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21 votes
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I was scared to say this to NASA... (but I said it anyway)
25 votes -
Thirty criticisms that hold women leaders back, according to new research
25 votes -
Is there a glass ceiling for ethnic minorities to enter leadership positions? Evidence from an Australian field experiment with over 12,000 job applications.
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1048984322000583 Abstract We submitted over 12,000 job applications, to over 4,000 job advertisements, to investigate hiring discrimination...
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1048984322000583
Abstract
We submitted over 12,000 job applications, to over 4,000 job advertisements, to investigate hiring discrimination against six ethnic groups for leadership positions.
For leadership positions, applicants with English names received 26.8% of positive responses for their job applications, while applicants with non-English names received 11.3% of positive responses. This means ethnic minorities received 57.4% fewer positive responses than applicants with English names for leadership positions despite identical resumes.
For non-leadership positions, applicants with English names received 21.2% of positive responses for their job applications, while applicants with non-English names received 11.6% of positive responses. This means ethnic minorities received 45.3% fewer positive responses for non-leadership positions despite identical resumes.
Ethnic discrimination for leadership positions was even more pronounced when the advertised job required customer contact.
25 votes -
What are your experiences with leadership and ego?
Does leadership imply ego? Does it require ego? What are good characteristics of either? Can leadership be altruistic? Can ego and altruism co-exist? Or do all leaders function from a place of...
Does leadership imply ego? Does it require ego? What are good characteristics of either? Can leadership be altruistic? Can ego and altruism co-exist? Or do all leaders function from a place of self-interest?
I’d love to hear your thoughts and experiences on this.
19 votes -
Barnes and Noble's surprising turnaround
18 votes -
The Trump phenomenon (and many others) in one Casey & Andy comic strip
3 votes -
Reward efforts, not outcomes
5 votes -
Technical leadership and glue work
4 votes -
2020 has been marked by irresponsible, unaccountable, myopic behavior by those in power, both in gaming and the world at large
8 votes -
BBC 100 Women 2020 – A profile of Sanna Marin, who leads Finland's all-female coalition government
7 votes -
What are your “Flowerbox Indicators”?
About 15 years ago, I was impressed by a TV commercial. In a Bank of America ad about their investments in crappy neighborhoods (they didn’t phrase it that way), the spokesperson said the bank...
About 15 years ago, I was impressed by a TV commercial. In a Bank of America ad about their investments in crappy neighborhoods (they didn’t phrase it that way), the spokesperson said the bank knew they’d succeeded, “when the flowerboxes begin showing up on front porches.”
Teams have the same sort of indirect indications, too, for good or ill. I’m writing an article about such non-obvious metrics that managers can use to judge whether a team is healthy.
One example is self-organizing get-togethers. It’s one thing for a manager to create team-building exercises. But when the team members arrange for such gatherings themselves — and it includes the whole team, not merely a clique — you know you have an actual team, not a bunch of employees working on the same tasks. (A negative “flower box indicator” of a project cancellation is when the company no longer refills the snack bar; but in this article I want to keep things positive.)
For managers and other leaders: What have you recognized as “flowerbox indicator”? I want to give examples that managers can use to recognize and celebrate success.
(We can have a great conversation here, but I do need to quote people by name, company, title if I use the input in the article.)
18 votes -
Throw the bums out: The USA is in the midst of a world-historic failure of governance. Why isn’t anyone in charge acting like they are responsible for it?
23 votes -
William Deresiewicz: Solitude and leadership
7 votes -
The coronavirus is the worst intelligence failure in US history
6 votes -
Why do so many incompetent men become leaders? And what can we do about it?
15 votes -
Book review: Turn the Ship Around
4 votes -
The 'glass floor' is keeping America's richest idiots at the top
10 votes -
Why Americans don’t fully trust many who hold positions of power and responsibility
9 votes -
Eight books that can help make you a better leader
4 votes -
How great managers give and receive feedback
3 votes -
When leaders are bullies
5 votes -
Why you shouldn't help your coworkers unless they ask
12 votes -
At 63, I threw away my prized portrait of Robert E. Lee
9 votes -
What conferences are on your wish list? (for team leads or wannabee managers)
Imagine that your boss told you that the company is happy to send you to one or two conferences next year, with the aim of helping you to improve your leadership skills. In this context,...
Imagine that your boss told you that the company is happy to send you to one or two conferences next year, with the aim of helping you to improve your leadership skills.
In this context, "leadership" includes Culture; Coaching & Mentoring; Teamwork; Continuous Improvement; Collaboration; Agile; Culture Change.
You want to make a list of conferences worth considering in order to estimate the budget. What events would you put on your list?
7 votes