PODCAST · business
The Leadership Article Insights Podcast
by Global Leadership Insights
Want to listen to your favorite article on the go?! We’ve got you covered! Catch all of your favorites right here in your podcast feed!
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444
Beyond the Job-Hopping Myth: Why Gen Z Turnover Signals a Leadership Crisis, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD
Abstract: Gen Z's shorter job tenures have often been mischaracterized as disloyalty or entitlement. Emerging evidence suggests that these patterns reflect unmet expectations around meaningful work, career development, and organizational support rather than generational fickleness. With entry-level opportunities contracting sharply and artificial intelligence reshaping skill requirements, Gen Z workers navigate unprecedented uncertainty while demonstrating high technological fluency and adaptive capacity. Organizations that frame this cohort as "a problem to solve" risk forfeiting competitive advantage. This article synthesizes recent workforce analytics, organizational behavior research, and practitioner interventions to reframe Gen Z mobility as a signal of leadership gaps rather than character deficits. Drawing on cross-industry examples and evidence-based retention strategies, we propose four organizational imperatives: transparent career architecture, embedded developmental support, AI-enabled self-directed learning, and redefined psychological contracts that emphasize growth over tenure. Organizations that recalibrate their talent systems around these pillars position themselves to attract, develop, and retain the workforce that will define the next decade of competitive performance. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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443
AI, Organizational Leadership, and Scaling your Business, with Namit Jindal
In this podcast episode, Dr. Jonathan H. Westover talks with Namit Jindal about AI, organizational leadership, and scaling your business. Namit Jindal runs a software company called Aerosend.io. They help B2B companies send cold emails that land in the inbox. They specialize in facilitating highly personalized emails that are relevant to the audience. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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442
The Capability Frontier: How Organizations Navigate Talent Mobility to Drive Economic Complexity, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD
Abstract: This article examines how organizations leverage talent mobility to develop economic complexity—the knowledge network capacity that enables economies to produce diverse, sophisticated goods and services. Drawing on literature from economic geography, organizational science, and knowledge management, it explores how talent mobility drives the diffusion and recombination of productive capabilities across organizational boundaries. Analysis reveals that firms with strategic talent mobility practices demonstrate enhanced innovation capabilities, knowledge spillovers, and resilience to market disruptions. However, these benefits are unevenly distributed, with significant variations by industry, geography, and organizational maturity. The article presents evidence-based strategies for cultivating productive knowledge networks through talent mobility, including capability mapping, cross-functional deployment systems, and strategic diaspora engagement. Organizations that successfully manage these dynamics gain competitive advantage while contributing to broader economic development and complexity in their regions and sectors. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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441
Commitment over Compliance: Creating a Dynamic and Engaging Organizational Culture, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD
Abstract: Organizations face a critical choice in how they motivate employees: enforce compliance through rules and monitoring, or cultivate genuine commitment through engagement and shared purpose. Research demonstrates that commitment-based cultures significantly outperform compliance-oriented ones across metrics including innovation, retention, customer satisfaction, and financial performance. Yet many organizations default to compliance mechanisms due to their perceived simplicity and control. This article examines the distinction between commitment and compliance cultures, reviews evidence on their organizational and individual consequences, and synthesizes research-informed interventions for building commitment. Key strategies include transparent communication, procedural justice, capability development, autonomy-supportive leadership, and meaningful work design. Building long-term commitment requires recalibrating psychological contracts, distributing leadership authority, and embedding continuous learning systems. Organizations that successfully shift from compliance to commitment create sustainable competitive advantages while enhancing employee wellbeing and stakeholder outcomes. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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440
Reconfiguring Productive Knowledge: Organizational Responses to Shifting Work Patterns, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD
Abstract: Organizations are experiencing profound shifts in how productive knowledge is created, stored, shared, and leveraged amidst changing work patterns. This research-based article examines the restructuring of organizational knowledge ecosystems in response to hybrid work, technological disruption, and evolving workforce expectations. Drawing on recent empirical studies and organizational cases, it analyzes the consequences of knowledge fragmentation and presents evidence-based interventions to strengthen knowledge continuity. The analysis reveals that organizations implementing structured knowledge management approaches—including digital knowledge architecture, collaborative documentation practices, and intentional knowledge transfer mechanisms—demonstrate greater operational resilience and innovation capacity. The article concludes with a framework for building long-term knowledge capabilities through organizational learning systems, knowledge governance structures, and strategic talent practices that preserve critical expertise while adapting to emergent work models. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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439
Global Talent Networks and Local Economic Complexity: The Mediating Role of Organizational Structures, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD
Abstract: This article examines how organizational structures mediate the relationship between global talent networks and local economic complexity. As economies become increasingly knowledge-driven, the interaction between internationally mobile talent and local economic ecosystems has emerged as a crucial determinant of innovation capacity and economic diversification. Drawing on research from economic geography, organizational science, and talent management, this analysis identifies how organizational architecture either facilitates or impedes the translation of global knowledge flows into local economic complexity. The evidence suggests that organizations with permeable boundaries, cross-functional collaboration mechanisms, and decentralized decision-making are better positioned to leverage international talent networks to enhance local capabilities. By deliberately designing organizational structures that support knowledge transfer across geographic and cultural boundaries, firms can serve as crucial intermediaries that transform global talent mobility into locally embedded economic complexity, ultimately driving regional competitive advantage and resilience. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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438
Cultivating a Growth Culture Through the Culture Triangle Framework, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD
Abstract: Organizational culture has long been recognized as a critical determinant of performance, yet many organizations struggle to translate cultural aspirations into tangible realities. This article examines the Culture Triangle framework as a practical approach to demystifying and operationalizing cultural change. By breaking culture into three measurable components—environment, behaviors, and habits—organizations can move beyond abstract values statements to create sustainable growth cultures. Drawing on empirical research and organizational case studies, this article presents evidence-based strategies for assessing and transforming each dimension of the Culture Triangle. The framework offers leaders concrete interventions that align everyday practices with strategic cultural aspirations, fostering environments where innovation, collaboration, and continuous improvement can thrive. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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437
Human Capital as a Driver of Business Performance: The Netflix Approach, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD
Abstract: This article examines how leading organizations are reimagining the human resources (HR) function as a strategic driver of business performance rather than a traditional support function. Using Netflix as a primary case study, the analysis explores how the company's HR team has grown 47% faster than the rest of the organization since 2012, demonstrating a fundamental shift in HR's organizational positioning. The research synthesizes evidence on the organizational and performance benefits of investing proactively in HR capabilities, especially in knowledge-intensive and innovation-driven environments. The article presents evidence-based approaches to HR transformation, including strategic workforce planning, performance-oriented talent systems, and data-driven people analytics. Practical implications focus on how organizations can reposition HR functions to create competitive advantage through human capital optimization in rapidly changing business environments. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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436
The GDP Benchmark: A New Frontier for Measuring AI Capabilities in Professional Knowledge Work, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD
Abstract: This article examines OpenAI's recently released GDPval benchmark, which represents a significant advancement in evaluating artificial intelligence capabilities on economically valuable knowledge work. Unlike previous AI evaluations that focus on academic reasoning or specific domains, GDPval assesses performance on real-world tasks spanning 44 occupations across 9 major economic sectors that contribute $3 trillion annually to the U.S. economy. Analysis of benchmark results reveals that frontier AI models are approaching expert-level performance on many professional tasks, with the best models winning or tying with human experts approximately 50% of the time. The benchmark also demonstrates that human-AI collaboration strategies can potentially increase productivity while maintaining quality. This article synthesizes the methodology, findings, and implications of GDPval, offering evidence-based recommendations for organizations seeking to integrate AI capabilities into knowledge work processes. While these results show impressive AI progress on standalone professional tasks, they should be interpreted as indicators of task-level capabilities rather than predictions of occupational displacement. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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435
The Strategic Competency Gap: Perception versus Reality in Organizational Leadership, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD
Abstract: This article explores the prevalent discrepancy between perceived and actual strategic competencies among organizational leaders. Drawing on recent research in leadership development, cognitive biases, and organizational performance, the analysis reveals that many executives overestimate their strategic capabilities, creating significant performance gaps within organizations. The research examines five core strategic competencies: understanding present contexts, envisioning futures, influencing systems, delivering results, and adapting to change. The findings demonstrate that addressing these competency gaps through systematic assessment and targeted development can significantly improve organizational performance, strategic execution, and leadership effectiveness. The article presents evidence-based approaches to close these gaps, providing practical frameworks for organizations seeking to enhance their strategic capabilities in increasingly complex business environments. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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434
Embracing Otherness: The Organizational Impact of Otroverts in the Workplace, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD
Abstract: This article explores the emerging concept of "otroverts"—individuals characterized by their sense of otherness and comfort existing outside social groups while maintaining empathetic connections. Unlike introverts who recharge in solitude or extraverts who draw energy from social interactions, otroverts possess a distinct relational style that positions them as eternal outsiders who paradoxically can integrate anywhere. Drawing on recent research and organizational case studies, this article examines how recognizing and leveraging otrovert traits can enhance workplace dynamics, leadership models, and organizational outcomes. The paper presents evidence-based strategies for harnessing the unique strengths of otroverts, discusses implications for talent management, and proposes a framework for cultivating environments where diverse relational styles can thrive. Findings suggest that organizations acknowledging the otrovert experience may gain competitive advantages through enhanced innovation, leadership diversity, and cultural resilience. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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433
Economic Complexity from Within: How Organizational Adaptability Drives Regional Diversification, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD
Abstract: This article examines the critical relationship between organizational adaptability and regional economic diversification. While economic complexity research has predominantly focused on macro-level patterns, this analysis explores the organizational mechanisms that enable regions to develop new capabilities and expand into related industries. Drawing on evidence from economic geography, organizational science, and innovation studies, the article identifies how firms' internal capabilities—particularly knowledge absorption, network formation, and strategic flexibility—contribute to broader regional diversification. The analysis demonstrates that regional diversification trajectories are significantly shaped by organizations' capacity to recombine existing knowledge into novel applications. The paper presents evidence-based organizational strategies and governance mechanisms that foster adaptability, highlighting practical approaches for policymakers, business leaders, and regional development agencies seeking to enhance economic complexity and resilience against sectoral shocks. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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432
Quantifying and Harnessing Human-AI Work Synergy in Organizations, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD
Abstract: Organizations increasingly implement generative AI tools to enhance employee productivity, yet standalone AI benchmark results offer limited insights for real-world deployment. This article examines emerging research on human-AI synergy—the performance gains achieved through human-AI collaboration that exceed what either can accomplish alone. Drawing on recent findings from Item Response Theory frameworks and interactive benchmarks, we analyze when and how human-AI teams outperform solo performance across task difficulties and user abilities. The evidence reveals that collaboration with AI represents a distinct capability from individual problem-solving ability, with Theory of Mind—the capacity to understand others' perspectives—emerging as a key predictor of effective human-AI partnerships. Organizations can cultivate synergistic human-AI collaboration through structured delegation practices, strategic capability alignment, cognitive complementarity approaches, adaptive collaboration training, and psychological safety initiatives. These evidence-based strategies help organizations move beyond seeing AI as merely a productivity tool toward creating genuine synergistic partnerships that enhance collective intelligence. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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431
The Rise of the Supermanager: Leadership Transformation in the AI Era, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD
Abstract: This article examines the emerging role of the "Supermanager" in contemporary organizations facing rapid technological change. As artificial intelligence transforms business processes, traditional management approaches focused on supervision have become insufficient to drive organizational performance. Drawing on research across multiple industries, this analysis defines the Supermanager paradigm, explores its prevalence and drivers, and details its impact on organizational and individual outcomes. The evidence suggests that Supermanagers—characterized by their ability to empower teams, foster experimentation, and drive innovation from the bottom up—are creating significant competitive advantages. Organizations seeking to thrive in the AI era must develop leadership capabilities that emphasize coaching over commanding, learning over directing, and innovation over maintenance. This article provides evidence-based strategies for cultivating Supermanagers and building long-term organizational resilience in an increasingly AI-enabled business landscape. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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430
Restructuring Entry-Level Employment in the AI Era: Beyond Traditional Apprenticeship Models, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD
Abstract: The integration of artificial intelligence into professional work environments is rapidly transforming entry-level employment, challenging traditional pathways into knowledge work. This article examines the limitations of conventional apprenticeship approaches in an AI-accelerated economy and proposes evidence-based alternatives for Chief Human Resources Officers (CHROs) and talent leaders. Drawing from research in organizational psychology, labor economics, and human capital development, it presents a framework for sustainable talent development that acknowledges both market realities and long-term workforce needs. The analysis reveals that while protecting entry-level positions solely for societal benefit is economically unsustainable, strategic redesign of junior roles with emphasis on AI-complementary skills can create genuine business value. Organizations that develop systematic approaches to developing AI-native talent may secure significant competitive advantages as the experienced talent pipeline contracts over the next decade. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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429
The Emotionally Intelligent High Performer: Why EQ Matters for Individual and Organizational Success, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD
Abstract: This article synthesizes scholarly research on the relationship between emotional intelligence (EQ) and high performance at the individual and organizational levels. EQ is defined as the abilities to recognize and manage emotions in oneself and others. The brief explores how emotionally intelligent high performers tend to exhibit traits like self-awareness, social skills, resilience, influence and finding purpose beyond self. It discusses evidence that EQ contributes significantly to how individuals and teams respond optimally to challenges. Practical strategies are offered for developing EQ in the workplace, such as assessments, coaching, diverse project teams and job rotations. An example illustrates how applying EQ development at Pearson transformed leadership and boosted business results. The article concludes that cultivating an emotionally intelligent organizational culture can maximize human potential and sustainable achievement for companies operating in today's complex environment. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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428
The Evolution of Professional Versatility: From T-Shaped to V-Shaped Talent, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD
Abstract: This article examines the evolution from T-shaped to V-shaped professional competency models in response to rapidly changing workplace demands. While T-shaped professionals combine deep expertise in one domain with broad knowledge across multiple areas, V-shaped professionals develop graduated depth across adjacent domains, creating a more fluid transition between specialization and generalization. Drawing on empirical evidence and theoretical frameworks, this paper analyzes the drivers behind this shift, its organizational and individual impacts, and evidence-based strategies for developing V-shaped capabilities. Case studies across technology, healthcare, and consulting sectors demonstrate how organizations are successfully cultivating V-shaped talent to enhance adaptability, innovation, and cross-functional collaboration. The article concludes with a framework for building sustainable talent development systems that foster professional versatility in an increasingly complex business environment. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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427
Beyond Hiring Metrics: Developing a Holistic Approach to Measure Quality of Hire, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD
Abstract: Measuring the quality and business impact of new hires is a critical yet often overlooked aspect of strategic talent acquisition. Traditional hiring metrics focus on efficiency but provide little insight into whether organizations are attracting and onboarding the right people who will thrive in their roles and deliver desired organizational outcomes over time. This practitioner research brief proposes a holistic framework for developing a more robust approach to evaluate quality of hire across cultural/strategic fit, individual performance and engagement, team/departmental contribution, and overall business impact. Specific leading and lagging qualitative and quantitative metrics are explored under each framework dimension, grounded in academic literature and illuminating real-world consulting examples. The brief aims to equip talent professionals with an integrated, evidence-based toolkit to gain deeper insights into which hires are truly fulfilling their potential to fuel organizational performance and competitive advantage in meaningful ways beyond basic numeric tracking. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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426
Designing a Better Hiring Process: Strategies to Identify Top Talent, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD
Abstract: Designing an effective hiring process is crucial for organizations to identify and attract top talent. However, many companies' hiring practices are inadequate and result in suboptimal outcomes. This article provides a synthesis of empirical studies and offers evidence-based recommendations for how to design a better hiring process. It discusses the importance of allocating proper resources and establishing structure, goals and accountabilities for the hiring function. Guidance is provided for developing an exceptional candidate experience through employer branding, user-friendly applications and personalized communication. Recommendations are made for holistic candidate evaluation methods and providing constructive feedback. The article also reviews the significance of onboarding and implementing a strategic process to set new hires up for success. By systematically applying the discussed strategies grounded in talent acquisition science, organizations can optimize their hiring and onboarding to gain competitive advantages through higher quality hires and lower turnover. The overarching goal is to transform recruitment into a strategic growth enabler. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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425
Human-AI Partnerships on the Jagged Frontier: Managing Verification in the Era of Advanced AI
Abstract: The rapid advancement of large language models (LLMs) and AI agents is transforming human-AI collaboration from co-intelligence partnerships to interactions more akin to verification of autonomous outputs. This article examines the emerging "wizard" paradigm, wherein AI systems produce sophisticated outputs with minimal human guidance during the creation process. Drawing on empirical research and organizational case studies, we analyze the verification challenges that arise when AI capabilities simultaneously become more powerful and more opaque. The paper identifies three key verification domains—factual accuracy, process transparency, and contextual appropriateness—and presents evidence-based organizational responses for managing AI verification across different scenarios. As organizations increasingly deploy advanced AI, developing systematic verification strategies and cultivating appropriate trust calibration will be essential for capturing value while mitigating risks associated with undetected errors or misaligned outputs. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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424
Leading Through Economic Cycles and Transitions: Decision Frameworks for the New Economic Reality, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD
Abstract: This article examines leadership approaches for navigating economic cycles and transitions in today's volatile business environment. Drawing on research in organizational resilience, economic forecasting, and strategic management, it presents evidence-based frameworks for executive decision-making during periods of economic uncertainty. The analysis explores how economic volatility affects organizational performance and employee well-being, while providing structured approaches to strategic flexibility, scenario planning, and capability building. Case examples from diverse industries demonstrate how organizations have successfully navigated economic transitions through deliberate preparation, strategic workforce management, and innovation-focused investments. The research suggests that leaders who develop systematic approaches to economic cycle management, while maintaining long-term strategic priorities, achieve superior outcomes during both downturns and recovery periods. The article concludes with actionable frameworks for building economic resilience into organizational DNA. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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423
Leadership in Fractured Markets: Navigating the New Era of Geoeconomic Competition, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD
Abstract: This article examines the emerging landscape of geoeconomic competition and its profound implications for organizational leadership. As geopolitical tensions reshape global markets through trade restrictions, investment controls, and technology decoupling, business leaders face unprecedented complexity in strategic decision-making. Drawing from international relations scholarship, strategic management literature, and documented organizational responses, this analysis provides a framework for understanding market fragmentation and its consequences for multinational enterprises. The article identifies evidence-based leadership approaches for navigating geoeconomic tensions, including strategic foresight capabilities, supply chain resilience measures, stakeholder management strategies, and regulatory navigation frameworks. By developing organizational capabilities in geopolitical intelligence, scenario planning, and adaptive governance, leaders can transform geoeconomic challenges into sustainable competitive advantages while mitigating risks in increasingly fractured global markets. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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422
Quantum Computing Readiness: Preparing Your Organization for the Next Computing Revolution, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD
Abstract: Organizations across industries face a strategic imperative to understand and prepare for quantum computing's disruptive potential. This article examines the current quantum computing landscape, expected organizational impacts, and evidence-based approaches for building quantum readiness. Despite quantum computing remaining in early development, its anticipated breakthrough capabilities in optimization, simulation, and cryptography demand proactive preparation. The research identifies three tiers of organizational response: awareness building, capability development, and strategic positioning. Case examples from finance, pharmaceuticals, and logistics demonstrate how forward-thinking organizations are already establishing quantum advantage pathways. The article concludes with a framework for long-term quantum resilience, emphasizing talent cultivation, partnership ecosystems, and responsive governance structures. Organizations that systematically prepare for quantum disruption will gain significant competitive advantages as the technology matures. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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421
When the Going Gets Tough: Identifying and Overcoming Burnout as a Sign it May be Time for a New Job Opportunity
Abstract: Burnout is a significant issue facing professionals in a wide range of industries, yet it often goes unnoticed until the negative impacts emerge. This article explores the key dimensions of burnout as distinguished from temporary job stress, including emotional exhaustion, cynicism, and reduced professional efficacy. A review of common signs and objective assessment strategies helps practitioners recognize when stress has crossed over into burnout. Once identified, the research outlines actions individuals can take to address burnout through setting boundaries, managing workload demands, seeking formal or informal leave, and considering career changes if triggers cannot be resolved. Case studies demonstrate how identifying burnout prompted two professionals to pursue new roles better aligning their needs and skills. Overall, the article aims to raise awareness of burnout and promote its identification as an important indicator that a fresh job opportunity may be needed to restore well-being, passion, and optimal career functioning over the long term. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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420
The Evolving Role of HR leaders, with Andy Lange
In this podcast episode, Dr. Jonathan H. Westover talks with Andy Lange about the evolving role of HR leaders. Andy Lange, MBA, PMP®, SHRM-SCP, is the Senior Vice President of People at Take Command, bringing over 15 years of combined HR, executive leadership, and operational experience. Prior to his current role, Andy served as CEO for seven years and as a partner and general manager, where he led business operations, talent strategy, and organizational growth. His career blends hands-on HR leadership with executive-level insight, enabling him to build scalable people programs that align with business objectives. Andy’s practical, real-world approach to helping HR leaders elevate their strategic impact through modern benefits strategies has been shared through speaking and editorial opportunities for BenefitsPro, HRSouthwest, business.com and SHRM. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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419
The Power of Talk: Who Gets Heard and Why
Abstract: This article examines the factors that influence whose voices and perspectives gain influence within organizations. Through a review of the relevant literature across communication styles, cognitive biases, social hierarchies, and group dynamics, this research brief explores how certain individuals are more likely to have their ideas heard and shape outcomes based on attributes such as extraversion, confidence levels, gender, and social status. Biases in how competence and expertise are perceived unconsciously privilege those with characteristics aligning with dominant identity groups. However, practical recommendations are provided for how leaders can cultivate a more inclusive culture where diverse viewpoints have equal chance to meaningfully contribute. Examples from leading companies demonstrate the power of establishing equity norms, implementing unbiased processes, utilizing impartial third parties, and investing in feedback and development across employee demographics. The research stresses the need for multidimensional approaches acknowledging both individual and systemic barriers limiting diverse organizational voices. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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418
Beyond Control: Understanding the Hidden Beliefs that Fuel Micromanagement, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD
Abstract: This article explores the psychological drivers underlying micromanagement behaviors in organizational leaders. Drawing from scholarly literature in management, leadership, and psychology, common hidden beliefs that can fuel micromanagement are identified, including needs for certainty, perfectionism, external locus of control tendencies, and distrust or control issues. The article delineates how these unconscious beliefs manifest as identifiable thought patterns and micromanaging workplace behaviors amongst leaders. Practical suggestions are then provided for how organizations and leaders can work to develop self-awareness of underlying motivations and gradually reshape unhelpful beliefs through assessment, open discussion, flexibility experiments, empowering work structures, and general workplace support. Two brief case studies illustrate the sustainable progress that is possible when leaders address deeper psychological drivers of their previous micromanagement. The goal of this article is to enhance understanding of micromanagement's root causes in order to foster empowering work environments and optimal leader and employee functioning. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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417
The Empowering Role of Empathy: How Connecting with Others Bolsters Leadership Success, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD
Abstract: Empathy is an essential yet often overlooked component of successful leadership. This article explores the importance of empathy - defined as understanding another's perspective and feelings - for key leadership functions through a review of recent studies and insights from consulting experience. It examines how empathy strengthens relationships, increases engagement, and fosters innovation by transforming rapport into empowerment for both leaders and followers. Practical strategies are then proposed for cultivating greater empathy within oneself and across organizations, illustrated through case studies. The article argues leadership approaches grounded in genuine human connection, rather than directives alone, are better suited for today's workplace contexts that demand emotional intelligence. Overall, empathy is positioned as a leadership advantage for addressing challenges, maximizing talent, and achieving shared goals in personally fulfilling ways. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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416
Are You Preparing for the Future of Work by Developing Skills That Won't Be Automated?, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD
Abstract: This article examines how individuals and organizations can proactively develop skills that research indicates will remain difficult to automate as artificial intelligence and new technologies continue to transform the future of work. Through a review of comprehensive skills studies by McKinsey Global Institute, World Economic Forum, and OECD, core human capabilities like complex problem-solving, critical thinking, creativity, people management and emotional intelligence are identified as least vulnerable to automation. The article then provides recommendations for how people can strengthen these skills personally through lifelong learning and hands-on experiences. It also outlines best practices organizations are utilizing, such as skills assessments, individualized development planning, strategic upskilling partnerships, and fostering a culture of continuous learning, to help equip their workforce for emerging capabilities. The goal is to help prepare both people and companies to not just withstand but thrive amid ongoing workplace disruptions. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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415
Understanding Self-Awareness: More Than a Buzzword, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD
Abstract: This article explores the topic of self-awareness, an important yet often misunderstood concept, through a conceptual and practical lens. After defining self-awareness as having an accurate perception of one's abilities, characteristics and behaviors, the article examines self-awareness development as occurring along a continuum from subjective to constructively-developmental understanding. Drawing from leadership, coaching, and psychological literature, key strategies for cultivating self-awareness are proposed, including 360-degree feedback, reflective journaling, developmental experiences, and transformative feedback. Examples demonstrate tangible organizational impacts like enhanced soft skills, decision-making, and business outcomes resulting from systematic self-awareness initiatives. While recognizing its nonlinear nature, the article advocates embracing self-awareness as an ongoing learning journey to develop wisdom and grace. Overall, the article aims to provide scholars and practitioners with a grounded perspective on conceptualizing and fostering authentic self-awareness. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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414
Collaborating from Afar: Tips for Maximizing Productivity When Your Team is Remote, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD
Abstract: As more teams conduct their work remotely, effective collaboration across distances has become increasingly important. However, remote work also introduces unique challenges to teamwork and productivity that require strategic solutions. This practitioner-oriented brief provides research-backed guidance and examples for overcoming barriers to remote collaboration. Drawing from literature on virtual teams, knowledge management, and distributed work, it establishes the communication, coordination, and community-building practices necessary for maximum effectiveness when working apart rather than together. Specific strategies are offered for areas like establishing communication norms, leveraging collaboration technology, delegating coordination responsibilities, and facilitating community beyond simple task execution. Case studies illustrate real-world applications. The brief concludes that with forethought applied to seamless collaboration processes and relationship development, remote teams can achieve outcomes on par with co-located counterparts when supported appropriately. Managers are equipped to enable engaged, productive virtual work. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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413
The Wellbeing Paradox in an AI World, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD
Abstract: As artificial intelligence transforms work through automation, a "wellbeing paradox" may emerge if its social and psychological impacts are not consciously managed. This practitioner-focused research brief explores the tensions between AI's productivity gains and potential threats to human thriving. Through a review of recent studies at the intersection of technology, jobs and wellbeing, it identifies challenges like job insecurity, social isolation, technostress, employee surveillance and over-reliance on algorithms that could undermine individuals' sense of purpose, autonomy, relationships and overall wellbeing. Meanwhile, AI provides an opportunity to cultivate resilience for workers through career support, meaningful reskilling, internal mobility and social connection in the workplace. The brief also outlines strategies for organizations to optimize human-AI collaboration through transparency, explainability and prioritizing augmentation over automation. It concludes with a "digital ergonomics" framework of boundary-setting, mindfulness, presence and wellbeing nudges to proactively design technology that enhances rather than depletes human capacities and fulfillment. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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412
Beyond Micromanagement: The Risks of Under-Management in Organizations, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD
Abstract: This practitioner research brief examines the under-explored issue of under-management in organizations and its implications for employee and organizational performance. Under-management is defined as a hands-off, laissez faire approach to management where leaders provide very low levels of oversight, guidance and support to direct reports. Drawing from the academic literature as well as reflections on the author's 15+ years of experience as a management consultant, potential risks of under-management are identified, including lack of direction, poor work quality, employee disengagement, stalled growth and missed opportunities. To bring these concepts to life, challenges stemming from under-management are described within case studies of a fast-growing tech startup and hospital nursing unit. The brief concludes by advocating for a balanced, differentiated approach tailored to team needs rather than extremes of micromanagement or under-management. Key recommendations focus on regular communication, feedback, collaboration enablers and customized development to optimize both employee and business outcomes over the long-term as circumstances evolve. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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411
Rethinking the Myth of Coming into the Office 5 Days a Week to Build Company Culture, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD
Abstract: This research brief challenges the common assumption that having employees in the office together five days a week is essential for building and maintaining a strong organizational culture. Through a review and synthesis of relevant scholarly literature from fields such as management, psychology, and sociology, the article finds little empirical evidence supporting the notion that co-location drives cultural outcomes like performance, collaboration, and engagement. Two case studies are presented of companies that have flourished culturally while embracing hybrid and remote work arrangements. The article concludes by outlining practical strategies that forward-thinking leaders are using to nurture connections, shared purpose, and cultural vibrancy regardless of employees' physical work locations. These strategies include clarifying core values, redesigning workspaces, training managers for hybridity, and nurturing interpersonal bonds through a variety of virtual and in-person relationship building activities. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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410
Reducing Conflict and Elevating Your Impact: Strategies for Leading with Greater Effectiveness and Harmony, by Jonathan H Westover PhD
Abstract: This research brief examines strategies for leaders to more effectively manage conflict and enhance their positive influence. It explores how conflict, if left unresolved, can significantly undermine individual and organizational performance. The brief outlines a framework combining research insights with practical approaches for reducing the costs of conflict. Key recommendations include developing self-awareness of one's tendencies, fostering psychological safety, listening to understand diverse perspectives, focusing on shared interests versus positions, and reframing differences as opportunities for collaborative problem-solving and learning. Real-world examples demonstrate applying these strategies consistently and flexibly across situations. The brief argues that by shifting one's mindset and adopting these research-backed methods, leaders can transform discordant interactions into collaborative solutions that strengthen relationships, cooperation and overall effectiveness within their teams. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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409
How Flat Hierarchies Can Discourage Women Applicants, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD
Abstract: This article explores how flattened, team-oriented organizational structures aimed at boosting flexibility, collaboration, and innovation may unintentionally make it harder for women to navigate career opportunities and progression. Through a review of relevant academic literature, the article examines research showing that flattened hierarchies tend to de-emphasize clear career ladders, rely more heavily on informal networks, and reward aggressive self-promotion - all factors that can place women at a systematic disadvantage compared to their male counterparts due to entrenched gender biases and norms. The article then proposes evidence-based strategies for mitigating these deterrents, such as formally defining career lattices, implementing sponsorship programs, providing implicit bias training, and distributing recognition equitably across teams. Case studies of technology companies adopting such practices demonstrate how intentional efforts have yielded success expanding representation while sustaining innovative cultures. The article aims to equip practitioners with research-grounded solutions for broadening opportunities for women within collaborative work structures. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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408
Rewire to Adapt: Neuroscience Strategies for Building Leadership Learning Agility, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD
Abstract: This article examines how evidence-based neuroscience principles can be leveraged to develop learning agility in organizational leaders. Learning agility—the ability to quickly adapt, learn from experience, and apply new knowledge in changing situations—has become a crucial leadership capability in volatile business environments. Drawing on recent neuroscience research, this paper identifies key brain mechanisms involved in learning agility and translates these insights into practical strategies. The discussion covers neuroplasticity foundations, attention network optimization, stress regulation techniques, and social brain activation approaches. Organizations implementing these neuroscience-informed practices have seen measurable improvements in leadership adaptability, innovation capacity, and organizational resilience. The paper provides a framework for sustainable learning agility development through integrating neuroscience principles into leadership development programs, feedback systems, and organizational learning cultures. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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407
HR's Critical Role in Leveraging a Blended Workforce
Abstract: This paper examines the critical role human resources (HR) must play in ensuring the successful onboarding, integration and ongoing engagement of a blended workforce comprised of both traditional employees and alternative arrangements like contractors and gig workers. As many organizations adopt this model to increase flexibility and access specialized skills, unique challenges arise that require adept management. The research discusses HR's responsibilities in laying the necessary groundwork through clarifying definitions, expectations and goals upfront, as well as providing inclusive onboarding and interactive programming to nurture unity across worker types over time. The brief also considers HR's role in thoughtfully managing change to maintain continuity of the blended approach. Practical application and examples from industries such as technology, media and consulting that have incorporated blended models demonstrate how proactive guidance from HR on strategic alignment, culture-building and change leadership positions organizations to optimize diverse staffing arrangements, fully realize the potential of this evolving workforce paradigm, and gain competitive advantage. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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406
Changing Company Culture Requires a Movement, Not a Mandate, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD
Abstract: Changing cultures within organizations has proven very difficult to achieve through top-down mandates and directives alone. However, some companies have succeeded in catalyzing large-scale cultural transformations by taking a different approach - sparking grassroots movements from within. This practitioner research brief examines why movements are more effective than mandates at shifting underlying organizational mindsets and norms in lasting ways. Drawing on theories of self-determination, diffusion of innovations, and lessons from impactful social movements, it explores how leaders can cultivate internal change agents to champion a compelling vision that aligns with employees' intrinsic values and purposes. Case examples from Southwest Airlines and healthcare demonstrate how grassroots pioneering, not administrative edicts, fundamentally reshaped entire industries over time. The brief concludes by advising leaders seeking profound cultural change to empower bottom-up movements rather than attempting to force compliance through top-down mandates. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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405
Why Do We Undervalue Competent Management, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD
Abstract: This article examines why competent management is often undervalued within organizations despite its crucial role in driving operations, projects, culture and business results. Through analyzing relevant literature, key reasons for this undervaluation are explored, including perceptions of management as an "expected" task rather than accomplishment, difficulty quantifying management impact, cultural biases favoring technical skills, and lack of formal management development programs. Recommendations are then provided for building a culture where management excellence is properly recognized, such as defining clear competencies, offering training and career pathing, highlighting management as specialized expertise, and incentivizing people manager performance. The brief aims to bring greater awareness and solutions to more accurately valuing the drivers of organizational success. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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404
Building a Culture of Appreciation through Giving and Receiving Compliments at Work, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD
Abstract: This article provides practical strategies for leaders and employees to foster a culture of appreciation in the workplace through thoughtful compliments. While recognition is important for engagement and satisfaction, many find expressing appreciation professionally uncomfortable. The article offers guidelines for sincerely complimenting others with specificity and timeliness so praise feels genuine. Tips are also shared for gracefully receiving compliments to maximize their impact. Examples illustrate how leaders at Southwest Airlines, Google, and Lincoln Financial used compliments daily to shape highly engaged, strengths-focused cultures. The article concludes that shifting norms to build appreciation through compliments, despite discomforts, yields far greater organizational and human benefits than risks. With practice, small acts of praise meaningfully strengthen relationships, trust and performance. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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403
A Multi-Layered Perspective: Examining the Intersection of Gender and Race in Employee Engagement, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD
Abstract: This research brief aims to provide a nuanced perspective on how the intersection of gender and race impacts employee engagement. Through a review of academic literature, key factors that shape engagement for women and employees of color are explored. While drivers like meaningful work and support apply broadly, gender and racial minority employees often face additional barriers such as stereotyping, lack of representation, microaggressions, and caregiving responsibilities that undermine engagement. Strategies for building an authentically inclusive engagement culture are presented, including increasing representation, addressing bias, promoting equitable policies and practices, supporting work-life balance, and seeking intersectional employee insights. Examples from the technology and consulting industries demonstrate how adopting inclusive strategic initiatives can boost engagement scores meaningfully for targeted demographic groups. The brief argues that an intersectional lens is needed to develop sophisticated understanding of diverse employee experiences and nurture fully engaged, future-fit organizational cultures. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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402
When Work Piles Up: Maintaining Balance When Feeling Overwhelmed, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD
Abstract: This article explores with research-backed strategies for maintaining balance and preventing burnout when feeling overwhelmed by high workload demands. The article begins by defining job overload and identifying common warning signs. It explores how to gain control over workload, expectations, and self-care through prioritizing tasks, setting boundaries, strengthening support systems, and integrating proactive approaches. Specific techniques are grounded in academic literature on stress management, social support, and resilience. Real-world industry examples illustrate applying concepts across fields experiencing perpetual pressure. Long-term considerations around career strategizing and developing resilience habits are also addressed. The overarching message is that by combining workload audits, communication skills, self-care routines, and social resources, professionals can sustain performance and well-being even during taxing work periods, thereby maximizing career longevity and life satisfaction. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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401
HR's Vital Role in Advocating for and Protecting Employees in an Unhealthy Workplace, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD
Abstract: This practitioner-focused essay examines the vital role that human resources (HR) professionals play in advocating for and protecting employees, especially in dysfunctional or unhealthy work environments. Drawing from the author's 15 years of experience in organizational consulting and academic research, it outlines the common signs of an unhealthy workplace culture, such as toxic leadership, lack of respect, and high turnover. The essay argues that HR has a responsibility to identify issues through anonymous surveys, benchmarking, and health metrics, and then drive positive change by holding leaders accountable and empowering individual employees. Specific strategies are provided for strategic partnering with executives, conducting investigations into complaints, educating managers, and implementing practical solutions tailored to different industries. Two case studies demonstrate how HR collaboration led to improved staff satisfaction, retention, and customer service at a hospital and call center. The conclusion reinforces HR's enduring duty to safeguard employee well-being and remedy the root causes of unhealthy dynamics through advocacy at both the systems and individual levels. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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400
Combatting Contagious Stress: Building Your Resistance and Resilience in the Workplace, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD
Abstract: This article explores stress contagion in organizational settings and provides strategies for building resilience against absorbing others' tensions. It begins by outlining the research demonstrating how stress transmits between individuals through unconscious neurological mirroring and limbic system processes. Left unaddressed, this "emotional contagion" allows stresses to spread rapidly through workplaces. However, recognizing stress contagion's scientific mechanisms empowers people to disrupt that initial transmission. Techniques discussed include cultivating mindfulness to maintain attentional and emotional control, using mindful communication styles, practicing gratitude to interrupt crisis mindsets, and fostering supportive cultures where stress is openly discussed. These mindfulness, cognitive and organizational practices strengthen individual "immunity" against secondhand stress over time. When implemented consistently, even imperfectly, they can sustain worker well-being and productivity despite inevitable pressures faced in busy professional environments. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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399
Mastering the Art of Productive Busyness, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD
Abstract: This article explores a framework called "productive busyness." The framework aims to help professionals accomplish more work in less time by optimizing prioritization, focus, processes, and self-care. It is based on three core principles supported by research: prioritizing the highest value tasks, minimizing distractions through "deep work" sessions, and streamlining processes for efficiency. The article outlines strategies within each of these areas, including setting goals, saying no to low-priority tasks, blocking focused work time, documenting standard operating procedures, and implementing self-care routines. Examples are provided of how these strategies have been applied successfully in organizations. The overall framework is intended to provide a sustainable approach to boosting productivity and workload capacity without increased stress when fully adopted as a lifestyle philosophy. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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398
Managing Your Anxiety at Work, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD
Abstract: This article provides practical recommendations for managing workplace anxiety. It begins by defining anxiety and explaining how anxious thinking patterns can negatively impact work performance if left unaddressed. Cognitive strategies are presented to challenge catastrophic thoughts and refocus on facts rather than feelings. Physiological strategies like deep breathing, muscle relaxation and visualizations aim to reduce physical anxiety symptoms. The role of social and environmental workplace factors in exacerbating or soothing anxiety is also explored. Recommendations target improving communication, feedback, recognition and boundaries. Finally, the article outlines a personalized daily toolkit of routines for maintaining mental wellness and offers an optimistic message about harnessing one's resilience to overcome anxious challenges. The goal is to empower professionals to effectively manage anxiety and achieve their maximum career potential. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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397
How Our Careers Impact Our Families, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD
Abstract: This article explores the intersection between professional careers and personal family life, focusing on how demanding jobs can both positively and negatively impact children, and what organizational leaders can do to promote healthier integration. The pressures of constant high achievement in many industries are discussed, and how an overemphasis on work can negatively affect children's development if parents are unable to detach. Research is presented showing issues children of overworked parents may face. However, moderate parental involvement is also shown to benefit children by serving as role models of a balanced life. The article advises practices like sharing work appropriately with kids and involving them in age-appropriate ways. Additionally, how exposure to career difficulties can build children's empathy when explained constructively is covered. The conclusion emphasizes the interconnection between work and family roles, and the responsibilities of leaders to cultivate cultures supporting well-being, flexibility and balance for all. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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396
Avoiding Burnout for Peak Performance, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD
Abstract: This article discusses strategies that organizational leaders can implement to help employees avoid burnout and perform at their peak abilities. Burnout is defined using Maslach and Jackson's conceptualization involving emotional exhaustion, depersonalization, and reduced personal accomplishment from chronic work stress. The negative impacts of burnout on individual health and organizational costs are reviewed. The article then examines evidence-based practices for managing workload, developing autonomy, and fostering community to engage employees and prevent burnout. An example of applying these strategies in a healthcare organization is provided. The article concludes that understanding burnout and implementing tailored strategies can transform organizational cultures into ones where employee well-being and high performance coincide. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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395
Faculty Entrepreneurship: Transforming Academic Expertise in the Evolving Higher Education Landscape, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD
Abstract: This article examines faculty entrepreneurship as a strategic response to the evolving higher education landscape, exploring how academics can translate specialized knowledge into consulting, speaking, and content-creation ventures while maintaining scholarly integrity. Drawing on empirical research and successful implementation cases, the analysis reveals significant benefits at individual, institutional, and societal levels—including enhanced research productivity, improved faculty retention, expanded knowledge transfer, and accelerated research-to-practice translation. Despite these advantages, substantial barriers persist, including restrictive institutional policies, academic cultural resistance, and faculty knowledge gaps regarding business development. The article presents evidence-based frameworks for supporting faculty entrepreneurship through policy reform, structured development programs, and practical resource provision, illustrated through case studies across diverse disciplines. As higher education continues navigating significant structural challenges, faculty entrepreneurship emerges as a critical pathway for expanding academic influence while developing sustainable new models for knowledge creation and dissemination in the contemporary knowledge economy. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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