Tagged: technology change
In 2008, Donald Keough, former president of Coca-Cola, wrote a book that should have been required reading for every business leader. It wasn’t called “How to Succeed.” It was called “The Ten Commandments for...
Shutterstock – Image by ShotPrime Studio I’ve been reading JonScott Turco‘s work on Stoic leadership lately, and it’s made me think about a question that keeps coming up: how does a leader know when...
The playbook that used to work doesn’t anymore. Here’s why: three massive forces collided at once and fundamentally rewrote the rules of business. Understanding this convergence changes everything.
“One of your company’s most valuable assets never appears on any balance sheet. When experienced employees leave, they take decades of irreplaceable knowledge and relationships with them. Here’s what’s really at stake.”
A reader recently commented on one of my leadership articles with a question that’s been stuck in my head: “As AI and automation take more of the tactical load off our plates, will emotional...
We talk a lot about AI these days. ChatGPT dominates headlines. Companies announce their “AI strategy.” Executives debate whether to embrace or restrict generative AI tools in the workplace. But while we’re having that...
If you’re a senior executive, you’re facing a decision that will define your legacy: how to lead your organization through the AI revolution without destroying the culture that made you successful in the first...
Culture encompasses shared values and beliefs within an organization or group. While it can be influenced from the top down, it evolves based on experiences. A healthy culture fosters communication, trust, and vision alignment, especially in remote work environments. As generational expectations and technology change, adapting culture remains crucial for attracting talent.
In today’s workforce, leaders manage five generations with diverse expectations, skills, and career strategies. The rapid obsolescence of professional skills complicates this dynamic. Younger workers bring adaptability and fresh perspectives, while experienced employees offer judgment and institutional knowledge. Effective leadership involves fostering collaboration, continuous learning, and mutual respect across generations to drive innovation.
Effective leadership is not about rigid adherence to established styles but rather understanding enduring principles like character, clear communication, and fostering growth. As traditional, authoritarian methods fade, modern leaders must adapt to change, prioritize collaboration, and value continuous feedback to meet evolving workplace dynamics and employee expectations.
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