June 22, 2012

Interview: George Anders

Look at candidates' peripheral experience, instead, to see who has great tenacity, ingenuity, creativity, etc. that has been expressed outside the workplace so far -- but could be harnessed on the job. When I was at Google last year, they were intrigued by a resume from someone who had run the 1,000-mile Iditarod dogsled race in Alaska four times. That's a very hard race. Very few people do it once. Someone who did it four times has a stubbornness and a focus that is quite remarkable. You wouldn't hire such a person if they didn't have the right technical degrees, credentials, etc. But someone who was 94th percentile in work, with that extra background, might be a more promising candidate than someone with a 96th percentile ranking on mainstream measures and no other signs of standout dedication.

June 2, 2012

Managing Virtual Employees

Share of voice: This ensures that the virtual team members are heard as much as those who are physically present in the meeting. It is human to seek the opinions of people when they drop by. This is where virtual employees lose out.

May 11, 2012

Trading Off Privacy

There is no such thing as a free lunch. On the Internet, this saying is even more true. We pay for everything free. The currency is our data. Each time someone is assembling a picture of you - maybe with information you do not know you have handed over. Read on.