How to Ask for What You Need at Work

For many people, especially women, people of color, and LGBTQ+, asking for something can feel risky and intimidating. We often tell ourselves that we should just be happy with what we have. It’s a problem that, when you boil it down, reveals that we often don’t think we deserve what we want or need.

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Laura BoydComment
Use Your Resources to Sweat the Small Stuff

Time, attention, and energy are our most valuable currencies. They are all scarce and must be protected, even in the best of times. However, with the state of the world what it currently is, there are more demands on these vital resources than ever before. So, what’s a leader to do, especially when she has so many other pressing concerns, such as family, home, and self-care?

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Laura Boyd Comment
Leadership Management in a Changing World

We are in a moment of massive change. No part of everyday life is as it was even six months ago. As a result, the ways we interact have also changed, not just in maintaining a distance of six feet from one another and wearing a mask to keep our communities safe. Increasingly, managers and team leaders are realizing that videoconferences are here to stay. Many are wondering how to continue leading effectively and inclusively in this new work situation.

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Laura BoydComment
Self-Awareness: Your Path to Success, In and Out of the Office

Self-awareness is the key to personal growth as well as the foundation of high emotional intelligence, which is the ability to be aware of, control, and appropriately express emotions. Self-awareness is all about knowing ourselves, our personality, and, most crucially, our weaknesses. Together, these two skills allow us to handle interpersonal relationships of all kinds with empathy and integrity.

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Laura Boyd Comments
Secure Your Own Mask First: Why Self Care is More Important Than Ever

A recent Gallup poll revealed the sobering fact that nearly two out of every three workers feel burned out. Burnout is very real and very dangerous. And although many of us are well acquainted with the risk of burning out while juggling work and childcare, doing so in our new and challenging reality of living through a global pandemic puts us at an increased risk of burnout. Collectively and as individuals, self-care is now more critical than ever for leaders.

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Laura BoydComment
When You Ask a Question - Give Them Time to Respond

As a leader, it's easy to assume that it's up to you to make the right decisions, to give practical instructions, and to generally make sure that things are running smoothly. While those roles are undoubtedly part of your job description, the most effective leaders know that there is one skill that must be done exceptionally well: asking questions. However, it doesn't end there.

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Laura BoydComment
4 Ways to Think Before You Speak in the Workplace (and Elsewhere)

Imagine that you're holding a beautiful ceramic dining plate in your hands. For some reason, you throw it to the ground, shattering it to pieces. Suddenly, however, you regret throwing the plate, so you apologize to it, hoping that it will reassemble itself and go back to the way it was. Unless this scenario is taking place in some surreal situation, the plate will remain unbroken; even if you decide to glue the pieces back together, it is irrevocably changed forever.

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Laura Boyd Comment
How to Utilize the Long Game to Reach Your Goals

When you think about it, time and attention are our only real currencies. We can always earn back the money that we spend, but we can never garner more time or split our attention without sacrificing something else, which is why it is crucial to leverage your time appropriately when pursuing your goals.

However, this is much easier said than done. Most people are bombarded with distractions or otherwise buried under countless tasks that make it a challenge to stay committed to their goals.

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Laura Boyd Comments
When A Strength Becomes A Weakness

Strengths are often hard-earned. They must be recognized, developed, and then deployed in a precise manner to make them useful. Regardless of the path you took to embrace your strengths, it took time and effort and has likely since become a foundational part of your success as well as your way of overcoming challenges. Your strengths may also be a big part of how others value your contributions.

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Laura BoydComment
Obstacles: You Can’t Avoid Them, So Go Through Them! 

If achieving ambitious goals like reaching one’s full potential or changing a mindset were easy, everyone would do it. However, the path of every worthwhile journey is marked by obstacles at every step of the way. No matter how thorough your preparation when you set out, or how clear your vision along the way, there will be obstacles to overcome. Many people seek to minimize obstacles or to anticipate ways to avoid them, but that's a missed opportunity. It is by clearing obstacles that the journey becomes fulfilling. 

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Laura BoydComment
Be Seen

Imagine that you have been put in charge of conducting a study to find what motivates a group of employees.  You ask them what makes them more engaged with their work and offer two choices: money or recognition in the workplace.  You might be inclined to think that money is the bigger motivator.  However, in a recent national research survey conducted by oGoLead—a leadership training firm—results indicated otherwise.  In fact, 60% of employees surveyed reported being far more motivated by recognition over monetary compensation.

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Laura BoydComment
We All Fall Down

Real talk: Failure happens.  When it happens, it’s easy to feel like Humpty Dumpty toppling off the wall to never be put back together again.  Failure often feels like the end of the world, but the reality couldn’t be farther from the truth.  If failure is so common, how can we learn from it?  How can we fail with dignity and grace?  How can we learn to fail better?

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Laura BoydComment
I am Me and I am Okay

All of us have been there at one time or another.  You find yourself sitting in a conference room, looking around at your team.  You are surrounded by competent, confident, and highly accomplished individuals.  Without knowing why, you find yourself comparing yourself to all of these individuals.  You start to question if you belong among them, and maybe even start to feel as if a mistake has been made. 

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Laura BoydComment
Connect the dots

Humans are social animals.  Really, it is our ability to build connections and lasting relationships that often sets us apart as a species.  But unfortunately, this instinctual need to connect with each other doesn’t always come easily to us.  According to a 2018 study conducted by Cigna, over half of all Americans reported feeling alone and isolated.  This includes Americans working at our businesses.  If we consider that the average employee works a 40 hour week, that’s a possible 2,080 hours a year that we may be contributing to a sense of loneliness in our team!

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Laura BoydComment
Happy Teams, Happy Dreams!

Presenteeism—or when employees show up at work physically but are unfocused and mentally elsewhere—is running rampant in the modern workplace.  According to many recent studies, employee disengagement is at an all time high.  We all dream of walking into work to find a motivated, keyed-in, ready-to-go team, but unfortunately that just isn’t the reality for the majority of businesses.  But there is good news: this doesn’t have to remain true for you and your team. 

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Laura BoydComment