Once a year, leaders from all industries come together to share insights on leadership, innovation, and performance excellence. The Baldrige Fall Conference, October 28–30, which includes the Communities of Excellence (COE) annual conference, comprises sessions on actionable strategies for driving operational excellence, building a culture of continuous improvement, and achieving sustained high performance across an organization’s processes. Continue reading
Category Archives: Future of Professions
#456 – IS QUALITY MANAGEMENT DEAD? – ROZANA HUQ PH.D.
Featured
I have been studying and teaching the history of quality and TQM; researching it in different shapes and forms, talking to people from different departments, at work, and during my doctoral research interviewing over 235 people from management and non-management positions.A Continue reading
#446 – NEW RULES FOR WORK – GREG HUTCHINS
Featured
If your goals are ambitious and crazy enough, even failure will be a pretty good achievement.
Laszlo Bock – Author
FOW process rules are guidelines, tips and tools that can lead to success. Thomas Davenport,
The author of Thinking for a Living, said:
“To treat something as a process is to impose a formal structure on it – to identify its beginning, end, and intermediate steps, to clarify who the customer is for it, to measure it, to take stock of how well it is currently being performed, and ultimately to improve Continue reading
#429 – RISK AND CRISIS CONSULTING ARE FACING THEIR KODAK MOMENTS – ANDREW SHEVES
Featured
Summary – Risk and crisis consulting is on the brink of its ‘Kodak moment’. As AI streamlines tasks by over 90%, firms face a dilemma: adopt AI and disrupt the business model or resist and risk obsolescence. Small teams have the edge, but all must adapt. Dive in to discover the industry’s future. Continue reading
#427 – NEW NEURO TECH IS BLURRING THE LINES OF MENTAL PRIVACY – LAURA CABRERA
Featured
Neurotechnologies – devices that interact directly with the brain or nervous system – were once dismissed as the stuff of science fiction. Not anymore.
Several companies are trying to develop brain-computer interfaces, or BCIs, in hopes of helping patients with severe paralysis or other neurological disorders. Entrepreneur Elon Musk’s company Neuralink, for example, recently received Food and Drug Administration approval to begin human testing for a tiny brain implant that can communicate with computers. There are also less invasive neurotechnologies, like EEG headsets that sense electrical activity inside the wearer’s brain, covering a wide range of applications from entertainment and wellness to education and the workplace. Continue reading