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Quick Tips for Time Well Spent: Taking On New Projects

July 25, 2022 by John Ray

Projects
North Fulton Studio
Quick Tips for Time Well Spent: Taking On New Projects
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Projects

Quick Tips for Time Well Spent: Taking On New Projects

One way to better manage your time is to be intentional when starting a new project. In this Quick Tip, Julie Hullett offers strategies for choosing what projects to take on.

Julie’s commentary was taken from this episode of Time Well Spent with Julie Hullett. 

Time Well Spent with Julie Hullett is presented by Julie Hullett Concierge, LLC and produced by the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX®.

About Time Well Spent

Time Well Spent with Julie Hullett features stories from busy professionals who have created more time to do what they love. Every other week, your host and personal concierge Julie Hullett speaks with entrepreneurs, community leaders, and influencers to answer the question: What would you do if you had more time?

The show is produced by the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® and can be found on all the major podcast apps. The complete show archive is here.

Julie Hullett, Host of Time Well Spent with Julie Hullett

Julie Hullet, Host of Time Well Spent with Julie Hullett

Julie Hullett is the host of Time Well Spent with Julie Hullett.

Julie Hullett is a personal concierge and entrepreneur in Nashville, TN. She founded Julie Hullett Concierge, LLC in 2011 to give people their time back so they can do more of what they love. No stranger to big ideas and pursuing passions, Julie left corporate America to create her business. She capitalized on her skills—multi-tasking, attention to detail, and time management, to name a few—to build a successful business that gives back. Her clients enjoy ample free time. They’ve traveled more, spent more time with those they love, and have even created their own businesses.

Connect with Julie:

Website| LinkedIn | Instagram. Sign up to receive her newsletter.

 

Tagged With: Julie Hullett, know your why, new projects, personal concierge, Projects, Quick Tips for Time Well Spent, time management, Time Well Spent with Julie Hullett

The R3 Continuum Playbook: Empowering Yourself – How You Can Be a Catalyst for Change in the Workplace

July 22, 2022 by John Ray

Catalyst
Minneapolis St. Paul Studio
The R3 Continuum Playbook: Empowering Yourself - How You Can Be a Catalyst for Change in the Workplace
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Catalyst

The R3 Continuum Playbook: Empowering Yourself: How You Can Be a Catalyst for Change in the Workplace

How do you go about discussing difficult topics with your company’s leadership? How can you effectively advocate for causes which you are passionate about? R3 Continuum’s Associate Director of Strategic Solutions, Sarah Hathaway, discussed these questions and more as she addressed how to become a catalyst for change within your workplace.

The full webinar from which this excerpt was taken can be found here.

The R3 Continuum Playbook is presented by R3 Continuum and is produced by the Minneapolis-St.Paul Studio of Business RadioX®. R3 Continuum is the underwriter of Workplace MVP, the show which celebrates heroes in the workplace.

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: [00:00:00] Broadcasting from the Business RadioX Studios, here is your R3 Continuum Playbook. Brought to you by workplace MVP sponsor R3 Continuum, a global leader in workplace behavioral health, crisis, and security solutions.

Shane McNally: [00:00:14] Hi, everyone. My name is Shane McNally, Digital Marketing Project Lead at R3 Continuum. On this episode of The R3 Continuum Playbook, we’ll be featuring a segment from a recent webinar presented by R3 Continuum Associate Director of Strategic Solutions, Sarah Hathaway. This recent webinar is titled Empowering Yourself, How You Can Be a Catalyst for Change in the Workplace.

Shane McNally: [00:00:35] In this short segment from her webinar, Sarah talks about how employees can become workplace champions and create a more positive culture in their workplace by utilizing the strategies she outlines.

Shane McNally: [00:00:47] So, I think let’s move forward and kind of go over what are some actual strategies to go about creating change.

Sarah Hathaway: [00:00:55] Yes. And, you really led into some of these specific points. The first one is identifying your allies. So, who is most likely to be in alignment with me on this change? And then, also your obstacles. Who are the people that are probably not going to be on board right away?

Sarah Hathaway: [00:01:15] Now, when I say obstacles, this doesn’t mean that these people are just a problem to be solved but they may present some barriers and we want to be aware of those barriers so that we can start to identify, okay, how do I address that challenge. This person has a very different viewpoint than me or this person is really committed to the status quo. What might influence them toward this change or what’s important to them? And why is the status quo important?

Sarah Hathaway: [00:01:45] So, that’s where – the next step is, just really getting the perspectives of other people. Our viewpoint may not be the right viewpoint, and maybe there’s not only one right viewpoint. Maybe, there are reasons that these other views are important, too. So we want to do a little bit of perspective-taking to really understand where is everyone else at. Are people really motivated for this change? Do they see the need that you see, or are there other things driving their perspective, other things of importance to them?

Sarah Hathaway: [00:02:16] So, you really want to tap into that motivation of what’s important and recognize, again that that may not be the same for everyone. So, for some people it might be a really passion-driven change of this is important, you know, for the well-being of our company, for the well-being of our employees, while others may be a little bit more methodical about their decision making. And so it might be a business-driven choice of, well, this is going to drive profits or reduce costs, and the return on investment is really important. So what’s that individual’s motivation or what’s the group motivation? And be able to tap into those different areas and what motivates individual people.

Sarah Hathaway: [00:03:04] Now, I mentioned the idea of the status quo. There is value oftentimes in the status quo. We wouldn’t generally be in the situation that we’re in. Even if it’s not the ideal situation, we wouldn’t be dealing with a status quo if there wasn’t some purpose for it. The status quo generally serves a purpose, even if it’s just for stability and consistency. So we have to recognize that the possibility of not changing has some value, too. It helps us to really create a bit of a counterbalance there to our own plan or ideas.

Sarah Hathaway: [00:03:39] We need to get really clear in defining what’s the ask, what needs to change, and what do we need in order to affect that change, get that buy-in as we talked about, and ultimately start to identify if I can’t have all of what I want to change, if we can’t have all of this, if that’s not possible, where are the areas where we might be able to compromise? Where can we kind of pare back the goals or the plan, or where can we maybe start small to build up a little momentum toward the change?

Shane McNally: [00:04:15] So, going off of what you were just saying about kind of the different types of changes, which do you think is typically harder to gain buy-in? Would that be like a cultural change in the organization or a business change?

Sarah Hathaway: [00:04:30] You know, it could be really any of them. That’s a good question. I think cultural changes can be harder in some ways because they’re more difficult to define at times. It’s more of a sort of nebulous shift, right? Process changes are very clear. When we’re working with widgets, I can replace this widget with that one or, you know, replace the phone call here with an email. That’s very clearly defined. Those cultural shifts are a little bit more complex. It doesn’t mean that they’re impossible or that we can’t tackle those, but they’re just different.

Shane McNally: [00:05:17] Yeah. Okay. I mean, that makes complete sense, I think. Another question following this up, and we do have about 8 minutes left, so we will answer some questions if anybody in the audience has some more as well. But is this something that is like you can only do if you’re a leader or a manager in your company, or do you think that going about these strategies and trying to create change for the better of the company can be anybody in the organization?

Sarah Hathaway: [00:05:45] I think that it can be anyone within the organization. Change starts somewhere, right? Now, I think we also have to acknowledge that at the leadership level, there oftentimes is a greater opportunity for influence. There’s greater authority, ability to make decisions that you may not be able to make at another level of the organization. But everyone can influence change. It’s about sort of setting the standard being the example at times. Creating, again, creating that buy-in, building allyship in that change, and really just starting the momentum and recognizing that even those really small changes are a catalyst toward greater change.

Sarah Hathaway: [00:06:35] Sometimes when we look at having these big, lofty goals and things that we want to shift, especially when we’re talking about a cultural shift or a team shift or program design shift, these are big things. And so sometimes it can feel like, well, gosh, we’re not making any progress, or our movement is very slow, or maybe we only got this one little piece of what we wanted. But that generally if you start to kind of look from A to Z, look over a period of time, you start to see that maybe that one small change created an opportunity for another change and another change. So, never underestimate the power of momentum in making change.

Shane McNally: [00:07:20] Reducing the amount of toxicity in the workplace can help to improve the overall well-being of you, your colleagues, and the organization as a whole. If you or your employees are feeling significant amounts of stress and workplace disruption, you’re not alone. R3 Continuum can help. Connect with us and learn about our services at www.r3c.com or email us directly at info@r3c.com.

 

Show Underwriter

R3 Continuum (R3c) is a global leader in workplace behavioral health and security solutions. R3c helps ensure the psychological and physical safety of organizations and their people in today’s ever-changing and often unpredictable world. Through their continuum of tailored solutions, including evaluations, crisis response, executive optimization, protective services, and more, they help organizations maintain and cultivate a workplace of wellbeing so that their people can thrive. Learn more about R3c at www.r3c.com.

R3 Continuum is the underwriter of Workplace MVP, a show which celebrates the everyday heroes–Workplace Most Valuable Professionals–in human resources, risk management, security, business continuity, and the C-suite who resolutely labor for the well-being of employees in their care, readying the workplace for and planning responses to disruption.

Connect with R3 Continuum:  Website | LinkedIn | Facebook | Twitter

Tagged With: Catalyst, catalyst for change, Empowering Yourself, R3 Continuum, R3 Continuum Playbook, Sarah Hathaway, Workplace MVP

Jeff Armacost, Whole Brain Creative

July 21, 2022 by John Ray

Jeff Armacost
North Fulton Studio
Jeff Armacost, Whole Brain Creative
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Jeff Armacost

Jeff Armacost, Whole Brain Creative (The Exit Exchange, Episode 15)

Branding is foundational for all businesses, says Jeff Armacost. Jeff joined this edition of The Exit Exchange to discuss several different aspects of branding, including defining what branding is and what makes a brand successful, the role of branding in building and maintaining the value of a business, and much more.

This episode of The Exit Exchange was co-hosted by Maria Forbes and Mike Rosenthal and was produced in the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® in Alpharetta.

Whole Brain Creative

Whole Brain Creative empowers ambitious entrepreneurs and visionary leaders.

They help them create, build, and grow brands for B2B, Higher Education, Medical and Medical Technology, Technology, Organizations, Visionary start-ups, Non-profits, Entrepreneurs, and much more. They love the work they do and love collaborating with an outstanding group of clients.

Each year Whole Brain serves a diverse group of clients. But always with one thing in common: to create brands that differentiate, connect, and stand out.

KEY SERVICES • Naming and Logo • Brand Launch and Rebrand • Internal Branding Initiatives • Breakthrough Brand Messaging – Tagline, Headlines, Elevator Speech, Core Content • Brand-Powered Websites • Killer Concepts and Campaigns

Company website | LinkedIn | Facebook

Jeff Armacost, Chief Brand Guy, Whole Brain Creative

For 20+ years Jeff Armacost has guided successful, standout brand development for over 100 companies and organizations of all kinds. Jeff gets in close with his clients, gets up to speed fast, listens well, and distills the powerfully simple story and branding that presents them in the best possible way.

Business owners and CEOs call on him as a thinking partner in building their brand, and a cost-effective solution for ongoing branding, brand launches, and key internal branding initiatives. Fast-growing small businesses call on him when it’s time for a serious rebrand or on-the-fly brand refresh that positions them to reach big goals and outpace their competition.

Experienced business advisors pull Jeff in – and if needed, his team of graphic design and web development – to add big-time brand power to their client’s marketing campaigns, new website projects, and more.

LinkedIn

The Exit Planning Exchange Atlanta

The Exit Planning Exchange Atlanta (XPX) is a diverse group of professionals with a common goal: working collaboratively to assist business owners with a sale or business transition. XPX Atlanta is an association of advisors who provide professionalism, principles, and education to the heart of the middle market. Our members work with business owners through all stages of the private company life cycle: business value growth, business value transfer, and owner life and legacy. Our Vision: To fundamentally changing the trajectory of exit planning services in the Southeast United States. XPX Atlanta delivers a collaborative-based networking exchange with broad representation of exit planning competencies. Learn more about XPX Atlanta and why you should consider joining our community: https://exitplanningexchange.com/atlanta.

The Exit Exchange is produced by John Ray in the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® in Alpharetta. The show archive can be found at xpxatlantaradio.com.

John Ray and Business RadioX are Platinum Sponsors of XPX Atlanta.

Tagged With: Branding, Jeff Armacost, Maria Forbes, marketing, Mike Rosenthal, The Exit Exchange, Whole Brain Creative, XPX Atlanta

Decision Vision Episode 177: Should I Resist? – An Interview with Lee Ellis, Leading with Honor

July 21, 2022 by John Ray

Lee Ellis
Decision Vision
Decision Vision Episode 177: Should I Resist? - An Interview with Lee Ellis, Leading with Honor
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Lee Ellis

Decision Vision Episode 177: Should I Resist? – An Interview with Lee Ellis, Leading with Honor

Lee Ellis, a decorated veteran of the Vietnam War and President of Leading with Honor, was Mike Blake’s guest on this episode of Decision Vision. From his harrowing experience as a prisoner of war and his military career, Lee brings a wealth of wisdom to the question of resistance. He and Mike talked about his POW experience, the code of honor he adheres to that guided his actions, how resistance looks in business, the role of resistance in effective leadership, ethical considerations, and much more.

Decision Vision is presented by Brady Ware & Company and produced by the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX®.

Leading with Honor, Leadership Freedom LLC

Leadership Freedom LLC is the original consulting, coaching, and training organization founded by Lee Ellis.

The goal isn’t perfect leadership, but it’s agreeing that we all want to authentically lead with honor. Leading With Honor helps leaders grow in character, courage, and commitment and learn new skills based on their natural behavior that will help them develop the next generation in the areas of responsibility, accountability, and resilience.

Their leadership development training methods are based on principles learned in some of the most challenging circumstances of POW life. They also have more than 25 years of experience in the research, development, and deployment of leadership resources including behavioral assessments.

In 2017, they made the transition from Leadership Freedom LLC to the new organizational name, Leading with Honor®, to further emphasize the importance of training leaders in character, courage, and commitment

Company website | LinkedIn | Facebook

Lee Ellis, Founder and President, Leading with Honor

Lee Ellis, President, Leading with Honor

Lee Ellis is President and founder of Leading with Honor®, a leadership and team development training and coaching company, and FreedomStar Media®, a publishing company that provides leadership resources and training. A popular media personality and high-profile human performance expert, Lee focuses on organizational integrity, operational effectiveness, and personal accountability for enterprise, government, and not-for-profit leaders.

His prior experience was as a founding partner and senior vice president of a leadership assessment and human capital management consulting company headquartered in Atlanta, GA. For over 20 years, he has served as an executive coach and a corporate coach in the areas of hiring, team building, leadership, human performance development, and succession planning. His approach to maximizing leadership performance has been implemented by Fortune 500 clients, senior executives, and C-Level leaders in telecommunications, healthcare, insurance, energy, IT, automotive, military, and not-for-profit sectors.

As the Director of Career/Life Pathways from 1990 – 1998, Lee led the development team that researched, developed, and validated Career Direct®, a vocational assessment package and two personality assessments with software applications. From 1998 – 2008, he was responsible for product development of three more behavioral and leadership assessments as well as the launch and Internet deployment of these resources. Most recently, he has developed and released his latest assessment tool, the Leadership Behavior DNA® Discovery Process (formerly N8Traits® Profile). In total, these assessments have been used worldwide by more than 200,000 individuals and are the instrument of choice in many organizations, including Fortune 500 companies and nationally recognized not-for-profits. Lee’s point of view on maximizing leadership performance and organizational leadership during crisis is framed by his extensive research and experience in the assessment of human behavior.

A prolific writer, blogger and thought leader, Lee’s latest book is entitled Leadership Behavior DNA: Discovering Natural Talent and Managing Differences. His last two award-winning books, Leading with Honor®: Leadership Lessons from the Hanoi Hilton and Engage with Honor™: Building a Culture of Courageous Accountability, share his POW experiences and the leadership principles that helped him and his compatriots resist, survive, and return with honor. Additionally, Lee co-authored three books and workbooks on career planning. He is a nationally-recognized Certified Speaking Professional* (CSP), Certified Virtual Presenter (CVP), and expert on the subjects of leadership and performance, team building, mentoring, and career planning. Some of his appearances include interviews on networks such as CNN, CBS This Morning, C-SPAN, ABC World News, Fox News Channel, plus hundreds of engagements in various industry sectors throughout the world.

Lee holds a B.A. degree in History from the University of Georgia and a M.S. degree in Counseling and Human Development from Troy University in Alabama. He is a graduate of the Armed Forces Staff College and the Air War College. Lee supervised, educated, and trained officers for the last 17 years of his Air Force career. He served as the Vice Commandant of the Squadron Officer School, the Air Force’s leadership school for captains. He completed his Air Force career as Professor of Aerospace Studies and Commander of Air Force ROTC at the University of Georgia. More recently he has developed and presented leadership curricula in numerous organizations including Fortune 500 companies, and major sectors of the Department of the Defense focusing on management performance, leadership accountability and principle-based management strategies.

A native of Commerce, Georgia, Lee graduated from the University of Georgia in 1965 and began a career in the Air Force. During the Vietnam War, Lee’s aircraft was shot down over enemy territory and he was held as a POW in various prisons in the Hanoi area for over five years. As a military officer, his experiences as a POW piqued his interest in leadership performance in difficult situations, leading to further research and academic pursuit in the area of measuring and optimizing human performance and leadership effectiveness.

After repatriation, he returned to flying duties with increasing positions of leadership. Rising to the rank of colonel before retirement, Lee’s assignments included duty as a pilot, flight instructor, staff officer, chief of flight standardization and evaluation, flying squadron commander, and supervisor in higher education. He was awarded two Silver Stars, the Legion of Merit, the Bronze Star with Valor device, the Purple Heart, the Air Medal with eight Oak Leaf Clusters, and the Prisoner of War Medal for his service in Vietnam. In addition, he was awarded four Air Force Commendation Medals and four Meritorious Service Medals for performance excellence. Lee is also a 2014 inductee into the Georgia Military Veterans Hall of Fame and the 2015 DAR Medal of Honor Recipient for a lifetime of patriotic service as a military officer and spokesman for leading with honor.

Lee and his wife Mary have four grown children and six grandchildren. They reside in the metro area of Atlanta, GA.

LinkedIn

Mike Blake, Brady Ware & Company

Mike Blake, Host of the “Decision Vision” podcast series

Michael Blake is the host of the Decision Vision podcast series and a Director of Brady Ware & Company. Mike specializes in the valuation of intellectual property-driven firms, such as software firms, aerospace firms, and professional services firms, most frequently in the capacity as a transaction advisor, helping clients obtain great outcomes from complex transaction opportunities. He is also a specialist in the appraisal of intellectual properties as stand-alone assets, such as software, trade secrets, and patents.

Mike has been a full-time business appraiser for 13 years with public accounting firms, boutique business appraisal firms, and an owner of his own firm. Prior to that, he spent 8 years in venture capital and investment banking, including transactions in the U.S., Israel, Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus.

LinkedIn | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram

Brady Ware & Company

Brady Ware & Company is a regional full-service accounting and advisory firm which helps businesses and entrepreneurs make visions a reality. Brady Ware services clients nationally from its offices in Alpharetta, GA; Columbus and Dayton, OH; and Richmond, IN. The firm is growth-minded, committed to the regions in which they operate, and most importantly, they make significant investments in their people and service offerings to meet the changing financial needs of those they are privileged to serve. The firm is dedicated to providing results that make a difference for its clients.

Decision Vision Podcast Series

Decision Vision is a podcast covering topics and issues facing small business owners and connecting them with solutions from leading experts. This series is presented by Brady Ware & Company. If you are a decision-maker for a small business, we’d love to hear from you. Contact us at decisionvision@bradyware.com and make sure to listen to every Thursday to the Decision Vision podcast.

Past episodes of Decision Vision can be found at decisionvisionpodcast.com. Decision Vision is produced by John Ray and the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX®.

Connect with Brady Ware & Company:

Website | LinkedIn | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: [00:00:01] Welcome to Decision Vision, a podcast series focusing on critical business decisions. Brought to you by Brady Ware & Company. Brady Ware is a regional, full-service accounting and advisory firm that helps businesses and entrepreneurs make visions a reality.

Mike Blake: [00:00:21] Welcome to Decision Vision, a podcast giving you, the listener, clear vision to make great decisions. In each episode, we discuss the process of decision making on a different topic from the business owners’ or executives’ perspective. We aren’t necessarily telling you what to do, but we can put you in a position to make an informed decision on your own and understand when you might need help along the way.

Mike Blake: [00:00:43] My name is Mike Blake, and I’m your host for today’s program. I’m the managing partner of Brady Ware Arpeggio, a data-driven management consultancy which brings clarity to owners and managers of unique businesses facing unique strategic decisions. Our parent, Brady Ware & Company, is sponsoring this podcast. Brady Ware is a public accounting firm with offices in Dayton, Ohio; Alpharetta, Georgia; Columbus, Ohio; and Richmond, Indiana.

Mike Blake: [00:01:07] If you would like to engage with me on social media with my Chart of the Day and other content, I’m on LinkedIn as myself and @unblakeable on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram. I also host a LinkedIn Group called Unblakeable’s Group That Doesn’t Suck, so please join that as well if you’d like to engage.

Mike Blake: [00:01:24] Today’s topic is, Should I resist? And what does that mean? Well, in my 52 trips around the sun, we are in an unprecedented time of social and economic upheaval. Certainly, I think you have to go back to the 1970s – and I was only a kid then and didn’t care about that stuff – to encounter anything like this. And interestingly enough, that’s going to be a recurring theme for today’s show, as a matter of fact.

Mike Blake: [00:02:01] But now we’re put in a position of resisting toxic relationships. We’re in a position of resisting toxic employers. We’re always in a position at some point of resisting people who want to manipulate us into doing or accepting bad things. And we could apply this, of course, to the political arena, which seems to be becoming more polarized by the day. And I don’t know what the solution is there. We’re certainly seeing it in business as people – as we have covered many times in the show – have redefined their relationship with work and, frankly, with a lot of the rest of the world.

Mike Blake: [00:02:55] And there’s even a decision as to whether or not we’re going to resist COVID or how we’re going to resist COVID. Are we going to resist it by being vaccinated? The resistance, are we going to resist vaccination mandates? And some people are doing that, in many cases at great personal cost to them, in some cases the cost of their lives. So, the resistance there, while some of us may disagree with it – I happen to disagree with it. I don’t think that that’s a trivial exercise – I think that one of the things, as I kind of reflect upon our society right now and our country, is not that it’s a good or bad place, but I do think it’s an angry place. It’s a much angrier place that I can ever remember.

Mike Blake: [00:03:51] And the first president that I can remember was Ronald Reagan. And whether you voted for him or not – and I’m certainly not one of these guys that lionizes him or really almost any president, every president that I’ve grown up with has been flawed in some way – and whether you agree with the politics or not, the one thing that he was, I think, always was a positive voice. And our political landscape has changed, where negative voices are being heard more. There’s an economic argument for negative voices. Negativity right now, I think you can argue, sells. And there’s a resistance that I think is required to just resist to avoid being overwhelmed by that sense of pervasive anger and negativity.

Mike Blake: [00:04:50] And so, I’ve wanted to do this show for a long time. This is not a new phenomenon. But not everybody can talk to this authoritatively. But I think I found the right guy who can talk about resistance authoritatively, and I think that you’re going to agree. This will probably be the longest introduction I’ve made of a guest, and too bad because he’s earned it.

Mike Blake: [00:05:16] Joining us today is Lee Ellis, who is President and Founder of Leading With Honor, a leadership and team development, training, and coaching company; and Freedom Star Media, a publishing company that provides leadership resources and training.

Mike Blake: [00:05:30] For over 20 years, Lee has served as an executive coach and a corporate coach in the areas of hiring, team building, leadership, human performance development, and succession planning. His approach to maximizing leadership performance has been implemented by Fortune 500 clients, senior executives, and C-level leaders in telecommunications, health care, insurance, energy, I.T., automotive, military, and not-for-profit sectors.

Mike Blake: [00:05:55] Lee and his wife, Mary, have four grown children and six grandchildren, and they reside in the Metro Area of Atlanta. During the Vietnam War, Lee’s aircraft was shot down over enemy territory, and he was held as a prisoner of war in various prisons in the Hanoi area for over five years. He was awarded two Silver Stars, the Legion of Merit, the Bronze Star with Valor Device, the Purple Heart, the Air Medal with eight oak leaf clusters, and the Prisoner of War Medal for his service in Vietnam. In addition, he was awarded four Air Force Commendation Medals and four Meritorious Service Medals for Performance Excellence. And by the way, after being released, he went back into active service.

Mike Blake: [00:06:34] Leadership Freedom is the original consulting, coaching, and training organization founded by Lee Ellis in 2017. Since then, they’re making the transition from Leadership Freedom to the new organizational name, which you now know as Leading With Honor. First, Lee Ellis, thank you for your service to our country and welcome to the Decision Vision podcast. It’s an honor to have you.

Lee Ellis: [00:06:55] Thank you, Mike. Great to be with you. And I always enjoy hearing what you have to say about things. I’ve seen you on several interviews on our CEO Netweavers, and I admire your wisdom. So, good to be with you.

Mike Blake: [00:07:09] Well, I appreciate that. So, you have, I think, the ultimate perspective of resistance. And we talked about you were in the same prison camp as the late Senator John McCain, correct?

Lee Ellis: [00:07:25] Yes.

Mike Blake: [00:07:26] Right. So, I just can’t imagine, it’s even hard to formulate the questions even though I have them written down. You’re shot down. You’re over enemy territory. You’re taken into custody. And you’re put in a position where you’re in prison as a hostile, as an enemy combatant. And my question, I guess, is, in that moment, how do you decide that it’s worth resisting?

Mike Blake: [00:07:58] Because your captors didn’t just want you to be there. They weren’t just feeding you for their health or, certainly, not even yours necessarily. But they wanted you to do things for them. And you had to make a conscious decision to resist that, decide it’s worth to do so at great personal suffering. How do you come to a point where it’s worth doing that, where it’s worth resisting?

Lee Ellis: [00:08:23] Well, we had memorized, actually, the code of conduct, which I think it’s about six articles in ROTC at the University of Georgia, it’s where I memorized that. And those six articles describe what is the role of a person who’s been captured as a prisoner of war. Basically, you commit to serving your country honorably, not sharing anything with the enemy that you shouldn’t other than your name, rank, service number, date of birth, and things that are very generic are okay. But anything that would have to do with military intelligence, and especially making oral or written comments that would be harmful to your country and its allies. That’s right there in there.

Lee Ellis: [00:09:09] So, those six articles were the foundation of what I really wanted to stand for and stand by. I had committed to that when I took the oath. So, my goal is to live up to that. And so, that’s how I resisted. I said no. They asked me to share this, I said no. They said fill out this, I said no. And of course, that was a battle. And sometimes I got tortured out of it.

Lee Ellis: [00:09:37] And, eventually, I did give them something, but it was nothing of value to them. I remember I had to fill out a three page biography one time and I resisted, and eventually I gave in and said, “Yes. I’ll do it.” And I want you to know that I was in leg irons and handcuffs and blindfolded on the filthy floor in the torture room, and I cried like a baby because I was so ashamed. I felt like the lowest scum that had ever worn the uniform of the United States. Well, I gave them nothing that was true of any value except my father’s first and last name. But I still felt like I wasn’t tough enough to beat them. And that was my disappointment.

Lee Ellis: [00:10:18] Well, when I get back to my cell, I found out the other guys had been through similar things, and some lasted longer than I did, and some didn’t last as long as I did. So, that helped. But it was still a pretty big shocker that I wasn’t tough enough. But that was our commitment right upfront, and that got reinforced by our leadership.

Mike Blake: [00:10:38] So, I’m curious, I want to kind of unpack some of this because I can see many angles in terms of determining that you’re going to resist. And I’m not saying this is true, but just one path to saying you’re going to resist is, “Well, they’re the enemy. And I don’t like these guys. They’re not treating me and my comrades very well, so I’m not going to help them.” Another path is, “Well, I signed an oath where I made a personal commitment to my country, to my government, to the people I’m trying to protect, and it says Lee Ellis on it, and, by golly, that’s going to be my path to resistance.”

Mike Blake: [00:11:18] Or it could be something entirely different. Maybe you’re just resisting because – I don’t want to say just – it could be as simple and as foundational that you’re with a group of other guys that are resisting as well, and you don’t want to be the guy, the weak bat in the lineup, so to speak. Was it any one of those things that dominated? Was it a combination of three? Am I totally missing it and there’s something else? What’s the calculus like?

Lee Ellis: [00:11:42] I think those are the main points that influence us all. First of all, because you might not be able to see another person for a week or a month, in some cases it was six months to a year, although we did have covert communication, but it might be weeks and months before you actually was able to talk to somebody and you might be that isolated. So, you had to stand on your own footing, so to speak, your own foundation. And that’s where that code of conduct came in and your commitment to it.

Lee Ellis: [00:12:15] And then, the other thing, I think, just generally knowing that you are up against an enemy, the Communists, and they were working with the Russians and the Chinese. Actually, they were almost the hand of the Russians and Chinese pushing against the U.S. And so, the Communists all kind of work together. So, wanting to resist them was a big part of it too. And then, some of it was just personal pride, “I’m the good guy. You’re the bad guy. I don’t want to give in to you.”

Mike Blake: [00:12:45] Well, and that’s what I want to ask you about next, when you were in the moment, did you think of yourself as a resister or did you think of yourself as something else, good guy versus bad guy or something else?

Lee Ellis: [00:13:00] We saw it as duty. Our duty is to resist the enemy. And so, yes, I saw myself as a resister. But it was a piece of pride that the line was drawn. And when they stepped over the line, I was going to push back.

Mike Blake: [00:13:23] So, in the movies, they talk about people being given training to resist torture, interrogation, and so forth. I mean, is that true? Is that a thing? Were you given that sort of training? And if so, did you find the training helpful in practice?

Lee Ellis: [00:13:39] Yeah, it was helpful. Absolutely, it was helpful. In fact, I was thinking about that this past week. I was thinking about I’ve been blessed with a nature that I can tolerate things without getting too panicky. And so, they put me in a little box about the size you put a pig in. And I was cramped up like this and left me in there for 30 or 40 minutes in the dark, where I couldn’t even move my elbows out or move my head up. Well, a lot of people would panic with that. And I just said, “Okay. I’m hanging in here.”

Mike Blake: [00:14:16] “I’m doing this now.”

Lee Ellis: [00:14:16] And then, they put me in another vertical, it was like a locker in a gym. You walk in, you hang up the clothes. Well, they locked me up in there for a day or so. And I had to stand up, it’s about a-day-and-a-half and I just think about things to think about. And I could hear there was a guy down the hall from me crying, and I’m thinking, “Well, I’m not going to cry yet.”

Lee Ellis: [00:14:45] So, you know, I think as an air crew member, you’ve gone through both psychological and physical screening and you have a pretty strong ego. It takes a lot of confidence to fly a fighter. And I think the average age and the POWs was [inaudible], the long term guys was like 30, 31. And I just turned 24, so that’s why I was a kid there. But, you know, we were not 18 year olds or 19 year olds. We’d been out on our own. We’d been to a lot of training. I’d been through survival school, the one you just mentioned. I’ve been through water survival training. I’ve been through jungle survival training. So, all that builds you up and prepares you to be ready for very difficult situations.

Mike Blake: [00:15:35] So, you know, if you haven’t been there, I just don’t think you can imagine it, obviously. But you’re in a scenario under which, I mean, at some level, it has to be terrifying. You just don’t know what they’re going to do.

Lee Ellis: [00:15:52] Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah.

Mike Blake: [00:15:53] And your power is limited, to put it mildly. That’s sort of the whole point.

Lee Ellis: [00:15:59] I got a story about being terrified, if I can jump in here.

Mike Blake: [00:16:03] Please. I want to hear you and they want to hear you. Go.

Lee Ellis: [00:16:05] When I got to the first English speaker on the way to Hanoi, it was a holding camp. It’s a bamboo prison. They put you in leg irons and handcuffs or rope tied until they got enough of you there, four or five or six in a truck, and then take you on to Hanoi. And so, they had this one arm interrogator there who spoke very broken English. And I can’t remember, we all have names for all these guys, and I can’t remember his name now.

Lee Ellis: [00:16:33] But he asked me a question about the kind of airplane I was flying and where I was based out of. Well, he asked me what kind of airplane I was flying, and I wouldn’t tell him. But I saw he had my checklist over there behind him on the table. They’d picked it up when I jumped out of the airplane. And I said, “I’ll give you name, rank, service number, date of birth, answer no more questions.” And he just started screaming at me and he yelled at the guard behind me.

Lee Ellis: [00:17:04] There were a couple of guards there. And that guard – I’ve shoot rifles and shotguns – I heard him crank in a bullet, and he yelled at the guy, and the guy put it right up to the side of my head. He said, “You answer or I kill you now.” Well, I just got captured. I didn’t know whether he was truthful and honest and would. Later, I learned he probably wouldn’t have. But then, I didn’t know.

Lee Ellis: [00:17:31] So, I told him I was flying an F-4 Phantom. Well, he had my checklist there, so I didn’t really give him any. So, I answered three or four questions but I didn’t give him anything that was not obvious already or that he didn’t already know. I didn’t give him anything else. And so, I really felt bad about that. But I really didn’t feel like I had a choice. I was scared, by the way.

Mike Blake: [00:17:55] I mean, there’d be something wrong with you if you weren’t. So, when you’re in that situation – and that’s really a perfect example – at any point, they can just decide to put a bullet in you. There’s no recourse. That’s just it. How do you conceive of ways to resist when the power dynamic is so against you?

Lee Ellis: [00:18:18] I think you have to evaluate that. I make these kind of decisions all the time. I have to evaluate, is this worth me resisting? I have business partners. I have friends. I have clients. And I have to decide if this is worth me taking a stand. And most of the time it’s not, but sometimes it is. And so, if they say, “Well, I’m out of here.” Well, okay.

Lee Ellis: [00:18:53] Once you’ve been a POW for five-and-a-half years, you don’t worry about a lot of things that most people worry about day to day. When I came home, I never worried about getting promoted again. I just said, “I’m going to do my job. I’m going to do the very best I can. I will be the person I want to be. And if I get promoted, fine. And if I don’t, hey, that’s okay. I’m home. I’m better off than I was locked up, up there.”

Mike Blake: [00:19:21] So, in the moment as you think about, I guess, we would now almost call them microaggressions, if you will, even resisting the simplest, it must have been very frustrating to your captors because you’re resisting to comply with, even what to them, must have seemed like the simplest comment, the simplest task. In that moment, do you think of the consequences of resisting or do you have to kind of put that aside to give you the mettle to resist?

Lee Ellis: [00:19:51] Well, I think, Mike, the biggest issue here that we’re talking around is really character, honor, integrity. I think that’s where we need to clarify is what is my character, what I believe has integrity, what I believe is honorable. And then, at what level I’m willing to sacrifice for that, and how much risk am I willing to take. I mean, I battle this all the time because I’m a pretty opinionated person. And I see stuff on social media that I just want to jump in there. And I have to coach myself it’s not worth it right now. You’ll have another time at another level. This is not going to matter to hill of beans what you say in that social media. And they’re just cranking you up to respond.

Lee Ellis: [00:20:43] And so, one approach to this issue, from the higher level of character and integrity where you can sit down and talk with others who are on the other side and let’s work through this. I mean, our country was founded basically with two parties, because I think we need two parties, we need accountability. So, if one party holds the other one accountable to our Constitution and our values, then I think that’s a good thing. It helps keep us in line.

Lee Ellis: [00:21:11] Just like my wife and I, we kind of help keep each other in line. My business partners, my managing director, we sit down and talk about it. And I’ll say, “Well, I think we should do this.” And he said, “Well, I think that’s not a good idea.” And I say, “Well, tell me why.” And we analyze it. And, really, it’s a day to day battle for honor and character and integrity. And you’ve got to evaluate what is the risk versus reward, and is there a better place for me to play this battle.

Mike Blake: [00:21:43] Let me ask you this and I’m going to go off script here, because I don’t know you that well, but I’ve interacted with you enough to know that you’re a very positive guy. And I don’t know if you were brought in to the Hanoi Hilton that way or not, but you certainly emerged that way, or at least that’s the finished product that I’ve seen. Does positivity make you a more effective resister? Does it make you more effective than negativity?

Lee Ellis: [00:22:09] Absolutely, man. Absolutely. It does. You got to focus on the positive and be able to identify the negatives that creep in around you and how are you going to handle them in a positive way. Because I can get very negative, by the way. My personality is I don’t mind arguing. Because if I’m off base, I want you to show me the logic and I’ll get on your side, so I don’t mind that, and I can get a little critical. But the reality is, that doesn’t work very well for very long. And so, for me, I have to coach myself how can I take a positive approach to this where I show respect for the other person.

Lee Ellis: [00:22:54] Here’s the bottom line, the truth is every human being wants to be loved and cared for. They want to be accepted. In coaching leaders, I talk about, yes, you have to accomplish the mission. You have to get results. But you also have to connect with your people. You have to acknowledge their existence. You have to accept them for who they are. You have to affirm them on specifics. And you have to show them that you appreciate having them on your team.

Lee Ellis: [00:23:22] And when you do that, you know what’s going to happen? They’re going to believe in themselves, and they’re going to perform better, and they’re going to stay with you longer, and they’re going to grow more. Because now they’re less insecure and they’re more secure and they’re going to perform more healthily and more effectively. So, as a leader, I coach myself, I coach other leaders. Men, it’s probably hard for you. It is for a lot of us. But when you do it and intentional about it, it builds the culture that you want to be in.

Mike Blake: [00:23:57] Does it make a difference that you’re resisting in a group versus an individual?

Lee Ellis: [00:24:03] Oh, yeah.

Mike Blake: [00:24:04] The guy standing in front of the tank in Tiananmen Square in ’89 versus a whole group of protesters. And I guess maybe that’s why they separated you in the prison system.

Lee Ellis: [00:24:13] Yeah, it does. Camaraderie and teamwork and collaboration, that feeling of I’m not in this alone, it’s huge. That’s why we would take great risks to have that covert communication. And I was a good risk taker, so I would reach out to guys in solitary confinement. Now, I had people protecting me by watching, we called it clearing. They’d be looking through the cracks in the doors and listen out the back for a guard coming. And when the guard came, [coughs], they do like that or they’d bump the wall with their elbow. And we’d all do like this and act like we’re just snoozing there.

Lee Ellis: [00:24:50] But, yeah, it’s critical to be connected to others. You don’t want to fight this battle alone. Fighter pilots, we don’t ever want to fight alone.

Mike Blake: [00:25:02] Now, one of the issues of resisting – and we see this unfolding in Russia and Ukraine right now – is that when you resist, it’s not necessarily just you that suffers the consequences of your resistance, but others around you that may not want you to resist necessarily, that they can suffer. We’re seeing in Russia and Ukraine, if you are resisting the propaganda, the party line, or if you’re a soldier and you refuse to fight, it’s not just you that gets shot, but your family’s going to suffer. And that’s how they maintain leverage. That’s their system, unfortunately. You must have recognized also that there were sort of consequences to others, and this happens in business too. How do you think about that? How do you reconcile those things? Can you reconcile them?

Lee Ellis: [00:25:56] Going back to what I said earlier, you always have to evaluate what is the gain versus the loss. And sometimes the gain is good, what you want, but the loss may be greater. And so, you just have to back up and keep your mouth shut and wait until another time and another situation, maybe more evidence builds up or more people see the world the way you do. So, I think you have to evaluate that all the time.

Lee Ellis: [00:26:25] And going back to the community and the group, you know, I feel like I’m very confident about myself. But I know myself well enough that sometimes what I think is right and wise, it’s off a step. So, you got to have mentors, friends. And my wife, for instance, is one of those, in certain areas she say, “I don’t really think about that.” But I have business mentors that I reach out to when I’m going to make a decision where I know I’m too emotionally connected that I’m afraid I can’t make a wise decision, and I’ll say, “Let me run this by you and you tell me how you see it.” And then, I’ll sit there and listen. I’m not giving up my decision to them. I just want to hear is there something I’m missing that I need to know. So, I think that’s so important.

Mike Blake: [00:27:17] So, I want to pivot a little bit more to a more direct connection with business here. And you’re not just a former POW, I mean, you’re a successful, highly influential leadership trainer. So, I’d like to switch and talk about that a little bit. I’d like to start with, first of all, have you seen cases where, in fact, there are employees that do try to resist things that are happening in a company? And if so, what do companies do to try to break that resistance? If I’m thinking of resisting something in my company, for example, what are some tactics you see that management tries to implement to break that resistance?

Lee Ellis: [00:28:06] Well, that’s a little bit of a difficult one for me, because here’s what happens, most of the time, really good leaders bring me in. Bad leaders don’t ever bring in a leadership consultant. And so, most of the leaders I’ve worked with have been really good leaders that would listen, and they cared about their people, they’re mission focused but they cared about their people. So, I don’t have a lot of experience, and I’m sure I’ll think of something here in a minute.

Lee Ellis: [00:28:34] But I think life is that way. You have to constantly evaluate the risk versus reward in light of your character and your life purpose and your mission. And that’s why I say sometimes you’ve got to be able to discuss that with somebody else. Don’t do that just by yourself in secret. You’ve got to have somebody who can look at it slightly different, give you some feedback and discuss it, and take it around. And then, you make your decision about what you’re going to do.

Lee Ellis: [00:29:10] I think that really good companies, they realize that people are important and they listen to them. I was saying about this the other day, creativity in the POW Camp came from the bottom up. It didn’t come from a top down. Strategy comes from the top down. Creativity and innovation and practical fixes and money savers come from the bottom up. And so, leaders have to learn to build a culture where you can set the boundaries and the culture, and then let your people operate, let them go after it. And you have to really re-communicate those boundaries periodically. But it’s so much better because you’re going to have people take ownership and responsibility and be accountable at the lower levels, and that makes for a much better organization and work environment.

Mike Blake: [00:30:05] So, let me phrase the question a different way, because your point about good leadership teams is well taken. But for most people we report to somebody else. It’s rare. There are some people that don’t report to anybody else. You’re a sole proprietor and maybe you’ve raised no outside capital. Maybe you have no obligations to anybody else. But that’s sort of rare. But even successful leadership of companies may have boards to which they need to report. And there’s a resistance that may need to arise against an aggressive board, for example. Or there’s a resistance against a market trend. Or maybe there’s a resistance, for example, to manage quarterly earnings. Or there’s a resistance to “cut costs” that’s going to hurt people in your organization.

Mike Blake: [00:31:05] So, I think my last question was phrased badly. That’s a long preamble to reconstitute the question, in that, would you agree that good leaders are actually good resisters because they often have a lot of things they need to resist?

Lee Ellis: [00:31:21] Yes. I think so. But I think listening is a powerful way to actually resist.

Mike Blake: [00:31:27] Tell me more about that.

Lee Ellis: [00:31:30] Instead of just stomping your fist and saying, “No. We’re not doing that. Get out of here.” It tells you if they’re resisting that there’s something they don’t see that you see. They don’t understand and so clarifying over and over. You know, for all his good and bad, Jack Welch at G.E. used to say, “Everywhere I go, I preach the same sermon.” And he was saying over and over again what their mission was from the high levels and that sort of thing.

Lee Ellis: [00:32:01] As a leader, you have to continually clarify and re-clarify your mission, the boundaries of it, what your expectations are, and those kind of things. And when you come out with a new idea or change or you’re meeting resistance, then you probably need to listen to them and hear their reasons for resisting and then help them see why we can’t do that. And I think they’ll respect that. And they’re much more likely to fold up and stay with you for a while and support you. And then, you may reach a point and say, “Well, this is what we’re going to do, so you have a choice. You can join us and work with us or you can go somewhere else.”

Mike Blake: [00:32:47] So, in a collective resistance – and you sort of hinted at this at the start of the conversation – some people seem to have an endless capacity for resistance and others don’t. And I would imagine a fact of life is that people who are initially committed to the resistance are simply going to get broken. It simply just becomes too difficult and that individual just cannot summon the wherewithal to continue the resistance against the adverse consequences, call it the pressure that they’re facing.

Mike Blake: [00:33:30] I have two questions based on that. The first question is, I think everybody sort of feels like they’re reaching their breaking point. I’m sure that must have happened to you at some point. You might have felt like you’re reaching a breaking point. How do you see yourself to saying, “I’m reaching a breaking point, but I’m going to bend and not break”? How do you do that?

Lee Ellis: [00:33:50] Well, I think you have to sort it out in your head. And so, I thought of something while you were talking there and then I’ll come back to that, this will fit into it. When you go to someone who’s putting something on you and they’re your boss and you don’t like it, then I think you owe it to them to go sit down and talk to them and tell them why you don’t like it, why you don’t think it’s good for the company, or if it’s unethical.

Lee Ellis: [00:34:19] See, this could be a big issue here if they want you to do something that’s unethical. And you’ve got to evaluate that and have that discussion with them. And they say, “No. This is okay. We have to do this. We have to tell a lie. We have to make up stuff and put it out there,” which that’s happening a lot nowadays. Then, you have to decide.

Lee Ellis: [00:34:41] For me, the decision is, is it ethical, is it honorable? And if it’s not dishonorable and it’s not unethical, then I’m probably going to say, “Hey, this is your decision. If it works, great. I’m going to do it. I’m going to give it all I got. But if it fails, you take ownership. I’m going to do my best, but I don’t think it’s going to work.” But I’m going to do my best, you might even have to say that. You just say, “It’s ethical. It is your responsibility. If you want to decide to do that, I will support you. I’ll do my best.”

Lee Ellis: [00:35:17] And then, you’ve helped them the best way you can and now it’s the leader’s responsibility. If it fails, they can come back to you and say, “Hey, this was your fault. I told you it wasn’t a good idea but I’ve done my best to make it happen and it didn’t work.”

Lee Ellis: [00:35:34] I think that’s very important, and I do that. I’ve gone to leaders and said, “I don’t think it’s a good idea. I think we ought to do this.” And they said, “Well, I think we ought to do this.” And I said, “Well, you’re the boss. Yes, sir. We’re going to go do it. I’m going to do it to the very best of my ability, because it’s not illegal, it’s not unethical. And you’re the boss and you own this decision.”

Mike Blake: [00:35:59] And I think what you’re really getting at is, everybody sort of has has a line, at least most people have a line that you’re not going to cross. And in many of our professions, we have rules, regulations, or just professional standards that try to give clarity to that line.

Mike Blake: [00:36:19] But what I want to get to – and this may be an unfair question. If it is, we’ll just move on – I’m close to the Ukraine situation because I lived there for a couple of years. I spent a lot of time in that part of the world. I still have friends that have either fled or they’re now serving in Ukrainian military. And one of the issues they’re now facing is collaborators. You know, the Russians have come in. There’s new management in town. And the Russians, as is widely known, when they say you’re under new management by the Russians, that is not good news. They’re not a kinder, gentler management.

Mike Blake: [00:37:01] And I think about the people that have chosen to collaborate, they’re faced with a horrible choice. And some people are breaking. Some people may be welcoming them. Maybe they want the Russians all along. But at least some subset of them just looked around and said, “You know what? My resistance makes no difference if I’m dead and my family’s dead, so I may as well play along. I may as well ‘work within the system.'” And I’m sure that sentiment must have come up among at least some POWs. How do you react to that? How do you combat that kind of mentality? Or is it unfair to call it a rationalization?

Lee Ellis: [00:37:49] Well, I think we did not have to face a decision where our family was going to be involved. But we did have faced decisions – the leaders did – where their people were going to be tortured or whatever. And so, I think we all knew what the effort was to do your very best. And some people are tougher than others. Some people could draw that. Some people could go five days. Some people could go five hours. And some people couldn’t go much more than five minutes. That’s just the way human beings are different.

Lee Ellis: [00:38:29] And so, our leaders learned to accept that. And they knew if the person had done their best and was committed to that, then whatever that came out, they were going to be okay with. So, there are some people, if you’re talking about killing your family, that would be a little bit different than other decisions. If I thought it’s going to kill my family, the first thing I’d do is I would retreat and get with some more people and get an army together and go back and defend and whatever, you know.

Lee Ellis: [00:38:59] But I think you’ve got to measure – I keep going back risk versus reward – what is at risk and what’s the reward if we come through this? What’s the right thing to do here? And how much risk do we have to take it?

Lee Ellis: [00:39:20] And going back to the one where I tell somebody I don’t think we ought to do this and they decide to do it, I’m going to support them 100 percent. But if that happens a lot, I’m probably going to start looking for a new job somewhere else. I’m going to be leaving. And I think good people are going to leave. I mean, it always showed, bad leaders, they run all the good people off. And the poor performers hang around because they’re afraid they can’t get a job somewhere else. Now, that may be changing with young people today because they don’t care. “Mom and dad will take care of me. If I don’t make it, I’ll just go home live with mom and dad for a while.”

Mike Blake: [00:39:57] Yeah. There may be some of that. So, I want to bring it back to sort of a different kind of discussion, but I had a thought and I’d love to hear your reaction to it. Is there a connection between resistance and radicalization? And I’m not even sure what I mean by that, but going back to my introductory remarks where America has become an angry place. And I have a theory that one of the reasons it’s become an angry place is that radicalization and resistance are being confused. They’re being confounded with one another. Do you have to be a radical to be a resister, I guess? Or when you’re a resister, does that automatically make you a radical?

Lee Ellis: [00:40:55] Well, I think that’s the natural reaction. Yes. I think what we need are people that can rise above that. You know, I’ve been thinking for five or six years because I pay attention to a lot of this stuff, how good it would be to get some senior leaders from all areas together – we changed our brand, our company is still Leadership Freedom, but we changed our brand to Leading With Honor in 2012 when the book came out – if we could have an honor group come together from all parties all around the country to talk about what does honor look like, and how does it serve our country right now, how can we disagree and work together, and sit down and listen to each other and focus on certain things.

Lee Ellis: [00:41:46] And that would be a great idea, I know a lot of people, CEOs and generals and admirals and these kind of people, but I hadn’t had time to do that. But what’s happening is that we’ve been radicalized primarily through social media. If we didn’t have social media – I don’t know if you’ve seen that movie about the social dilemma about the tech, Silicon Valley. And they’ve got a lot of these programmers on there who got paid to build programs that would make a lot of money. And they talk about when we did this, we did not write this to divide the country.

Lee Ellis: [00:42:26] But now, if we don’t change something, we’re going to be in a civil war within 30 years because this is going to continue to multiply and divide us, because the more we can separate people into groups, the more money we make. “You like this? I got other people coming in.” And so, the truth is, if we don’t somehow learn to sit down and work through the important issues, the radical is going to increase.

Lee Ellis: [00:42:56] Now, here’s the other truth. You know I can prove to you if I had to indirectly, that Russia and China appointed millions, if not billions, into social media and other places to divide us. They’re funding different organizations to. They don’t care. They just want to divide us. Obviously, they would like for the socialists to take over. But they just want to divide us and that opens it up for the socialists to take over. And whether it’s race, gender, politics, anything they can do to divide us.

Lee Ellis: [00:43:35] I have a friend here in Atlanta who was a KGB agent who defected. He’s a brilliant guy who grew up in East Germany. He said, “You know, growing up in East Germany, I just hated the West because they were so evil and the U.S. was the most evil because that’s what I was taught. That’s what I heard on the radio. That’s what I saw on T.V.”

Lee Ellis: [00:43:56] And that’s the people in Russia and Communist countries, they control the media and the message. In Hanoi, we had propaganda three times a day, morning, noon, and night. The people in Vietnam, even if you work in the rice field, they had a speaker that would blast the propaganda to you over the rice fields. It was incredible how propaganda is intended.

Lee Ellis: [00:44:22] In the schools, they were taught certain things. I was talking to a young fellow who’s a guard, English speaker though – most of them were English speaker – he spoke a little bit, and we were talking about something. He said, “Yeah. World War II, Japan surrendered when Russia declared war on them. Within five days, Russia saved us. Russia won World War II.” Because that’s what he’d been taught. Well, Russia didn’t join the war until after we dropped the big bombs over there. And Japan was ready to surrender. But he had never been taught that.

Lee Ellis: [00:44:56] See, it’s all how you share that information and get people over to your side. And the bottom line, all of this is power. What’s going on right now is all about power. I want to be more in charge politically, financially, whatever it is. I want to be more. I want more power.

Mike Blake: [00:45:18] You know, that reminds me of my first couple of apartments, my first one in Minsk, and then in Kiev a couple of years later, they are both Soviet built apartments. And in those old Soviet apartments, they always had a radio built into the kitchen. And you could not turn the radio off, you could turn the volume down. But the only way to turn it off is to rip the damn thing out of the wall.

Lee Ellis: [00:45:43] That’s what they do in Communist countries.

Mike Blake: [00:45:45] It was fascinating that it went even to that level.

Lee Ellis: [00:45:48] Yeah. Yeah.

Mike Blake: [00:45:50] I’m talking with Lee Ellis. And the topic is, Should I resist? So, you mentioned something that I think is maybe an interesting connection. I don’t know, maybe it’s totally dumb. But it seems to me there’s actually potentially a connection between communication and resistance. And I think there are two dimensions to that. One dimension is, as you talked about before with your fellow POWs, your ability to communicate to create sort of a cohesive strength –

Lee Ellis: [00:46:24] Essentials.

Mike Blake: [00:46:25] Yeah. But, also, I think the opportunity to communicate with your oppressor, for lack of a better term – there’s a better word than that, I just can’t think of it right now – the person who wants to make you resist, the opportunity to communicate with them and have some constructive communication of some kind probably tends to defuse resistance a little bit.

Lee Ellis: [00:46:51] Probably what?

Mike Blake: [00:46:52] It tends to defuse resistance a little bit, make it less, make you want to resist less if you can actually have a conversation. For example, you probably couldn’t even talk to most of your captors, at least not initially, unless you learn Vietnamese from them.

Lee Ellis: [00:47:06] Yeah, sometimes. But what it really was for us, they did not understand the subtleties of the English language. So, we would pull their chain a little bit if we could. We just tried to outsmart them. Even in those conversations, we were generally trying to outsmart them. Now, if you had just been tortured and you were suffering, they would use the good guy, bad guy.

Lee Ellis: [00:47:37] So, the bad guy is threatening you. You know, “We’ll do this and kill you. We’re going to wear you out. We’ll blah, blah, blah.” And then, the good guy comes in and said, “Oh, I’m so sorry they’re doing this to you. Just fill out these two pages, I’ll get them off your back,” you know, that kind of thing. And so, we were always alert for that sort of thing. And most of our communications were either we were telling them the way we saw the world or we were laying some groundwork to pull their chain later.

Mike Blake: [00:48:12] Lee, this has been a great conversation, but I got to be respectful of your time, even though I could do this for another three hours but that’s not fair to you. There’s a very good chance we didn’t get to questions that our listeners would have liked us to cover, or we didn’t stand up long enough. If somebody wants to contact you for more information about your leadership services or your perspectives on leadership, what’s the best way to do so?

Lee Ellis: [00:48:34] Just go to leadingwithhonor.com, and we have a place there where they can just check in and we’ll follow up directly right there.

Lee Ellis: [00:48:40] I want to say one more thing in closing out. We have an honor code we developed in 2014. It’s free. It’s a nice, colorful graphic, one page. It has seven articles on it. I’ll send you one, and you could put it out there on your website if you want to.

Lee Ellis: [00:49:01] But when you battle with that honor code to be the person that you think you ought to be and others ought to be, it’s probably one of the most helpful things. Like the code of conduct was for the POWs, the honor code can be that for us. And when we work to be the honorable person, then it takes away a lot. It gives us the ability to fight off a lot of this temptation to be sarcastic and demonizing of others, and helps us to see what’s a respectful, honorable thing to do here. I may not like you, but I need to be able to show you respect, because being disrespectful is probably not going to help at all, and it’s just not who I am. I need to fight to be the person I am to treat others with respect.

Mike Blake: [00:49:51] Well, I can’t any better than that, so I’m not going to try. That’s going to wrap it up for today’s program. And I’d like to thank Lee Ellis so much for sharing his expertise with us.

Mike Blake: [00:50:01] We will be exploring a new topic each week, so please tune in so that when you’re faced with your next business decision, you have clear vision when making it. If you enjoy these podcasts, please consider leaving a review with your favorite podcast aggregator. It helps people find us so that we can help them.

Mike Blake: [00:50:15] If you would like to engage with me on social media with my Chart of the Day and other content, I’m on LinkedIn as myself and @unblakeable on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram. Also, check out my LinkedIn Group called Unblakeable’s Group That Doesn’t Suck. Once again, this is Mike Blake. Our sponsor is Brady Ware & Company. And this has been the Decision Vision podcast.

 

Tagged With: Brady Ware & Company, Brady Ware Arpeggio, Decision Vision, Leadership, Leadership Freedom, Leading With Honor, Lee Ellis, Mike Blake, prisoner of war, resist, resistance, survival training, Vietnam veterans

Workplace MVP LIVE from SHRM 2022: Jess Miller-Merrell, Workology

July 20, 2022 by John Ray

Workology
Minneapolis St. Paul Studio
Workplace MVP LIVE from SHRM 2022: Jess Miller-Merrell, Workology
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Workology

Workplace MVP LIVE from SHRM 2022: Jess Miller-Merrell, Workology

Jess Miller-Merrell, Founder of Workology, joined host Jamie Gassmann in the R3 Continuum booth at SHRM 2022, offering findings from her latest research. Jess discussed how she’s looking at data around HR titles, the eleven different priorities HR leaders are focused on, the challenge of managing the top priorities, how Workology serves these professionals with training and development, and much more. Workology continues to collect data on HR trends from leaders. Jess encouraged anyone interested to take the survey which is available here.

Workplace MVP is underwritten and presented by R3 Continuum and produced by the Minneapolis-St.Paul Studio of Business RadioX®.

This show was originally broadcast live from the 2022 SHRM Annual Conference held at the New Orleans Convention Center in New Orleans, Louisiana.

Jess Miller-Merrell, SHRM-SCP, SPHR, Founder, Workology

Jess Miller-Merrell, SHRM-SCP, SPHR, Founder, Workology

Jessica is a former executive HR leader turned thought leader and entrepreneur focused on sharing resources and stories to help elevate the workplace, employees, and business leaders. Jessica has spoken at global events including SHRM’s Annual Conference, SXSW, Working Mother Magazine’s Conference, and HR Tech Fest. She’s recognized by Forbes Magazine as a top 50 social media influencer and featured by The Economist in their C-Suite series for HR. Jessica’s newest book available in Fall 2022 is Digitizing Talent: Creative Strategies for the Digital Recruiting Age published by SHRM.

Jessica is also a Master certified trainer in Neuro-Linguistic Programming (NLP), a psychological approach that involves analyzing strategies used by successful individuals and applying them to reach a personal goal.

Jessica Miller-Merrell is the founder of Workology, a digital resource that reaches more than a half million HR and workplace leaders each month. Jessica lives in Austin, TX, with her husband, daughter, and an assortment of furry family members. She is the co-owner of Duo Works, an Austin-based co-working and shared office space

LinkedIn | Twitter

Workology

The team at Workology have made it their mission to elevate HR and workplace leaders everywhere with more training, support, and resources to help them do their jobs better. They reach nearly 1 MILLION leaders monthly. The team of wordsmiths, course creators, HR experts, and marketers offer training and learning to the HR community AND we help their HR tech and service provider clients with content creation, demand generation, market insights, and support.

Company website | LinkedIn | Instagram | Twitter| YouTube

About Workplace MVP

Every day, around the world, organizations of all sizes face disruptive events and situations. Within those workplaces are everyday heroes in human resources, risk management, security, business continuity, and the C-suite. They don’t call themselves heroes though. On the contrary, they simply show up every day, laboring for the well-being of employees in their care, readying the workplace for and planning responses to disruption. This show, Workplace MVP, confers on these heroes the designation they deserve, Workplace MVP (Most Valuable Professionals), and gives them the forum to tell their story. As you hear their experiences, you will learn first-hand, real-life approaches to readying the workplace, responses to crisis situations, and overcoming challenges of disruption. Visit our show archive here.

Workplace MVP Host Jamie Gassmann

Jamie Gassmann, Host, “Workplace MVP”

In addition to serving as the host to the Workplace MVP podcast, Jamie Gassmann is the Director of Marketing at R3 Continuum (R3c). Collectively, she has more than fourteen years of marketing experience. Across her tenure, she has experience working in and with various industries including banking, real estate, retail, crisis management, insurance, business continuity, and more. She holds a Bachelor of Science Degree in Mass Communications with special interest in Advertising and Public Relations and a Master of Business Administration from Paseka School of Business, Minnesota State University.

R3 Continuum

R3 Continuum is a global leader in workplace behavioral health and security solutions. R3c helps ensure the psychological and physical safety of organizations and their people in today’s ever-changing and often unpredictable world. Through their continuum of tailored solutions, including evaluations, crisis response, executive optimization, protective services, and more, they help organizations maintain and cultivate a workplace of wellbeing so that their people can thrive. Learn more about R3c at www.r3c.com.

Company website | LinkedIn | Facebook | Twitter

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: [00:00:02] Broadcasting live from SHRM 2022 at the New Orleans Convention Center, it’s time for Workplace MVP. Brought to you by R3 Continuum, a global leader in helping workplaces thrive during disruptive times. Now, here’s your host.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:00:19] Hi, everyone. Your host, Jamie Gassmann here with – goodness sakes. It’s been a long day already – at SHRM 2022’s Expo Hall. And I am here at our sponsor, R3 Continuum’s booth. And with me is Jess Miller-Merrell. Welcome to the show.

Jess Miller-Merrell: [00:00:36] I’m so excited to be back. We’re like conference besties now.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:00:39] Yes, we are. And LinkedIn besties. We’ve known each other for a while socially on social media.

Jess Miller-Merrell: [00:00:44] Agreed. Agreed.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:00:46] So, just remind us a little bit of your background just for any listeners that might be listening to this first hand, because I know you run Workology, so share what that is and kind of talk to us a little bit.

Jess Miller-Merrell: [00:00:55] So, Workology is a training and learning destination for, really, the entire human resources industry. We help HR professionals be their best selves with a lot of digital resources and training. And we also help HR technology companies and vendors, people who are in the industry that aren’t necessarily practitioners, learn and understand about the HR space. Because – shocking news – it’s incredibly complex what we do and it only has gotten more complex in, you know, this thing called the COVID.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:01:30] Yes. And I know what we want to talk about today that I think is really exciting because any time you’ve got research and data that can help business leaders, especially an HR leader, to make some decisions or kind of know what might be coming is always exciting and really useful. So, you’ve done some research. Tell us a little bit about that.

Jess Miller-Merrell: [00:01:49] I have. So, I’m such a nerd about just our industry. I absolutely love this space. I’ve had a podcast for now eight years, but in 2020, when we were all buckled down in our homes, I started interviewing heads of HR on the podcast for a series called the CHRO Podcast Series over with Workology. And so, what I decided was, like, I needed more information than just anecdotal interviews with CHROs, which we have now 50 of these interviews.

Jess Miller-Merrell: [00:02:23] So, I launched a survey, and so it’s called HR Benchmark Survey. And if you’re like, “Wow. This is cool. What the heck is this?” hrbenchmarksurvey.com is where to go. And there are 30 questions. It is geared towards heads of HR and senior HR leaders for them to let the community know about what is happening in their world as an HR leader. I think we see each other at events, but I want to know, not one on one, but with many different responses, as many as possible, what are the trends? What are we seeing in HR? And how is our job, our responsibilities transforming? Because it really, really is.

Jess Miller-Merrell: [00:03:03] We’re leading executive meetings because of COVID and all the changes that have happened. And I want to make sure that we keep being a part of these conversations. Because you and I know working in the HR space, it’s incredibly important what we do. It’s not always understood fully the impact we have. So, that’s what the survey and the research I’ve done is all about.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:03:25] Yeah, I love that. I always kind of say you’re kind of secretly the heroes in the workplace that nobody knew was the hero. You’re helping with so many different things. I know I consider my HR team definitely my heroes because they help me do a better job as a leader.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:03:40] So, in looking at COVID, I think would you agree, and maybe your research has told you this, that more organizations due to the ways they had to shift and pivot with the changes with COVID, in response to it but then also now kind of coming into this endemic they’re talking about, the changes to the work environment, do you think that HR is being seen in a different light in terms of value than ever before?

Jess Miller-Merrell: [00:04:07] Anecdotally, yes. We are, like I said, leading conversations. And I do think all the economic changes and the shifts, and then the Omicron coming in have really made us have to be incredibly nimble and flexible. And businesses with teams of people and leaders aren’t always those things. But, now in this current environment, for whatever is coming next, we have to continue that. And my hope is that we learn from the mistakes, the failures. Those are all moments of opportunity for us to grow.

Jess Miller-Merrell: [00:04:43] And as an entrepreneur, as a business owner, I think about that for myself. Like, when something doesn’t go right, it’s an opportunity to learn for next time, for the next time we launch a new product or a new conversation that I have, like in a podcast interview. Like, I wasn’t always great at podcast interviews. My first one over eight years ago on my podcast, the Workology podcast, not great. So, it takes time and you have to learn from each lesson, there’s a lesson there. And I think that’s what we have learned from this is we have to be prepared for the unexpected.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:05:16] Yeah. Like the silver lining in it. So, let’s dive into the research a little bit. So, I know you’ve got some results, you know, what were some of the findings you gathered from that research?

Jess Miller-Merrell: [00:05:26] So, for the nerdy HR geek in me, I really just wanted to know what is important to HR leaders. And so, we asked a lot of different questions. I had 30 different questions on there. But I asked about their teams, their organizations, how big they were, what their job title was. Which, for me, I really wanted to understand why are there two different job titles. For a senior HR person, there’s typically a chief people officer or a VP of HR – well, there’s a third – or the chief HR officer. What does that mean exactly? And is this a new position? Is this a new title? What’s changing?

Jess Miller-Merrell: [00:06:04] So, the majority of our respondents, which we had 457, identified as a VP of human resources, primarily. We had a number of chief people, officers. Of course, we had some chief HR officers. But those are really the majority of the titles. There was also like a VP of talent and management, which I thought was kind of interesting from the survey results. But I think that’s what makes it challenging for selling in our industry, number one, because everybody has a different job title. And then, connecting with the right person who is actually the head of human resources.

Jess Miller-Merrell: [00:06:42] I was also really interested in the HR to employee ratio. I’m still working on that data because I want to be able to see, are there differences in verticals or segments or company sizes. So, the nerd in me is like, “Yes. The more responses I get, the better.”

Jess Miller-Merrell: [00:06:59] One of the really interesting parts of the research was initiatives, and I’m interested in seeing how this changes over time. But we found, the HR responses in the survey said that they have 11 different initiatives or priorities for HR. And if I think about my day and what I try to do as an HR leader, 11 sounds like a lot. How do you manage all those things? So, when I am communicating this information to the CEO and I’m interested to see how this evolves over time, but there are 11 priorities that the average HR leader is focused on.

Jess Miller-Merrell: [00:07:36] So, if you’re focusing on 25, compared to this information that we have here, you have a lot more three times, almost, the priorities, but they’re very vast. We have talent. We have recruiting. We have retention. We have upskilling. We have payroll processing. All these different things, and that’s really one of the biggest challenges of the HR role is it is so diverse, you have to be an expert in so many different areas. In fact, 11.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:08:04] Yeah. That’s crazy. And not to mention like the day job, right? Eleven sounds like it’s just the projects that they’re working through, goodness sakes.

Jess Miller-Merrell: [00:08:12] Yeah. Because then you have the individualized thing. So, maybe one of your top priorities is retention, but within retention you might have three or four different projects that you’re focused on. Maybe you’re launching some pulse surveys, maybe you’re doing some skip level interviews, or some different programs. How do we manage and balance all those things?

Jess Miller-Merrell: [00:08:31] I really think that HR leaders are really super secret project managers because you really have to be able to organize yourself, your team, and then all the other members who are involved in the organization who are part of these programs. Because it’s not just HR who’s doing the things, it is the frontline managers who are really executing the plans and the programs that we are putting together.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:08:55] Yeah. That’s amazing. So, now, this is the first time you’ve done the research, are you looking to do this kind of on an annual basis so that people can see trending reports?

Jess Miller-Merrell: [00:09:04] So, I want to do quarterly. Because I feel like if COVID has taught me anything, it’s that we have to be flexible. So, this is done quarterly. My goal is for us to have as many responses that we can receive, which is one of the reasons why I was excited to be on the podcast, because I need your help. I need everybody’s help to help contribute, because the more people we have to complete the survey, the more information I have to share, and the better our data and results will be. So, we’ll be doing it quarterly.

Jess Miller-Merrell: [00:09:35] I want to just go back for just a second. I talked about the 11 initiative, so there’s four primary, this is right now. I’m so excited to see how this changes next quarter for us. The number one initiative is onboarding, which is not surprising because we’re hiring all these people. We’ve had a lot of turnover, the Great Resignation. The next one is culture and employee engagement. Also, not surprising. But then, number three is recruiting. And then, our fourth one is employee experience.

Jess Miller-Merrell: [00:10:09] So, I feel like HR really has, in the top four anyway, there’s a foot in a different area. Like, we’re on the culture retention side, but then, “Oh. We have to hire all these people.” So, how do we do all these things? And then, upskilling is also very high on the list, too. So, it’s very retention and recruiting focused for us right now.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:10:30] And it’s so interesting and I love hearing the whole employee experience, because I’ve heard a lot about that lately. You know, just creating those work environments that makes it hard for an employee to leave. And so, your data seems reflecting very similar to that kind of thinking of I need to recruit these people, but I also need to make sure I create a great experience where I can retain them at the same time.

Jess Miller-Merrell: [00:10:56] I call it The Leaky Bucket Syndrome, really, because we are filling up a bucket with water and there is always a hole, and that’s the turnover that we’re having in our organization. So, with the Great Resignation, our hole was very, very big, and it still might be. I think a lot of people are going to jobs, and then six months in saying, “Oh. This wasn’t the right place for me.”

Jess Miller-Merrell: [00:11:20] And I have a number of friends who are returning back to their original organization, so they are boomerang employees. Or they have made some choices and they’ve said, “Okay. My priorities have shifted even more. These are the kind of things I do want in an employer. I’m going to go over here to this other place now.”

Jess Miller-Merrell: [00:11:38] And HR people are switching jobs too. A number of our survey respondents, a very high number, are less than a year in the role. And, frankly, based on my LinkedIn right now, I think that so many people have changed jobs and they are less than six months in. I don’t even know the number of congratulations I send out every day for new people in the space who are in these chief HR officer roles is so many.

Jess Miller-Merrell: [00:12:08] And I feel like if you’re having turnover in that head of HR role, there is really something serious with your organization that you need to take some reflection. Because if you can’t retain the person who’s supposed to be in charge of onboarding, retention, employee experience, et cetera, et cetera, how are you going to be able to retain any of your workforce?

Jamie Gassmann: [00:12:28] Yeah. You can’t. I mean, your HR leader kind of helps to set the tone of that culture in a way. I mean, it starts at the top. I mean, it’s all executive leadership. But your HR people drive a lot of that.

Jess Miller-Merrell: [00:12:39] And we’re the ones who are having those conversations with the executive team and reminding them about these things. Yes, I think every leader should be responsible for turnover and culture. But we are the keepers of those metrics and information in those programs, really.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:12:56] So, in looking at your research, if somebody wanted to get access to the research or to get access to Workology, how do they do that?

Jess Miller-Merrell: [00:13:06] Well, just Workology in general is really easy, it’s workology.com. And I have over 8,000 published resources there on the website. I’ve been doing this a little while. We really shine for online training in the area of HR certification and HR personal development. So, you can go to workology.com for that information. If you’re like, “Wow. This is great. I want to know more information about the survey,” the best place to go is hrbenchmarksurvey.com.

Jess Miller-Merrell: [00:13:39] One of the interesting things that I’m seeing HR leaders who take the surveys – you have to complete the survey and then we’re sending you a copy of the results. So, complete that and then we’ll get you the information – a lot of our HR pros who have access to report and the preliminary data have been using this to have conversations with their executive team about, “Here’s how my HR department needs to be set up or here’s what my peers are doing on their HR teams.”

Jess Miller-Merrell: [00:14:05] It’s really important for me to make sure that we are still leading these conversations long after COVID is in the rearview mirror. So, this data is designed for us to help make that happen, because I don’t want to hear more about HR trying to get a seat at the table. We are at the table and I want us to be able to stay there.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:14:23] At the table and now have the data to help backup what you’ve been saying and doing.

Jess Miller-Merrell: [00:14:27] Absolutely. Absolutely.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:14:29] Fantastic. Amazing. Well, you heard it here, check out workology.com and definitely get that HR Benchmark Survey. Thank you so much for stopping by, Jess. It’s always a pleasure to see you.

Jess Miller-Merrell: [00:14:41] It is. I love this conference. I love that you all do the podcast here at the conference. I think it’s fantastic and it’s such a great way to get to know you and the Continuum team better.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:14:51] Yeah. Thank you so much. Appreciate it.

Outro: [00:14:56] Thank you for joining us on Workplace MVP. R3 Continuum is a proud sponsor of this show, and is delighted to celebrate most valuable professionals who work diligently to secure safe workplaces where employees can thrive.

 

 

Tagged With: Chief People Officer, HR Benchmark Survey, Jess Miller-Merrell, R3 Continuum, SHRM 2022, Vice President of HR, Workology, Workplace MVP

Dr. Everette Bannister, Family Tree Animal Clinic

July 20, 2022 by John Ray

Dr. Everette Bannister, Family Tree Animal Clinic
North Fulton Business Radio
Dr. Everette Bannister, Family Tree Animal Clinic
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Dr. Everette Bannister

Dr. Everette Bannister, Family Tree Animal Clinic (North Fulton Business Radio, Episode 476)

Veterinarian Dr. Everette Bannister, Owner of Family Tree Animal Clinic, was host John Ray’s guest on this episode of North Fulton Business Radio. After several years of experience at two different veterinary clinics, Dr. Bannister opened his own practice several years ago and specifically chose Milton. He shared his journey in veterinary medicine, his experience, his approach to high-touch client care, what sets Family Tree apart, tips for both dog and cat owners, and much more.

North Fulton Business Radio is broadcast from the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® inside Renasant Bank in Alpharetta.

Family Tree Animal Clinic

Family Tree Animal Clinic is a small animal clinic in Milton, GA.

Our mission is to strengthen the human-animal bond by consistently providing unmatched care to all pet companions and their families in the communities in which they serve while upholding the Gold Standard of veterinary medicine. “Together on the Journey of Care”

Company website | Facebook | Twitter

Dr. Everette Bannister, Owner & Veterinarian, Family Tree Animal Clinic

Dr. Everette Bannister, Owner & Veterinarian, Family Tree Animal Clinic

Dr. Everette Bannister is proud to be a part of the FTAC family since its inception. After finishing his clinical year at the University of Georgia and graduating from Ross University in 2007, Dr. Bannister has dedicated his career to strengthening the human-animal bond by focusing his passion on educating companion owners on preventative care, practicing internal medicine, and performing advanced dental and surgical procedures.

During his free time, he enjoys relaxing with his wife, daughter, their pet Ocean, playing the bass guitar, reading, and community outreach events.

LinkedIn

Questions and Topics in this Interview:

  • Tell me about yourself
  • What’s your vet journey? How long have you been in business?
  • Why Milton?
  • Why is Family Tree Animal Clinic different?
  • What do you do best?
  • What does the future hold for Family Tree Animal Clinic?

North Fulton Business Radio is hosted by John Ray and broadcast and produced from the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® inside Renasant Bank in Alpharetta. You can find the full archive of shows by following this link. The show is available on all the major podcast apps, including Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google, Amazon, iHeart Radio, Stitcher, TuneIn, and others.

RenasantBank

 

Renasant Bank has humble roots, starting in 1904 as a $100,000 bank in a Lee County, Mississippi, bakery. Since then, Renasant has grown to become one of the Southeast’s strongest financial institutions with over $13 billion in assets and more than 190 banking, lending, wealth management and financial services offices in Mississippi, Alabama, Tennessee, Georgia and Florida. All of Renasant’s success stems from each of their banker’s commitment to investing in their communities as a way of better understanding the people they serve. At Renasant Bank, they understand you because they work and live alongside you every day.

 

Special thanks to A&S Culinary Concepts for their support of this edition of North Fulton Business Radio. A&S Culinary Concepts, based in Johns Creek, is an award-winning culinary studio, celebrated for corporate catering, corporate team building, Big Green Egg Boot Camps, and private group events. They also provide oven-ready, cooked from scratch meals to go they call “Let Us Cook for You.” To see their menus and events, go to their website or call 678-336-9196.

Tagged With: A&S Culinary Concepts, Dr. Everette Bannister, Family Tree Animal Clinic, Milton, North Fulton Business Radio, renasant bank, Small animal veterinarian, veterinarian

Ed Foye, Discount Waste, Inc., and All Children, Inc.

July 19, 2022 by John Ray

Discount Waste
Business Beat
Ed Foye, Discount Waste, Inc., and All Children, Inc.
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Discount Waste

Frazier & Deeter’s Business Beat: Ed Foye, Discount Waste, Inc., and All Children, Inc.

The founder of Discount Waste, Inc., Ed Foye, was Roger Lusby’s guest on Business Beat. He founded the company from nothing in 1999 and has grown it into a nationwide company. In addition, he is heavily involved in work with All Children, Inc., the non-profit he founded to help the poorest disabled children in orphanages in the poorest countries. Ed talked about the construction industry, the ways Discount Waste retains its talent, the life event that turned his heart towards giving back, his foundation, the ways other companies can get involved, and much more.

Business Beat is presented by Alpharetta CPA firm Frazier & Deeter and is produced by the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX®

Discount Waste, Inc.

Discount Waste, Inc. manages solid waste removal and recycling for customers nationwide.

Their customers rely on them to help define the best possible solutions. They take pride in being able to help customers identify their specific needs and work hard to implement services tailored to each and every situation.

Discount Waste has provided open top dumpsters for small one-night projects as well as services for customers with hundreds of locations. No job is too small or too large when it comes to satisfying the needs of our customers.

Their customer base continues to grow and their business has seen significant year-over-year growth.

Discount Waste’s growth is directly attributed to the hard work and dedication of each employee to provide the best possible services to each customer.

For information on how Discount Waste, Inc. can service your needs, please contact them or fill out a request a quote form. They keep adding services for you to make your project smoother and more cost-effective. They will be glad to assist you.

Discount Waste believes companies have a responsibility to address social issues such as poverty, poor health, lack of education and more. They practice Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) and choose to make a difference in the lives of less fortunate children.

Their model for corporate social investment is AC3. All Children deserve a voice. All Communities deserve a future. All Companies need a mission to serve. This straightforward model points the way for like-minded companies to give back to those in need.

Their actions incorporate the company’s values of Compassion, Integrity, Service, and Responsibility. These values are reflected in their daily actions, interactions with customers, and those that they seek to help.

Discount Waste supports issues impacting children’s lives in less developed countries with limited welfare services. This year Discount Waste along with All Children, Inc. have supported more than 2,100 children with:

  • Medical Care – Children die needlessly when aid and vaccinations are so easily available but not provided
  • Nutrition – Without proper nourishment, the body and mind cannot grow and prosper
  • Education – The cycle of despair will continue without this opportunity to achieve new heights
  • Shelter – Children abandoned on the streets have no voice and no future

Discount Waste proudly supports allchildren.org. Change will happen when companies, individuals, and nonprofits collaborate to create long-lasting results.

Company website | LinkedIn | Facebook

All Children, Inc.

All Children, Inc. is the vision of founder Ed Foye, CEO of Discount Waste, Inc. As a teenager he survived a life threatening car accident. He had to learn how to walk, talk and complete everyday tasks all over again. With the support of his family and friends, he made a full recovery and went on to graduate from college. He knows that he was given the gift of life a second time.

As a successful entrepreneur and businessman, he has always embraced opportunities to give back to the community. In 2012 he and his wife Amy created a family foundation named International Children’s Foundation of Atlanta to fund special projects serving disabled children in third world countries.

In 2016 he founded All Children, Inc. to provide an opportunity for other like-minded companies and individuals to support children living in some of the poorest countries. So many children with disabilities have tremendous potential, but with no resources they are never given a chance.

All Children began with two projects aiding orphans in Kenya and the Philippines. By the end of the first year they were able to help fund five additional projects that included feeding hundreds of starving children, tuition for children too poor to go school, education for deaf children and medical assistance. All Children currently supports nine projects in four countries.

Currently more than 2,100 children from some of the poorest countries are receiving a second chance in life through All Children’s support. All children have value and through medical assistance, nutrition, education and shelter they will experience a better quality of life. Many of these children have the potential to be future leaders and will someday have their own stories to share.

YouTube | Instagram | LinkedIn | Facebook

Ed Foye, Founder and CEO, Discount Waste, Inc., and Founder of All Children, Inc.

Ed Foye, Founder and CEO, Discount Waste, Inc.

Former waste executive, Ed Foye, founded Discount Waste, Inc. in 1999. With over 20 years of experience in the waste industry, Mr. Foye has built a solid reputation as a national provider of solid waste removal and recycling services.

As a teenager, Ed Foye, CEO of Discount Waste, survived a life-threatening car accident. He had to learn how to walk, talk and complete basic everyday tasks again. With the support of his family and friends, he made a full recovery. Armed with a new perspective in life, Ed wants to help abandoned children in third-world countries have a better quality of life.

Frazier & Deeter

The Alpharetta office of Frazier & Deeter is home to a thriving CPA tax practice, a growing advisory practice and an Employee Benefit Plan Services group. CPAs and advisors in the Frazier & Deeter Alpharetta office serve clients across North Georgia and around the country with services such as personal tax planning, estate planning, business tax planning, business tax compliance, state and local tax planning, financial statement reviews, financial statement audits, employee benefit plan audits, internal audit outsourcing, cyber security, data privacy, SOX and other regulatory compliance, mergers and acquisitions and more. Alpharetta CPAs serve clients ranging from business owners and executives to large corporations.

Roger Lusby, Partner in Charge of Alpharetta office, Frazier & Deeter
Roger Lusby, Partner in Charge of the Alpharetta office of Frazier & Deeter

Roger Lusby, host of Frazier & Deeter’s Business Beat, is an Alpharetta CPA and Alpharetta Office Managing Partner for Frazier & Deeter. He is also a member of the Tax Department in charge of coordinating tax and accounting services for our clientele. His responsibilities include a review of a variety of tax returns with an emphasis in the individual, estate, and corporate areas. Client assistance is also provided in the areas of financial planning, executive compensation and stock option planning, estate and succession planning, international planning (FBAR, SFOP), health care, real estate, manufacturing, technology, and service companies.

You can find Frazier & Deeter on social media:

LinkedIn | Facebook | Twitter

An episode archive of Frazier & Deeter’s Business Beat can be found here.

 

Tagged With: All Children, allchildren.org, Business Beat, construction waste disposal, Discount Waste, Ed Foye, Frazier and Deeter, orphanages, Roger Lusby

Nicole Comis, Nicole Comis Coaching

July 19, 2022 by John Ray

Nicole Comis
North Fulton Business Radio
Nicole Comis, Nicole Comis Coaching
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Nicole Comis

Nicole Comis, Nicole Comis Coaching (North Fulton Business Radio, Episode 475)

Professional Certified Coach Nicole Comis joined host John Ray this edition of North Fulton Business Radio. Nicole shared what led her into coaching from a career in mortgage lending, why she emphasizes the power of mindset in her work with driven professionals, her coaching training that includes NLP, how she engages with clients, and much more.

North Fulton Business Radio is broadcast from the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® inside Renasant Bank in Alpharetta.

Nicole Comis, Professional Certified Coach, Nicole Comis Coaching

Nicole Comis, Professional Certified Coach, Nicole Comis Coaching

Nicole Comis works with driven professionals to achieve their BIG personal and professional goals. She works with her clients to gain clarity on what they want their future to look like, identify obstacles holding them back, face their fears, and create a plan to help them achieve goals that are outside of their comfort zone.

Her coaching practice incorporates her client’s whole life, not just their career, leading to a more balanced, productive, healthy, and fulfilling life.

Nicole is a graduate and certified coach from the Accomplishment Coaching Coaches Training Program and is accredited by the International Coach Federation (ICF) as a Professional Certified Coach (PCC). In addition, she’s a Certified Neuro-Linguistics Programming (NLP) Master Coach and a Master Practitioner of NLP, Time Line Therapy®, and Hypnotherapy.

Nicole’s high-energy, judgment-free, fun, no-BS approach helps men and women live a more balanced life with a career they love, fulfilling relationships, healthy well-being, and killer confidence!

Website | LinkedIn | Facebook | Twitter

Questions and Topics in this Interview:

  • Tell us a little more about coaching.
  • What’s the difference between coaching, consulting, and therapy?
  • What led you to become a coach?
  • Can you tell us a little about your training and certifications?
  • Who are you passionate about working with?
  • What is a common myth about coaching?
  • What is the most important lesson you’ve learned over your career?
  • What are some of the most meaningful goals that your clients have achieved?

North Fulton Business Radio is hosted by John Ray and broadcast and produced from the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® inside Renasant Bank in Alpharetta. You can find the full archive of shows by following this link. The show is available on all the major podcast apps, including Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google, Amazon, iHeart Radio, Stitcher, TuneIn, and others.

RenasantBank

 

Renasant Bank has humble roots, starting in 1904 as a $100,000 bank in a Lee County, Mississippi, bakery. Since then, Renasant has grown to become one of the Southeast’s strongest financial institutions with over $13 billion in assets and more than 190 banking, lending, wealth management and financial services offices in Mississippi, Alabama, Tennessee, Georgia and Florida. All of Renasant’s success stems from each of their banker’s commitment to investing in their communities as a way of better understanding the people they serve. At Renasant Bank, they understand you because they work and live alongside you every day.

 

Special thanks to A&S Culinary Concepts for their support of this edition of North Fulton Business Radio. A&S Culinary Concepts, based in Johns Creek, is an award-winning culinary studio, celebrated for corporate catering, corporate team building, Big Green Egg Boot Camps, and private group events. They also provide oven-ready, cooked from scratch meals to go they call “Let Us Cook for You.” To see their menus and events, go to their website or call 678-336-9196.

Tagged With: A&S Culinary Concepts, business coaching, Coaching, hypnotherapy, ICF, mindset, Neuro-Linguistic Programming, Nicole Comis, NLP, North Fulton Business Radio, Personal coaching, renasant bank

Workplace MVP: John Baldino, Humareso

July 19, 2022 by John Ray

John Baldino
Minneapolis St. Paul Studio
Workplace MVP: John Baldino, Humareso
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John Baldino

Workplace MVP: John Baldino, Humareso

John Baldino, President of Humareso, joined the show again after his December 2021 appearance to review his predictions for 2022.  He and host Jamie Gassmann noted how he was right on the mark about trends such as meeting the holistic needs of employees, supporting their well-being, the shift towards more flexibility, companies rethinking their approach to disruption, the wave of resignations and layoffs, and many other timely topics.

Workplace MVP is underwritten and presented by R3 Continuum and produced by the Minneapolis-St.Paul Studio of Business RadioX®.

Humareso

Humareso is able to strategize with your company and develop plans to manage talent, recruit for skill gaps based on employee inventories, assess markets for growth, develop long-range succession plans and influence a culture of enthusiastic buy-in. Humareso handles all facets of employee engagement and business development. Humareso provides HR solutions and administration for small businesses trying to manage budget and growth.

Humareso sits strategically to support an organization’s vital talent needs. Talent is what they believe in cultivating. They look to drive organizational health through true employee engagement, strategic workforce planning, and invested management training. Having a culture that values people, policy, and performance in the right measures is the differential needed to stand apart from other organizations. Whether your organization has 10 or 100,000 employees, dynamic human resources will build corporate strength and recognize talent contribution.

Company website | LinkedIn

John Baldino, MSHRD SPHR SHRM-SCP, Founder and President, Humareso

John Baldino, MSHRD SPHR SHRM-SCP, Founder and President, Humareso

With 30 years of human resources experience, John’s passion of setting contributors and companies up for success is still going strong.  John is a keynote for US and International Conferences where he shares content and thoughts on leadership, collaboration, and innovation, employee success, organizational design and development as well as inclusion and diversity.

He is the winner of the 2020 Greater Philadelphia HR Consultant of the Year award. John is currently the President of Humareso, a global human resources consulting firm, and the proud dad of 3 amazing young adults.

LinkedIn | Twitter

About Workplace MVP

Every day, around the world, organizations of all sizes face disruptive events and situations. Within those workplaces are everyday heroes in human resources, risk management, security, business continuity, and the C-suite. They don’t call themselves heroes though. On the contrary, they simply show up every day, laboring for the well-being of employees in their care, readying the workplace for and planning responses to disruption. This show, Workplace MVP, confers on these heroes the designation they deserve, Workplace MVP (Most Valuable Professionals), and gives them the forum to tell their story. As you hear their experiences, you will learn first-hand, real-life approaches to readying the workplace, responses to crisis situations, and overcoming challenges of disruption. Visit our show archive here.

Workplace MVP Host Jamie Gassmann

Jamie Gassmann, Host, “Workplace MVP”

In addition to serving as the host to the Workplace MVP podcast, Jamie Gassmann is the Director of Marketing at R3 Continuum (R3c). Collectively, she has more than fourteen years of marketing experience. Across her tenure, she has experience working in and with various industries including banking, real estate, retail, crisis management, insurance, business continuity, and more. She holds a Bachelor of Science Degree in Mass Communications with special interest in Advertising and Public Relations and a Master of Business Administration from Paseka School of Business, Minnesota State University.

R3 Continuum

R3 Continuum is a global leader in workplace behavioral health and security solutions. R3c helps ensure the psychological and physical safety of organizations and their people in today’s ever-changing and often unpredictable world. Through their continuum of tailored solutions, including evaluations, crisis response, executive optimization, protective services, and more, they help organizations maintain and cultivate a workplace of wellbeing so that their people can thrive. Learn more about R3c at www.r3c.com.

Company website | LinkedIn | Facebook | Twitter

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: [00:00:04] Broadcasting from the Business RadioX Studios, it’s time for Workplace MVP. Workplace MVP is brought to you by R3 Continuum, a global leader in workplace behavioral health and security solutions. Now, here’s your host, Jamie Gassmann.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:00:25] Hey, everyone. Your host, Jamie Gassmann here, and welcome to this episode of Workplace MVP. So, last December 2021, I had the pleasure of interviewing John Baldino, President of Humareso, on our show, and we did a year-end review talking about what challenges or nuances HR and other business leaders navigated over the last year.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:00:48] And during that interview, I asked John what his 2022 predictions were for what would be the areas of challenge or need for change in the workplace this year. So, today, a little over halfway through 2022, we are following up with John to get his update if his predictions came true, and what other challenges is he seeing that we didn’t predict, but that we want to talk about today. So, help me in welcoming Workplace MVP John Baldino, President of Humareso. Welcome to the show, John.

John Baldino: [00:01:23] Thanks, Jamie. Great to be back.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:01:25] Yes, it’s always such a pleasure to have you on the show.

John Baldino: [00:01:28] I appreciate that.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:01:29] So, I did want to start out for any new listeners that might be catching this episode that didn’t have an opportunity to listen in in December, tell us a little bit about your background and your career journey in growing your business.

John Baldino: [00:01:43] Sure. So, I am, you know, 30 years still in human resources and in the veins of leadership development, and organizational development and structure, and all the employee lifecycle components. And so, I started Humareso, it will actually be ten years in a few weeks for Humareso and so that’s really fun. And Humareso is a full-service HR consulting firm. And we just have a great time working with companies across the country at various sizes from startup to enterprise level clients. I’ve got a great staff that’s across the country and just doing some phenomenal work. And it’s really, really been a good time.

John Baldino: [00:02:34] And I’ll just mention, though, my journey, as you said, I started in personnel. Before there was human resources, it was personnel. And I say that because I don’t know that we’ve really kind of given enough props to the fact that in this discipline of human resources, we have had opportunity to evolve out of completely transactional work and mixing it now a bit with some transformational work. Like, helping to look at organizations more holistically.

John Baldino: [00:03:10] And so, those who are practicing HR in various organizations across the country, my colleagues in the profession, there’s been a lot of movement over the last 30 years that I’ve been involved, and probably more movement from a pace standpoint over the last three than any of the 27 before in many ways.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:03:32] Well, they spent so many changes, especially over the last couple of years. And even before then, I think, there were changes especially in that HR arena. So, wow, you’ve definitely come through a lot of that. And congratulations on your upcoming anniversary. That’s exciting.

John Baldino: [00:03:49] It is. It is very exciting. Thank you for that.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:03:52] Absolutely. So, now the moment I’m sure our listeners are looking for. How did you fare in your predictions for this this last year? So, I’m going to start with the first one, overall health of your employees, including religion, emotional, mental, and physical. We kind of talked about how employers need to really be looking at that whole person, as opposed to just the one component, like physical, which a lot of them probably maybe have focused more on over the years. So, tell me a little bit about what are you seeing? Has that come true?

John Baldino: [00:04:29] It has. There’s going to be a theme, I think.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:04:34] You’re like, “I was right.”

John Baldino: [00:04:39] I would say that for sure we certainly not arrived. But I think that what we see over the last six months is a continued deepening of organizations looking at the overall person that works for them, not merely, “How do I keep them healthy? So, I keep my health insurance premiums lower.” Which, that’s unfortunately kind of what some of the attention had been previously. And certainly we’re not going to, like, talk down about the fact that we want our staff to be physically healthy. Of course, if we can provide opportunities for that, please continue to do so.

John Baldino: [00:05:18] But I think that what you and I spoke about, really, was the holistic view, that there is an emotional component to what people are bringing into the workplace. If we didn’t learn anything from COVID and from that pandemic and, honestly, what we’re still going through in certain parts of the country, for sure, it took an emotional toll on people. It was really difficult.

John Baldino: [00:05:42] Like, it was really difficult to stay in your house under mandates from cities and/or state. It was difficult for people to say you cannot come into the office and see these people you’ve worked with for the last four, five, six, seven, ten years. Stay away from each other.

John Baldino: [00:06:05] People are really dealing with some emotional and mental health challenges as a result of that. And I think that the wiser companies today are looking at that saying we’re seeing the residue of that and we’re really needing to be wise about how we provide an outlet for care, for communication, and consideration.

John Baldino: [00:06:30] And so, we’re watching organizations do things that they weren’t doing before, even things like open chat channels on platforms, like Slack or Teams or whatever you might be using, to say we want to work in a spirit of transparency a little differently than we were previously. It wasn’t that we weren’t transparent at all before, perhaps, but now we’ve got to do it with a bit more intention. And we’re going to be proactive in our approach to those things.

John Baldino: [00:07:03] Because if you’re struggling today, we need to know. We’re not going to judge you. We’re really going to help provide some areas of support. And if, for nothing else, just so that people on your team can say, we’re with you, we want to take a minute and not just look at what our production numbers are like for today. It matters, I get it. But we’re also going to take a couple minutes and say, let’s just do a pulse check. How’s everybody feeling today? Green for great, yellow for I’m not so sure, red for I’m really struggling. You know, there’s organizations that are kind of doing that stoplight poster, and that’s great.

John Baldino: [00:07:39] You know, you don’t have to have everybody tell you every bit of their deep, dark secrets or what they’re really struggling with because there is some protection there as well that needs to be understood. But is there an outlet for people to say, I’m going to talk to HR and I’m going to talk to whatever support structures we have within the organization.

John Baldino: [00:08:00] And it needs to be – what we’re also seeing very deliberately – is it’s got to be more than just your immediate manager. It doesn’t mean that it has to exclude the immediate manager, but it has to be more than just that. Because it might be uncomfortable for me to go to my direct supervisor and say, “I’m not feeling great today. My body physically is fine, but I feel just overwhelmed and maybe even depressed. I’m not really sure, but I’m feeling it today.” Because bias is real, that may affect the way a manager could look at that employee.

John Baldino: [00:08:37] So, companies are being wiser about if you’re feeling that way, here’s some other places to go to talk about that, to report that, to ask for resources and support. And so, we’re seeing that happen more and more. So, that’s exciting, I would say, even though it doesn’t sound like the reason for it is exciting, and I appreciate that. But it’s wonderful that we’re being much more deliberate about giving these kinds of resources and outlets.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:09:02] Yeah. Just more mindful of that whole person at work. And they might just need something, you know, that person, an outlet to talk to. And I would agree, sometimes the manager is not going to be the right person they want to have that conversation with. But I think a leader being able to show their own vulnerability and transparency to how they’re feeling can make a huge difference in how that employee shows up too.

John Baldino: [00:09:29] For sure. And, you know, I like to have data and some statistics behind some of what I share because I just want to make sure people know this isn’t Baldino just waxing philosophical because he’s bored. There’s real numbers behind a lot of these things.

John Baldino: [00:09:43] And so, even I would say since the start of the pandemic, and many of you who are listening may remember, maybe the first 6 to 12 months of what we went through, organizations were doing happy hours, “Let’s just get together on Zoom or Teams,” or what have you, and everybody just let’s have a happy hour together. And what we’re seeing statistically is that, there’s been – it depends on the survey – 60 to 65 percent drop off in the happy hour offering at organizations. And that is predominantly pushed because of a healthier outlet.

John Baldino: [00:10:21] What we found is that individuals at organizations who are struggling with emotional or mental health issues to then push them towards happy hour, towards alcohol, became a bit uncomfortable for some organizations. And they thought that’s probably not a great outlet to offer to someone. The intention is great, we get it. The intention is great. Let’s change the dynamic of it a little bit. Let’s not push alcohol as the release in that, but rather the relational communication, rather the let me feel like I belong with some people. That’s the better way to push things.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:11:01] Yeah. Definitely. And kind of hanging out in that overall health, same vein, something that I’m hearing and I heard in some of the interviews I was doing at SHRM recently, where we ran into each other again, was part of your DE&I structure is looking at that whole person and looking at kind of how do you support maybe that religion that that person wants to have shown up at work, and how do you make them feel welcome as that whole individual when you’re looking at it spiritually.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:11:35] I mean, mental health, absolutely. Stigma is reducing everywhere. It’s very exciting to see. Physical, we’ve kind of got that one down. But looking at that religion component, what are you seeing with some of the changes? And what are you hearing within work environments in how they’re starting to embrace different religions that individuals are coming to work with?

John Baldino: [00:11:56] Yeah. That’s a great question. And I would say, out of all of the areas of consideration for individuals that are coming to work, the spiritual vein is probably the one that’s still the weakest in terms of comfort because most business owners, senior leaders, managers don’t know what to do with it. They’re nervous that they may have some sort of compliance infraction by having a conversation with someone or being open to having a conversation with someone.

John Baldino: [00:12:29] And I think that the ones that are doing it really well, what we’re seeing is that, they are just providing a forum for communication and conversation around it. So, for instance, there are some organizations that are being more thoughtful around spiritual and/or religious diversity. I know that there are people who wear, for instance, particular pieces of clothing that represent some of the spirituality that they’re starting to pursue more. Also, for those individuals, who maybe during the remote time of the pandemic, who are now coming back to work, are coming back different as far as an expression of faith is concerned.

John Baldino: [00:13:12] And so, people don’t know how to manage that relationship. “Oh, my goodness. You’re wearing something or your routine is very changed now, and I don’t know if I can say certain things to you. Am I allowed to curse in front of you anymore? Could I split my ham sandwich with you anymore? I don’t know what to do anymore.” And I think that the ones that are doing it really well are creating a place for there to be safe conversation.

John Baldino: [00:13:43] Not everyone is an expert in every area of spirituality. There has to be a place to be able to say, “I’m so sorry. I’m predominantly ignorant about this vein of spirituality that you’re talking about. Can you enlighten me? Can you tell me what it’s been like for you? I don’t have a frame of reference, but I’m really interested in understanding.”

John Baldino: [00:14:03] I think that if you can provide that place for it to be safe, it doesn’t mean it’s the responsibility of the employer to have people pursue spirituality. That is not what we’re saying. But rather when there is an outlet – remember, religious accommodation is still a very real federal allowance within the law – it should be comfortably discussed as anything else where there’s an accommodation or a consideration at play.

John Baldino: [00:14:33] We’re seeing, again, not as high of a percentage as in the other veins of support, but it’s starting to make a way. We actually even know a couple of organizations that have before work, there are some employees who are getting together to pray or to meditate. And they may meditate towards or with a frame of reference towards their own spirituality, but they’re doing it collectively in quiet in a room with others. There are some organizations that we know that actually have a Bible study going on before work.

John Baldino: [00:15:04] Whatever your people are bringing up to say that it might be helpful for them if they can start their day or end their day in a certain way, be open to that. It doesn’t mean that you’re giving acceptance to everything, but just be open to that dialogue.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:15:17] Yeah. Absolutely. It sounds very familiar too. I did another interview with a gal by the name of Soumaya Khalifa, and she talked about even just, you know, being curious or wanting to know more is refreshing. And being able to say have a blessed Ramadan, where normally you wouldn’t hear that, but even just being aware of the fact that she’s celebrating that and that she’s fasting, and maybe asking questions about what that looks like can go a long way with an employee.

John Baldino: [00:15:50] Absolutely. And wouldn’t it be nice to be able to have a conversation with an employee that you know to understand rather than being scared and telling someone, “We’ll just Google it.” Should we really be Googling how to understand everybody else’s spiritual? I’d be terrified to do that. Like, talk to somebody else and just ask them. “I see that you’re taking some extra time during the day, how exciting. What’s that like for you? It seems like you’re much more centered. I’m jealous of that, even. I love the fact that you do.” Have an honest conversation. Be safe in that.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:16:23] Absolutely. Great advice. Love that. So, looking at your second prediction, creative health options. So, that need to think creatively and kind of a little bit out of the box on how you might accommodate somebody’s overall health. So, kind of expanding out of some of the traditional modes, like an EAP, obviously, all employers usually have an EAP for the most part. You know, and that’s always usually a standard kind of offering. But looking at what are some other ways that you can help those employees to promote self-care and taking care of themselves. So, talk to me a little bit about what some of the things that you’re seeing with that.

John Baldino: [00:17:01] Yeah. And, again, I’m so excited to say this has gone in the right direction coming into this year.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:17:07] You were right again is what you’re saying.

John Baldino: [00:17:08] I mean, thank you for saying that. First of all, just to make sure everybody has a frame of reference, so, the EAP, the Employee Assistance Program, those of you that are involved with a smaller business, say, under 100 employees, there’s a good chance that your current medical benefit offering does not include an EAP. So, your frame of reference may be very left of center in that, and that’s okay. Please don’t think that you’ve done something wrong or that your employer is not providing at a level that you need them to. Quite frankly, it’s a product of the volume that goes behind the way health insurance is put together, and that’s why the EAP isn’t thrown in.

John Baldino: [00:17:59] But there are things, so one of the areas that I’ve seen an uptick is at the state level. And for most states, there is an opportunity to connect, you can pick up the phone and dial 211. Just like you can dial 911 for an emergency, 211 can get you to a variety of support resources that, for some things, mimic what an EAP would offer. So, there’s opportunities for counseling, for issues around physical health, all of that health veins that we just spoke about and beyond.

John Baldino: [00:18:37] And so, what we’re seeing is that there’s more organizations pushing out that 211 as part of sort of their resource list within their organizations to say, “Don’t be ashamed, please use this.” Even if we have an EAP, there’s more stuff at the county level that, quite honestly, your taxes are paying for. So, tap into those things. Look for that help there.

John Baldino: [00:19:02] But one of the things that’s become, I think, a growing consideration coming into this year is a step back and looking at the ways in which, from a creative standpoint, wellbeing – not wellness but wellbeing – is looked at. And so, we’re seeing products and service out there now that are marketing to businesses to say, “How’s that health savings account going for you that you were so keen on five years ago? Are people using that?” “There’s money left over at the end of every year. They never use all the benefit that they have that they’re entitled to.” Or December 20th, everybody’s running to CVS to buy Q-tips and cotton balls and contact lens solution, even when they don’t wear contact lenses, just because they want to spend this HSA money that they have.

John Baldino: [00:19:59] And is that really the goal? Like, the goal is not let me stock my medicine cabinet with this stuff that’s not really, really helping me. And so, this wellbeing offering is really, I think, more on a vein that we’re going to see more and more of. We’re already seeing a consideration in a different way to this where employers are saying, “I want to split what I’ve been giving to this HSA between, yeah, I’m going to keep money in a health savings account for you, totally. But I’m not going to put as much. And instead I’m going to put some of that money over to a wellbeing app cafeteria consideration.”

John Baldino: [00:20:39] Again, I’m using cafeteria in a broader sense, meaning pick what works for you. Maybe you want to do things that are physically related for you. Great. You want to take yoga classes, you want to get some equipment to use, whatever, but this wellbeing is also going to give you opportunities for your soul, for your spirit, for your mental health.

John Baldino: [00:21:02] TherapyNotes does a great job with journals covering all kinds of mental health considerations that now an employee can use employer funded components to buy these notebooks and start a journey of moving through anxiety or depression, and keep themselves accountable in a comfortable way. Not to say that it can’t be counseling as well, but this is sort of the upkeep in between visits.

John Baldino: [00:21:29] So, to have these resources where, well, my employer is not going to get involved with my therapy directly because I want to keep that boundary there. But my employer is providing me an opportunity for wellbeing to continue my therapy journey every day. And they don’t even realize it because they’re just providing me with some funds that can be used towards these kinds of resources. Maybe I care a lot about my environment, social issues that affects my wellbeing. Here, I can use some of these set aside funds for this.

John Baldino: [00:22:01] So, we’re seeing creativity in probably the broadest way that I’ve ever seen in the marketplace right now. And those companies that are trying to do things to be thoughtful about their current staff, but also to attract new staff from a talent acquisition standpoint, they’re bragging about having this accessibility for their teams, and that is drawing potential candidates to their organizations who are looking to make a change. And that’s a set apart that, honestly, organizations need today to capture talent.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:22:35] Yeah. Being a little innovative, kind of looking outside of the box, not the standard. That’s great. And I know the next one was more flexibility, which I think has an absolute key in today’s working environment for employers to be looking at. So, talk to me a little bit about what are you seeing from the flexibility side of it in terms of how long the working day should look like. What are those hours look like? Where are you working? You know, tell me a little bit about some of the things you’re seeing that didn’t go away after COVID. And in fact, if not anything, it increased.

John Baldino: [00:23:09] Totally. Isn’t that amazing? Like, it didn’t go away. And, you know, you had some people, some I’m going to say well-meaning, but you may be missing it a little bit, who were saying it’s all going to go back to normal. No. No. And so, part of that is not because the workforce has become lazy. They just don’t want to get on a subway and travel into New York City. They don’t want to get in a car and fight LA traffic. Well, first of all, who does? Let’s be honest.

John Baldino: [00:23:43] But the other part of it is, “Oh, my goodness. People have been as productive at home or even on a hybrid schedule as they were when they were in five days a week, maybe even more productive. Oh, no. Now, what do we do? This is terrible.”

John Baldino: [00:23:59] And I think that we’ve got to be able to say, somebody else’s predictions may have been wrong – not mine – about how that was going to change back. And I think that what we’re seeing today is there are a lot more candidates in the first, I’ll say, phone screen or consideration of a new role, this is one of their first questions, and sometimes even more than how much does the roll pay, “Can I work from home? Can I work from home part time and come into an office? What does hybrid look like? Does remote work mean I have to be at my house all the time? Or can I take my laptop anywhere I want to go to do the work?”

John Baldino: [00:24:48] Now, look, that’s an IT thing. I know there’s some security protocols for some organizations. If you’re looking to get a job in finance, they’re not going to love that you want to be on a cruise, you know, nine months of the year with picking up WiFi signals from all different countries, that’s going to cause an IT professional to have some issues. I get that.

John Baldino: [00:25:08] But by and large, individuals are looking for that kind of flexibility. And I think the smarter companies have said yes. Yeah, it can. It does not mean that you can’t, though, still ask for some level of balance, if you’re an organization that does need to have people come in, if you’re an organization that exclusively has to have people come in. You and I spoke last time about making pizzas. You can’t do that remotely. You’re going to have to come in somewhere, right? So, depending on the industry, don’t apologize for it. Continue.

John Baldino: [00:25:50] And what we’re seeing is organizations that are unapologetic – and I don’t mean obnoxious – but sure of who they are, what kind of work they do, and not having to apologize for it. If you work for a manufacturing company and you build things, you make things, that’s really hard to do remotely, you’re going to have to be together. Engineers will have to get together. Those that are working the manufacturing line have to be there to facilitate that production. Don’t apologize for that.

John Baldino: [00:26:19] And we’re seeing more companies be braver in that, which is healthy. You and I talked last time, we were starting to see a little bit of a caste system, where there was, like, it’s better to have a remote role and terrible if you have to come into work. No. We’re seeing that come back to, I’d say, center. But it doesn’t mean that we’re no longer offering remote work or hybrid work. Smarter companies that are looking to provide that kind of flexibility are doing so, I would say, with some flexibility of hours when possible. They are doing it with some longer gaps in between for some companies.

John Baldino: [00:26:58] So, someone who is still a caretaker for, say, parents or having some child care concerns that they have to take care of, that person saying, “I’m going to need two hours. From 2:00 to 4:00 p.m., I can’t work because I’ve got to go do these things. But I’m going to come back and stay on until 7:00 p.m. to do my eight hour day,” or whatever it might be. You’re seeing some companies saying, “I’m okay with that. I wouldn’t have been two years ago.”

John Baldino: [00:27:27] But we’re so much better now. And as long as your productivity is not hampered, as long as your performance continues to be at the level we need it to be – and this third part is a smart question for organizations to always ask of each individual – as long as your team is aware of what that schedule is and can work with it, not around it, but work with it, I think it’s respectful all the way around.

John Baldino: [00:27:57] Because we have seen some companies not do this well and create friction amongst teammates because there’s the impression that a few people feel like they are covering for this person constantly. It isn’t true necessarily, but it feels like it because for two hours of the day they’re not around, I’m here working, but they’re not. Have that conversation. We’re seeing the smarter companies talking through that with their teams.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:28:22] Yeah. And I know there’s a question I have that I want to dive into is some of the cultural divides that are happening. And I want to cover that here in just a little bit so I can get through showing off your smart predictions here and how they came through. But, yeah, no, there’s that internal perceptions that are happening that I’m excited to dive into a little bit with you to see what you are seeing.

John Baldino: [00:28:49] But changes in sick time was the last one that you predicted in terms of that more workers being okay in coming into the office sick is not okay anymore. If you’re sick, stay home. And if you’re sick, go home. But if you you really can’t work, be sick. And so, I think you said in your interview, if you’re sick, go home and be sick. Don’t bring it here. Just stay where you need to be to get yourself back on track. I think that the super hero in all of us that says, “I’m good, I can make it,” we have to rethink that now in terms of what we might have been doing before COVID. So, tell me a little bit about what you’re seeing with that one.

John Baldino: [00:29:31] Absolutely. I think that what we’re seeing is that there are more organizations championing that sentiment. That they are not going to be able to be okay with people just showing up being sick and putting other people at risk. Even if, look, we get colds. I understand that that they still exist. But why cause tension? Why cause nervousness? Why cause there to be some stress between people for unnecessary reasons? It’s just silly.

John Baldino: [00:30:14] Plus, we have people who have to be really thoughtful about how sickness affects their own wellbeing. To continue to push through those things does create, statistically, resentment with an organization. Even if the organization is not directly asking you to plow through, they’re telling you to be sick, but you keep showing up, you can still develop resentment towards that organization. And so, that residue is unnecessary. You are creating a self-fulfilling prophecy of this company doesn’t appreciate me. That’s a bad thing. You don’t want that.

John Baldino: [00:30:54] And I think that organizations, what we’re seeing in terms of the sick time is, we’d rather you take the extra time. And, yes, you have so many hours. But we’ve seen so much flexibility the past couple of years whether it’s COVID sickness or not, but there’s an accommodation consideration to this that I think there’s wisdom in. And we’re seeing more companies say, “I don’t want to penny pinch about the hours. I really want to be thoughtful.”

John Baldino: [00:31:22] Now, there’s always the exception. Yes, I already see people shaking their heads while I’m saying this. Yes, I know there are people that take advantage. I know. I get to talk to them and say, why are you taking advantage of the company? I get it. But they are the exception. Believe me when I tell you, they are the exception, not the rule. And we have to stop legislating to the exception and start being considerate of those that are the majority.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:31:48] Very great advice. And a job well done on your predictions.

John Baldino: [00:31:53] Thank you so much. I appreciate that.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:31:56] Great job. So, we’re going to dive into a quick commercial from our sponsor, and then we’re going to look into what we’re seeing in 2022 that we didn’t talk about in that prediction show.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:32:07] Workplace MVP is sponsored by R3 Continuum. R3 Continuum is a leading expert in providing behavioral health support to people and organizations facing disruption and critical incidents. Through our evidence-based interventions, specialized evaluations, and tailored behavioral health programs, we promote individual and collective psychological safety and thriving to learn how we can help your workplace make tomorrow better than today by helping your people thrive. Visit r3c.com today.

John Baldino: [00:32:40] So, now looking at what we’re seeing in workplaces today, you know, kind of looking at that cultural divide, so we kind of stay in the same vein of some of the things we’ve been talking about, some of the things I’m hearing from HR leaders in the conversations that I’ve been having is that, even though they might have made that hybrid work environment or the remote work versus working in the office options for the entire team, when you start actually getting kind of settled into that, some people are remote, some are in the office, some are kind of a combination of, they’re seeing that resentment you mentioned and they’re seeing conflict. And, basically, culture breaking down between these employees because of the choices that each person made, even though they were both given that option. What are you seeing and what is some advice that you’ve been giving to leaders in terms of how they can navigate that unexpected kind of challenge?

John Baldino: [00:33:43] Yeah. I think, first of all, it’s a conversation. You’ve got to kind of bring the parties that are involved in this into a room and chat. And a room means like Zoom. Just look at one another. I think that if you’re only doing these things via email, you’re missing it. And, certainly, we foster levels of resentment – to come back to that word – or stress, because we’re letting people fill in the blanks with our tone. And we’ve got to stop, whether that is email, whether it’s a Slack channel, Teams channel, stop just typing everything. Talk to someone.

John Baldino: [00:34:34] I know that sounds silly. And for some people they might think it’s old fashioned. “John, it’s not efficient.” I’m going to tell you something, it is more efficient. Here’s why. Because now I don’t have to run back and have two more conversations to sort of fix an implied tone that someone heard, as opposed to just having the initial conversation. And, yes, yes, that conversation may take ten minutes longer than the chat that I did on Teams. But that chat on Teams now led to 20 more minutes of conversation that I wound up having to have. I’m still net better ten minutes if I had done the communicative right way in the beginning.

John Baldino: [00:35:15] So, when people hear tone and they hear me say, “I’m so sorry that you have not been feeling well. Is there anything that we can do?” There’s a big difference than me just saying what they hear, “I’m sorry you’ve not been feeling well. What can we do?” That sounds cold. You don’t really care. I could mean it with all my heart, but they’re not hearing my tone. They’re not picking up on those things. So, I would say that, honestly, is the basic that should be done by organizations.

John Baldino: [00:35:49] I have to tell you, I challenge even my own team often about getting on the phone or being in a video chat with people. And that’s not even because we’re having tension with anyone. But just to remind them of the familiarity that talking to someone, even virtually, face to face, what that does, what that means, how it affects the dynamic of the conversation. To do that intentionally is, honestly, a very smart strategy. It does not mean that you still can’t use Slack or whatever you’re using. Just mix it up.

John Baldino: [00:36:28] And I think you’re going to watch that issue, for instance, that you just were mentioning, dissipate. Even if someone thinks for a minute, maybe there’s tension here, maybe I should feel a certain sort of way. Because of the deposits you’ve made into the rapport development, they’re going to tip the scales towards giving you the benefit of the doubt, the measure of grace, as opposed to there’s nothing in that bank. I’m just going to think the worst right away.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:36:55] And talking in person is so much more powerful, I’m with you. I mean, email can’t capture it.

John Baldino: [00:37:04] And how many emojis can you do, right? Like, how many punctuation marks? Stop. That start to becomes silly, right?

Jamie Gassmann: [00:37:11] Or then you use the wrong one and you’re like, “Oops, that didn’t send the right message.”

John Baldino: [00:37:14] Oh, my gosh. Or you’re my mom who just sends random things emoji-wise to my kids. And they’re always like, “Should we understand something here that my mom is trying to tell us?” No. No. They were at the beach, she thought she sent them a crab. She sent them a scorpion. My son’s like, “Do you want me dead? Like, what does this mean?” And we can laugh, because if my mom listens, I’m in big trouble. But the idea of I can laugh about that with my kids and my mom because we have more in our relationship bank than just text messages. It matters.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:37:51] It does. Yeah. That’s a great analogy to use in kind of comparison where you’re not going to take it the wrong way because you understand the person behind it, where with a coworker you’re going to only know them as far as you’ve allowed that relationship to build with them. So, it does kind of change that.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:38:09] And then, kind of looking at this and this is something, too, that we’re seeing quite frequently – you know, not really quite frequently, but really a common challenge that primarily in health care space they’re experiencing, but I would say this is in probably a lot of other areas as well, the systemic disruption that workplaces are facing. Discontinued large scale events happening within the country. The pandemic started and then the waves of the pandemic where, “Nope, the cases are down.” “Nope, they’re back up.” And there’s a surge.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:38:42] And then, it’s racial tensions, civil unrest, political divide. We continue to see these things happening within the world that is tipping into the work environments. And what it’s creating is a lot of stress, some burnout. So, what are some of the things that you’re hearing from customers? And when you have a customer experience this, where are you navigating them to get support for that?

John Baldino: [00:39:10] Yeah. I mean, it’s a really great question. And I think that, typically, what we do is take a step back with some clients to say, “Let’s just talk about a general category to start with.” And that general category is disruption. What is it that you would like to be known for when it comes to disruption? It’s an interesting question to ask an organization because it’s like, “Well, John, we want to be a leading disruption. We’re innovative. We’re creative, we want to be at the forefront of disruption in a healthy way to bring our technology forward or process forward or product forward,” whatever it might be.

John Baldino: [00:39:54] And so, I’ll say, “Okay, I believe you. I don’t have a reason to not believe you. I’ll believe you that that’s your intention around disruption.” So, when disruption comes to you, why do you revert back to a non-innovative response? Where does that come from and why is that the default trigger? What that tells me is that there’s some behavioral modification that has to occur. We want to get to good old fashioned psychology and say, “I mean for X to be my response, but I keep defaulting to Y.” Where is that coming from? Stop and take stock of that.

John Baldino: [00:40:41] What we have found some organizations realizing is, “Darn it. We say we’re innovative. But we’re kind of scared of innovation.” Or, “We say we’re really creative, but if I really sit and think about it, I don’t know when we’ve had a really robust creative idea.” We found maybe another product or piece of software that helped us do things better, but is that creativity or is that efficiency? “Oh, man. We’ve overlapped those words and we shouldn’t have.” Efficiency is something different.

John Baldino: [00:41:16] And so, what we try to do is help organizations to say, let’s talk about disruption itself. Don’t worry about it being a social issue, a pandemic, or something else. First, talk about disruption. Now, let’s align your response or what you desire your response to be in disruption to your value system. What is the organization about? Why do you say it’s about that? What does that mean to you and for you? And as a result, how might it impact the way in which disruption is then perceived?

John Baldino: [00:41:55] Because you may think that I’m doing it this way, but your value system is running counter to some of your approach. And people don’t know what to do with it. They don’t know how to perceive what it is that they see. How do we help that? I’m just giving you a couple of steps to start with. Certainly, there’s a lot more to it.

John Baldino: [00:42:14] But working with organizations to say, “let’s just take it in pieces,” because what we’re seeing – and I’ll be very practical – in sort of a recent social disruption is in the Supreme Court change for Roe v. Wade. And whatever side that you fall on, that’s not what I’m getting at. But it is certainly a disruption. It has certainly changed for 50 years what people had grown accustomed to.

John Baldino: [00:42:44] And so, if you chose as an organization to say, “Down with the Supreme Court. We are now going to support every individual in our organization up to $4,000 each time that they seek a procedure like this if they work and live in a state that no longer supports it, because the federal mandate is gone.” That’s fine. If that’s what you’re response is from a disruption standpoint. But are you looking at it just for today or are you looking at it long term?

John Baldino: [00:43:21] One of the things – again, this is practical and philosophical where the roads meet – I have said to people, do you know what kind of utilization those services have been leaned on for your employee population to date? Do you have any sense of that? “No, I don’t.”

John Baldino: [00:43:43] You may. Your finance person is in a corner with a box of tissues sobbing because they’re worried that in your 400,000 person organization, there could be 10,000 people who use this benefit even just once this year. That’s a hit to the budget that was not planned for. And it isn’t only about the social issue, it is also about the financial impact. Be thoughtful about that. There’s no magic in $4,000 and there has to be consideration for that.

John Baldino: [00:44:17] I’m saying those social issues are worthy of your consideration, but approach it the way that you would approach disruption as a whole. How do we put all of our options in front of us? How do we talk through it? How do we collaborate on it with our teams? How do we get there? Because what that would tell us is, not everybody is going to get their way. Someone might want $10,000 a year. Someone might say don’t give them a nickel because of how they might feel about the issue.

John Baldino: [00:44:45] That isn’t the way you make a decision. It can’t just be how people feel. That’s a piece, but it’s not all. How do you approach disruption and then apply it to social issues? Apply it to doing “the right thing” based on your value system of your organization? Don’t lose sight of those things.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:45:02] Yeah. That’s great advice too. And I think that’s important is looking at the value system. Because at the end of the day, when you go off, especially public, on some of those things, it can affect your brand, so, it’s being mindful. And then, ultimately, it can affect those employees too. So, great advice.

John Baldino: [00:45:26] Absolutely. And listen, I want to make sure I say this, companies that are giving $4,000, great. That’s not the issue, at all the issue. But what happens in two years when the issue isn’t as much of a hot button? Let’s say, you decide to kind of wind down that benefit a bit, take it from $4,000 to 2,000 or and take it away completely because the budget is struggling. That may actually be a harder conversation now to have with your people because you were not thoughtful about it in all the ways you should be to start with. And I don’t want to make it just about the money, but for the sake of our conversation, that’s just an easy example to give.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:46:03] Yeah. Absolutely. And it’s in either direction that you lean. Absolutely. So, the other thing that we’re kind of seeing, and from what I’ve heard and what we see, and, obviously we see a lot of it in the media as well, staffing shortages and mass exodus out of certain industries.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:46:20] You know, I have a sister who’s a teacher and she’s like, “Teachers are leaving left and right.” You know, you hear it in health care, nurses, doctors leaving left and right. But then, on top of that, we’ve also got staffing shortages across the board. So, what are some of the things you’re seeing? And how are you helping leaders to navigate that?

John Baldino: [00:46:40] Well, and the other piece that is much more rampant in some ways, in some industries is layoff. We are seeing the layoffs that we’ve talked about that were going to come, and whether that’s because of compensation reasons that they have to sort of right size what we’ve been paying people. And so, organizations are now like, “Oh, my gosh. We can’t afford this long term.” Or the amount of startups that are laying off people, just do a little research alone on tech startups, you’re talking thousands of Americans have been laid off this year so far from tech startup companies or series E, series B funded companies that it’s like, “Oh. We raised 30 million. We’ll be fine.”

John Baldino: [00:47:32] I’m going to tell you something which is scary for me to say out loud, that goes quickly. You hire a whole lot of people, it’ll go quickly. So, you have companies laying off that might not sound like a lot, so-and-so laid off 400 people. Well, when they had 700 people, when they lay off 400, it’s more than 50 percent of their workforce. Don’t be fooled to think it’s only 400. Think about it as a percentage of the organization. That’s a huge impact. Let alone the huge organizations, like Wells Fargo, that are laying off a ton of people in mortgage lending and other divisions of lending as a whole because of the interest rate increase.

John Baldino: [00:48:13] So, now you have people still wanting to find the job that they really want to work in. They’re looking for something better than where they’re currently working. They don’t believe in the organization that they’re a part of anymore, if they ever did quite honestly. Or they are still entertaining and being wooed by some really high paying possible roles. But these same people now are sort of looking at the news and seeing, “Oh, my gosh. Such and such just laid off 2,800 people and so-and-so just laid off 4,000 people. And Netflix is laying off people.” And some of these companies are like, “Oh, shoot. I watch Netflix all day long. How can they not have enough business? What’s happening?”

John Baldino: [00:48:59] Now, you have people taking a moment – which I’m so grateful for – they’re taking a breath to say, “Do I want to self-select out of the company I’m a part of for what I perceive to be the grasping, greener, knowing that there may not be a guarantee I might be on the chopping block in three months of these layoff swing continues across the country?” It’s happening. We talked about a lesson. The Verizon were laying people off. Amazon is laying off people. It’s happening. So, they have to be thoughtful about that.

John Baldino: [00:49:31] Now, that does not mean that the business owner or the manager now can be a jerk once again and say, “Yeah. Go ahead. See if you can find something.” No, no, no. No. No. That’s the wrong response. The answer is, “Why, employee, are you looking elsewhere?” Let’s talk about this a little bit more, because it really may not be about the money at this point, because now there may be nervousness. The right sizing may be happening with some industries to bring down some salary ranges. What else is inspiring you to want to leave?

John Baldino: [00:50:07] And to hear from somebody to say, “It’s a thankless job. No one shows appreciation in this place. You get an offhanded thank you. Or the only way we show thank you is we have pizza the last Friday of every month for lunch. It’s just not enough anymore. It’s just not enough. And by the way, I’m on Atkins. I can’t eat the pizza. Like, nobody knows. Ask people.” But there are so many people who are like, “I don’t eat the pizza. I don’t eat the tacos. I don’t drink the alcohol. But nobody asks me. They assume I should be an assimilate like everybody else. And I live individually. I don’t live corporately. Nobody’s asking me.” That is still where we’re finding organizations struggling.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:51:01] Yeah. And that can make a big difference in an employee, just even that if somebody needs something different than what we’re going to serve today. “Can I get you a salad?”

John Baldino: [00:51:13] Right. And listen, it’s not about taking everybody’s order. I understand that. But if you just have one way to show appreciation, and I’m picking on the pizza thing. Pizza Friday is the last Friday of the month, if that’s it, that is not going to meet everyone. It’s just not. Even the people who like pizza, they want something different or they want to hear appreciation differently.

John Baldino: [00:51:38] And I want to make sure I say this, because I think this is another dynamic that’s really interesting because of what’s been happening in the economy. This year alone, 1.7 million people who retired in the past year are returning to the workforce.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:51:54] Interesting. Wow. The early retirement didn’t stick.

John Baldino: [00:52:01] It did not stick. Because you look at your stocks, you look at your 401K, and you’re like, “Oh, no.” I mean, you see the hit that the 401Ks have taken the past 6 to 12 months. Those that retired last year are saying, “No. I’m not going to make it. What I thought I was going to draw from has shrunk quite a bit.” And they’re coming back. Now, it doesn’t mean that they’re coming back to the same exact role or even full time, but it does mean that they’re coming back into the workforce.

John Baldino: [00:52:38] Now, I sound like an old man, the young upstarts that are like, “Whoever’s got the best offer for me, that’s who I’ll talk to.” And you have retirees saying, “I don’t need the best offer. This is all I really need to make. And I only want to work 25 hours a week. So, if you could give me that for the 25 hours a week, I’ll get the same work done. For some roles, I can get almost fulltime work done in that 25 hours.” And so, then the person who’s thinking, “Make me an offer, you might hear from the employer. I don’t have an offer to make you. We’re covered.”

Jamie Gassmann: [00:53:09] And you get that retiree that’s got how many years of experience that they can bring to the table. That’s fantastic. So, it sounds like there’s some pendulum shifting there, swinging going on in that, which is probably refreshing to hear for some employers who maybe have been experiencing challenges in that area.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:53:31] So, if you could give any advice – just wrapping up our show today – to our listeners of what they should be focused on and what you would advise them to to kind of do in the next five months we have left of the year, what would you leave them with?

John Baldino: [00:53:52] I mean, there’s so many things you could say. But if I’m going to just come down to really, really one core piece, it’s talk to your teams, talk to them. Not talk at them. Not just listen to them. But communicate. Converse with them. And I don’t need it to be some formalized system where you’re like, “Well, I conducted 17 stand up meetings with people this week.” Take a minute. I’m not asking for it to be so categorized. Just make sure that there’s a regular cadence of communication and real conversation. I think you’re going to do really well as you run towards the end of the year. I think you’ll do really, really well.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:54:44] Yeah. Absolutely. And, you know, as normal of any conversation I have with you, we take up that full hour because it’s such a great conversation, great insights and information. So, if our listeners want to get a hold of you, learn more about your organization or just get more advice from you, how can they get a hold of you?

John Baldino: [00:55:03] Thank you. I mean, certainly feel free to go to our website, humareso.com. I am super active on LinkedIn and Twitter, so look me up on both. On Twitter, I’m jbalive. Please feel free to follow, lots of resources and information that gets pushed out there as well, so happy to connect.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:55:25] Wonderful. And thank you so much again for being on our show, John, and sharing your great wisdom, your predictions, your expertise, and kind of filling us in on how leaders can help navigate the current world that we’re in with staffing and employees and other things. So, thank you so much. It’s been an absolute pleasure.

John Baldino: [00:55:45] Always awesome to be with you, Jamie. Thank you.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:55:47] Yes. And we also want to thank our show sponsor, R3 Continuum, for supporting the Workplace MVP podcast. And to our listeners, thank you for tuning in. If you have not already done so, make sure to subscribe so you get our most recent episodes and other resources. You can also follow our show on LinkedIn, Facebook, and Twitter at Workplace MVP. And if you are a workplace MVP or know someone who is, we want to know or hear from you, so email us at info@workplace-mvp.com. Thank you all for joining us and have a great rest of your day.

 

 

Tagged With: Business Development, Employee Engagement, HR Solutions, Human Resources, Humareso, Jamie Gassmann, John Baldino, layoffs, R3 Continuum, systemic disruption, Workplace MVP

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