How to say goodbye to Stone Age Performance Management

Are you tired of chasing up appraisal forms? Are you wondering why your people roll their eyes and sigh when it’s time for end of year reviews? Are you starting to wonder if your Performance Management process is the right fit for your organisation and your people? If so it might be time to bring your Performance Management into the 21st century! Remove the pain out of annual appraisals, and move to a more engaging, continuous process that will actually yield results. READ MORE

How employers and recruiters can find and attract quality candidates

Finding quality employees is crucial for the success of any business, but attracting top talent in today's competitive hiring environment can be challenging. To succeed, hiring managers should leverage recruiting tools, including ZipRecruiter, to cast a broader net that reaches the right talent.

The latest Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey, or JOLTS, showed 9.9 million job openings at the end of February, down some 632,000 from the previous month. But even with some softening in the labor market, many companies continue to hire. READ MORE

A professor started tracking ‘Fortune 500 CEO colleges’ 20 years ago, and ‘the results were stunning.’

Since 1999, David Kang has pursued a peculiar hobby. That year, after Fortune released its annual Fortune 500 issue, Kang began to wonder about where chief executives of companies on the list had attended college. To keep track, the college professor did some research and manually entered their alma maters into a spreadsheet. After completing the task, Kang, then a professor at Dartmouth College’s Tuck School of Business, was shocked by what the data revealed.

“The results were stunning,” he told Fortune. “Like everyone else, I thought Ivy Leagues would dominate. But the largest place they had gone to was no college at all.” READ MORE

Bosses are fed up with remote work for 4 main reasons. Some of them are undeniable

The golden age of remote work seems to be ending. The Wall Street Journal is reporting that even tech firms (the first industry that told employees they could work from home forever just a few years ago) are getting engineers and project managers back in the office. The economic blogger Kevin Drum, formerly of Mother Jones, has taken note of the increasing anti-remote literature and is making a bold prediction about the future of work: there is none. It’s not going to look much different than it’s ever looked. That’s because the remote work revolution just isn’t going to materialize. READ MORE

Company execs used to trumpet their diversity and climate efforts. Now not so much

Just three years ago, diversity and sustainability were big talking points for executives at many big companies, and ESG funds — investments that evaluate stocks using environmental, social and governance factors — were riding the wave.

But corporate interest in trumpeting these initiatives appears to have been short-lived. Just 74 members of the S&P 500 even mentioned “ESG” in their first quarter earnings calls, according to new FactSet data. READ MORE

3 things you must do as a first-time manager to be a great leader

Being a first-time manager can be incredibly fulfilling, but it also comes with many transitions and challenges. 

When I stepped into a manager role for the first time, I failed miserably. As a high-performing individual contributor, I had been eager to get promoted to manager. But when I finally got there, I struggled to delegate and took on everyone’s jobs, only to feel overwhelmed. I was impatient with my team and set impossible goals without empowering them to get there. Even though I didn’t communicate my vision, I got frustrated when my team misunderstood expectations. While I’d put on a brave face in front of my team, deep inside, I felt like an imposter who didn’t know how to do the job.  READ MORE

AM Radio Fights Back After Getting the Boot From Tesla and Other EVs

Automakers moving into an electric future are locked in a battle with broadcasters concerned about the potential loss of an aged and fading technology: AM radio.

Major carmakers, including Tesla Inc. and BMW AG, are omitting AM tuners from electric vehicles, citing electromagnetic interference with the frequencies used by the century-old broadcasting service. AM radio is particularly susceptible to disruption because it uses frequencies like those emitted by EV systems, which can overwhelm the radio signal and make it unintelligible. FM stations operate over different wavelengths. Shielding radio reception gear can be costly and complex, especially when vehicle users can access AM signals via digital platforms. READ MORE

Price tag of Apple’s newly unveiled ‘Vision Pro’ headset draws mockery

Apple’s newly unveiled mixed-reality headset — hailed by the company as an innovation as groundbreaking as the original iPhone — drew near immediate mockery online with many scoffing at its eye-popping price tag.

Dubbed the “Vision Pro,” the device will go for a whopping $3,499 a pop when it becomes available early next year, Apple CEO Tim Cook announced at the company’s annual Worldwide Developers conference event at its California headquarters. READ MORE

Americans Are Working Fewer Hours. How Are Employers Responding?

The COVID-19 pandemic led to a slew of changes in the U.S. workplace: hybrid work, talent shortages, employee mental health issues and more. As a result, newly released data shows that Americans are working fewer hours than ever before.

Prior to the pandemic, the average employee was paid to work 37.5 hours per week. As of last November, that number had fallen to 36.9 hours, according to a study from the Brookings Institution, a nonprofit public policy organization based in Washington, D.C. READ MORE

The alt-right economy is failing. Here’s the real performance of anti-woke entrepreneurs

In commenting on Bob Iger’s defense of Disney's values and brand in the face of threats from Florida Governor DeSantis, Nike CEO John Donahoe said, “I think Bob’s doing a great job at this. If it’s core to who you are and your values, then you stand up for your values.”

That spirit has been rewarded by the free market. Across many fronts, we have shown in quantitative analysis of business performance that doing good for society is not at the expense of doing well for shareholders, with clear examples ranging from Russian business exits to public engagement on voting rights. READ MORE

FTC’s Proposed Rule to Ban Noncompetes Faces Stiff Resistance

The U.S. Federal Trade Commission’s (FTC) January rule proposal to ban employers from adding noncompetes to their employment contracts is now facing stiff and steady resistance from employer advocacy groups.  

The FTC received nearly 27,000 comments on the draft rule proposed, and Bloomberg Law reportedOpen in a new tab that the agency is expected to vote in April 2024 on the final version of the rule.  READ MORE

Apple just announced its first major product since 2014

Apple announced its mixed-reality headset, the Vision Pro, on Monday during its WWDC developer conference. The $3,499 headset is its first major new product since the Apple Watch in 2014.

The Vision Pro will allow users to see apps in a new way, in the spaces around them. Users can use their eyes and hands to navigate through apps and search with their voices. The headset can be used to watch movies, including in 3-D, with spatial audio, view their own pictures or videos, and play video games. It can also be used for work with video conferencing apps, Microsoft READ MORE