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How Can Business Schools Develop Leaders? (incl. free articles)

See on Scoop.itpersonnel psychology

Ioannis Nikolaou‘s insight:

Developing leaders is what business schools aspire to contribute to society. The pledge to do so features prominently in mission statements, web pages and course brochures—and it is as appealing as it is controversial. While large numbers of students flock to undergraduate, MBA and executive programs that promise to transform them into “leaders,” the last decade has seen a mounting wave of criticism of what happens in those programs. Questions have been raised from outside and within management academia not only about whether and how business schools truly fulfill their promise to develop leaders, but also about what kind of leaders their graduates become and on whose behalf—with whose interests at heart—they lead.

For all the fascination and controversy that surrounds leadership, there is broad consensus on two key points. First, becoming a leader is not just a matter of acquiring a body of knowledge and practicing a requisite set of skills. It entails deeper personal work. That is, it requires acquiring a clear sense of oneself—an identity—as a leader, and aligning it with one’s personal values, history and purpose. The second point of consensus is that becoming a leader—and staying one—is a social endeavor. It requires understanding, connecting and giving voice to, the social context that ultimately grants or denies one’s permission to lead. Learning to lead, in short, is not an abstract matter. The only way to do it is through experiences—of leading as well as of following—and ongoing reflection on those experiences to distil lessons that may in turn inform future practice.

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Empowering job candidates, part 1 – CV, cover letter, job search | Loft2work

See on Scoop.itGreek HR

Ioannis Nikolaou‘s insight:

The first seminar of the ”Empowering job candidates” series organized in cooperation with the Center of Research in Organizational Behavior and Leadership took place last Thursday afternoon. Nadine Georgiou, PhD candidate of Organizational Behavior at AUEB, opened the seminar series focusing on CV and cover letter writing, as well as general job search issues.

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Empowering job candidates | Loft2work

See on Scoop.itGreek HR

Είναι γνωστό και κοινό θέμα συζήτησης πλέον, πως η περίοδος αυτή είναι ιδιαίτερα δύσκολη για όσους αναζητούν μια θέση εργασίας και πως ακόμα και η λεπτομέρεια μπορεί να κάνει τη διαφορά.

Τα ερωτήματα, πολλά.. Είναι το βιογραφικό μου σημείωμα είναι σωστά συμπληρωμένο; Πως πρέπει να είναι ένα καλό cover letter; Πως θα ξεχωρίσω; Πως μπορώ να χρησιμοποιήσω τα social media αποδοτικά για να με υποστηρίξουν στην προσπάθειά μου; Πως μπορεί να είναι η συνέντευξη; Τι θα πρέπει να προσέξω;

Για το λόγο αυτό και για να υποστηρίξουμε τους υποψήφιους που αναζητούν μια θέση εργασίας στη δύσκολη προσπάθειά τους, διοργανώνουμε σε συνεργασία με το Εργαστήριο Οργανωσιακής Συμπεριφοράς και Ηγεσίας του Οικονομικού Πανεπιστημίου Αθηνών, ένα κύκλο τριών συνολικά σεμιναρίων, όπου θα απαντηθούν και θα συζητηθούν αυτά και άλλα πολλά θέματα.

See on blog.loft2work.gr

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Worker satisfaction boosts future returns on companies’ stocks, but Wall Street has been slow to catch on, new research finds

See on Scoop.itpersonnel psychology

Ioannis Nikolaou‘s insight:

When former General Electric CEO Jack Welch told the Financial Times four years ago that "on the face of it shareholder value is the dumbest idea in the world," and cited workers as among a company’s main constituencies, the irony was obvious. Here was the man whose ruthless approach to employee relations had earned him the nickname Neutron Jack (after a nuclear weapon designed to kill people without destroying property) but who now seemed to be suggesting that employees were worthier of top management’s concern than company investors were.

 

How important is worker satisfaction to corporate financial performance? Notwithstanding Mr. Welch’s apparent change of heart, demonstrating such an effect has proved elusive. "There is still much debate on whether these variables are actually related in practice," begins a paper in the current issue of the scholarly journal Academy of Management Perspectives.

 

The study then proceeds to provide what its author, Wharton professor Alex Edmans, claims to be the strongest demonstration to date not only that the two are related but that worker satisfaction is a significant driver of firm value rather than just a happy byproduct of it. Focusing on the yearly listing in Fortune magazine of the 100 Best Companies to Work For In America, the University of Pennsylvania professor finds that those firms generate considerably higher annual stock returns over the long term than the broad market does — as much as nearly four percentage points higher per year.

Equally important, Wall Street seems largely impervious to this impressive impact. Noting the intangible nature of employee satisfaction, the study asserts that "the stock market uses traditional valuation methodologies, devised for the 20th century firm and based on physical assets, which cannot accommodate intangibles easily."

 

Moreover, the market is proving a slow learner: stock analysts’ under-appreciation of the effect has been even more pronounced since 1998 than it was before, even though the visibility of the Best Companies list greatly increased with its first appearance in Fortune that year.

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Avoiding plagiarism, self-plagiarism, and other questionable writing practices: A guide to ethical writing

Ένας εξαιρετικός οδηγός «on ethical writing». A must-read για όσους εμπλέκονται στην έρευνα και στη συγγραφή επιστημονικών άρθρων.

Avoiding plagiarism, self-plagiarism, and other questionable writing practices: A guide to ethical writing | ORI – The Office of Research Integrity.