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Embracing Ally Leadership, with Becky Berry, Becky Berry Coaching

August 21, 2024 by John Ray

Embracing Ally Leadership, with Becky Berry, Becky Berry Coaching, on North Fulton Business Radio with host John Ray
North Fulton Business Radio
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Embracing Ally Leadership, with Becky Berry, Becky Berry Coaching, on North Fulton Business Radio with host John Ray

Embracing Ally Leadership, with Becky Berry, Becky Berry Coaching (North Fulton Business Radio, Episode 797)

In this episode of North Fulton Business Radio, host John Ray welcomes leadership coach Becky Berry. Becky shares insights on ally leadership, contrasting it with mentorship and servant leadership. She discusses the importance of agency, promoting inclusivity, and supporting underrepresented employees. Becky also outlines her “Seven Commitments of Female Leadership” and shares a compelling success story. This episode offers valuable advice for emerging women leaders and emphasizes the significance of allies in fostering a thriving work environment.

John Ray is the host of North Fulton Business Radio. The show is recorded and produced from the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® inside Renasant Bank in Alpharetta.

Becky Berry, Becky Berry Coaching

Becky Berry, Becky Berry Coaching
Becky Berry, Becky Berry Coaching

Becky Berry is an Executive Career Coach coach whose mission is to help women reach the potential they’re afraid to admit that they have.

To do that, she empowers women to own their personal impact and the impact of their work. She facilitates their ability to speak fluently, without hesitation, about both. Her specialty is using language to gift clients with a clear understanding of their own gifts and power. She supports women as they create rich, meaningful work and home lives on their own terms.

Becky has experienced several crossroads in her life, including careers as magazine publisher, software entrepreneur, stay-at-home mom, special education teacher, social entrepreneur, and widowhood. Her life and work experiences allow her to provide uniquely empowering and supportive coaching to women at all stages of their lives.

Becky also produces and cohosts She’s Not Done Yet: Conversations with Women Over 50, available wherever you listen to podcasts, including Apple Podcasts and Spotify. She lives in the northern suburbs of Atlanta, GA.

Website | LinkedIn | Instagram | Facebook

Topics Discussed in this Episode

00:00 Introduction and Welcome
01:33 Meet Becky Berry: Executive and Career Coach Extraordinaire
02:29 The Evolution of Becky’s Coaching Practice
04:45 Leadership Coaching: Becky’s Sweet Spot
08:42 The Concept of Ally Leadership
22:18 Commitments of Female Leadership
24:29 Survey on Women’s Leadership Preferences
24:57 The Importance of Agency and Authenticity
25:33 Role Models and Vulnerability in Leadership
27:13 Recognizing and Elevating Unrecognized Talent
28:02 Promoting Diversity for Business Success
29:30 The Business Case for Diversity
33:11 Personal Leadership Coaching Success Stories
34:35 How to Engage with Becky Berry’s Services
41:08 Conclusion and Contact Information

Renasant Bank and Casa Nuova Italian Restaurant support North Fulton Business Radio

Renasant BankRenasant Bank has humble roots, starting in 1904 as a $100,000 bank in a Lee County, Mississippi, bakery. Since then, Renasant has 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.

Casa Nuova Italian RestaurantCasa Nuova is a proud family-owned and operated restaurant, serving classic, authentic and traditional Italian cuisine and top tier hospitality since 1998.

Casa Nuova is a cook-to-order kitchen, serving traditional fare including pasta, chicken, seafood, veal, vegetarian and gluten-free options, plus daily specials. They are a farm-to-table establishment, meaning that in the summertime, they cultivate their own vegetables in their garden, steps away from the restaurant, including tomatoes, corn, peppers, zucchini, sunflowers and more!

Celebrating more than 25 years, Casa Nuova has become a true staple in the Alpharetta area, serving more than three generations of families, including friends old and new, visiting near and far from all over the metro Atlanta area and beyond.

Website | LinkedIn | Facebook | Instagram

About North Fulton Business Radio and host John Ray

With over 790 shows and having featured over 1,200 guests, North Fulton Business Radio is the longest-running podcast in the North Fulton area, covering business in our community like no one else. We are the undisputed “Voice of Business” in North Fulton!

The show welcomes a wide variety of business, non-profit, and community leaders to get the word out about the important work they’re doing to serve their market, their community, and their profession. There’s no discrimination based on company size, and there’s never any “pay to play.” North Fulton Business Radio supports and celebrates business by sharing positive business stories that traditional media ignore. Some media leans left. Some media leans right. We lean business.

John Ray, Business RadioX - North Fulton, and Owner, Ray Business Advisors
John Ray, Business RadioX – North Fulton, and Owner, Ray Business Advisors

John Ray is the host of North Fulton Business Radio. The show is recorded 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, and many others.

The studio address is 275 South Main Street, Alpharetta, GA 30009.

John Ray, The Generosity MindsetJohn Ray also operates his own business advisory practice. John’s services include advising solopreneurs and small professional services firms on their value, their positioning and business development, and their pricing. His clients are professionals who are selling their expertise, such as consultants, coaches, attorneys, CPAs, accountants and bookkeepers, marketing professionals, and other professional services practitioners.

John is the national bestselling author of The Generosity Mindset: A Journey to Business Success by Raising Your Confidence, Value, and Prices.

Tagged With: agency, ally leadership, authenticity, Becky Berry, Becky Berry Coaching, diversity, John Ray, Leadership, leadership coaching, North Fulton Business Radio, Servant Leadership

Navigating Adaptive Challenges: Using the Dignity Lens for Organizational Success, with Dr. Beth-Sarah Wright, Author of Dignity: Seven Strategies for Creating Authentic Community

February 15, 2024 by John Ray

Dr. Beth-Sarah Wright
North Fulton Business Radio
Navigating Adaptive Challenges: Using the Dignity Lens for Organizational Success, with Dr. Beth-Sarah Wright, Author of Dignity: Seven Strategies for Creating Authentic Community
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Dr. Beth-Sarah Wright

Navigating Adaptive Challenges: Using the Dignity Lens for Organizational Success, with Dr. Beth-Sarah Wright, Author of Dignity: Seven Strategies for Creating Authentic Community (North Fulton Business Radio, Episode 743)

Dr. Beth-Sarah Wright, an author, speaker, organizational consultant, and adjunct professor at Emory University, joined host John Ray to discuss what she calls the “Dignity Lens,” a seven-part acronym for addressing organizational challenges and fostering individual development. According to Dr. Wright, the Dignity Lens asks organizations to measure results (Yield), maintain Integrity, promote Growth, Nurture changes and interventions, be Transparent, value Diversity in all its forms, and stay true to Identity. She emphasizes that this framework isn’t for fixing quick issues but for addressing adaptive challenges, fostering capacity building, encouraging new thinking, and bringing about long-term changes in organizations. Dr. Wright has further detailed the application of her framework in a workbook that can be used independently or in consultation, and her work has been utilized in a wide variety of organizations.

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.

Dr. Beth-Sarah Wright, Organizational Consultant, Author, and Speaker

Dr. Beth Sarah-Wright
Dr. Beth Sarah-Wright

Atlanta-based speaker and author Dr. Beth-Sarah Wright works nationwide, encouraging individuals, communities, and institutions to develop the capacity for change and transformation.

Dr. Wright is a former college professor at NYU and Spelman College. She currently serves as the Director of Enrollment Management at Holy Innocents’ Episcopal School in Atlanta and an Adjunct Assistant Professor in the Department of Psychiatry at Emory School of Medicine. She holds a Ph.D. in Performance Studies from New York University, an MPhil in Anthropology from Cambridge University, and a B.A. (magna cum laude) from Princeton University in Sociology and Afro-American Studies.

Her body of work addresses the insidious challenges we face in our individual lives, mental health, or communities that require identity shifts and increases in capacities and competencies to bring about sustainable and meaningful change. Wright advocates for authenticity in our communities, no matter our context, by aligning our aspirational identities with our lived realities.

Beth-Sarah is the author of eight books, which include The DIGNITY Lens Workbook: Implementing the Seven Strategies for Creating Authentic Community, a companion to her book DIGNITY: Seven Strategies for Creating Authentic Community, a children’s book, Meet Babs and her Beautifully Different Friend, Me? Depressed?; A Story of Depression from Denial to Discovery, Ten Things I Wish I Knew About Depression Before It Almost Took My Life, and a book of meditations, Becoming Who I Am.

Her latest book is Deep Joy: 40 Meditations for Your Journey.

Beth-Sarah is originally from Jamaica and has lived and studied worldwide, from Edinburgh, Scotland, to San Juan, Puerto Rico. She is married to Robert C. Wright, the Episcopal Bishop of Atlanta, and they are parents to 5 children.

Website | Books | LinkedIn | Instagram | Facebook

Topics Covered in this Interview

00:04 Introduction to the Show
01:22 Introduction to Dr. Beth-Sarah Wright
01:57 Discussion of Dignity, What Dignity Means, and its Importance
03:01 Understanding the Concept of Dignity as an Acronym
08:22 Deep Dive into the Meaning of Each Letter in Dignity
25:08 Practical Application of the Dignity Framework
32:23 Conclusion and Contact Information
John Ray and Dr. Beth-Sarah Wright

About North Fulton Business Radio and host John Ray

With over 740 shows and having featured over 1,100 guests, North Fulton Business Radio is the longest-running podcast in the North Fulton area, covering business in our community like no one else. We are the “Voice of Business” in North Fulton!

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, and many others.

The studio address is 275 South Main Street, Alpharetta, GA 30009.

John Ray
John Ray, Studio Owner, Business RadioX and Owner, Ray Business Advisors

John Ray also operates his own business advisory practice. John’s services include advising solopreneurs and small professional services firms on their value, their positioning and business development, and their pricing. His clients are professionals who are selling their expertise, such as consultants, coaches, attorneys, CPAs, accountants and bookkeepers, marketing professionals, and other professional services practitioners.

John is the author of The Generosity Mindset:  A Journey to Business Success by Raising Your Confidence, Value, and Prices.

 

Renasant BankRenasant Bank has humble roots, starting in 1904 as a $100,000 bank in a Lee County, Mississippi, bakery. Since then, Renasant has 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.

Tagged With: adaptive challenges, dignity, Dignity Lens, diversity, Dr. Beth-Sarah Wright, growth, integrity, Leadership, nuture, Organizational Consultant, organizational consulting, Transparency

LIVE from SOAHR 2023: Sheryl LaPlace, Insperity

April 13, 2023 by John Ray

LIVE from SOAHR 2023: Sheryl LaPlace, Insperity
North Fulton Business Radio
LIVE from SOAHR 2023: Sheryl LaPlace, Insperity
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LIVE from SOAHR 2023: Sheryl LaPlace, Insperity

LIVE from SOAHR 2023: Sheryl LaPlace, Insperity (North Fulton Business Radio, Episode 643)

Sheryl LaPlace, HR Consultant with Insperity, joined host John Ray LIVE at the Business RadioX® remote at SOAHR 2023. She talked about her work at Insperity, her fireside chat topic at the conference, “Reskilling and Retooling,” the biggest mistakes she sees employers make, and much more.

This show was originally broadcast live from SOAHR 2023, the annual conference of SHRM-Atlanta, held at the Gas South District Convention Center, Duluth, Georgia on March 28th and 29th, 2023. This series of interviews was underwritten by Oberman Law Firm, your legal guide to workplace complexities.

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

Insperity

People are at the core of every business – including theirs. Insperity is here to help you navigate employee benefits, HR admin and payroll, risk management and so much more.

Their tagline, HR that makes a difference®, defines what they do. It emphasizes that human resources is a key driver of growth and contributes to a business’s bottom line. This is what sets Insperity apart.

Website | LinkedIn | Facebook | Twitter 

Sheryl LaPlace, HR Consultant, Insperity

Sheryl LaPlace, HR Consultant, Insperity

As a Human Resources Consultant with Insperity, Sheryl currently works on a team of professionals providing a wide array of HR services to small and mid-sized businesses across the U.S. She has experienced the business world as an entrepreneur, managing operations for a small partnership, and as the member of a large multinational corporation.

With over 20 years of experience in human resources, training & development, recruiting, operations, business management, DE&I, and consultative services, Sheryl helps organizations design a thriving culture, build HR infrastructure, and ensure HR compliance.

Sheryl is sought out for her HR expertise and has written articles for various business magazines, facilitated numerous podcasts and webinars on HR “hot topics,” and has been featured in several radio and newspaper interviews.

She enjoys sharing her knowledge and experiences and serving as a mentor to new and junior HR professionals. As a Summa Cum Laude graduate of Rutgers University, Sheryl holds a Bachelor’s Degree in Business Management and is a member of the Society for Human Resource Management. She has earned her Diversity, Equity, & Inclusion Certification from the University of South Florida as well as the PHR designation (Professional in Human Resources) by the HR Certification Institute.

Questions and Topics in this Interview:

  • Sheryl’s work at Insperity
  • Her fireside chat topic at the conference – “Reskilling and Retooling”
  • Biggest mistakes employers make

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.

The “LIVE from SOAHR 2023” Series is proudly underwritten by Oberman Law Firm

Stuart Oberman
Stuart Oberman, Founder, Oberman Law Firm

Oberman Law Firm has a long history of civic service, noted national, regional, and local clients, and stands among the Southeast’s eminent and fast-growing full-service law firms. Oberman Law Firm’s areas of practice include Business Planning, Commercial & Technology Transactions, Corporate, Employment & Labor, Estate Planning, Health Care, Intellectual Property, Litigation, Privacy & Data Security, and Real Estate.

By meeting their client’s goals and becoming a trusted partner and advocate for our clients, their attorneys are recognized as legal go-getters who provide value-added service. Their attorneys understand that in a rapidly changing legal market, clients have new expectations, and constantly evolving choices, and operate in an environment of heightened reputational and commercial risk.

Oberman Law Firm’s strength is its ability to solve complex legal problems by collaborating across borders and practice areas.

Connect with Oberman Law Firm:

Company website | LinkedIn | Twitter

 

Tagged With: diversity, HR, HR consulting, HR stategy, Human Resources, nsperity, Oberman Law, Oberman Law Firm, payroll, Reskilling, Retooling, Sheryl LaPlace, SHRM Atlanta, SOAHR 2023, Stuart Oberman

Elena Joy Thurston with Elena Joy Experience and Vera Minot with Southwest Solutions

February 23, 2023 by Karen

Elena-Joy-Thurston-with-Elena-Joy-Experience-and-Vera-Minot-with-Southwest-Solutions-feature
Phoenix Business Radio
Elena Joy Thurston with Elena Joy Experience and Vera Minot with Southwest Solutions
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Elena Joy Thurston with Elena Joy Experience and Vera Minot with Southwest Solutions

Elena Joy Experience is a certified LGBTQ-owned and women-owned consulting company that offers training, coaching, speaking, and consultation. We increase authentic and sustainable Inclusive Leadership through: EJE-logo3

  • Inclusive Leadership training workshops
  • Human Resource and Public Relation department trainings
  • ERG support strategy
  • Executive Coaching that focuses on inclusion and impactful Vocal Empowerment for leaders from marginalized communities
  • Keynote speaking engagements that allow for transformational experiences

Our mission is to increase inclusion in real and sustainable ways, through transformational experiences and communication. We believe that organizations specifically and society at large can prevent suicide and homelessness in the LGBTQ+ community by authentically increasing inclusion, safety, and belonging, while simultaneously increasing profit.

We envision a world in which every LGBTQ+ employee is safe at work and proud of the impact their employers are having on the world.

Elena-Joy-Thurston-Phoenix-Business-RadioFeatured in the award-winning documentary, CONVERSION, Elena Joy Thurston is an inspirational Diversity & Allyship speaker, trainer, and author through a lens of LGBTQ+ inclusion.

Elena Joy inspires her audiences to learn how Inclusive Leadership can improve company morale and productivity, changing members’ lives in a practical way.

A Mormon mom of four who lost her marriage, her church, and her community when she came out as a lesbian, her viral TEDx talk on surviving conversion therapy has been viewed more than 45,000 times and landed her media and speaking opportunities with ABC, CBS, FOX, Penn State, University of North Texas, Michael’s, Logitech, and more.

Connect with Elena Joy on LinkedIn and Instagram.

Southwest-Solutions-logo

Southwest Solutions is an award winning marketing materials agency that has been going the extra mile for their clients since 2014.

With a diverse team comprising more than 45 years of experience in the industry, they help people think beyond the product and leverage the emotional exchange that marketing actually is.

Vera-Minot-Phoenix-Business-RadioVera Minot is the Creative Director for, and part owner of, Southwest Solutions – an award winning promotional design company. She is a heart-first professional who’s known for her creativity; aversion to small talk; and appreciation good vocabulary and clever marketing materials.

She studied Linguistics and Gender & Women’s Studies at the University of Arizona, and after stints in a variety of industries that converged into a unique perspective on business and humans, she joined the team at SWS.

She never knew she’d love her industry so much, but every business or organization has a unique brand story to tell, and when she realized promotional products & custom apparel don’t have to be boring (nor do they have to be straight-to-the-trash-swag) she was hooked!

In her free time, Vera serves as the President of the Tucson LGBT Chamber of Commerce – cultivating a safe space for queer folks in business but also a space of learning for allies who are tremendously important to the LGBTQIA+ community.

In the free time that’s left, you’ll find her being active, tending to too many houseplants, reading, and hanging out with her wife and their cats.

Connect with Vera on LinkedIn.

Tagged With: Arizona Promo Products, Custom Branded Apparel, diversity, equity, inclusion, Inclusive Business, inclusive leadership, Intentional Marketing Materials, leadership development, LGBTQ+ Inclusion, Print Materials, promotional products

Humanity and Mental Health in the Workplace E26

August 25, 2022 by Karen

E26-Humanity-and-Mental-Health-in-the-Workplace-feature
Phoenix Business Radio
Humanity and Mental Health in the Workplace E26
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Humanity and Mental Health in the Workplace E26

Authenticity, humanity, and integrity are just a few of the words to describe the two gentlemen on this show and the direction that the conversation went in.

When it comes to pairing guests for the Culture Crush Business Podcast, we pair strategically. We tend to pair a company that has a great culture with a company that offers resources to improve culture. For this show, each of the two companies that were on the show fit into both of these categories. BOTH companies are growing a great culture while ALSO supporting companies with improving their company culture.

This conversation started strongly in the direction and importance of DEI in the workplace and supporting individuals in being their authentic selves in a psychologically safe work environment. Psychological safety is a shared belief held by members of a team that the team is safe for interpersonal risk taking. It gives the employees the opportunity to disagree and still be supported in the workplace.

This was part of the bigger conversation of things that leaders and companies can do to support the mental health of their employees. Companies can’t just talk about supporting mental health- they actually need to take action on it.

We walked away with tons of examples on how to do this!!

  • Ask the right questions
  • What am I doing and what is the company doing that can be improved on?
  • How are you doing professionally?
  • How are you doing personally?
  • Have open visibility to what goes on the calendar
  • Therapy sessions
  • Dentist Appointments
  • Doctor appointments
  • A block on the calendar for self care
  • Support from leadership to the staff in being their own authentic self
  • Provide a stipend that allows them additional mental health support
  • Allowing them the time for self care during the work day
  • Letter from the CEO articulating the importance of mental health
  • Putting in boundaries for when emails can be sent to the staff

When trying to find out more info about Hummingbird Humany, head to their website www.hummingbirdhumanity.com and go to the resources tab where they offer free resources to the Hummingbird community. From the website, visitors can also sign-up for their weekly newsletter or follow their social media accounts.

evolvedMD has a variety of resources listed at their website as well. Head to their main page, https://www.evolvedmd.com/ and then head over to their resources and news tab.

Both Sentari and Brian are on podcasts out there as well! Make sure to find them and follow them!

Let’s just say this conversation will definitely have to have a Part B to it!

HHM-KLogo-TextOnlyv1

Hummingbird Humanity is committed to amplifying the voices of the unheard.

Hummingbird’s offerings include a consulting practice which partners with companies to build human-centered workplace cultures through assessment, strategy, and implementation; a speakers bureau featuring diverse voices who share about their lived experiences and offer suggestions for tangible action in their message; a growing collection of children’s books and resources for grown-ups to have age-appropriate diversity conversations with kids; and a soon to be launched practice for coaching and facilitation helping leaders develop their skills to be inclusive and people-centered.

Brian-McComak-HeadshotBrian McComak is a consultant, speaker, author, and facilitator with over 20 years of experience in Diversity, Equity, & Inclusion, HR, company culture, change management, internal communications, and employee experience.

He is the founder and CEO of Hummingbird Humanity, a consulting firm that cultivates and champions inclusive workplace cultures and human-centered leadership.

Connect with Brian on LinkedIn and Instagram.

evolvedMD-logo

evolvedMD is leading the integration of behavioral health services in modern primary care. Uniquely upfront and ongoing, our distinctive model not only places but embeds behavioral health specialists onsite at your practice. We offer an economically viable and better way to integrate behavioral health that ultimately drives improved patient outcomes.

Sentari-Minor-Headshot-CroppedSentari Minor is most passionate about bringing the best out of individuals and entities.

His love languages are strategy, storytelling, and social impact. As Head of Strategy for evolvedMD, Mr. Minor is at the forefront of healthcare innovation with a scope of work that includes strategy, corporate development, growth, branding, culture, and coaching.

Prior to evolvedMD, he worked with some of the Nation’s most prominent and curious CEOs and entrepreneurs advising on philanthropy, policy, and everything social good as Regional Director of Alder (formerly Gen Next) [PHX + DAL + SFO] and strengthened social enterprises as Director at venture philanthropy firm, Social Venture Partners.

A Phoenix native, Mr. Minor continued his education in the Midwest and is an alumnus of DePauw University in Greencastle, Indiana where he studied English with an emphasis in Creative Writing. He is also a member of Class IV of the American Express Leadership Academy through the Arizona State University Lodestar Center. If you want to profile him: he’s an ENTJ (Myers Briggs), a Maverick (Predictive Index), and trimodal Blue/Green/Red (Emergenetics).

Where does he shine? In high-touch stakeholder engagement, capital raising, public relations, and strategic planning. With his background, Mr. Minor serves on the board of directors for a diverse set of social impact organizations, as a venture mentor for socially conscious companies nationwide, and as a facilitator for businesses who want organizational clarity.

Committed to strengthening brands doing good in the world, Mr. Minor speaks nationally and publishes often on strategy, marketing, leadership, capacity building, social entrepreneurship, and engaging high-profile leaders in the dialogue of today. For his impact on business and community, he was honored among the Phoenix Business Journal’s “40 Under 40” class of 2022.

When he’s not busy changing the world, self-care to him looks like working out, stirring the pot on social media, being an amateur author, and spending time with the people who make him smile.

Connect with Sentari on LinkedIn and Instagram.

About Culture Crush

Culture is not just a tag word to be thrown around. It is not something you throw in job descriptions to draw people to applying for jobs within a company.

According to Marcus Buckingham and Ashely Goodall in their book Nine Lies About Work, “Culture is the tenants of how we behave. It’s like a family creed. This is how we operate and treat each other in the family.”CultaureCrushKindraBanner2

As a growing company- Culture Crush Business Podcast is THE culture improvement resource that supports companies and leaders.  Our Mission is to improve company cultures so people WANT to go to work. Employees and leaders should like where they work and we think this is possible.

Within the company: Culture Crush has Vetted Resources and Partnerships with the right people and resources that can help improve your company culture.

On this podcast:  We focus on everything surrounding businesses with good company culture. We will talk with company leaders to learn about real-life experiences, tips, and best practices for creating a healthy work environment where employees are finding joy and satisfaction in their work while also striving and growing within the company.  We also find the companies that offer resources to help improve company culture and showcase them on the show to share their tips and tricks for growing culture.

About the Host

ABHOUTHOSTHEADSHOT

Kindra Maples  is spartan racer, past animal trainer, previous magician’s assistant, and has a weakness for Oreo cookie shakes. Her journey working with people actually started working with animals as a teenager (don’t worry we won’t go that far back for her bio).

She worked for over 15 years in the zoo industry working with animals and the public. Her passion of working with animals shifted into working with people in education, operations and leadership roles. From there her passion of leadership and helping people develop has continued to grow.

Then came the opportunity for leading  the Culture Crush Business Podcast and she jumped on it. Leadership, growth, and strong company cultures are all areas that Kindra is interested in diving into further.

Shout Outs

We want to thank a few people for their behind the scenes effort in helping this relaunch to come to life. James Johnson with Tailored Penguin Media Company LLC.– It is a small, but powerful video production company with a goal to deliver the very best by articulating the vision of your brand in a visually creative way. Gordon Murray with Flash PhotoVideo, LLC. -Flash Gordon has been photographing since high school and evolving since then with new products that will equip, encourage, engage, and enable. Renee Blundon with Renee Blundon Design – She is not only one of the best free divers (that’s not how she helped with the podcast) but she is great with graphics design and taking the direction for the vision that you have while also adding creative ideas to bring to your vision to life.

These are just a few of the folks that supported the relaunch of the podcast. If you would like to be part of the Culture Crush team or would like to support underwriting the show- please reach out: info@culturecrushbusiness.com

Tagged With: Behavioral Health Integration, Branding, Culture, diversity, employee experience, Human-Centered, inclusion, mental health, workplace wellness

Workplace MVP: Soumaya Khalifa, Khalifa Consulting

March 24, 2022 by John Ray

Khalifa Consulting
Minneapolis St. Paul Studio
Workplace MVP: Soumaya Khalifa, Khalifa Consulting
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Khalifa Consulting

Workplace MVP: Soumaya Khalifa, Khalifa Consulting

On this episode of Workplace MVP, Soumaya Khalifa, President of Khalifa Consulting, joined Jamie Gassmann to discuss diversity, equity, and inclusion at the leadership level. Noting that diversity is now a given when hiring, Soumaya elaborated on the qualities an effective leader must have to be an inclusive leader. She and Jamie went on to discuss what diversity is, the impact when it’s missing, how leaders can uncover their unconscious bias, a culture of belonging, and much more. Workplace MVP is underwritten and presented by R3 Continuum and produced by the Minneapolis-St.Paul Studio of Business RadioX®.

Khalifa Consulting

Khalifa Consulting provides Fortune 100 companies, non-profit organizations, and governmental institutions with wide-ranging expertise and practical solutions to cross-cultural operations in the Arab world and the US.

Our team of top-level Diversity and Inclusion experts offers training and coaching services including Understanding the Diversity and Cultures of Arab Americans, Intercultural Communication, Managing a Cross-Cultural Team, Cultural Competency for Law Enforcement, and Keys to Success as a Woman Executive in the Arab World.

▪ For international business clients, we offer the specific cultural tools and information needed to successfully conduct business in the Arab World, including how to work within global/virtual teams, and crafting culturally appropriate videos and other media messages.

▪ For domestic and international business clients, we offer training workshops and individualized coaching to support diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives.

▪ For US-based clients, we offer guidance and technical assistance on how to provide reasonable accommodations for their Muslim employees, by auditing current practices, making recommendations, and suggesting inclusive ways to support a positive work environment.

▪ For clients planning relocations to or from the Arab World, we offer general and specific direction for personal and family adjustment, practical shortcuts for managing new systems, and how-tos for everyday life.

▪ For our executive coaching clients, Khalifa Consulting offers personalized, ongoing, one-on-one high-level coaching to increase motivation, improve business skills and create work-life balance leading to thriving businesses and families.

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Soumaya Khalifa, President, Khalifa Consulting

Soumaya Khalifa, President, Khalifa Consulting

Soumaya Khalifa is the president of Khalifa Consulting, an Atlanta-based consulting firm specializing in intercultural coaching, consulting, and training. She is also an executive coach and teaches at Emory University Continuing education courses on Human Resources Management, Diversity, Equity and Inclusion, and Women in Leadership.

Soumaya is passionate about her work to build bridges of understanding and help leaders and organizations positively impact their employees and their bottom line.

 

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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.

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 Gassman.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:00:25] Hi, everyone. Your host, Jamie Gassmann, here, and welcome to this episode of Workplace MVP. Diversity and inclusion is an area of focus for many senior leaders and H.R. executives. A great number of workplaces are re-examining their organization’s approach to ensuring diversity and inclusion and looking for how they can improve, build or implement new initiatives for their work environments. There are a lot of ways employers can take to building their diversity and inclusion program. But to aid in their ability to ensure their program is effective and successful, their efforts need to start at the top where they’re leaders embodying what is called inclusive leadership.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:01:08] As an inclusive leader, you are aware of your own biases and you are actively seeking out and considering different perspectives to inform your decision making and collaboration with others. These leaders are committed to ensuring all team members are treated equitably, feel a sense of belonging and value, and have the resources and support they need to achieve their full potential. How does an organization ensure they have inclusive leaders or how do their leaders learn to be inclusive if not already? Where does this fall within the process of establishing or reinventing an organization’s diversity and inclusion program?

Jamie Gassmann: [00:01:47] Well, joining us today to share her expertise and recommendations for workplaces looking to incorporate or reinvent their diversity and inclusion programs is workplace MVP and President and CEO of Khalifa Consulting, Soumaya Khalifa. Welcome to the show, Soumaya.

Soumaya Khalifa: [00:02:03] Thank you. It’s so wonderful to be with you today.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:02:07] Oh, we’re really happy to have you. So, I’d like to start out with you sharing with me your journey to becoming the President and CEO of Khalifa Consulting.

Soumaya Khalifa: [00:02:16] That is an incredible question. It has been a long road and it also has been a very unconventional journey. I earned my B.S. degree in Chemistry of all things and decided that I wanted to do something with people and not in labs. So, what I did is I pursued my MBA in human resources, worked in Corporate America for many years in the H.R. field, which I truly loved. Towards the end of that career in Corporate America, I was involved in a lot of diversity and inclusion work as well as organizational effectiveness, and it’s really amazing that the two really kind of complement each other. When I went out on my own, I wanted to bring all of my journey, all of my experiences to my clients. And so, that’s when I founded Khalifa Consulting, and it’s been about 12, 13 years now.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:03:01] Wow. So, talk to me a little bit about some of the work and the business that you do with Khalifa Consulting and helping your clients.

Soumaya Khalifa: [00:03:09] Khalifa Consulting is a boutique firm with a network of consultants covering the world. We specialize in executive coaching, intercultural and DEI training and consulting. I have a special interest in women and leadership and how to bring religion or faith into the DEI framework. We cater to large and mid-sized organizations and in the intercultural and DEI work, and also we do executive coaching for all sizes of organizations.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:03:41] Great. So, this topic we’re talking about is very near and dear to your heart. Share with me your opinion about workplaces having a diversity and inclusion program. Should they – is it – what’s the level of importance in making sure that they have something built-in?

Soumaya Khalifa: [00:03:59] Well, you know, diversity is a given because our population right here in the US has been diversifying over the last couple of decades. So, it is a given. If we are, as employers, looking for the best talent that there is out there, we will get diverse talent. Now, the real issue is how do we make our workplaces inviting enough for that talent, that top talent, to want to join us, but not only in joining us but to stay with us. So, inclusion needs to be very intentional. What does an employer have to do to attract and retain the talent that’s out there?

Soumaya Khalifa: [00:04:39] And, you know, it’s not only about talent. But if we have that talent, we are able to get into new markets. Because when we go into new markets, we have to understand them. And if we do have representation from them, that gives us an advantage, a competitive advantage to reach people in different markets. And, diversity is being invited to a party, and inclusion is being able to dance up the party. So, that’s the framework. So, diversity is a given, but what do we do with it in organization is the act and that is inclusion.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:05:19] Yeah. It’s such a great analogy. I’ve never heard it referred to that way, but it gives some context to how those two play together, basically. So, looking at that term inclusive, inclusive leader, you know, can you share from your expertise what that means? I know I gave a little brief definition of it at the beginning, but can you share from your perspective what that means?

Soumaya Khalifa: [00:05:43] Sure. In my opinion, an effective leader by default is an inclusive leader. And if we are to look at some of the characteristics of an inclusive leader, they have to have commitment to cultivate a diverse and inclusive workforce, and that takes really time and energy from them. And they have to believe in the business case for diversity and inclusion and how that is driving or will drive or will impact on the mission and vision of their organization.

Soumaya Khalifa: [00:05:43] They need to have courage. They need to have courage and not be afraid to challenge organizational attitudes and practices that yield homogeneity, even if their recommendations are politically or culturally unpopular within their organization. You know, they have to be very careful there.

Soumaya Khalifa: [00:06:34] They need to also display humility by acknowledging their own personal limitations and seeking contributions from others to overcome that. Some leaders, you know, as we all know, find it difficult to admit that they don’t have all the answers. So if they are, if they do have humility and reach out to others, that makes them better leaders. They need to be able to recognize that they have biases. We all do this. It’s just human nature. They need to work on identifying what their own biases are and learn ways to prevent them from influencing their talent decisions.

Soumaya Khalifa: [00:07:14] They want to also look at their policies, processes and structures to see if there are organizational biases that are undermining diversity and inclusion in their organization.

Soumaya Khalifa: [00:07:27] They have to be curious. They have to have an open mind and a passion for learning and a desire for their own exposure to different ideas. And, they have to also be culturally intelligent. By that, I mean that they have to be aware of their cultural preferences. When they are on autopilot, how do they act? What do they go to? But they also need to learn about the cultures of people that they work with, their team, their colleagues, and be able to identify if there are gaps and how can they bridge those gaps to be able to leverage the best from all their team members.

Soumaya Khalifa: [00:08:13] An inclusive leader needs to also be collaborative. They have to understand that collaboration is important for the success of their teams. And for them to be collaborative, they have to create a psychologically safe environment in which all individuals feel that they are empowered to express their opinions in the group. So, these are just some of the characteristics of an inclusive and, in my opinion, an effective leader.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:08:45] Great. And now, looking at those biases and thinking about diversity, just real quick, can you share with us when we hear the term diversity. I feel sometimes that can show up differently with different individuals. From your perspective, when you hear the term diversity, what does that include? What does that mean?

Jamie Gassmann: [00:09:07] Sure. Diversity, in my opinion, is everything that makes us different but also everything that makes us the same. So, a lot of organizations focus on race and on gender. And, within the US framework, that’s usually what is focused in on. But there are so many different layers of diversity that we need to look into if we are telling people bring your whole professional self to work in terms of, for instance, sexual orientation, in terms of religion, and many other different layers of diversity.

Soumaya Khalifa: [00:09:51] People on the outside might look the same, but when we start peeling off the different layers, there are differences amongst them. So, we need to treat diversity in the broadest sense. And, what’s really interesting is diversity, we need to look at the history of the nation that we’re looking at diversity at. We need to look at the social construct in it and many other things.

Soumaya Khalifa: [00:10:15] I was working with a client who works for a French company, and the French company’s diversity and inclusion philosophy is getting more women in and bringing more non-French people into their boards and into their leadership. So, that is how they define it in a French company. In a US company, that is defined a little bit differently. There’s more emphasis on race and on gender, of course.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:10:45] Interesting. So, looking at that inclusive leadership and looking at that work environment, why is it so important that you have inclusive leadership within that work environment? What are the consequences if you don’t? Or the impact?

Soumaya Khalifa: [00:11:00] The impact there is really huge. And some of it is a direct impact and some is an indirect impact. If the workplace is not inclusive, where employees don’t feel like they belong, if it is a hostile work environment, it’s not a friendly work environment, then the implications can be very enormous, anywhere from a turnover rate where people are not – don’t want to stay with the company or the organization. People can get depressed. The medical cost of the organization that they pick up on productivity goes down. People call out sick more often. Just a lot of negative consequences if we don’t have an inclusive environment in our workplaces.

Soumaya Khalifa: [00:11:55] I don’t feel like I belong. If I don’t feel like I belong and I could be myself, I don’t want to be there. I want to find somewhere else to go. And, I think with COVID-19 and if leaders were not intentional in diversity and inclusion because we went into more online and it was more difficult to provide that culture of inclusivity when we are online. So, leaders have to be even more intentional and organizations have to be more intentional to bring that inclusiveness culture into the workplace.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:12:31] Yeah. Interesting. I could imagine with the great resignation, if you will, if maybe some of that realization was coming through for some of those employees. Do you think that that had some contribution to it once they moved into this kind of remote work environment, feeling a little bit more isolated than before?

Soumaya Khalifa: [00:12:50] I do believe so. I do believe so. All our worlds really turned upside down. We did not think that we could work from home as much as we did, and we adapted to it. Everybody had an opportunity to pivot. And, as employees, they looked at their priorities and what’s important to them and decided is this the right organization for me to stay in, or do I look for something else where I’m happier? Because happiness is really important for individuals now.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:13:24] Yeah. Absolutely. And so, looking at a leader in a work environment, you know, how do they identify the biases that they have? How do they know they’ve got them? Like, what are some ways that they can help themselves to maybe identify ones that they might have that they weren’t even aware of? So, just we’d like to get some of your thoughts around that.

Soumaya Khalifa: [00:13:47] Well, thank you so much for the question. We all have biases and we have unconscious bias, whether – and they’re called unconscious because we don’t know about them and they could be really detrimental for us. If we don’t know about them, we can’t do anything about them.

Soumaya Khalifa: [00:14:02] So, your question of how do we find out. Well, there are so many different ways to find out. One quick way of doing it is for the individual leader to look at their circle of friends. Do they all look like them? Look at who they’re hiring. Do they all look like them? This is similar to me impact. And, you know, so that is looking in the mirror and seeing what world have I created around me.

Soumaya Khalifa: [00:14:33] I was involved with Leadership Atlanta and I went through that many years ago. And one of the things that came out of it is that we were challenged to look at our circle of friends. And many people from our class decided that, hey, I golf with all white guys or all black guys or whatever the race and gender happened to be. And they made a conscious decision that I need to diversify my circle of friends, circle of people that I go out with, circle people that I golf with, and that impacted them.

Soumaya Khalifa: [00:15:15] Now, another way to find out about our own cultural biases or unconscious biases, I’m sorry, is to ask a colleague or confidant. That would be a very sensitive conversation. But there needs to be a very high level of trust there.

Soumaya Khalifa: [00:15:32] There’s another way too and that is, there’s an online tool that is developed – that has been developed by Harvard University, and that’s an instrument to identify unconscious bias. And it’s free and it’s online. And, if one types implicit Harvard edu, then they will take that, take it to that website. And it’s really an amazing one. If you want to look at race or gender or religion or what have you, there are many different instruments there for people to identify what unconscious bias they might be playing.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:16:09] So, you kind of identified a couple of approaches that they can take by looking at their group of peers or that they’re spending a lot of their extra time with and look, you know, re-evaluating and identifying ways to kind of diversify that. But what are some other ways that they could overcome their bias, their unconscious bias, or even biases they know that they have and relearn a thinking, you know, that likely has been instilled in them from a really young age, because I think some of our biases that we have comes from how we grew up or how we, you know, life events that we’ve experienced. And so, how can one kind of relearn, if you will, how to look at people differently or how to kind of be more diverse or more inclusive?

Soumaya Khalifa: [00:17:00] Yeah. That is such a great question. And, you know, we pick up our unconscious biases as children at the dinner table, what is said at the dinner table. So, parents and grown-ups and leaders, we need to be watching what is said at the dinner table because the younger generations are picking up on the biases that we already have, spoken and unspoken. So, we don’t have to say much of anything and that’s picked up. Kids are very, very smart.

Soumaya Khalifa: [00:17:30] So, in terms of how do we get over that, I know that a client, he worked with very diverse background people. And one of the stories that he shared is they were talking about we don’t have, you know, we only have one Jewish person in the group. And to him, he looked and he said, “Who’s that?” And that Jewish person was somebody that he became friends with and he no longer saw him as Jewish. He was just Ed.

Soumaya Khalifa: [00:18:11] And so, that is how we can work around unconscious biases. First of all, identifying what unconscious bias we might have, and then be intentional in terms of expanding our experiences so that we have meaningful interactions with people from whatever background that we have the unconscious bias on. And then, when we see people as individuals, the stereotypes or the assumptions we have based on the group kind of falls out the way. And that is a very effective way to overcome our unconscious biases. But, again, it takes awareness. It takes intentionality, and it also takes a strong will of wanting to do it.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:18:56] Great. Great, great advice there. Because I imagine there’s people who are like, I don’t want to be seen as that person that’s not inclusive because they might feel internally that they are and maybe aren’t aware of what they can’t see. So, very interesting.

Soumaya Khalifa: [00:19:11] And, you know, more on that because that is a very important subject to think about. Again, unconscious, it’s not seen, it’s not felt. But knowing that the biases show up when we are in an ambiguous situation, such as if we don’t know about a person and we meet them, and all of a sudden we go to our stereotypes. So, we want to be able to minimize ambiguous situations. We you want to learn about all the situations we get into so we won’t be surprised. We won’t be able to surprise ourselves in a negative way when snap decisions need to be made right away, our hardwired stereotypes pop up. So, taking time to make decisions. And usually, it’s recommended that leaders make decisions early in the day when they have had a good night’s sleep and they’re less likely to make mental shortcuts.

Soumaya Khalifa: [00:20:09] And, you know, being able to push back against default assumptions when we put a stereotype in our mind that’s hardwired, you know, and I’m a short person. I love to give that example. If our stereotype in our mind is that short people are not very smart and we see a short person, then the way the stereotype works is that they are not very smart. And if that happens, if that person happens to be smart, then we push back through those stereotypes. Well, well, they’re the exception. They’re not really the rule.

Soumaya Khalifa: [00:20:44] So, we need, again, self-awareness to get over that. And then, being able to learn, learn and meet new people, be challenged and challenge our stereotypes and prejudices if they have gotten to that level.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:21:06] Yeah. Ask questions get to know people. Yeah. Be open to that. That’s kind of the approach that I like to take because I just love to hear people’s stories. So, which is why this show is so great because I get to hear so many leaders’ stories and expertise.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:21:19] So, real quick, we’re going to take a break and listen from our sponsor. So, Workplace MVP is sponsored by R3 Continuum. R3 Continuum is a global leader in empowering leaders to effectively support and help their employees thrive during disruptive times. Through their tailored workplace behavioral health support, disruption response and recovery, and violence mitigation solutions, they can help you create a work environment where your employees can feel psychologically and physically safe. To learn more, visit our r3c.com today.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:21:53] So, you mentioned in our previous conversation the importance of creating a culture of belonging within that work environment. Can you help kind of describe for our listeners what does a culture belonging look and feel like?

Soumaya Khalifa: [00:22:09] Sure. Belonging is a sense one gets that they are a valued member of an organization. They feel a sense of purpose. A sense of belonging brings meaning into our lives and all the circles. I mean, let’s face it, we spend more time at work than we spend with our family. And if we feel good about ourselves, good about the organizations that we work for, just think about how that’s going to impact us individually, as employees, as leaders, but also the organization.

Soumaya Khalifa: [00:22:44] So, there was a survey done in 2019 by an organization called BetterUp, and they found that workplace belonging can lead to a 56% increase in job performance. It can also lead to a 50% reduction in employee turnover. Workplace belonging can lead to 75% decrease in employee sick days. So, those numbers really give us the business case for why having a culture of belonging is very important. It adds to the bottom line.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:23:19] Wow. Sounds like – I mean, those are great statistics to show, you know, just by creating that environment that people want to be at and be a part of. Fantastic. So, looking at that, there was something when we talked before that really resonated with me in regards to religion and the symbolism around religion and certain holidays that are celebrated. And you and I were kind of discussing, in particular, the Christmas or Hanukkah and kind of that a lot of leaders have taken the approach of this broad messaging of happy holidays, and then removing certain symbolism like Christmas trees. And you talked about how not all your employees really want you to take that down, even if they don’t celebrate it.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:24:06] And so, the question I have is, you know, by taking and removing some of those symbolism, does it help to create that culture belonging, or what are some of your thoughts around how they can really handle those holiday seasons, you know, in an appropriate approach that allows all employees to feel like they belong and that their holidays are being celebrated.

Soumaya Khalifa: [00:24:32] I love that question. I super love that question. I am not in favor of somebody saying happy holidays. First of all, I am a Muslim. And, most of the time I don’t have a holiday around Christmas. And, for somebody to say happy holidays, it really doesn’t resonate with me. And that’s not only for Muslims, but you have Buddhists and you have Hindus, etc., who do not have a holiday around the holiday season.

Soumaya Khalifa: [00:25:02] I am not in favor of taking down the Christmas tree, but I am in favor of having an inclusive work environment that acknowledges and celebrates the religious holidays and traditions that are represented in the workforce. So, if we do have Jewish members, then Hanukkah, Passover, needs to be acknowledged. Holly, Ash Wednesday, Ramadan, and the list goes on. I want to be – I want to feel like I’m validated. By just saying happy holiday, I think it’s just a brush over and it alienates the Christians and it does not bring anybody into the fold.

Soumaya Khalifa: [00:25:44] But we want to be intentional. Again, we want to be knowing who’s in our workforce and what matters to them. If we have a calendar, let’s put it on there that Ramadan starts April 2nd. Ash Wednesdays on that date. Hanukkah is on that date. So, bring all those holidays, acknowledged people, validate people, and they feel like, hey, my workplace cares about me enough to wish me a Ramadan Mubarak or Happy Hanukkah or whatever the holidays.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:26:16] Yeah. Well, even to allow other employees to understand how each of those faiths practice their various holidays and what the symbolism and meanings are behind what they’re practicing so that people can learn.

Soumaya Khalifa: [00:26:30] Yes. And that’s the intention behind that. Because if I know – if I am – we have something called the iceberg. And the iceberg is where we say that what’s visible is what people see. But what’s below the waterline is what drives the visible attributes that we see.

Soumaya Khalifa: [00:26:50] So, if people know that my colleague’s religion is Muslim and when he takes or she takes a longer lunch hour on Friday, it’s because they have to go to prayer, or they’re not eating from April 2nd to May 2nd lunch and they leave early and we know it’s Ramadan. What is Ramadan like? What is Hanukkah like? What is the Passover and High Holy Days are like? Then, we get to know people at a deeper level and that goes hand-in-hand with belonging. I am accepted for who I am. I’m celebrated for who I am, and I am appreciated for who I am. And I don’t have to fit a mold to be able to be a validated person.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:27:40] Yeah. I love that. So, looking at that and looking at that validation of a person because obviously, you know, not feeling like you belong, not feeling validated can start to really impact somebody’s mental health and obviously ultimately their productivity. So, how does a workplace that’s not culturally belonging in your opinion, what do you see as the impact on that mental health and productivity of its employees?

Soumaya Khalifa: [00:28:08] There’s been a lot of research about that. And the outcome says – it was a 20-year research project. And it said that there’s increased depression of the employees, substance abuse, and health issues that kind of manifest themselves because of the stress and the pressure that they feel in that particular workplace. And, we know we’ve heard about people being disgruntled. We’ve heard people possibly committing suicide. We’ve heard people going postal. If the situation really gets out of hand and there’s a mental issue there, an employee could go back to the workplace and do horrific things, do it. So, it does have very negative implications.

Soumaya Khalifa: [00:29:00] But, you know, we’re talking about the employee and their mental health, which is really important. But the research also shows that the organizations are suffering as well. So, they’re suffering from decreased productivity, lower levels of employee commitment, increased turnover, and that doesn’t take into account the higher medical insurance premiums that the employer will be paying, the use of the employee assistance programs. So, it’s negative for all concerned, both the employees, leaders and the organization.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:29:38] Yeah. Absolutely. You know, it’s like when you want to bring your whole self to work because you’re passionate about the work that the company is doing, but yet you don’t feel like your whole self can be at work. You know, you want to – it’s like when you’re at work, it gets like you’re home away from home is kind of how I call it when you’re in the office because you spend so much of your day there. You want to feel like you’re welcome just like you are within your own home. So, I could see where that could have a huge impact on those individuals.

Soumaya Khalifa: [00:30:04] Absolutely.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:30:07] So, looking at cultural differences you shared previously that there are cultures that are relationship-oriented and then there’s cultures like the US that are very task-oriented. So, within our workplaces becoming more and more diverse, how does this show up? How does a leader strike that balance between allowing people to really congregate and socialize, you know, at the water cooler, if you will, when we get, you know, get that opportunity back to those days to really that task-oriented? How do they strike that balance?

Soumaya Khalifa: [00:30:39] Yeah. So, I want to share that I ran into a website that is a Ramsey County Minnesota website. And what struck me is that that website has been translated into languages that I had never heard of before. I mean, Somali, Hmood, Oromo, and Kara. All right. I had to Google each one of those languages to see where they’re spoken. So, this is not a hypothetical question. This is a true question that we need to be thinking about is we have people represented from all over the world working right here. Different cultures have different orientations. You mentioned that task-oriented cultures and the relationship-oriented cultures and they are on a spectrum.

Soumaya Khalifa: [00:31:36] So, the task-oriented culture is let’s get to work. We have a project to do. Let’s get down to what’s going to be done. What is it going to be done? Who’s going to be responsible? Where are the deliverables? And, relationships are really a second or third item that people will think about. Let’s just get the job done.

Soumaya Khalifa: [00:31:55] Now, the cultures that are relationship cultures and all those languages that I just named off, they are relationship cultures, which means that before I start doing work with you, I want to get to know you. I want to get to know about your family. I want to get to know where you went to school. What do you like to eat? Let’s go out to lunch together. Right?

Soumaya Khalifa: [00:32:15] So, if we have people who are on the opposite spectrums of that task orientation or relationship and we want them to work together, we need to be very, again, intentional. That word is very important for understanding who do we have in our teams. Come up with the team norms, identify what is a hybrid culture that will work for both the task-oriented people and the relationship-oriented people.

Soumaya Khalifa: [00:32:44] The task-oriented people, just an FYI, will look at the relationship people and say, “Gosh, they waste so much time. Why do they need to do all this small talk and drink tea or coffee? Let’s just get down to business.” The relationship people will look at the task people and say, “Oh, they’re just so rude and abrupt. They don’t even say hello and drink coffee with me.” So, that can be a real issue in terms of breakdown and communication. So, as leaders, we need to know who is on our team and how do we create a culture that would be understood and accepted by both.

Soumaya Khalifa: [00:33:20] When we look at a lot of data and research and looking at a homogeneous team versus a multicultural team and looking at when they are at their best and when they are very well managed, the multicultural team way outperforms the homogeneous team. So, it is a gift to have the diversity, but we have to manage it well to be able to leverage the results that we want to be able to achieve.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:33:55] Yeah. I find that there’s so much value in being able to build up some of those relationships. Even as a leader, you get to know people so differently. If you’re only focused on the day-to-day task, you’re not taking that time to get to know the people you’re working with. And so, when you think of that culture of belonging, it makes me think there’s benefit in trying to bring them closer to a balancing act. What are your thoughts around that and like how it contributes to that culture of belonging?

Soumaya Khalifa: [00:34:26] Yeah. One thing that I want to mention here is we are in a business to do business. So, let’s not lose sight of that. Right?

Jamie Gassmann: [00:34:35] Right.

Soumaya Khalifa: [00:34:35] And doing DEI is a very strong business case to do our business better. So, I don’t want us to just talk about DEI and not forget the bigger picture. We are doing DEI because of the bigger picture and we have to keep that very clear in front of our eyes. We are here to further and achieve the mission and vision of our organizations, and I’m a firm believer that DEI will help us achieve that.

Soumaya Khalifa: [00:35:04] So, let me give you an example and we touched upon that just a little bit earlier when we include religion and the DEI conversation. All right. We want to be able to leverage the organizational values and how they are very much aligned with our employee values. And they’re probably aligned in their religious beliefs values. So, when we say bring your religion into work, it does not mean that, hey, let’s bring everybody together and let’s argue about which faith tradition is the right tradition that’s going to get us to heaven or what have you. But it is to understand what’s below the waterline for our employees is to get to know them. It’s to be able to celebrate them, make them feel like they’re validated. So here is the way, as an example with DEI, when we bring faith tradition into work, the parameters that we need to build around it. There shouldn’t be a discussion about or proselytizing or what have you, but it’s about the person, about my teammate, about my leader, about everybody matters. And that part of them, which in many situations is a big part of who they are.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:36:25] Yeah. Absolutely. And there definitely is that you still have a business to run. So, I love that you brought that up and, you know, sharing that you’re focusing on the business needs while also focusing on your employee needs. So, how do you know when you’ve got it right? Like, is there a way for them to measure that? I mean, is it employee surveying? Is it pulling? Like, what can a leader do to know they’re striking that right balance and that right chord within that organization?

Soumaya Khalifa: [00:36:52] Well, yeah. Employee surveys are definitely something that many organizations look at and, you know, they’re done anonymously so people feel comfortable giving their true, honest opinions about the culture of the organization, about whether the culture has moved the needle to belonging or not.

Soumaya Khalifa: [00:37:15] There is something called the stay interview, like the exit interview but for people who do stay in the company, to get a read on how others perceive in the company. There are employee exit interviews, of course, but hopefully, we don’t get there. But if we do, then we want to understand why people left.

Soumaya Khalifa: [00:37:36] And one of my favorites is a very simple thing, and it’s just sitting down and speaking with employees and team members about how things are going. We look at performance management. A lot of organizations do at least that it’s done once a year, but we do ourselves a disservice when we do that. Managers and leaders need to have frequent check-ins with their employees to see how they’re doing, and hopefully, they have created a relationship with their employees where they’re open enough to share with them how things are going for them.

Soumaya Khalifa: [00:38:12] A leader should not wait very, very long time to have that conversation, but the more frequent the conversations are, the better off it is. So, it’s not rocket science. It’s communication, it’s caring, and it’s letting the employees know that there is a positive psychology within the organization and they can speak their mind.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:38:36] Yeah. Awesome. So, the leader is looking to evaluate, build or reinvent their diversity and inclusion program within their organization. What is your advice for how they should prioritize this initiative and where should they start?

Soumaya Khalifa: [00:38:51] Well, a couple of thoughts here is they need to be very clear on why they want to do that. They need to understand the business case for it. If an organization is doing DEI just to check the box, they need to rethink that. I believe that when just checking the box is done, it has very negative repercussions on the organization. And they can hire an outside consultant to assess the organization in terms of where they’re at with their DEI and collaborate.

Soumaya Khalifa: [00:39:30] If somebody brings in a consultant, it needs to be a collaboration. It’s not, “Here, consultant, take this. Let me know what I need to do.” It needs to be a collaboration. It needs to be a commitment of time and energy and resources and to understand that DEI is really a journey and not a destination. We don’t get there. It’s always work in progress. So, a lot of times people want to say, “Okay, we’ve arrived.” There’s no such thing. It’s always work in progress.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:40:02] Great. Well, I know I personally have learned a lot from you, and I so appreciate you being here on our episode. But if we have guests that want to hear more from you, or to get a hold of you, how can they do that?

Soumaya Khalifa: [00:40:17] I am on LinkedIn, Soumaya Khalifa. Our website is khalifa.consulting. So, K-H-A-L-I-F-A, dot consulting. Send us a message at info@khalifa.consulting, or call at 678-523-5080. I would love and appreciate hearing from you.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:40:40] Yeah. Wonderful. Well, thank you again so much for being on the show, Soumaya. It’s been such a great conversation. I truly appreciate you and all the work that you do.

Soumaya Khalifa: [00:40:48] Thank you so much. What a pleasure and honor to be with you.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:40:52] 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’ve 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. If you are a workplace MVP or you know someone who is, we want to hear from you. Email us at info@workplace-mvp.com. Thank you all for joining us today and have a great rest of your day.

 

Tagged With: belonging, DEI, diversity, equity, executive coaching, inclusion, Jamie Gassmann, Khalifa Consulting, R3 Continuum, sense of belonging, Soumaya Khalifa, Workplace MVP

Decision Vision Episode 159: Should I Give My Employees More Autonomy? – An Interview with Kemy Joseph, F.E.A.R.S. Advantage

March 10, 2022 by John Ray

Kemy Joseph
Decision Vision
Decision Vision Episode 159: Should I Give My Employees More Autonomy? - An Interview with Kemy Joseph, F.E.A.R.S. Advantage
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Kemy Joseph

Decision Vision Episode 159: Should I Give My Employees More Autonomy? – An Interview with Kemy Joseph, F.E.A.R.S. Advantage

Kemy Joseph, CEO of F.E.A.R.S. Advantage, defines autonomy in the workplace as “the independence to do the work you’re hired to do with the freedom, trust and ownership in your role.” He and host Mike Blake discussed its role in career equity, how to structure it with systems, the resistance to it from leaders, helping organizations find the path forward to implement it, the element of trust, autonomy’s role in the evolving remote work environment, and much more.  Decision Vision is presented by Brady Ware & Company and produced by the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX®.

F.E.A.R.S. Advantage

F.E.A.R.S. Advantage is a DEI (Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion) Consulting Agency with team members around the globe.

They help organizations reframe Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion to go beyond HR, anti-racism, and the old version of “diversity” in the workplace.

They understand that successful DEI initiatives require active and engaged DEI leaders who cannot help their teams thrive without doing the internal work first.

They are on a mission to help 5 million leaders advance equity in their organizations by 2030 as part of our vision of a world where every human being lives safely and thrives.

They believe the distinctions of love, kindness, compassion, diversity, and inclusion shall become the norms inside company cultures across the world.

They train company leaders in the courage and vulnerability needed to manifest this vision.

Company website | LinkedIn | YouTube

Kemy Joseph, Co-Founder and CEO, F.E.A.R.S. Advantage

Kemy Joseph, Co-Founder and CEO, F.E.A.R.S. Advantage
Kemy Joseph, Co-Founder and CEO, F.E.A.R.S. Advantage

Kemy Joseph helps business executives leverage equity as a pathway to prosperity to effectively lead their diverse teams through conflicts involving race, politics, and privilege. Raised in a single-parent household with nine siblings where poverty, violence, and racial inequity traumatized him at an early age. As an adult, he’s re-socialized himself into a healthy, educated black man who respects women, celebrates diversity, and advances equity for all people. He used negative experiences for positive change and learned the skills we need to treat others equitably.

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: [00:00:02] 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: [00:00:22] 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 am a director at Brady Ware & Company, a full-service accounting firm based in Dayton, Ohio, with offices in Dayton; Columbus, Ohio; Richmond, Indiana; and Alpharetta, Georgia. My practice specializes in providing fact-based strategic risk management advice to clients that are buying, selling, or growing the value of companies and intellectual property. Brady Ware is sponsoring this podcast, which is being recorded in Atlanta per social distancing protocols.

Mike Blake: [00:01:11] If you would like to engage with me on social media with my Chart of the Day and other content, I am on LinkedIn as myself and @unblakeable on Facebook, Twitter, Clubhouse, and Instagram. I also recently launched a new LinkedIn group called Unblakeable’s Group That Doesn’t Suck, so please join that as well if you would like to engage. If you like this podcast, please subscribe on your favorite podcast aggregator and please consider leaving a review of the podcast as well.

Mike Blake: [00:01:38] Today’s topic is, Should I give my employees more autonomy? According to the Wellcome Trust Workplace Mental Health Report, low job autonomy is associated with anxiety and depression for young employees, with the data showing the strongest connection for employees under age 25. This conclusion was gleaned from 227 scholarly articles and from data sets covering over 150,000 employees by a firm named Robertson Cooper.

Mike Blake: [00:02:06] Joining us today to discuss this topic is Kemy Joseph, who is the CEO and Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Strategist of F.E.A.R.S. Advantage. He is on a mission to help five million business leaders advance equity in their organizations by 2030 to create company cultures where people of all backgrounds can work safely and thrive. He holds a Bachelor’s Degree in Communication from the University of Miami, along with a Master’s Degree in Brain Based Teaching and Learning, as well as an Educational Specialist Degree in Leadership from Nova Southeastern University.

Mike Blake: [00:02:59] Over the past two decades, Kemy has served in several leadership roles in organizations, small and large, including working with multiple Nobel Peace Prize winners to inspire social justice initiatives in over 40 countries around the world. In 2012, he also led a 22,000 mile kindness tour across North America, which taught him the power of human connection to overcome our country’s divisions.

Mike Blake: [00:03:23] In a time where so many people are being defensive around race, politics, and privilege, he uses his real world experiences to lead difficult conversations in an uplifting way that removes shame and blame to foster true inclusion. So, today he is here to help us strengthen our understanding of DEI and to make it approachable, actionable, and even enjoyable in our organizations. Kemy Joseph, welcome to the program.

Kemy Joseph: [00:03:47] Thank you so much, Mike. Thanks for having me. Thanks for that powerful intro as well. I get fired up. I’m ready to dive in.

Mike Blake: [00:03:53] Great. So, when we talk autonomy – and, boy, as we record this show on March 3rd, 2022 – the notion of autonomy, thanks to events in Europe, has taken on a different, maybe an increased visibility in our lexicon. In terms of what we’re talking about today, what does autonomy mean to leaders?

Kemy Joseph: [00:04:20] Yeah. I appreciate that question, especially putting in the scope of the worldwide events. And it’s kind of wild how we’re being impacted by things happening all over the world simultaneously, as well as things happening in our backyard. And so, as we look at the DEI perspective around autonomy, it can mean so many pieces, including the autonomy of where you live, how you live, who you are.

Kemy Joseph: [00:04:43] I think as we talk about it in the workplace here, we define autonomy as the independence to do the work you’re hired to do with the freedom, trust, and ownership in your role. So, from a leadership perspective, a lot of the autonomous leadership is what are we doing to empower our team with the right authority making power as well as giving them the tools and the processes to actually do the jobs without having to come to us for everything.

Mike Blake: [00:05:10] And we’ll get into this later, but by giving employees autonomy, doesn’t that give us, as leaders, greater autonomy as well?

Kemy Joseph: [00:05:19] Absolutely. And seeing some leader’s conversation around autonomy and they’re like, “Wait. If I give my team more than means I have to work more.” And if they’re listening in the very first few minutes, yes, if we do this correctly, giving our teams more autonomy gives us more autonomy. And that’s a phenomenal way to just anchor the show.

Mike Blake: [00:05:39] So, is there a difference in terms of how leaders and employees perceive autonomy?

Kemy Joseph: [00:05:46] Yeah. I think that with the leaders, we’re kind of thinking about the systems we have to build and the decisions that we have to then kind of reverse engineer to prepare employees to make. I think for employees, they kind of see it more as time or job freedom instead of being micromanaged or trusted to do their jobs. I think for us, as leaders, were both experiencing the autonomy and building systems that allow for it to happen. Whereas, a lot employees will just kind of experience of benefit without necessarily having to build out the systems themselves for them to be a part of it.

Mike Blake: [00:06:20] And so, you know, you’ve done a lot of things, you’ve done a lot of very important work in diversity, equity, and inclusion, as well as the other spaces, why this topic? Why are you so interested in this topic today?

Kemy Joseph: [00:06:34] Well, autonomy is one of ten non-negotiable equities that we measure when we look at thrive leadership. So, if we look at the big picture – I’ll just say them out loud now so folks can know, but we will only be talking about autonomy today – we’re looking at what’s called career equities or the pathway for someone to actually thrive in their career. So, it goes from awareness of opportunities to access to those opportunities for the ability for people to participate, then their safety, belonging, resources, development, advancement, autonomy, and legacies.

Kemy Joseph: [00:07:05] So, autonomy is at the very top of this chart. If you think about kind of the hierarchy of needs in the workplace, the idea of having autonomy is very up there, including with legacy, the kind of purpose or what drives us to make an impact. And so, when we have been doing the CIO work over the last two years, especially, we found that many leaders were saying, “How can I give my team the belonging, the safety, the autonomy that they want when I don’t have it myself?”

Kemy Joseph: [00:07:35] And when we think about anchoring on autonomy out of those ten, it seems to be one that’s less polarizing, one that most people can say, “Yes, I want more of this.” And then, now, we start talking about what that might look like for the individual leader to have in order to give it to their team. So, that’s why it’s so important to me.

Mike Blake: [00:07:54] And you bring up an interesting point, I want to go off script for a second because I thought one thing that you said I think is really smart and that is, that if you don’t feel like you, yourself, have autonomy, that makes it hard to grant autonomy to others. And I think I understand the implications of that, but I don’t want to assume and you’d say it better anyway, so I’d like you to expand on that. What exactly does that mean?

Kemy Joseph: [00:08:24] One example in my life is, even over the last year, I was working 50 hour workweeks. And when I started my company with Brian and Sarah, who are my co-founders, they were very clear that that’s not the life that they want. They never want to be working 50 hour workweeks or killing ourselves to meet deadlines and all these things that we used to do in previous jobs. We say, “Hey, we’re building this company to be our freedom vehicle. So, why would we do this for ourselves?”

Kemy Joseph: [00:08:51] Again, that seemed fine in the beginning, and then we started getting inundated with lots of work. And I found myself working 50 to 60 hour weeks, and it was really intense for me to then support them taking time off or to not expect them to work at the same level. And so, as I think about me being the executive in that situation, if I wasn’t experiencing the autonomy, I felt very trapped. I felt trapped in a company that I was building with my partners. And so then, it was all of this resentment towards them and this idea that any time they asked for time off, I saw them as less than or I saw them as people who weren’t contributing the same.

Kemy Joseph: [00:09:28] So, part of what helped us shift that for me is we actually were measuring thriving in our organization and they saw I had the lowest autonomy scores of all of us as team members. So then, we could have a conversation that was more neutral because everything else I was, like, projecting on them was just baggage. Again, they never said they wanted to work as hard as I was or they were working hard just didn’t want the kind of lifestyle that I was living. I didn’t want it either. I just didn’t know a way out.

Kemy Joseph: [00:09:52] So, being able to measure it and then have this conversation allowed me to own my own feelings about it and then talk to them about what do we need to do in order for me to experience the same autonomy. And, you know, we’re about two months in after that conversation, I’m telling you, Mike, we’re working 30 hours a week across the board. And it is like a blessing to where I can actually take time off and they take their own time off. And there’s no more of the negative thought process or this baggage that I’m throwing at them. In fact, I actually feel like I’m more grounded and present to be with our team for those 30 hours a week.

Mike Blake: [00:10:27] You know, that’s really interesting. It dovetails nicely with some books I’ve been reading lately. I don’t know if you’re familiar at all with a concept called the Entrepreneurial Operating System.

Kemy Joseph: [00:10:37] Yeah. EOS. I love it.

Mike Blake: [00:10:38] Okay. So, you know EOS. So, I’ve just become acquainted with this. I’m now banging my head against the wall. I probably should have read this, like, 25 years ago.

Kemy Joseph: [00:10:45] Yes. Shoutout to them, for sure.

Mike Blake: [00:10:46] But these books by Gino Wickman are fascinating and I’m finishing – I should say – something called the EOS Life. And one of the exercises that the author, Gino Wickman, tells you to do in that book is, set your 100 percent. What does 100 percent mean to you? And to some people, it means 30 hours a week. To some people, it means 65. Others, it means ten minutes. You don’t even know. But the point is, know where that’s set.

Mike Blake: [00:11:18] And this actually does come back to your promise, you cannot do that without autonomy. If you feel like that’s all being driven down towards you, you can’t make that choice. And that emotionally unravels the entire operating system.

Kemy Joseph: [00:11:32] At 1,000 percent. I mean, there’s folks who are going to hear this podcast and say, “I don’t have the decision making power to support my autonomy,” we’ll talk about that. For everybody who’s at the very top of the organization and you have that power, please understand that making that one decision, you can help people in a way that is measurable and even immeasurable if we think about time being the one anchor that we all have to deal with. No matter how rich or poor, no matter your skin color, no matter whatever it is, we all have to deal with time.

Kemy Joseph: [00:12:04] So, for us, I want to give a real big shoutout to Nicole Pereira – who you’ll hear more about later – she’s been our coach guiding us through what she calls Time as a Benefit. And so, she has been doing this so well in her company that she’s teaching us how to do it so we can share that information with more folks who are engaging us for DEI services.

Kemy Joseph: [00:12:23] But from this perspective of doing 30 hour workweeks and the way that it’s set up, the short version is we end up giving people back 13 weeks of their year. So, imagine what you could do with 13 more weeks of your year back in your own hands and your own pockets. And I told her at the beginning, I was like, “I don’t even know what to do with myself if I’m not working.” She’s like, “Get a hobby, start another business, do whatever you want. Just don’t limit your work.”

Kemy Joseph: [00:12:47] So, for us, the 100 percent is the hours that we’re maxing out at 30 hours. But the amount of efficiency or the amount of exponential growth we’ve had just in limiting our time so we can come with fresh brains has been phenomenal.

Mike Blake: [00:13:04] So, the funny thing about autonomy is, everybody seems to think that it’s great. You know, I researched autonomy. I’ve never seen an article that says your employees are too free, bring them back. You never hear that. But we both know there are lots of organizations out there that don’t really live a culture of autonomy in the companies, in spite of the fact that literally everybody is saying autonomy is good. So, why isn’t every business doing this? What’s wrong with them?

Kemy Joseph: [00:13:40] Oh, I think it’s just so driven by fear. I mean, this is literally why we call our organization the F.E.A.R.S. Advantage. We want to help people to take those fears. Right now, some of the fears are, “If I give autonomy, people are just going to take advantage of me. They’re not going to do their work. I’m going to have to do all the work.” And if we’re being real, those are fears that are legitimate.

Kemy Joseph: [00:14:00] So, for us, F.E.A.R.S. stands for Fuel, Equitable, Actions, Relationships, and Systems. So, we say, “Okay. Great. If we were going to acknowledge the fear that we believe our team is going to take advantage of us or are going to underperform, let’s address that in a way that’s actually equitable by setting performance measures, by setting standards that are clearly communicated across the board. And then, taking the actions and building the relationships that allow that system to work.”

Kemy Joseph: [00:14:26] But it has to start with us acknowledging. And some folks don’t acknowledge it outright. They just say, “Oh, it doesn’t work,” and they can give us lots of examples that it’s not going to work. I say, “Okay. Well, it is working.” And to your point, there’s no articles that say don’t give autonomy. Some of them are saying, “Hey, give autonomy in this way.” There’s versions of it. Autonomy is not the same for every single person or every single organization.

Kemy Joseph: [00:14:50] So, I appreciate you giving us a chance just to talk about what’s preventing people. We would say it’s a fear of actually making things worse and more inefficient versus people having a tangible pathway forward.

Mike Blake: [00:15:03] And the flip side of that coin, I think, is also trust.

Kemy Joseph: [00:15:06] Yeah, 100 percent. And it’s one to ask people, “Do you trust your team or do they trust you?” And if we get into that, we talk about creating work environments where people live safely or can work safely and thrive, trust is at the baseline of this. And so many people dance around the trust conversation that until we bring it up and say, “Well, do you trust your team?” They were like, “Okay. Great.” They hesitated, then that’s going to prevent autonomy right out the gate.

Mike Blake: [00:15:38] I mean, you can’t have autonomy. But at least when you ask that question, you’re starting to get at the root cause. So, you mentioned this in passing, but I know you’re asked this question. It has to be, I’m sure. I know I’m asked this question, too. What do you say to somebody that says, “Well, if I give my employees too much autonomy, they’re going to be more inefficient.” I’m curious what your response to that is.

Kemy Joseph: [00:16:10] I would say, “First of all, again, thank you for sharing that that’s what you believe is the crux here.” And then, it would be interesting to find out how are they measuring efficiency right now. Because I think until we have a baseline of measurement, that wouldn’t be very hard to actually have a conversation beyond our fears.

Kemy Joseph: [00:16:29] So, assuming that they’re measuring efficiency, then be able to say, “Okay. Let’s start doing this in stages.” We’re not an all or nothing type of company. We’re very much, Mike, we call them micro-progressions. How do we progress on this journey? And I say this over and over because so many people don’t have performance measures or do performance reviews until something goes terribly wrong. They don’t have like an actual set up equitable system.

Kemy Joseph: [00:16:56] So, this is part of the reason they’re scared and they’re only thinking about the worst times because sometimes when things go really well, we don’t even clock that on our list of things that are happening in our organization. We only think about the times where people drop the ball. “Okay. Let’s actually have an equitable system to measure. And then, let’s start to think about where can we give autonomy first?”

Kemy Joseph: [00:17:18] And to that point of inefficiency, there is a transition period. Just like any new skill, there is a transition period where things may feel like you are doing a little bit more work to set the system up. But after you set the system up and you can make sure you’re monitoring and preparing the system, then it gives you a better sense to actually go forward.

Kemy Joseph: [00:17:39] And I’ll give you an example for our team. We have not been tracking time. So, we started – especially us three executives – like, we know we have to do what we need to do in order to get the business to be successful, which is a place a lot of people are in. And so, in order to do this Time as a Benefit and to get down to 30 hours, we actually have to put systems in place to track our time in different ways than we ever did before. We have to report on our time.

Kemy Joseph: [00:18:04] And of that two months, it took us about a month to figure out our transition of how do we start tracking our time, how do we report it back to our team, how do we check in when we are either above or below our benchmarks. And so, yes, that took an extra month, but now that part is done. So, at some point somebody might say, “Oh, that’s a little bit more inefficient because we have to build the system.” But, yeah, that’s how business systems work. We have to build a system that will then allow us to continue building upon it.

Mike Blake: [00:18:33] I mean, systems really are the crux, aren’t they? You know, my response to the autonomy versus efficiency question is, isn’t micromanaging the least efficient way you can do anything?

Kemy Joseph: [00:18:50] The least efficient, because then I’m not doing my job. If I’m micromanaging you, what am I up to?

Mike Blake: [00:18:55] That’s right. I’m literally doing the job somebody else is already doing. It’s being done twice. And in my terms, at a higher bill rate, basically, than it was ever budgeted for. But it all comes down to systems. And, therefore, it’s not just trusting your people, but also trusting your systems.

Kemy Joseph: [00:19:16] And being able to review them. Some folks, their systems are not built for autonomy right now. So, back to what we’re saying for the leader who is maybe a middle manager or a senior leader, but not the full executive, they might be saying, “Oh, some of our policies and our practices, including things around time off, some of these may be inefficient right now. It’s the norm.” Sometimes we get used to the norm, but the norm is actually inefficient. And there could be a different norm which would require us to really review what we have in place right now if we want to make a shift.

Mike Blake: [00:19:50] I’ll bet you, when a lot of companies start to make that transition, they may perceive inefficiency. What they’re experiencing is discomfort.

Kemy Joseph: [00:19:58] Yeah. Because there’s going to be a little bit of relaxing of control. And if you ask me if I want more control or autonomy, I would say I’ll find a balance between the two. Because we consider the opposite of thrive leadership to be controlling leadership. So, “Hey. I want to micromanage you. I have to make sure you’re reporting on this in this time.” And all these things that if we’re keeping ourselves so locked in on that piece, we may not realize we’re keeping ourselves controlled as well by trying to control other people.

Kemy Joseph: [00:20:31] So, some companies, when we started to look at the autonomy, start to then think about what our anchoring meetings that we all have to be at. Besides those anchoring meetings that we all have to be in, like the EOS, Level Ten meetings, and things that we all have to be at. Then, everything else, you can do on your own time based on how your organization is set up.

Kemy Joseph: [00:20:52] This is how we found that we operate. We have a couple of overlapping hours. And then, from there, we can work at our best hours. Sometimes for me that’s morning. Sometimes I’m a night owl and I’d rather just do it at 12:00 a.m. to make sure that I’m in my best zone, to be in my zone of genius, and be able to create what I can create.

Kemy Joseph: [00:21:08] So, I think there are ways where people can have the safety and the structure that they know. And this is going to be a challenge to expand what’s possible in their minds.

Mike Blake: [00:21:20] Are there some kinds of businesses that lend themselves better to autonomy than others?

Kemy Joseph: [00:21:27] Sure. I think as we talk about different types of autonomy, people kind of think about, “Oh, yeah. Work from home culture.” And then, they say, “Well, at a bank or at a brick and mortar, you can’t work from home. You have to be there.” So, I think work from home type of organizations are going to see some of the greatest versions of autonomy. There’s the autonomy of location, autonomy of time that you’re doing your work, autonomy of, I would say, the type of technology that has to be used to then do that.

Kemy Joseph: [00:21:59] I think with brick and mortar folks, you do have to have people show up at a certain time within your business hours. There’s not really autonomy of location because you’re all at the same location. Are we giving people an autonomy of how they’d be of service to our customers, so we can set a high level of excellence and quality for the customers? Are we allowing people to even have play wiggle room and how that looks? Or are we asking everybody do it the exact same way?

Kemy Joseph: [00:22:24] Back to the diversity, equity, and inclusion conversations, that would be minimizing folk’s ability to actually show up powerfully. Are we giving people who are back to the brick and mortar situation an ability to have kind of an autonomy of development, even how they do their learning and development and preparation to do their jobs? Not necessarily the standard kind of orientations, but allowing people to stagger it, and even understand how to grow in the company.

Kemy Joseph: [00:22:50] Those are just some examples that come to mind as I think about brick and mortar folks listening to this, like, I don’t think that autonomy is going to work. What if we also consider there’s different versions of autonomy beyond schedule autonomy?

Mike Blake: [00:23:06] Yeah. And I want to pause on that, because it brings to mind an observation. As a customer and as I look at my history of customer resolution events, the thing that frustrates me the most is when I’m dealing with somebody who has no autonomy. If my issue just conform to whatever policy was written somewhere, then you just can’t help me. And that’s frustrating, you know, to wait on hold for 45 minutes to talk to somebody that can’t help me. And going into a store, the same thing. Who wants to deal with people that can’t decide things for themselves?

Mike Blake: [00:24:00] If you do get together with your friends and your friends all the time had to ask somebody else if they could go out to a movie or to a ballgame or something, you’d start asking them less because it’s like, you know, I don’t need the three levels of administration to see if I can go to see a Hawks game.

Kemy Joseph: [00:24:20] Well, I love the customer service teams that give their folks some parameters. Like, if it’s in this parameter, great. For example, I think about calling my phone line – I won’t mention them – if I have an issue. And I’ve stuck with them for over ten years because what if I have an issue. There are times where I run into that same scenario you just said, like, I literally need to ask them for a manager because there’s nothing they’re going to be able to do. But when there’s a lot of minor pieces, they’ve been super helpful and like, “Oh, hey. We’ll give you this discount.” Or, “Hey, this promotion is available. We have that wiggle room to kind of make your experience better.”

Kemy Joseph: [00:25:01] I actually just ran into somebody today who was fundraising for an incredible earth initiative that I’m all about. They were asking me to make a decision of, like, signing up for a monthly contribution right there on the street. And I was like, “Hey, I just budgeted my money for the Ukraine for this month. So, can I get your information for next month? Totally, I’m happy to give.” And they basically said that it’s all or nothing. Like, in that interaction they can’t even give me their information to say, “Hey, I found out about this through this person on the street.” They can’t sign me up for a follow up. It just has to be all or nothing.

Kemy Joseph: [00:25:36] And I thought, what a very inequitable way to do fundraising, where this person, literally, has to, on the street, get people to make a decision to give them 20 bucks or whatever amount of money for however period of time. I was like that is a very poor way to fundraise, because that seems like it doesn’t give me, as a consumer, the option to make a choice that I want to make. I have to, like, make a choice based on their false urgency. So, I think we set up structures and we think this is the best way to manage our folks, and we actually might be setting them up for failure.

Mike Blake: [00:26:12] I’m curious what you think now, I’m sure you’ve been monitoring that now, I guess, we’re declaring victory over coronavirus. I don’t remember seeing the surrender papers being signed, but I guess that’s happening. And companies are now turned off as version three now, by my count. What’s your view on that? I mean, when you look at that and you see that Google wants people in the office three days a week – of all people, if there’s any company that should be geared to working remotely, it should be them. I mean, it makes me wonder about their other products – what do you think about that? When you see that, how do you react to that?

Kemy Joseph: [00:26:57] That has been a very interesting version of the DEI conversation as well, as people are seeking to be inclusive of different requests, different lifestyles, as well as trying to return to a version of what they thought was possible or what they thought was successful before. I can’t speak for every single company because I don’t know what is driving their decisions.

Kemy Joseph: [00:27:20] I would love some more transparency with what’s actually driving their decisions because some of what people have shared is driving their decision seems more like back to micromanaging. Especially there are companies whose teams have had better records being home, so those are the companies where I’m really struggling to understand that. If your team has actually performed better being at home, why not leave them there, especially the teams who have that kind of track record. I would say, for the teams who saw a dip in their performance and productivity, it can make a lot more sense to bring your team back.

Kemy Joseph: [00:27:55] So, I think there is multiple struggles back to the fears conversation, some folks are not even willing to share with their team the actual drivers. They start to say kind of blanket statements, and the employees we talked to are like, “Yeah, I can see right through that.” It just feels like mistrust and then the control.

Kemy Joseph: [00:28:11] So, from the outside looking in, I’m grateful that we’ve decided to stay virtual for our team, because we already seen the trust and efficiency that we can produce. For teams who are making that transition back, I would really think about who is most essential to be back and where is the wiggle room for those who would rather stay home if they’re going to be able to produce the same or better than they could in the office.

Mike Blake: [00:28:41] You know, I hadn’t thought of this angle until you brought it up, so I feel compelled to talk about it a little bit. I mean, there are a number of DEI angles in this. You know, we get back to fundamental things like access to transportation. And we get into fundamental things like access to health care – not health care. I’m sorry – access to child care. And, also, we get into things like presenteeism. There’s a growing body of evidence that employees that work remotely are in effect discriminated against because they’re perceived to be not as committed or, frankly, because they can’t schmooze in real time in the office the way that the people are present can.

Mike Blake: [00:29:28] And I can appreciate that some of that is human nature. But there are a lot of things about human nature that aren’t necessarily constructive. So, to me, that’s not an adequate explanation. You know, change human nature if it’s not working for us. And it is intertwined. The remote work thing, and it’s interesting how autonomy and work flexibility sort of do go hand in hand, but I think it’s important to understand they’re not identical. But, boy, I do wonder if kind of working from home or work from anywhere – I think is a better term – for a while it’s kind of been the great equalizer, hasn’t it?

Kemy Joseph: [00:30:09] Yeah. It’s giving people permission. I mean, some people have moved states finally. Some people finally say, “Oh, great. I can do my job really well from anywhere in the world.” I mean, the possibilities that it’s opened up has been so transformative. So, I think trying to close that late is going to be very difficult for employers who are saying, “Hey, we just want people back in the office.”

Kemy Joseph: [00:30:32] I love how you said that there is a difference between autonomy and work flexibility. I think some folks are saying, “Hey, we have a flexible work plan. You can come in three days and so on.” For us, the difference would be, what do you have to do to get the flexibility? Or some people have to jump through a lot of hoops, multiple approvals, all these things that are costing time and money versus having systems in place to say this is what autonomy looks like in our organization. Everybody has this. And then, from there, if you need some additional accommodations, that’s kind of different than here’s the baseline autonomy.

Kemy Joseph: [00:31:04] And as you started the question talking about all of the kind of access pieces, I mean, even if you have a car, some people were commuting more than an hour each way to work. And, now, they’re at home and their commute is from bedroom to their office.

Kemy Joseph: [00:31:19] Like, for me, bedroom to the office. I used to travel all over the place. I spent hours commuting to go to different client places. I can do that all here and it just gives me much more focus on what I’m actually here to do. And I’m spending less time with the decision fatigue around preparing, you said, childcare, preparing to be on the road, whatever I need to be at the client environment. Versus, this is the environment we’re in.

Kemy Joseph: [00:31:45] I’m not saying by any means that virtual replaces in-person, and this is where a lot of teams are struggling. Because there’s a bias towards people who are in-person and they’re spending more time arguing about getting everyone back into the office versus pausing and say what if we look at what ways can we bring in the virtual people in a more inclusive way? Or what are ways that we can actually build the relationships that let’s acknowledge are not going to be the same?

Kemy Joseph: [00:32:14] Some people are fine with that. Some people are like, “I don’t need to go to work. I don’t need to know all of y’all like that.” Some people are totally fine with that. It’s okay. It’s not going to be the same. But how do we make it as inclusive as possible for those of you who want to stay at home? A lot of companies are missing that conversation because they’re focusing on just trying to get everybody back in the office, which may not even be possible.

Mike Blake: [00:32:35] You know, if employees have been working in an environment for a long time with low autonomy, do you have to do some prep work to get them prepared? Or can you walk in one day and say, “Hey, you guys are all now free to do what you want.” Is it just like that, as easy as a switch? Or do you have to put in some groundwork so that when you do grant that autonomy, you actually gain benefits from it?

Kemy Joseph: [00:33:03] Yeah. I would say the latter. The idea of giving people access without education can be dangerous. If you just walk in and say, “Hey, everybody, do what you want.” And, again, that’s what I believe a lot of leaders think autonomy is. I will say again, our definition is, I have the independence to do the work I’m hired to do with the freedom, trust, and ownership in my role.

Kemy Joseph: [00:33:23] So, that means that the employees would then have to have a greater sense of ownership in their role, first and foremost. So then, say, “Hey, I have ownership, I can make relevant decisions.” If some folks believe autonomy means that everybody has to be involved in every decision, that’s still not true. We’re saying, the ones that are directly related to my job – back to the customer service metaphor we’re using earlier – can I help a customer who’s struggling with this problem? If I always have to check in with you, I don’t really have ownership in my role. I’m just a baton passer. All I’m doing is just passing it up to the next level.

Kemy Joseph: [00:33:58] And then, as we start to look at building the ownership that requires some processes and systems to be put in place and the trust to be built, I think the notice that I’m going backwards saying ownership trust and then you have the freedom. And most people want the freedom, and we’re seeing that globally where what’s happening is that people say, “Don’t tell me what to do. I’m done with these mask mandates. Don’t tell me to get vaccinated.” All these things, people want that freedom. But we’re not really talking about the personal ownership and the trust.

Kemy Joseph: [00:34:25] And so, for us, it would have to be all three of those together. And for anybody listening, I would be asking them to think about which one do they think they need to work on first for their team to build this out in phases.

Mike Blake: [00:34:38] That segues very nicely in the next question, and that is, how do leaders need to prepare for autonomy in the organization? What muscles do leaders need to build? What education do they need so that autonomy is workable?

Kemy Joseph: [00:34:57] Yeah. I appreciate that question. First, we always say this phrase, assess instead of make a mess. Check in on your own levels of autonomy as a leader. Because back to what we said before, there are some leaders who already stopped listening because they’re like, “I don’t have autonomy.” Like, they just shut it down already. So, they would need to check in on actually measuring their levels. And we’ll talk about a free self-assessment that we have that they can use to do that.

Kemy Joseph: [00:35:20] The idea is, first and foremost, check in on your own levels of autonomy and understand what has created the parts that you enjoy and what you believe is preventing you from having the autonomy, so we can work on it, so you can work on those pieces.

Kemy Joseph: [00:35:34] And the reason we call it Thrive Leadership in our programs, because we help leaders experience that and start to thrive. They give themselves more permission to give it to their team. Like, we found at the groundswell, bottom up approach, where employees are demanding autonomy with leaders who are not experiencing it. It’s not happening. It’s not going to happen. It’s been a stall. It’s been a stalemate kind of conversation.

Kemy Joseph: [00:35:58] So, instead, we’re saying, “Leaders, if you’re struggling because you don’t have this, let us help you have it, experience it in your current organization so you can give it to your team.” So, that would be the biggest mind shift, is, assess where they are and better understand what’s helping them have the autonomy or what’s preventing them so we can leverage those blocks in order to be able to actually support it in their organization because they get a sense of freedom along the way.

Mike Blake: [00:36:28] Autonomy may or may not necessarily be for everyone, or it may or may not be an adjustment that somebody can easily make. Does a company have to rethink, perhaps, even how they hire and onboard people so that that promotes a culture and a mindset of autonomy from day one? And if so, how do those things change?

Kemy Joseph: [00:36:52] Again, I’ll mention Nicole Pereira and her journey she takes. She says it takes people about nine months to kind of transition from the regular way of working to a more autonomous work, and that’s just for an individual employee. So, when she hires them, she then thinks about what’s the transition from getting someone prepared for their job?

Kemy Joseph: [00:37:13] So, for example, in her company, Remotish, somebody will start working 40 hour weeks when they first join. And their core competency, their core work is 30 hours of that, but they have ten hours of training until they can reach certain benchmarks. So, essentially, they pace themselves out of the 40 hour work week as they become more efficient in their job. And then, eventually, they are part of the rest of the group that is doing 30 hours.

Kemy Joseph: [00:37:37] And I love that approach because she also communicates that from the very beginning of the recruitment process, of the hiring process, that we are an autonomous organization. We know that’s not for everybody. We know some people want a different type of work environment, great, because that’s what we’re used to. Just know that this is not our place. Like, our place is, this is how we’re going to operate 30 hours a week. We have transition periods. We have supports in place. She creates incredible wiki articles to pretty much tell people how to do every single thing they need to do. And, again, there’s buffer time and buffer room for mistakes for people to transition.

Kemy Joseph: [00:38:16] But I think to your direct question, it’s the more you can communicate that up front, the better. It’s really interesting that right now a lot of hiring processes are kind of like lying contests. It’s almost like dating in the beginning. People are like, “Oh, this is who I am.” And then, the company is like, “This is our culture.” And then, you get to the next day, you’re like, “Oh, we both just lied to each other. This sucks.”

Mike Blake: [00:38:39] You don’t look the way you did on your Tinder profile.

Kemy Joseph: [00:38:41] “I look this way.” And I think that mismatch is what starts to create friction almost immediately and back to the lack of trust. So, I love what Nicole is doing in her team. And any organizations who are saying, “Here’s who we clearly are. And anybody who wants to be a part of that, then they know what they’re getting themselves into.”

Mike Blake: [00:39:03] And you brought up something that I think is important. My experience is that there are people in this world who don’t want autonomy. That they don’t want to have to engage their brain for whatever reason. I feel badly for those people, but they exist. Is that truly what they want? Or have they been so conditioned that they don’t strive for anything better?

Mike Blake: [00:39:32] And I guess the question I was ultimately going to get to is, if somebody has that mindset, is it worth the effort to try to change them into a mindset that embraces and really requires autonomy to thrive? Or is somebody like that kind of not likely to make it and you’re better off kind of helping them find their next thing? Am I being too cynical or is that a legitimate question?

Kemy Joseph: [00:40:00] I mean, it’s a legitimate question. I think, I wouldn’t feel bad for those folks, because that means we’d be judging their version of working is not our version. I think I just want to really promote a world where we can disagree again. That’s, for us, very important. Like, “Great. You can want to work 40 hours. Fantastic. That’s how you are. That’s great.”

Kemy Joseph: [00:40:24] For some people, I think a version of, “Hey, I go to work. I know exactly what I’m supposed to do. No one bothers me. I just do it and then I leave.” That, technically, is a version of autonomy. Or you think about the leaders, like ourselves, who are like, “Yeah. I go to work. I still work 30 hours, but I’m still thinking about my business and whatever. You know, if an emergency comes up, I’m available.” So, it’s freer to me than working 50, 60 hours a week.

Kemy Joseph: [00:40:46] So, I think it’s just better for the individual to understand what structure they thrive in the best and for the companies to be able to communicate that. Because that person who does the anchoring 40 hours a week, for example, in the coal structure, the 30 hours are spread across four weeks or for a month that has four weeks, that would be 120 hours. So, that means if I’m working 30 hours a week, I just spread that over four weeks. Great.

Kemy Joseph: [00:41:17] For that person who wants to work 40 hours a week, they might actually have a three week, month, and then they’re done. And it’s like you get a week off every month. I mean, they might just spread it out slightly different. And so, I love the idea of setting it up that way. I don’t think she gives people the ability to do that 40 hours. I think she wants to cap it, but there’s flexibility in that space.

Kemy Joseph: [00:41:40] And you can have Nicole on to flush this out a little bit further. But the idea being, there’s a way we can support those kind of folks, too, if they believe that’s their version of autonomy, they just have to be able to navigate within the systems. As long as they can do that, I’m fine with that.

Mike Blake: [00:41:58] It’s very interesting you bring this up. It’s interesting how timing works sometimes. So, I have a coach as well. And one of the things that he espouses and we’re adopting is a concept of a 12 week sprint. Now, there are only 12 of those in a 52 week year, even I can do that math. And then, the question is, what do you want to do with the other four weeks?

Mike Blake: [00:42:23] And one of the things I’ve tasked my team with is tell me what they want as a reward for hitting the goals after those 12 weeks. And for one, he basically said, “I want cash.” Like, “Okay. That’s fine. We’ll figure out the cash.” But for others, myself included, it might be a week sabbatical, it might be a special project, or just taking a week off.

Mike Blake: [00:42:49] And I don’t feel like that benefit has to or even should be the same for everybody on my team because everybody values something different. And it costs me nothing, almost nothing, to vary it for everybody. As long as I just keep a balance and it’s not something getting a disproportionate benefit, then you get into equity again. But I think we’re smart enough to manage that.

Kemy Joseph: [00:43:10] Great. Good job. I mean, you’re giving people a solid example, like autonomy of reward. Like, we don’t all even like to be appreciated the same way. How do we expect that everybody wants the same reward for working 12 weeks straight and doing the sprints?

Mike Blake: [00:43:26] You know what? That’s exactly right. And, again, a really smart comment that I want to pause on, you know, there are some people, for example, that love praise. If they do a great job, they would love it if you just sent an email throughout the entire company, “This person just did a great job and I want to show my appreciation and admiration for the job that they did.”

Mike Blake: [00:43:51] Another person may be an introvert and just hates public attention. They don’t want that. They don’t need that. They would much rather have an Outback Steakhouse gift card or something. And you’re right, I hadn’t even thought of that. See, now I’m getting free consulting from you, which is great on this podcast.

Kemy Joseph: [00:44:12] That’s how people make the decision, right?

Mike Blake: [00:44:14] Yeah. You know, let people pick the reward that’s meaningful to them. And I don’t know if you could do that if you’re a Microsoft. Maybe you can, I’m just not smart enough. But, certainly, with me running a six person organization, I certainly could.

Kemy Joseph: [00:44:28] I think even as you build the conversation, so from us back to talking about the hiring, one of my favorite interview questions is asking people, “How do you like to be appreciated for a job well done?” And most people, they actually struggle to answer that question because they’re not asked that, especially in an interview. And for us, it’s like, boom, we get to put it in our system when we know we may not be able to do every single thing they ask, like you said, we do have to pace ourselves based on how we’re growing and our income.

Kemy Joseph: [00:44:55] But the point is, people feel like they actually care about what I want and what’s important to me. And I think that’s why we love the autonomy conversation. It just broadens the perspective that, yeah, we started talking about time because we’re talking about system. Now, we’re talking about appreciation and really supporting the individuals on your team to do their best work. If we’re not doing that, what are we doing?

Mike Blake: [00:45:18] I’m talking with Kemy Joseph. And the topic today is, Should I give my employees more autonomy? You mentioned something a little while back that I want to come back to because I think it’s important. Is it reasonable to expect in the initial phases of increasing autonomy that we might see more mistakes being made?

Kemy Joseph: [00:45:41] It’s interesting as you describe mistakes, I would want to give a little bit more clarity on the mistakes. If people have been doing their jobs, and then now you’re saying, “Hey, we’re trying to give you some more decision making power,” the mistakes might come if there’s still lack of clarity around decisions.

Kemy Joseph: [00:45:57] Like, I had a client I was speaking to yesterday, and she mentioned that someone who asked to step up as a leader for this one RFP they were writing, and the person totally made mistakes. They just didn’t do it well. And as we were reflecting more, they hadn’t actually had a roadmap to teach that person what it takes to do a successful RFP. In fact, they were so good at making it look easy that this person thought it was easy. So then, there was a lot of mistakes that happened.

Kemy Joseph: [00:46:27] There wasn’t a fully communication of, “Here’s the stages that you need to go through. And let’s help your decision making process be aligned with ours. So, when we look at your work and we review it, we can get it closer to that same page.” And so, that’s what we spoke about yesterday to help her reframe like, “Hey, you actually did a really good job making it look easy.” And from that perspective, your team probably does not know what it takes to actually do what you do or to make those kind of decisions.

Kemy Joseph: [00:46:52] So, part of that will be, there may be an increase of mistakes. I would reframe it as, as you transition, make sure there’s an increase of clarity on how certain decisions or processes are done in order for people to then be able to follow along with less mistakes.

Mike Blake: [00:47:10] And, to me, that sounds like as much as anything process building and training. And the mistakes provided that are catastrophic can actually be quite informative. Because those mistakes are likely telling you that something has broken down or something was broken down all along that you’re able to cover up with excessive effort and micromanagement that you no longer have the luxury of doing, if you’re committed to gain the benefits of autonomy.

Kemy Joseph: [00:47:40] Yeah. If you’re committed. I mean, we hired somebody who is taking over some of our sales roles. And I realized, like, actually to pause and I did have to be kind of work double time to onboard her in the way that really she can take it over. And so, people kind of think about that time and like, “I have to work double.” It’s like, “Yeah, in the beginning.” But, now, she even coordinated this stage and there’s stages I’m on now that I’m like, “Oh, great. I didn’t even know. It’s just on my calendar now. Fantastic.” Versus, all the hours I would take to coordinate with stage hosts and all that.

Kemy Joseph: [00:48:14] And, to me, experiencing that autonomy was worth the extra time I had to put in to actually train her. But, again, that is required no matter what. If you’re not putting time to train people, we’re not leading them. We’re just setting them up for failure. And then, we’re going to get upset because we’re having to do the double work.

Mike Blake: [00:48:32] Yeah. I mean, you can put in some work now or a lot of work later over a long period of time. In our practice, almost all of our training is done via video. We’re having to redo some of them now because they’re getting out of date. But if our training process is done well and our video library is current, we should be able to tell any employee, “Here’s what we need you to do and go look at Videos 2, 5, 9, and 14. Come back to me if there are any questions.”

Kemy Joseph: [00:49:05] And then, start building on that. Yeah. Absolutely.

Mike Blake: [00:49:06] And employees love it. They love it because, one, employees don’t like to come back to a boss and ask questions, especially if they’re new. They want to feel perfect and they don’t want to look fallible in any way. And, again, in terms of autonomy, people keep different schedules. You may love to work at 6:00 in the morning. Well, I’d rather you not call me at 6:00 in the morning and ask me that question. But if you can look at that video on your phone, and you can stop, rewind it, pause it, whatever you want, that’s been a tool for us.

Mike Blake: [00:49:38] Anyway, the point is that it’s an illustration of how simply doubling down on training and your training processes can make autonomy so much more effective.

Kemy Joseph: [00:49:49] And then, people can actually, like, talk about, “Hey, I didn’t understand this part of the video.” And if you keep getting that feedback, great, go and change that video. If multiple people are saying this one video doesn’t make sense or I’m confused or it’s outdated, then we can just spot check that piece. One thing that’s coming to mind is to really communicate to folks of we’re investing in our autonomy. When we think about investing, we literally pay right now for future benefits. And, you know, the ROI, doesn’t have to take as long.

Kemy Joseph: [00:50:19] Except for our team, we’re experiencing it in about two months and we have a small team. You say you have six person team. The bigger the team, the longer it might take to fully feel that. But right now we’re asking people to invest in autonomy versus feeling they have to sacrifice and be a martyr. So, like, no, no, no. This is going to benefit you, too. You just have to invest in that autonomy.

Mike Blake: [00:50:40] This could be a client of yours or somebody you just watch from afar, but is there a company that in your mind has done really well with employee autonomy that sort of they’re exhibiting best practices in your mind?

Kemy Joseph: [00:50:55] Yeah. I would refer back to Nicole Pereira and Remotish. It’s been interesting to just be guided by her and just seeing the structure she built. Remotish is a HubSpot consultancy agency, and they do phenomenal work. I mean, just even their hiring and onboarding from us looking at it from a DEI perspective, like, wow, she’s been doing so many things without calling it DEI. But the idea of anchoring around autonomy – this is why I’ve been referring to examples from her – giving her team about a nine month runway and say, “Hey, if you’re coming in and you’ve never worked like this before, am I taking nine months to make that transition?”

Kemy Joseph: [00:51:33] So, clearly communicating that, but then having wiki articles, videos, or testimonials, things that allow their team to actually learn at their own pace. And as I mentioned, even setting benchmarks to say you can come down from 40 hours to 30 hours when you can prove you can do blank, blank, blank. So, the process is so mapped out that we have been talking about collaborating for how do we bring more of her information.

Kemy Joseph: [00:51:57] So, just a heads up, people who look at this, look at her company, how they operate. They’re not an agency doing this and saying, “Hey, we want to teach people about time and the benefits.” She’s choosing to teach us about that because we saw the way she operates and was like, “Wow, we’re super impressed.” As we measured autonomy, we looked around to try to find who’s helping companies do that. We have not found that many companies.

Kemy Joseph: [00:52:23] They talk about, you know, transitioning to remote. But, again, as we just discussed, some people are remote, but they’re not autonomous still. So, the idea of actually anchoring on autonomy, they, by far, at Remotish, done it the best we’ve ever seen. And we’re excited to bring those kind of tools, resources, and coaches to more folks.

Mike Blake: [00:52:44] I mean, we’re running up against our time limit, and I want to be respectful of your time. But it’s been a great conversation. We didn’t even get to a bunch of our questions, but that’s okay. But I’m sure that there are questions that either our listeners would have liked me to have asked, but didn’t or would have wished we spent more time on. If somebody wants to follow up with you on this question of employee and organizational autonomy, are they welcome to do so? And if so, what’s the best way for them to contact you?

Kemy Joseph: [00:53:12] Absolutely. I love how you did the plug for LinkedIn earlier. So, you can find me on LinkedIn. You can visit our site directly, fearsadvantage.com. And there is a Thrive Leadership Assessment, this is literally the first thing we’ll tell anybody to do. It’s a free assessment that gives you a chance to measure how much autonomy you currently have in relation to the other ten aspects of thriving that we mentioned earlier. And, to me, we’ve built it in a way that even if no one ever talks to us, they can get some insights on their own experience and then be able to share that with their team as a great level setting conversation. So, all of that is at fearsadvantage.com.

Mike Blake: [00:53:47] That’s going to wrap it up for today’s program. I’d like to thank Kemy Joseph so much for sharing his expertise with us.

Mike Blake: [00:53:54] 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 that we can help them.

Mike Blake: [00:54:11] 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, Clubhouse, and Instagram. Also, check out my new 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: autonomy, Brady Ware & Company, Decision Vision, DEI, diversity, equity, FEARS Advantage, inclusion, Kemy Joseph, Mike Blake

Workplace MVP: John Baldino, Humareso

December 2, 2021 by John Ray

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

Workplace MVP: John Baldino, Humareso

In an engaging conversation, John Baldino, President of Humareso, and host Jamie Gassmann review changes in the HR landscape changes over the last two years, important trends, and look ahead to 2022. They discuss flexibility in work arrangements, compensation and inflation, cultural fabric, diversity, equity and inclusion, and much more. 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

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

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.

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, crisis, and security solutions. Now, here’s your host, Jamie Gassmann.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:00:30] Hi, everyone. Your host, Jamie Gassmann, here, and welcome to this episode of Workplace MVP. As we near the end of 2021 and gear up for 2022, I thought it would be a great time to reflect on what we, as business and H.R. leaders, have navigated over this last year. Some of the challenges and complexities experienced in 2020 followed us into 2021 and really never left. But just like with any year, 2021 brought focus and importance in areas of our business that needed to be focused on.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:01:03] And today, we will be talking with Workplace MVP John Baldino, President of Humareso, to share from his perspective when looking at the human side of business, what are the key areas of focus for H.R. and business leaders in 2021, and what does he see as areas of importance going into 2022. So, with that, welcome to the show, John.

John Baldino: [00:01:28] Hey, Jamie. Thanks so much for having me.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:01:30] Absolutely. I’m looking forward to connecting with you on this topic. I think you bring some great perspective. So, with that, let’s start out with learning a little bit about your career journey to being President of Humareso.

John Baldino: [00:01:45] So, yeah, thank you. It is one of the things that you alluded to, looking back on 2021, it’s 30 years for me involved this year with H.R., leadership development, organizational design and development. It’s frightening for that 30 years. I can’t believe it. But I’ve had a really great journey in terms of the kinds of organizations I’ve been able to be a part of. And so, through retail and restaurant, nonprofit, education, banking and finance, distribution and manufacturing, just so many areas of industry.

John Baldino: [00:02:26] And I got the privilege of starting Humareso in 2012, so it’s been a little over nine years, and it’s been a great time. Really, I’m thankful to say, a smart move to start the H.R. consulting firm that I did. And we’re just having a blast, honestly, with the work that we get to do with companies across the country, also in a variety of industries. So, it’s really fun.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:02:50] Yeah. And probably a great time right now, obviously. I’m sure your services are called upon even more as people are navigating different complexities and challenges that maybe they haven’t thought that they would experience. So, with that, tell us a little bit about Humareso, and what your organization does, and some of the services that you provide.

John Baldino: [00:03:13] Yeah. I try to tell people, we are as much of an all-in-one for everything H.R. as possible. And the way that we can do that is because we have some wonderful people on staff who are just phenomenal and they represent disciplined areas of H.R. And so, we support companies with a lot of, say, blocking and tackling, compliance administration, direct hire, recruiting, things that they need to get done day in, day out for that employee experience and life cycle.

John Baldino: [00:03:49] But we’re also involved with things that are a little beyond. So, technology, really an interesting path to constantly travel because technology changes so much. And what makes sense for a company at its particular genesis. So, you might use something today that when you double in size, you might not use next year. And so, helping navigate through that. But then, areas of mergers and acquisition, organizational development, learning management, executive coaching, just things where sometimes we overlook those components and think that they are nice to have.

John Baldino: [00:04:24] But, really, in the competitive marketplace today, they’re a must-have. You can’t just kind of put things aside anymore. You can’t ignore compensation. You can’t ignore employee sentiment. What’s happening with our people? Are they engaged? It’s not just how do you feel. It’s how are you productive. And so, I think organizations are much smarter about that than ever before. And so, we get a lot of opportunity to support companies doing a lot of that work.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:04:55] Yeah. Absolutely. It’s like the human side of business has become even more of a focal point and level of importance for businesses, particularly over this last year.

John Baldino: [00:05:06] For sure. For sure. And it’s funny, I mean, you and I have talked about this before, right? When people first connect with Humareso, they’re like, “I’m not sure how to say the name.” And I’m like, “It’s Humareso. It’s Italian for human resources.” And people are always like, “That’s fantastic.” That’s a total lie.

John Baldino: [00:05:27] But the focus for me is to get people to be thoughtful about that idea of human resources. It’s actually a global consideration. I appreciate the fact that in the U.S., we think of it as sort of a department. But, really, it’s a functional relational component of how organizations exist and thrive across the globe.

John Baldino: [00:05:49] So, you’re right, that human-centered perspective is not merely emotional. And I hate to say it, I still get to talk to some CEOs who, “This is all kind of fluff, blah, blah, blah.” And usually, they’re the CEOs that are struggling the most. And I want to just say to them, “Listen. Relax. It doesn’t mean that you have to get a warm blanket and sit in front of a fireplace and just get in touch with your feelings. That’s not what this means. It means you have real people with real concerns and real desires to contribute in their work and in the organization. So, don’t overlook that. Pay attention.”

Jamie Gassmann: [00:06:27] Absolutely. And they want to do good work for you, especially if you show that care and compassion and value that they’re seeking.

John Baldino: [00:06:35] Absolutely.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:06:36] And, obviously, you kind of already mentioned, we’re going to be talking about trending over the last year. So, from your perspective, just to level set as we kind of get into this dialogue, if you were going to look at over this last year, what were some of the key trends that you feel were most impactful to the human side of business?

John Baldino: [00:06:58] I mean, listen, we can be buzzword and trendy for at least an hour, right? Certainly, I think from a new term, we saw this year that the phrase The Great Resignation being used, and people struggling to find talent to fill open roles, and all of the perspective that went along with that. It’s because of unemployment. It’s because people are lazy. And everybody is an armchair coach to tell you exactly what’s wrong with the world.

John Baldino: [00:07:33] In many ways, though, I think that I’ve also heard probably a better phrase, instead of The Great Resignation, I look back and see it as a great reshuffle. And I think what talent has chosen to do this past year is say, “Where can I best thrive? Where can I best invest? Who’s going to like the fact that I’m bringing what I bring to the table? Who will like it the most?” And that may mean that I take my toys and go to another company in order to do that. And so, the talent is still in the marketplace. It’s just reshuffled. It’s out of where it was and onto someplace else.

John Baldino: [00:08:13] And if your organization winds up being one of the organizations whose bench has cleared, you may need to look in the mirror long and hard as to why your organization is the one reshuffled out of as opposed to into. And so, I think for sure that’s something that organizations have had to pay attention to this past year differently.

John Baldino: [00:08:39] And let me just add this, too, I want to be respectful of data. There’s absolutely data that would say this past year – and I’ll try to do this. I might say it twice – there’s jobs that people are filling right now and open jobs where we need people. If you add that number together, it’s more than the number of people available to work. That there’s less people available for all the jobs that are possible, both currently filled and opened. Our birthrate is down. For every two adults, we’re trending at about 1.7. So, we’re not regenerating the same number and haven’t for years. And so, we’re seeing a little bit of that catching up with us, for sure. I’m not ignoring the data.

John Baldino: [00:09:27] But I would also say, there are companies that are able to hire and they have hundreds of people this past year, hundreds of people this past year. Well, where are they coming from? They may be coming from your company if you haven’t paid attention to what’s happening with your team.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:09:43] Yeah. Absolutely. And there were a couple of other areas, too, you mentioned, like from an entrepreneurial spirit with that next generation of workforce.

John Baldino: [00:09:53] I mean, you and I know, we have this spirit even within us. And I’ll speak for myself, I’m not a young person anymore. I pretend I am. I think like I am probably to the chagrin of my spouse. But I’m not really a young person.

John Baldino: [00:10:11] We’ve encouraged a very entrepreneurial approach to commerce. There are so many younger – and I do mean younger by age – who are coming out of school, who very much feel like I don’t ever want to work in-house for someone. I want to start my own company,” whether that’s a product or a service, whether it’s tech based or not. There are just opportunities all over the place. You can start your own website and have product delivered to somebody for $199. I mean, this dropship stuff is just like easy peasy now.

John Baldino: [00:10:49] And so, there’s people who are like, “The heck with that. I’m not working for Baldino. I’m going to work for myself.” And that entrepreneurial spirit you can’t ignore. And so, what has that done this past year? It’s actually taking people out of the workforce as well who don’t desire a W-2 relationship with a company. They don’t want it.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:11:09] So interesting. And I’ve seen that. And I think you and I will talk about it a little bit later about that shift to consulting work. And that we’ve seen some of the writing on the wall for that years before, even pre-COVID. And I’m always kind of looking at, “Well, pre-COVID that was already happening. It just expedited it.” Which we’ve seen across a lot of different other areas.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:11:35] And another area, too, that we’re going to talk about a little bit later is that diversity, equity, and inclusion focus in workplaces. And I think you have some really exciting things to share on that different perspectives of how a workplace can be looking at that within their own space as well.

John Baldino: [00:11:53] Absolutely. We’ll talk more about that. But for sure to at least whet the appetite, honestly, we’re watching verbal responses followed by physical movement from people who are saying, “You say you’re about these things -” organization “- but you’re not. And so, I’m calling you out on it. And if you don’t change it, I’m leaving because I can go somewhere where the value around equity and fostering a sense of belonging is real. It’s active. We can talk about it. I can point to it. And you just want me to know we hired diverse talent.”

John Baldino: [00:12:35] Well, first of all, what does that mean? And second of all, how long are they staying? Because you can hire diverse talent, let’s say, in certain buckets. But in six months, there’s a good chance they won’t be there if your organization isn’t prepped for it. And other people are now going out the door with those folks who’ve been brought in just because they represent some sort of diverse group. That’s not the way to do it.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:12:57] Yeah. No, it’s so exciting to talk about that with you in terms of some of your perspective of how you helped workplaces to really embrace that in a way that’s helpful and really demonstrating what it’s meant to demonstrate. So, that’ll be really exciting.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:13:15] So, diving into The Great Resignations, and we’ve all heard about that and the impact of that. And I think in some ways we probably saw that, but maybe differently than, you know, just hearing some of the data that you shared, probably maybe differently than what we maybe anticipated. I think maybe some retired earlier than they anticipated. And with that, we had people leaving the job market that would have maybe stayed, like, five years longer. But then, to your point, just having less amount of that employee candidate pool based on just there aren’t as many workers out there. So, talk to me a little bit about that trend of the great reshuffle and share kind of some of your perspective a little bit deeper on that.

John Baldino: [00:14:01] For sure. It’s really interesting, honestly, even with what you just shared, that, certainly, there were people who COVID amplified their desire to get out of the workforce. There are definitely people who took early retirement. There are people who were furloughed or laid off from their organization.

John Baldino: [00:14:22] And when the opportunity presented itself to return, they self-selected out and said, “This whole pandemic thing isn’t done yet. I’m not interested in trying to navigate what this means, masks, no masks, vaccines, no vaccine. I just don’t want to be involved with it. And so, I’m not coming back or certainly I’m not coming back to the degree that I used to work. I’ll come back part time -” which we’re seeing that as well “- not full time. I only want to take a role where I can work from home completely because perhaps I’m immunocompromised or I’m a caretaker and I’m concerned about being a carrier for some of these things.”

John Baldino: [00:15:05] So, from a health perspective, absolutely, that’s impacted some of that reshuffle. I’d also say from an opportunity standpoint. So, what do I mean? There are plenty of professionals pre-pandemic who were involved in the – I’m going to use the big industry title – hospitality industry, so that would be things like hotel, restaurants, concierge-based services, spas, all of those areas, who were laid off and laid off for months. And when they were able to come back, came back at a very constrained schedule because it just wasn’t busy enough. People were not getting massages. I mean, think about some of that. You might be worried about health issues. Who wants to come and have a massage? Not as many as once did, let’s say, or other kinds of treatments.

John Baldino: [00:16:01] So, those folks decided, “I got to shuffle myself out of hospitality and into something that is not going to be as influenced by what’s potentially happening in the world, mandates that may yet come down the pike. I’m going to get into something else.” And so, right now, for sure, I’m seeing hospitality-based organizations struggling to find talent, struggling to find talent.

John Baldino: [00:16:26] Add to that the way in which some organizations – think about cities like New York, where so much hospitality happens in New York City. I mean, my goodness, so much of the economy is based on it – people are saying, “You want me to to not only do the work that I’m supposed to do, but now also be a representative of the city’s health mandates, and help to tell people what it’s supposed to be, and don’t sit here, and put your mask on.”

John Baldino: [00:16:54] People have chosen to say, “I am not interested in any of that. I don’t get paid enough for that. I’m not a professional in that degree. I want to use my professional expertise in a different way.” And so, they’ve reshuffled themselves, again, out of that vein of work.

John Baldino: [00:17:09] And lastly, you know, I also want to make sure I give a shoutout to some of the reshuffle as well, for those roles where you have to be in-person. You can’t do it remotely. And I think that we have to be really careful in the business community – because I think we’ve done this – to not make people feel badly for having work that they have to do physically. Just because your organization cannot give you a fully remote job doesn’t mean your organization is barbaric. That is not what it means.

John Baldino: [00:17:46] And we know that there’s going to be a lot of people listening to this while they’re having a meal and maybe you ordered that meal from somewhere. Well, who in the world cooked it and delivered it to you? People. Real people. And so, they couldn’t do it through Zoom. That sandwich would not taste as good if it was only through Zoom. It had to be physically done. So, let’s stop giving people a hard time because I do think that’s influenced the reshuffle as well. We’ve made some of our own employees feel badly as if they had some substandard job. That’s ridiculous.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:18:23] That’s such an interesting point. I mean, when you think about that, it’s like the people going in to make your coffee. Yeah, I could have made a pot of coffee at home, but there’s something about that Starbucks cup that just gives me a little satisfaction for the day.

John Baldino: [00:18:45] And hopefully you’re not going up to that drive-thru window saying, “Thank you so much for this coffee.” Isn’t it terrible that you had to come into work? Wouldn’t you rather have a job where you can work at home? I mean, again, I know that sounds ridiculous, but I think that we have unintentionally sort of made sort of a caste system between what it means to work from home and not being better than having to go in and work somewhere.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:19:08] Yeah. I mean, because there are some employees who they like to work in the office and they want to get back in the office. And, yes, there’s going to be some who are like, “I really prefer to work at home.” But that’s the beauty of our employees, is that difference and what their likes and dislikes and those types of things. So, yeah, interesting points all around.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:19:32] And so, when we talked previously, you indicated there is also another kind of business trend with larger organizations where they’re paying substantial salaries for some entry level or just above entry level positions, that is increasing some of the pay structure that’s having an impact on some of the smaller businesses that might be trying to hire. Can you talk a little bit to some of that trend that you’re seeing?

John Baldino: [00:19:57] Yeah, for sure. I mean, that is absolutely a trend. And I would say, I get asked about compensation a ton this year. Compensation from an external competitive standpoint and then pay equity from an internal standpoint. What are we doing with our own people? Forget about what’s happening externally. Are we paying people equitably for similar work within our company? Well, there’s a good chance that if you are bringing people in at this point, you’re bringing them in higher because you’re trying to compete.

John Baldino: [00:20:31] And all of a sudden, those legacy employees who’ve been there are trending downward because you’re starting people so much higher. So, what are we doing about that? That then becomes now your legacy employees start to feel some sort of way about your company and may think about exiting the company because of that. So, compensation on both sides has been really difficult.

John Baldino: [00:20:51] What we’re seeing is, you know, a large organization could easily say, “We’re just going to throw a bunch of money at this problem. And so, we need people at this particular level -” and I’ll make up something just for the sake of it being easy “- customer service rep. And we’re going to pay this much per hour.” And you’ve got a smaller organization that has a few customer service reps and they can’t compete at that hourly rate the way that Amazon or Verizon or Aramark or just pick whatever large, large enterprise level organization you would like to. And so, they price themselves out of the competition, those smaller companies. They can’t compete at that level.

John Baldino: [00:21:33] And if you are a job seeker, whether active or passive, and somebody calls you and says, “Hey, I got a job for you and you’re going to make $6 more an hour, $10 more an hour than you’re making right now.” Honestly, I see people leave for 50 cents, let alone the numbers that I just mentioned. Holy cow. You think that employee is going to come back to you and say, “Hey, John. I love working for you. They’re going to pay me $6 more an hour. Can you match that?” If I’m a small business, there’s a great chance I’m going to say, “No, I can’t. I can’t do it.” And so, now I’m losing talent because I can’t afford to compete at that compensation level.

John Baldino: [00:22:16] But the risk on the other side, as I see it, is at some point, this compensation thing is going to level out. We’re going to have to right size it a bit because it’s unsustainable. It can’t go on forever. It’s very much, in my opinion, like the housing crisis going back to ’07, ’08, ’09. Things are going to just eventually kind of crash. You just can’t keep saying this is worth more, worth more, worth more, worth more.

John Baldino: [00:22:41] So, what will happen for those people who went to those large companies? They’re likely going to do a riff. They’re going to do a reduction in force. You’re going to get your pink slip, whatever phrase you’re used to. And Verizon will right size. I’m not saying anything out of turn, we’ve seen Verizon, as an example, do this in years past, lay off a number of people, wait a few months, and start to rehire people. And they’ll rehire them at the new lower readjusted rates of pay. And, now, we’ve got all kinds of people on unemployment waiting for that readjustment to happen. And we watch that take its toll on our system.

John Baldino: [00:23:24] And I think organizations need to be wise to kind of wait for that. Take your time. I know it’s going to be stressful right now, but take your time that’s coming sooner than you think.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:23:35] So interesting. I’m guessing that’s contributing to some of the reshuffle, too, is just the opportunities out there for other workers. And, you know, being in the crisis response arena – that our sponsor is part of – some of the things I’ve heard spoken about is just when a situation like the pandemic happens, people start to rethink their situation. And so, some of that pricing that you’re saying probably are more in tune to what’s going on because they’re starting to look at what’s better for me and what should I do for myself, and it becomes enticing.

John Baldino: [00:24:14] Yeah. I mean, it’s hard to say no. Let’s be honest, you’re 26 years old and you’ve got a couple of years under your belt, maybe, of some professional work, and someone wants to pay you 20 percent, 25 percent, 30 percent more than you’re making right now, how are you saying no to that? That would be really hard. You’ve got student loans that you know you’re going to have to pay for. I mean, you just have things that are just realistic.

John Baldino: [00:24:39] And if my grandfather were still here, he’d say, “Get what’s yours as fast as you can get it.” That’s kind of the perspective that some people, for sure, are hearing. And it’s hard to talk them out of that.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:24:53] Yeah. Especially when you’re younger in your career, too, a lot of people say, “Now is your time.” You’ve got a whole 40 years left to work kind of mentality. So, looking at that and talking 40 years out, what is the long term impact that maybe some of that pricing for salaries impact is on, maybe the individual, but also on the organizations?

John Baldino: [00:25:20] Well, I mean, it’s such a great question. You know, I wish I knew in full. So, obviously, I’m anecdotal a little bit with some of the answer. But I would say, I mean, first of all, we have to realign expectations.

John Baldino: [00:25:37] I spoke to somebody about a-week-and-a-half ago, literally, 27 years old, and has a job making $150,000 a year. I’m like, “Are they hiring?” I mean, I have my own company, but I don’t even know what I would have done at 27 years old with $150,000 a year, nothing good. Let me just actually say that, I could at least say nothing good.

John Baldino: [00:26:05] Now, let’s say that the market readjusts, as I just shared. Like, what do you want that person at 29 years old to expect now? They’re going have a hard time going back into the job market and take even 90,000 as a salary, because it’s just going to seem so low compared to what they got used to quickly. That’s where I think we’re going to see a longer term impact because there’s a better chance of those individuals saying, “The heck with this. You’re not paying me what I’m worth. I’m going to go do my own thing. I’m going to go start my own thing. I’m going to go partner up with somebody and try to get something done differently.”

John Baldino: [00:26:44] Some of that may work. As an entrepreneur, obviously, I believe in that, because I started a business as well. But not everybody is going to be able to do that. And, certainly, the reality is, especially for those who’ve started companies, you don’t start making $150,000 your first year. I mean, you don’t. So, if you think starting your business is a guarantee to get you that kind of money right away to match where you’ve been, you’re going to be disappointed.

John Baldino: [00:27:14] And even now, I see entrepreneurs with those who are trying to be entrepreneurial get out of it because the expectation hasn’t been aligned correctly. So, I think long term, we’re going to struggle with that individually.

John Baldino: [00:27:28] As far as organizations are concerned, I think organizations are going to have to be honest about budgets. Because one of two things is going to happen, you’re going to have that huge reduction in force that I mentioned or we’re going to continue to see past the long pricing to cover for these things. I mean, we all go into that grocery store. Holy cow. Holy cow. Who’s paying for that? Or the gas line or whatever, we see what the prices are right now. That’s not sustainable, either. I mean, when you start looking at chicken as being expensive, don’t even bother putting the steaks out. Just don’t bother, because how could I afford it? And that’s where I think that markets are going to have to readjust as well. It’s just not sustainable.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:28:18] Yeah. Because that additional cost to cover those salaries, it’s got to get passed on to somebody.

John Baldino: [00:28:26] Somebody and it’s just you and me, right? It’s when we start saying 6.99 a pound is cheap. And you’re like, “Wait. What am I saying? What am I saying?”

Jamie Gassmann: [00:28:36] Years ago I said, “If they ever moved the coffees to over $5, I’m not buying them.” Well, they’re over $5 and I’m still buying them.

John Baldino: [00:28:44] I just got one this morning.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:28:49] I just got one this morning. So, you bring up a really good kind of points, so segueing into that next trend that we talked about, that entrepreneurial spirit and just seeing this next generation of workforce, you know, having more of that spirit and wanting to look at moving into more kind of consultancy or starting their own businesses. You had indicated when we talked before that this has been taught in us, and it makes me think about my 11-year-old at home who’s like, “I’m going to be a YouTube star someday, mom. They make good money.” And I’m going, “Oh, boy. Yes, they do.” But to get to that, how did they do that? So, what changes are you seeing with this shift of that entrepreneurial spirit? I mean, there’s got to be some pros and cons to that.

John Baldino: [00:29:38] Sure. I mean, look, we’re in the Shark Tank generation. I mean, we’ve encouraged people in this. And listen, I, for one, am not pooh-poohing it. I’m glad we have. Like, there have been some phenomenal inventions and ideas that have come forward as a result of people taking risks. One of my favorite shows to watch, honestly, is The Profit with Marcus Lemonis, and he’s just so smart in his approach to the entrepreneurial game. It’s right on the money.

John Baldino: [00:30:09] And so, I’m not badmouthing it. But what I’m saying is, we watch those people come forward on Shark Tank. And I know you sit on your couch and think, “What the heck is this? Who would buy this? Why do they think this is a great idea?” And we’re right, The Sharks, nobody invests in that company, right? But what we forget is, for that one person who’s standing there, that person represents another hundred who are doing the same thing, trying to put together service or product in an entrepreneurial way that they think the world wants. And they won’t. There are lots of products and services that are by the wayside or the distribution of those things that didn’t happen the way that it was meant to.

John Baldino: [00:30:54] So, disappointment has to be put together in a way to help people learn from it and encourage people back into the job market. Once again, as opposed to just thinking I’ve got to always go back to what could be the next product, the next product, the next product. Not everyone should do that. And I know that might be hard to hear as people listen to this. You know, “John, you can’t crush people’s dreams.” I’m not here to be a dream smasher. That’s not what I’m saying.

John Baldino: [00:31:27] But we need people to work in the disciplines that are functional components of how our economy is put together. We need medical professionals. We need hospitality professionals. We need retail professionals. We need food professionals. We need distribution professionals. We need folks that are understanding logistics and supply chain. And we need people who are going to understand technology in different ways. We need all of that. That has to be encouraged right now in our high schools, in our colleges.

John Baldino: [00:32:03] One of the saddest things for me – and this is a true story. So, this is a couple of years ago – someone who was actually working for my organization in marketing, and he was a recent college grad. He was a marketing associate. And I had him sign up for a digital marketing course. Humareso will take care of it. We paid for it. Just go learn a bunch of stuff. The deal was he had to present back on it to a few of us. And he came back after six weeks and presented on it.

John Baldino: [00:32:35] And he started by saying, “Thanks for letting me take this class. I just want to tell you, I’m so angry.” And I was like, “Oh, my gosh. This isn’t going to go well. Why are you angry?” He said, “Oh, no. I’m not angry at you. I’m grateful that you had me take this course. But I’m angry because I recently finished a four year degree in marketing and I learned nothing that I just learned in six weeks in this marketing course. Not one thing that I learned in these six weeks in practical marketing that I learned in my four year program that I’m now still paying for in my student loans. For that, I’m angry.”

John Baldino: [00:33:17] And I found that to be obviously sad. I was not happy for him. But what does that tell us? It tells us that we also have to realign better what’s happening in our educational system with what’s happening in our entrepreneurial outlets and in the business community. Because there’s a misalignment. It’s not where it needs to be.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:33:36] Oh, that’s such really good points. A lot of what people learn is on the job, in that hands-on, tangible, kind of real-world atmosphere. And you brought up a really interesting point with the entrepreneurs that, I think, too, maybe an employer could reframe it a little bit. I mean, that entrepreneurial spirit I could see as like an absolute benefit to a business, especially if you’re working for a smaller business. Because you want your employees thinking entrepreneurially because that helps to drive a smaller business to even more success when they treat it like it’s their own business.

John Baldino: [00:34:17] So, reframing it, maybe, for the workforce, how could an employer do that in a way that kind of attracts some of those individuals that have that spirit within them that maybe you can kind of bring them over to a company as opposed to trying to start their own gig?

John Baldino: [00:34:39] And as a small business owner or, honestly, even a mid-market company, you have to be willing to put in a little bit of the effort into that to help people have that bridge. You know, I get to talk to business owners all the time of various-sized organizations, and they will sometimes be intimidated by entrepreneurs coming back into the workforce. Or think that, “They’re only going to stay with me a year to make some money and then leave.”

John Baldino: [00:35:07] First of all, you don’t have anybody right now. Take 12 months from somebody, let’s see what happens. You have no idea what’s going to happen in 12 months. Take the 12 months. Relax. The other thing is, if you can reform that drive towards something, as you’re saying, Jamie, that benefits the organization as well without categorizing somebody in a negative way.

John Baldino: [00:35:31] I try to tell people, “Listen, you’re talking to me as I started a consulting firm. Let me paint a picture for you. I was one of those – what you would term – a corporate H.R. person for years, and I’m entrepreneurial. I don’t make sense. There shouldn’t be people like me. But guess what? There are.” And so, you can be entrepreneurial in any kind of industry, in any discipline. It’s about how to encourage it and how to define it.

John Baldino: [00:36:03] When I started Humareso, people – besides making fun of the name – were saying, “Why would you make a name? You should call it John Baldino Consulting, because everyone knows you. That’s what’s going to drive business to you.” And my response was, “If I make it about me, it will be seen smaller than I intend it to be. And so, I want to make sure I highlight the talent that I know will come.” For the first year, I was the only employee of Humareso – for the first year. But, now, all this time later and all these employees that I’m privileged enough to have be a part of the team, I’m glad I knew better than to call it Baldino Consulting, because it is much grander and larger than just me.

John Baldino: [00:36:53] So, if you can keep that long-term perspective in play as a business owner, look at your talent similarly, how can they be a part of the process for as long as they’re part of the process? And how do I encourage that? And, honestly, give them an opportunity to give me the very best that they can give me. That’s what we need to do.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:37:10] Yeah. That is such a good point. Even if it’s just for the 12 months and giving them a stepping stone, they may stay way longer than what they originally anticipated, especially if you give someone with an entrepreneurial spirit some flexibility to be able to work that spirit within the organization. It’s amazing what you can get out of it.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:37:32] And kind of touching on our last trend here in terms of over the last year, the diversity, equity, and inclusion focus that business and H.R. leaders had, you shared the term cultural fabric with me on our last conversation. I just thought that was such a great way to think about this topic. And so, can you elaborate a little bit more on what that means and how a leader can leverage that within their organization?

John Baldino: [00:38:00] Yeah. Thank you. I would say, it’s something that’s going to fight up against, I think, what some people have sort of adopted into their brains for a lot of years. We talk about cultural fit, right? And so, “I didn’t hire that person. They weren’t really a fit. The way that we are, this person isn’t really going to be able to succeed. I’m thinking of that person when I say this,” things like that.

John Baldino: [00:38:28] And what I think we know now is, there’s a bit of bias baked into cultural fit. What we’re saying is, there’s something about that person that isn’t like us. And the like me bias has been around forever. Instead, I think that what we’re smarter to do is look at the individual and say, “What would they add to what we already have?”

John Baldino: [00:38:54] And the picture that I try to give people who want to fight for cultural fit, this is what we need to be about, I try to encourage cultural fabric. Look at your organization like a tapestry. What is it that’s been woven to date? And it could be a beautiful picture on this tapestry, for sure, but where it is today? Couldn’t we be ready for a new thread to be added to this picture on the tapestry? Couldn’t we be ready for that? And we ought to be. And maybe we think it’s too scary. It might mess up the picture overall. It might. It might. It might.

John Baldino: [00:39:34] But, really, we don’t have much of a choice these days. Because if you think you’re just going to find a whole lot of people like you to do what you do the way that you do it, you’re going to be disappointed. So, this isn’t about, “Well, I guess I have to have substandard qualifications.” No. This is about how do we get work done better, wider, differently, with more innovation and creativity, and add a different colored thread to this tapestry of what we’ve built. Oh, my goodness. Now, in a couple of years when I step back, I see the picture more vibrantly. It’s even more beautiful than it was two years previous.

John Baldino: [00:40:15] And I think when we think about inclusion and equity, as for sure, areas that we have to pay attention to, that needs to be a bit more of our attention, is, what kind of fabric are we weaving? What are we ready for? What might we not be ready for but need to get ready for? And to take the risks associated with that.

John Baldino: [00:40:38] I find it really disconcerting when I’m talking to business owners who want to tell me, “John, we’re committed to diversity.” And I believe them. But you have to be committed to a much more holistic view of that word you’re using. Diversity, what does that mean for you? Is it just about persons of color or ethnicity? Is it about a particular gender? Diversity is even more than that. I’m not ignoring those often visible, diverse characteristics. Yes. Yes. You have to be open to that.

John Baldino: [00:41:12] But even beyond that. Even areas of like hiring veterans or disability. Or here’s a couple we don’t talk about enough, socioeconomics, educational backgrounds. Why on earth is it a bachelor’s degree required? Tell me why. When I look at your department and you have five people in that role, and the best one out of the five has an associate’s, does not have a bachelor’s, tell me why it’s required. Tell me why it’s required. “Well, that person is an exception.” How do you know that? You won’t hire anybody who’s like that person according to your standards. Be wider in the way in which you approach people. It’s possible. There are so many talented people out there who just haven’t had the chances that you may have had. So, don’t limit that.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:42:02] Like, most opening it up so that you can attract more of an audience with different backgrounds, different perspectives. Because keeping an open mind about the value that they can bring to that team could be really eye opening.

John Baldino: [00:42:20] For sure. One of my favorites – and when they listen to this, they will crack up laughing – there’s a pair that work at Humareso. And I’m saying a pair. And I won’t say the names. But there is one of the pair who is a 60 something black woman and the other pair is a 20 something white male. They are two peas in a pod. They are for each other like nobody’s business. You cannot get between them.

John Baldino: [00:42:54] And I’m going to tell you, they would not have a reason for their paths to intersect were it not for the opportunity of an open organization who looks at individuals with the skills or competencies, whatever you want to categorize those, with skills, knowledge, abilities, aptitudes, all of that. If we didn’t just look at that, their paths would not have crossed. And, now, they love each other, love each other, and that’s how it should be.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:43:26] Yeah. Absolutely. That’s such a great, great story. I love that. So, we’re going to just take a moment to hear from our show sponsor.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:43:35] Workplace MVP is sponsored by R3 Continuum. R3 Continuum is a global leader in providing expert, reliable, responsive, and tailored behavioral health disruption and violent solutions to promote workplace well-being and performance in the face of an ever changing and often unpredictable world. You can learn more about how R3 Continuum can tailor a solution for your organization’s unique challenges by visiting r3c.com today.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:44:03] So, now, we’re going to shift gears a little bit, John, and we’re going to talk about 2022. And I’m going to ask you to look into your crystal ball and give us some of your future predictions of what you think 2022 is going to look like. So, if we were going to identify and kind of narrow in to, like, some key areas that H.R. and business leaders need to watch for or even, to your point, focus on as they move into this new year, what would those areas be?

John Baldino: [00:44:35] This is so funny, because these are the moments where in the back of my mind, I’m like, “Six months from now, someone’s going to play this for me and tell me you were so wrong.”

Jamie Gassmann: [00:44:46] Isn’t that the risk of any predictive show, right? Or I could just do a follow up show to show how right you were.

John Baldino: [00:44:55] I like that one. Let’s prep for that. I think for sure, one of the things that has been very evident over the last couple of years is the need to be an encouragement towards overall health for our individuals who support our organizations. And I mean, overall health. More than just offering medical benefits, although that’s important. More than just offering ancillary benefits, again, that’s important. But all areas of health, so that’s physical, mental, emotional, spiritual.

John Baldino: [00:45:32] What are the ways in which we can foster opportunities for individuals to latch on to any and all of these areas and be supported? I want to make sure I paint both sides of this. We do know that if those individual contributors are healthier, they’re going to be better employees. That’s just how it is. I know that might not seem as altruistic as some may want. But it is a benefit on both sides of the equation. And that’s okay.

John Baldino: [00:46:03] So, I think that organizations coming into next year, how can they better give people opportunities and start spending money a little differently instead of maybe throwing it all into an HSA or an FSA? Can you use some of that money to go towards – I’ll call it – like a cafeteria type opportunity for people to choose areas of health that they want to focus on? Again, in those areas that I just mentioned, it’s got to be more than just here’s 150 bucks toward your gym membership. I mean, that’s great and all, but not everybody goes to the gym. Not everybody consistently goes to the gym.

John Baldino: [00:46:40] And what we sometimes do for people is if that’s really the primary benefit that we offer as an ancillary, and then they sign up and never go, then they feel guilty because they’re not going. So, we’ve we’ve actually made another problem. And so, what I would say is there are opportunities to be more customized. Let people choose how they can spend that money every month towards areas of mental health. Maybe they can chat with somebody for a few sessions over Zoom, a mental health professional. Maybe they can do a yoga class. Maybe they can do some sort of walk through the spiritual religions of the world.

John Baldino: [00:47:24] I mean, all kinds of things where people are like, “I’ve never been exposed to this kind of information. I’m really interested to know. It’s making me more centered, more aware, more compassionate, and considerate of others.” Again, how is that not going to help your organization? So, I think that that’s an area, for sure, that people who are in positions of authority or influence could encourage their organizations in, in providing that to their people. So, whole health consideration, for sure.

John Baldino: [00:47:55] I’d also say that we talked about flexibility. You mentioned it, Jaime, too, just a little while ago as well. Well, what does flexibility mean? And, again, when I talked about this before, I have staff even that are like, “I don’t want to work from home. Can I work in the office every day? I know you tell me I can work hybrid. Can I work in there every day? Because I bore a bunch of children that I love, but I’d rather not be with them 24/7 all the time. I think it’s healthy for me to have a little bit of a break, be with some adults.”

John Baldino: [00:48:28] My wife, we have three awesome young adults. They are in college and older and they’re great. My kids are all two years apart, so it was a little crazy in the early years. And my wife, we were fortunate enough that she wanted to stay home, especially with the third one, to stay home with all three. But she took two days a week to go work at Ann Taylor. She’s been there almost 18 years, I think at this point. Because she said to me, “I just want to talk to some other adults. I don’t want to be in the house.” That’s fair.

John Baldino: [00:49:06] So, how do we have some flexibility in the way in which we give people opportunities, either hybrid work, work from home, those considerations? How do we give people flexibility even in hours? Could they be full time? Does it have to be 9:00 to 5:00? Oh, my goodness. What if we did 12:00 to 8:00? Oh, no. That’s crazy. No. Actually, it’s not. For some of our organizations that are listening, your global or at the very least, your coast to coast. 8:00 p.m. on the East Coast is 5:00 p.m. on the West Coast. So, why? Let them work 12:00 to 8:00 and cover West Coast shift. Who cares? Give people opportunity and flexibility in that way. You’d be surprised how well that gets responded to.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:49:50] Yeah. Well, some people aren’t morning people. They don’t want to get up early.

John Baldino: [00:49:54] I’ve heard of them. And I will tell you the truth, I’m actually on the other side of that. I’m absolutely a morning person. I mean, I’m up at 4:30 to get to the gym. And people will look at me and say, “You’ve got something wrong with you to do that.” But I’m wired as a morning person. But come, you know, late afternoon, I got to really push myself forward because I’m crashing a bit.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:50:21] I’m a morning person too. I totally support that.

John Baldino: [00:50:25] We stand together. We’re going to stand together.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:50:27] Yes. We’re partners at the morning crew. I love it. But on the flip side, I have a husband who is a total night owl, so I totally get it. And I think creating that flexibility for employees, you know, you brought up an interesting point on our call about some people don’t want to be in that remote setting because they might be embarrassed about what comes across via their Zoom screens. And just having some kind of appreciation where the employee and understanding where that employee might be coming from because there might be something they don’t want to say in terms of why they don’t want to be in that remote world.

John Baldino: [00:51:05] And we have to remember that people didn’t buy their home or rent the apartment that they’re in thinking that they were going to have to now be on display for everybody in the office. I mean, try to remember that.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:51:18] Yeah. Absolutely. So, a couple of other areas I know we were talking about – I know we’re probably running out of time because you and I could talk for probably hours on various topics – we covered kind of the whole health of the organization and the individual and the flexibility. And then, we also talked about some tolerance for people coming into work sick. And we’re all probably starting to see that.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:51:40] You know, if you’re out shopping at the grocery store and somebody next to you starts coughing, I think we all are kind of like, “Why are you out?” But the reality is, is that, everybody has different things that they’re working through. So, how, in your opinion, is that being at work sick going to look going into this new year?

John Baldino: [00:52:03] I mean, I’ve been somebody who, even pre-pandemic, would always say to someone, “If you are sick, stay home.” There are plenty of companies that are offering personal time, sick time, that you’ve accrued or can take, so take it. That’s why it’s there. There’s nothing wonderful about you hacking up a lung in order just to be there and help to take care of it. There’s nothing wonderful about that. Go home, rest, get better, so you can be back here 100 percent. I’d rather have one day of 100 percent than two days of 50 percent. Get home and get better.

John Baldino: [00:52:38] I would also say, we also have to be thoughtful about how we force people to feel a certain way about using sick time. And I think sometimes managers are the worst when it comes to that. They make you feel badly for being sick, as if you planned on it. And always, I’ll have a manager who wants to tell me the story about someone who said they were sick and then they saw their Facebook pictures of them on the beach. And I’m like, “Listen, that’s one example. Do you want me to tell you about a hundred where people actually were really sick and needed to stay home and feel better? Let’s not make it be about the one example that you want to give me.”

John Baldino: [00:53:15] Give people the opportunity to have the freedom to use the time that they’ve earned and accrued. Be sick. Don’t work. Do you want to tell me it’s okay, “I’ll go home and I’ll log in right away.” No. Be sick and get better. Logging in at home is the same thing. You’re going to work at 50 percent. It doesn’t help me.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:53:33] Yeah. And I think your coworkers would appreciate you going home. They don’t want to catch it, even if it’s not COVID, please. So, great conversation overall. I mean, obviously, you have lots of great advice to share, lots of interesting trends that we discussed over this last year, and things that we’re looking at potentially being on the radar for 2022. If listeners wanted to get a little bit more information out of you or kind of learn more about your services, how can they get a hold of you?

John Baldino: [00:54:06] Yeah. Thank you, Jamie. Obviously, they can go to humareso.co, H-U-M-A-R-E-S-O.com. And that’ll take them right to, I would say, the bible of everything we do. I’m pretty active on social media, so please feel free to connect with me on LinkedIn. Just look for John Baldino, H.R. Or Twitter, actually, is pretty active, and that is @jbalive. As in not dead but alive, @jbalive.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:54:33] Wonderful. Well, thank you so much, John, for being on our show, and for letting us celebrate you, and for sharing your great advice and information, and your predictions for 2022. We really do appreciate you as a guest and thank you so much for your time today.

John Baldino: [00:54:47] Thank you, Jamie. I appreciate it as well.

Jamie Gassmann: [00:54:50] 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’ve not already done so, make sure to subscribe so you get our most recent episodes and other great resources. You can also follow our show on LinkedIn, Facebook, and Twitter at Workplace MVP. And if you are a workplace MVP or if you know someone who is, we want to hear from you. Email us at info@workplace-mvp.com. Thank you all for joining us and have a great rest of your day.

 

 

Tagged With: diversity, Diversity Equity and Inclusion, Employee Engagement, HR, Human Resources, Humareso, Jamie Gassmann, John Baldino, R3 Continuum, The Great Reshuffling, workers compensation, Workplace MVP

Knowing Your People as People and Building Diverse Teams E16

October 28, 2021 by Karen

Knowing Your People as People and Building Diverse Teams
Phoenix Business Radio
Knowing Your People as People and Building Diverse Teams E16
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Knowing Your People as People and Building Diverse Teams
Knowing Your People as People and Building Diverse Teams E16

This was such a great show, with two wonderful guests, to round out the first year of the Culture Crush Business Podcast. This first year has been a blast and we have plans to grow even more this year.

It was so great to have Darren Thompson from DiverseCity and Brian Mohr with anthym on the show this month. We are thankful for their honesty and openness to discuss the real things that really grow company culture.

The show also reached some very honest and real discussions surrounding company culture when it comes to diversity and inclusion and supporting your people as real people with feelings. This show was also lighthearted and fun, with momma Maples (Kindra’s mom Connie) in the studio as well.

Company culture is deeper than just the values on the wall that people align with though. It is important to understand the others that you are working with as more than just what their job is. Who are they? We spend the majority of our days with the people that we work with, so why not understand them on a deeper level. It is also extremely important to understand the importance of diverse teams and making sure that everyone truly feels included and accepted.

Once your company has been able to include diverse teammates and see them as people with feelings, then they can grow the culture of the company even further.

There were so many great tidbits in this show, that people will definitely want to take a listen.

  • Leaders get the teams they deserve
  • Culture is the way and how things get done
  • People simply want to be
  • Once you have the taste of a company with a good culture you just can’t go back.

If you are a company that is trying to take your company culture to the next level, then you need to listen to the show. This podcast is for all leaders. Brian and Darren give examples, tips, and reasoning for the ways that they are helping to grow company culture. Both gentlemen are supporting companies in their journeys to grow company culture.

DiverseCity is a mobile technology designed to help engage and sustain DEI initiatives.

Darren-Thompson-Phoenix-Business-RadioXDarren Thompson is VP of Marketing at DiverseCity, a technology platform dedicated to supporting and managing diversity, equity and inclusion education. In addition, he is also the Founder of POKR, a Digital Business Development and Marketing Firm. DiverseCity-logo

Darren attended undergraduate studies at The University of Arizona, and launched his career in education. He eventually branched out into Sales & Business Development Consulting and now has a diverse client base to include his favorite: Start-ups.

Today, Darren is devoted to building his own tech-based start up and currently resides in sunny Phoenix, Arizona near his identical twin brother. He is an avid traveler, musician, chess player and remains committed to working with young entrepreneurs to help them achieve their goals.

Follow DiverseCity on LinkedIn.

anthym-logo-for-light-background

Thriving organizations recognize that their level of future success will be a direct result of a highly connected and engaged team working together to create value and impact for those they serve. Connection and engagement can’t be dictated or mandated, and it doesn’t happen by accident; it’s the result of a deliberate focus on fostering a deep sense of belonging, inclusion, and trust within the culture.

The anthym experience harnesses the power of personal storytelling to knock down artificial walls and shine a bright light on the depth and breadth of authentic human connection that exists within every team. By leveraging the universal accessibility and time machine-like power of music, anthym sparks a new level of curiosity and opens the door for a heightened level of conversation leading to unparalleled levels of connection and trust.

anthym is the leading team building technology platform for remote, distributed, and hybrid teams.

Brian-Mohr-Phoenix-Business-RadioXBrian Mohr’s career is a learning-based journey with an intense focus on people, purpose, values, culture, and leadership. Brian has had amazing entrepreneurial and leadership experiences at Jobing.com, P.F. Chang’s China Bistro, Y Scouts and Conscious Capitalism Arizona. Today, Brian is channeling his experiences and energy into helping organizations build cohesive teams in the rapidly accelerating distributed workplace through his new company, Anthym.

Brian is on the national Board of Directors of Conscious Capitalism, Inc., he is a Board member and President Emeritus of the Arizona Chapter of Conscious Capitalism, a member of the Board of Directors of the Better Business Bureau of the Pacific Southwest, a TEDx speaker, and the co-author of “Hiring on Purpose – How the Y Scouts Method is Revolutionizing the Search for Leaders”.

Brian’s most important and cherished responsibilities are being the lucky father to his 2 daughters, Taylor and Riley, and the proud husband to his wife, Jackie. In his spare time, you’ll find Brian practicing guitar and catching a live music concert every chance he can get.

Connect with Brian on LinkedIn, Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

About Culture Crush

Culture Crush is officially relaunched! We are thankful to Debra Caron who launched and hosted the show originally. Culture Crush is back with a new host but the same focus- highlighting what makes a great company culture and how it affects the overall success of a company.CultaureCrushKindraBanner2

Culture is not just a tag word to be thrown around. It is not something you throw in job descriptions to draw people to applying for jobs within a company.

According to Marcus Buckingham and Ashely Goodall in their book Nine Lies About Work, “Culture is the tenants of how we behave. It’s like a family creed. This is how we operate and treat each other in the family.”

On this long form podcast we will highlight companies local to Arizona and beyond that are crushing it with great culture!

We will talk with company leaders to learn about real-life experiences, tips, and best practices for creating a healthy work environment where employees are finding joy and satisfaction in their work while also striving and growing within the company.

About the Host

ABHOUTHOSTHEADSHOTKindra Maples is your new host taking the lead on the relaunch of Culture Crush! She is spartan racer, past animal trainer, previous magician’s assistant, and has a weakness for Oreo cookie shakes. Her journey working with people actually started working with animals as a teenager (don’t worry we won’t go that far back for her bio).

She worked for over 15 years in the zoo industry working with animals and the public. Her passion of working with animals shifted into working with people in education, operations and leadership roles. From there her passion of leadership and helping people develop has continued to grow.

Then came the opportunity for relaunching the Culture Crush Podcast and she jumped on it. Leadership, growth, and strong company cultures are all areas that Kindra is interested in diving into further.

Shout Outs

We want to thank a few people for their behind the scenes effort in helping this relaunch to come to life. James Johnson with Tailored Penguin Media Company LLC.– It is a small, but powerful video production company with a goal to deliver the very best by articulating the vision of your brand in a visually creative way. Gordon Murray with Flash PhotoVideo, LLC. -Flash Gordon has been photographing since high school and evolving since then with new products that will equip, encourage, engage, and enable. Renee Blundon with Renee Blundon Design – She is not only one of the best free divers (that’s not how she helped with the podcast) but she is great with graphics design and taking the direction for the vision that you have while also adding creative ideas to bring to your vision to life.

These are just a few of the folks that supported the relaunch of the podcast. If you would like to be part of the Culture Crush team or would like to support underwriting the show- please reach out: culturecrushpodcast@gmail.com

Tagged With: connection, corporate storytelling, Culture, DEI, dei training, diversity, equity, hybrid teams, inclusion, remote work, sense of belonging, storytelling, team building, team connection, trust

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