to difficulty requesting repairs, increased evictions
32 votes -
Disney’s box office problems ramp up pressure on CEO Bob Iger and studio chief Alan Bergman
10 votes -
Starting Friday, dockworkers in all Swedish ports will refuse to offload Teslas, cleaning crews will no longer clean showrooms, and mechanics won't fix charging points
44 votes -
Inside an OnlyFans empire: Sex, influence and the new American Dream
32 votes -
US lawyers insist Nikola founder shouldn't face prison time for fraud — unlike Elizabeth Holmes
5 votes -
How David Zaslav blew up Hollywood
13 votes -
Exxon aims to become a top lithium producer for electric vehicles with Arkansas drill operation
26 votes -
Google witness accidentally blurts out that Apple gets 36% cut of Safari deal
58 votes -
In Canada’s battle with Big Tech, smaller publishers and independent outlets struggle to survive
15 votes -
Japan to create ¥1 trillion fund to develop outer space industry
16 votes -
Massachusetts passed a law requiring cars make data accessible to independent shops to allow repairs. Automakers sued.
31 votes -
WeWork files for bankruptcy in the US
39 votes -
Apple reaches $25M settlement with the DOJ for discriminating against US residents during hiring
27 votes -
Sweden's schools minister Lotta Edholm aims to limit the profit-making ability of friskolor/free schools in her plans for education reform
8 votes -
Spotify has added audiobooks to its subscription model – reaching millions of people, it may revolutionise the already booming audiobooks business
38 votes