This article from the Jamaica Sunday Gleaner hits on the same theme as my prior post on this blog – Caribbean executives need to be very careful not to overwhelm their direct reports with their ideas. This is especially true in planning situations.
Stop Corrupting the Planning Process
How can CEO’s stop themselves from corrupting their strategic planning processes?
I wrote an article for the Trinidad Newsday that described the ways in which this happens (inadvertently) and what top executives can do about the problem.
http://www.newsday.co.tt/businessday/0,164542.html
Do You Have the Courage to Hold High Work Standards?
A new column that I wrote for the Sunday Gleaner newspaper deals with the challenge that we Jamaican/Caribbean people have in setting and maintaining high standards.
Do You Have the Courage to Hold High Work Standards?
The Bligh We Should Not Give
Here in the Caribbean, we love achievement, but don’t appreciate that high standards need to be upheld by employees at all levels, in particular in relation to each other.
How to Become a Better, More Grateful Manager
The Jamaican workplace is one that’s desperately short of positive feedback. We often wait until someone is dead or leaving the company to tell them how much their work was appreciated.
Here’s what we can do about it: How to Become a Better, More Grateful Manager.
Convert Your Job into a Career
When Time Management Skills are Missing
What is a manager supposed to do when his/her team lacks the time management skills needed to get the job done? We often make the mistake of thinking that these skills are “basic.”
Nothing could be further from the truth.
The Pitfalls of Lacking Time Management
Stop Turning Your Employees Into Morons
Reducing Crime with a Boost in EQ
Recently I wrote an article for my regular column in the Jamaica Gleaner that describes what corporate Jamaica can do to invest in an increase in EQ / soft skills, and thereby reduce our murder rate.
OAS Magazine
The OAS puts out a magazine called “Americas” and they re-printed an article I wrote some time ago as a blog post. It had to do with the differences between Jamaicans, Trinidadians and Guyanese employee cultures.
You can find the text of the article here.