• The Critical Role Data Plays in Skills Development: MetLife’s Emily Hacker and Dan Weiss
    Aug 28 2024
    Skills data can be used to raise the bar in talent acquisition, implement data-driven learning, make strategic workforce planning decisions, help employees reach career aspirations, and much more. Too many organizations are so glued to the idea of perfection that they won’t implement imperfect programs to gather skills data. Dan Weiss and Emily Hacker believe that this mindset is useless.Your skills data won’t be perfect—but it can still be useful and helpful to employees. They share exactly why in this episode of Workplace Stories.

    You will want to hear this episode if you are interested in...
    • Join the RedThread Research Community! [2:53]
    • Learning more about Dan Weiss and Emily Hacker [3:35]
    • Transforming culture before building infrastructure [9:07]
    • How the MetLife culture championed the process [13:23]
    • Their current pilot and the vision for the future [16:40]
    • The lightning round [25:46]
    • How to get buy-in from leadership [30:09]
    • The critical role data plays in skills development [33:09]
    • Their data sources and how they’re using them [36:43]
    • Where does the data live? [40:43]
    • The biggest thing Emily and Dan have learned [43:35]
    • Why Emily and Dan do the work they do [44:26]

    Resources & People Mentioned
    • Join the RedThread Research Community!
    • Employee Benefits Trends Study
    Connect with Emily Hacker and Dan Weiss
    • Connect with Emily on LinkedIn
    • Connect with Dan on LinkedIn
    Connect With Red Thread Research
    • Website: Red Thread Research
    • On LinkedIn
    • On Facebook
    • On Twitter
    Subscribe to WORKPLACE STORIES
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    46 mins
  • Operationalizing AI Experimentation: Harvard Business Publishing’s Angela Cheng-Cimini
    Aug 14 2024
    Generative AI is taking the world by storm, and the realm of HR is no exception. The use of AI will change a business and it will impact teams. That’s why Angela Cheng-Cimini seeks to answer the question, “How do you make sure your teams are positively impacted by AI?”A lot of the conversation starts with mitigating the fear that surrounds AI. Angela believes one of the ways you can get people to run toward generative AI is to create a safe environment where they can play with it and be amazed by its capabilities. Then, they’ll want to integrate it into their work. In this conversation, Angela shares how—as the CHRO—she’s operationalizing AI experimentation at Harvard Business Publishing. Because, ultimately, “AI is not going to replace humans. But humans will be replaced by humans who use AI.”

    You will want to hear this episode if you are interested in...
    • Learn more about Angela Cheng-Cimini and her role [3:31]
    • The issues Angela is facing in her organization [5:49]
    • Using AI to help with the employee experience [9:51]
    • The Gen AI experiment that Angela ran [13:27]
    • The impact of Gen AI on recruiting[16:06]
    • How to take advantage of AI [18:59]
    • How to justify the expense of AI [22:30]
    • The ethical use of AI in organizations [24:16]
    • Influencing broader AI enablement strategy [26:37]
    • The lightning round [28:19]
    • HR’s role in integrating AI into the workforce [31:11]
    • How to operationalize experimentation [34:00]
    • Angela’s advice to leaders using Gen AI [36:00]
    • Angela’s biggest takeaway from the AI journey [40:34]
    • Why is Angela passionate about HR? [41:28]


    Resources & People Mentioned
    • Generative AI for Everyone
    Connect with Angela Cheng-Cimini
    • Connect on LinkedIn
    • Harvard Business Publishing
    Connect With Red Thread Research
    • Website: Red Thread Research
    • On LinkedIn
    • On Facebook
    • On Twitter

    Subscribe to WORKPLACE STORIES
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    44 mins
  • Debunking the Proposed Half-Life of a Skill: Guild Education’s Matthew Daniel
    Jul 31 2024
    Matthew Daniel—the Senior Principal for Talent Strategy and Mobility at Guild Education—believes that, in a workplace context, skills are the things we know, can do, and the ways of thinking that help us deliver on business strategy. They are rich, deep, complex, and meaningful.Matthew believes that the “Half-life” statistic that’s been perpetuated about workplace skills is garbage. In this conversation, he details exactly why the half-life of a skill being 2 ½ to 5 years is faulty logic and how we should view skills differently. You will want to hear this episode if you are interested in...
    • How to join the RedThread Research community [3:16]
    • Learn more about Matthew Daniel [3:52]
    • The half-life of a workplace skill [6:57]
    • The history of the false statistic [13:20]
    • How this statistic has influenced decisions [20:29]
    • The importance of critical thinking [24:18]
    • The lightning round [31:15]
    • How Matthew talks about skills [34:23]
    • Durable versus perishable skills [38:27]
    • Skills as an equalizer in organizations [40:55]
    • The big takeaway from Matthew’s research [43:28]

    Resources & People Mentioned
    • Join the RedThread Research community!
    • Matthew’s article: Let’s not obsess about disappearing skills; we need to plan for the ones that’ll stay
    • On the Obsolescence and Retraining of Engineering Personnel
    Connect with Matthew Daniel
    • Connect on LinkedIn
    • Guild Education
    Connect With Red Thread Research
    • Website: Red Thread Research
    • On LinkedIn
    • On Facebook
    • On Twitter

    Subscribe to WORKPLACE STORIES
    Show more Show less
    45 mins
  • The Problem with Change: Author Ashley Goodall
    Jul 17 2024
    Ashley Goodall has spent 20 years in various roles in HR, covering everything from performance management to leadership. He spent six years at Cisco as the SVP of HR. He left Cisco to write his book, “The Problem with Change,” which was just released. In it, he addresses the problems that accompany change. To write his book, Ashley interviewed people around the world, asking them to tell their stories of organizational change. Many people told miserable stories, stories of unending change propelled by mergers, new leadership, new strategies, and much more—much of it unnecessary. What was the result?People were struggling to do their jobs because of the constant change. Yet organizations are rewarding leaders to do things that make it hard for their employees to do their work! That’s a problem, right? So, what should we do instead?We have to understand the conditions of human performance to understand how we can “do” change better. Ashley begins to dissect that complicated yet fascinating topic in this episode of Workplace Stories.You will want to hear this episode if you are interested in...Join the RedThread Community [1:34]Why you should listen to Ashley Goodall [4:49] What is the problem with change? [7:09]Why Ashley wrote another book about change [10:34]The problems that accompany change [12:45] Looking at meaning and purpose differently [18:53] The story of Alexander the Great [23:38] The connection between meaning and ritual [25:29] We need to stop treating humans like “SKUmans” [29:10]The lightning round [33:08]Getting good at stability management [36:38] What we can learn from “the pistols” [39:59]How to create belonging on your team [44:21]Focusing on your teams to create stability [45:43] Learning how to radicalize HR [48:53] Ashley’s biggest takeaway from writing a book [53:11] The problems that accompany change Ashley addresses five core problem areas that accompany change: UncertaintyLack of control Lack of belonging DisplacementLoss of meaningThe feeling of belonging is intuitive. Humans form social groups. Those groups are massively important to psychological health, sense of identity, and cognitive processes. The way we think is socially mediated. A team gives you a sense of belonging. It’s a source of massive stability. Teammates complement each other so together they can meet a goal that couldn’t be achieved alone. When reorganization happens, all of the social groups at work are upended. In his book, Ashley also dove into the science of “place attachment.” People get attached to places. Place is a thing strongly tied to work. But there’s also a connection between ritual and place.Our habits are a mechanism by which we grow attached to a place. Habits and rituals tied to place have people saying “It’s where I do this” or “It’s where we do this.” When offices are changed or people are moved, you disrupt the rituals attached to that place.Those places are a source of stability. And for people to do their best work, they need stability. All of these facets of a human—certainty, control, social groups, sense of place, ritual—are the foundation of showing up at work and being useful. Everyone wants to be useful. How we design the workplace hinges on these things.Ashley is clear: “Sooner or later you have to ask people what they want and listen to what they tell you.”How Ashley looks at meaning differentlyAshley points out that the world around us must make sense. You can’t be uplifted by the mission of an organization if you can’t figure out what the mission is. Science tells us that the coherence of our world is so important that when it’s taken away in one place, we find it in another.There are two ingredients to meaning:Things have to make sense (which is shredded when things are changed)You need to find your own purpose. Someone can’t tell you what your purpose is We encounter the world and question, “Do I understand what’s going on here? Is this something that speaks to me?” If it does and someone asks if your work has meaning, you’ll say “yes.” Unfortunately, people think everyone around them has to have the same meaning. It doesn’t work like that. As much as they dislike it, employers aren’t massively important to someone’s purpose.We need to stop treating humans like “SKUmans”What characteristics of humans do we capture in our technology at work? How does that inform how we think about people at work? We track the “cogs in a machine” stuff. We record names, date of birth, someone’s role, their certifications and experience, etc. but we don’t record what amuses someone, what makes them smile, and the weird things they love to do. Maybe they’re always late for meetings, love to bake, or love creating spreadsheets.If you think humans are interchangeable and emotionless beings, how would you describe them? As a “SKU” number. SKUs are stock-keeping units. They track what...
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    56 mins
  • Using a Skills Framework to Empower Employees: Microsoft’s Shweta Srivastava and John Mighell
    May 29 2024
    The mission of Microsoft is to empower every person in every organization to achieve more. An enterprise-wide skills focus is one way they’re fulfilling their mission.

    It’s about moving beyond job titles and fixed roles to give freedom and flexibility to apply skills and expertise where they matter the most. And it’s all in service of creating an environment where growing one’s career is the top reason to join and stay at Microsoft.

    They’re using human verification to give the individual control over the data that’s included, who it’s shared with, and how it’s shared.

    Shweta Srivastava and John Mighell share how Microsoft is implementing skills on a large scale in this fascinating conversation.

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    53 mins
  • Why Skills are like Oxygen: Ericsson’s Vidya Krishnan + Peter Sheppard
    May 8 2024
    “Skills are like oxygen, invisible but necessary.”

    This mindset shift is the brainchild of Vidya Krishnan, the Chief Learning Officer, and Peter Sheppard, the Head of the Global L&D Ecosystem at Ericsson.

    Much of their job is identifying the oxygen and making it visible so they can do something with it. To do this, they’re taking a top-down and bottom-up approach. They’ve worked with senior leadership to define seven key skills they think everyone in the organization needs. They also work with the job leaders who own the skills to make sure their skills taxonomy is continuously updated.

    Vidya and Peter are passionate about what they do. They’re working tirelessly to systemize learning to take care of and serve the individual. Because, ultimately, systems-first means people-first.
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    1 hr and 6 mins
  • Skills Management: What is the Secret Sauce? GP Strategies’ Matt Donovan
    Apr 3 2024
    How do we define work and the skills needed to do the work? The way we view and assess skills is often through assessing and appraising someone’s output. But the problem is that most organizations aren’t capturing the right data and using it to gain insight.

    According to Matt Donovan—the Chief Learning and Innovation Officer at GP Strategies—Job descriptions and skills in general describe the baseline. They are not what makes someone great at what they do.

    So how do we define the work and the skills needed to do the work? How can we capture a high-performer’s secret sauce? What are they doing that’s making it a successful experience versus what’s written in the job description?

    We dive into a fascinating conversation about where we are now, how AI is going to both help and disrupt organizations, and what the future of skills assessment could look like.

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    57 mins
  • Generating Value from People Data: GSK’s Angela Le Mathon
    Mar 20 2024
    GSK is a global biopharma company with a purpose to unite science, technology, and talent to get ahead of disease together. They aim to positively impact the health of 2.5 billion people by the end of 2030.

    In her role as the VP of People Data & Analytics, Angela is responsible for generating value from their people data. She has the opportunity to shape thinking and inform strategy. Her job is to translate skills so that everyone can do what they need to with the data.

    She shares more about GSK’s scientific approach, how they’re using AI to gather information, and how skills verification ties in. Don’t miss this fascinating conversation.

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    45 mins