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Archive for November, 2008

Neuroleadership’s Big Contribution to Management

Wednesday, November 19th, 2008

By William Seidman

Research in neuroscience has been sucessfully utilized to improve management. David Rock and Dr. Jeffrey Schwartz’s article “Why Neuroscience Matters to Executives” details important aspects of neuroscience’s contribution to our understanding of how minds work.

The North American NeuroLeadership Summit at the end of October in New York drew change agents from 150 countries - people coming together to better understand the links from neuroscience to human performance and - most importantly - the application of these findings.

Cerebyte takes these findings seriously, and applies them to the businesses we coach. Some of what we do: help create the vision; focus attention, and create useful repetition and reinforcement for long-term change. A replicable and predictable experience for hundreds of people simultaneously reaps real rewards for companies and organizations.

The Technology of Hope and Change

Friday, November 14th, 2008

By William Seidman

One of President-elect Obama’s messages is about the importance of hope, and its importance to real change. Another portion of his message is about the importance of technology to governing and to communication. His campaign’s use of the internet underscores this idea. In fact, Cerebyte’s technology is a form of hope - a way to achieve more than the organizations we meet and work with ever thought possible.

Positive deviants seek to achieve the possible, which is similar to the idea of hope. Our technology uses positive visualization so that each person can achieve the possibilities of change envisioned by the positive deviants - so that people move into hope - often from frustration or limited vision.

Our technology enables many people at once to experience this hope.

Organizational Urgency vs. Activity; Why You Want Urgency

Tuesday, November 4th, 2008

By William Seidman

I recently revisited the work of Harvard Business School Professor John Kotter. He’s a prolific author and his latest work, A Sense of Urgency, focuses on urgency in organizations. He discusses the difference between urgency and activity, and how creating a sense of urgency is beneficial to a work environment.

Dr. Kotter has interesting ideas - he points out that activity is not the same as productivity. Activity can be unfocused while urgency is the act of moving deliberately and quickly forward to a specific goal. In tough economic times, activity tend to increase while urgency decreases. Panic sets in and the sense of urgency is lost. This unraveling can be avoided, and an organization can actually come out much stronger. The key for organizations is to retain a clear approach to optimizing in the face of pressure: maintan a sense of urgency versus blind activity.

 
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