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Harvard Business Review,Amy C.Edmondson,Laura Roberts,Marcus Buckingham,Peter Cappelli

HBR's 10 Must Reads 2021

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  • Elena Karcompartió una citahace 4 años
    The veneer of invincibility on industry and humanity has dissolved
  • Francisco Chaviracompartió una citahace 4 años
    What findings such as these show us is, first, that learning happens when we see how we might do something better by adding some new nuance or expansion to our own understanding. Learning rests on our grasp of what we’re doing well, not on what we’re doing poorly, and certainly not on someone else’s sense of what we’re doing poorly. And second, that we learn most when someone else pays attention to what’s working within us and asks us to cultivate it intelligently. We’re often told that the key to learning is to get out of our comfort zones, but these findings contradict that particular chestnut: Take us very far out of our comfort zones, and our brains stop paying attention to anything other than surviving the experience. It’s clear that we learn most in our comfort zones, because that’s where our neural pathways are most concentrated. It’s where we’re most open to possibility, most creative, insightful, and productive. That’s where feedback must meet us—in our moments of flow
  • Francisco Chaviracompartió una citahace 4 años
    The first problem with feedback is that humans are unreliable raters of other humans
  • Francisco Chaviracompartió una citahace 4 años
    And the third belief is that great performance is universal, analyzable, and describable, and that once defined, it can be transferred from one person to another, regardless of who each individual is. Hence you can, with feedback about what excellence looks like, understand where you fall short of this ideal and then strive to remedy your shortcomings. We can call this our theory of excellence
  • Francisco Chaviracompartió una citahace 4 años
    The second belief is that the process of learning is like filling up an empty vessel: You lack certain abilities you need to acquire, so your colleagues should teach them to you. We can call this our theory of learning
  • Francisco Chaviracompartió una citahace 4 años
    The first is that other people are more aware than you are of your weaknesses, and that the best way to help you, therefore, is for them to show you what you cannot see for yourself. We can call this our theory of the source of truth
  • Francisco Chaviracompartió una citahace 4 años
    Telling people what we think of their performance doesn’t help them thrive and excel, and telling people how we think they should improve actually hinders learning
  • Francisco Chaviracompartió una citahace 4 años
    Feedback is about telling people what we think of their performance and how they should do it better
  • Francisco Chaviracompartió una citahace 4 años
    To be clear, instruction—telling people what steps to follow or what factual knowledge they’re lacking—can be truly useful: That’s why we have checklists in airplane cockpits and, more recently, in operating rooms
  • Francisco Chaviracompartió una citahace 4 años
    The Hard Truth about Innovative Cultures.” Easy-to-like behaviors must be counterbalanced by some tougher ones: intolerance for incompetence, rigorous discipline, brutal candor, a high level of individual accountability, and strong leadership. Unless the tensions created by this paradox are carefully managed, attempts to create an innovative culture will fail
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