Bold New Breed

Jane McConnell

Gig mindsetters are a NEW Breed: employees with a freelance mindset who challenge traditions. They are a BOLD New Breed because they face management resistance in spite of being key players in building resilience and success. Are you, as a leader, balancing risks versus opportunities from this emerging movement?Are you part of the Bold New Breed and looking for ways to influence hearts and minds? The Bold New Breed podcast will give you a new perspective through real stories, front-line expertise, tips and tools. The podcast is based on over 7 years of research as well as firsthand interviews with gig mindsetters around the world. Bold New Breed website read less
BusinessBusiness
Proactive resilience: A race with no finish line
01-05-2021
Proactive resilience: A race with no finish line
For more information on the podcast website: Proactive resilience: A race with no finish lineHorizon scanning and a focus on skillsA resilient person or organization can get through a crisis, but making it through once is not enough. being resilient is a state of readiness. A way of acting a way of thinking. It’s proactive, not reactive.Individuals need to focus on developing  skills more than being satisfied with job titles: skills versus labels, as one person told me. Another talked to me about “personal future security”.Organizations (as well as individuals) need to get good at horizon scanning: being aware of the external world around us.Rapid response to major events and crises is not yet commonResults from my research 2013 and 2018 in my research about organizations in the digital age were similar to what BSI uncovered (see data on website page listed earlier). I asked more than 300 organizations around the world over four consecutive years (from 2013 through 2018) to state their agreement or disagreement with this statement: “Our organization can respond rapidly to major events or transitions such as market changes, competition, economy, downturns, environmental or disaster events”.The answers were not encouraging. Only 25% agreed or strongly agreed in 2013 and then only  another 10 percentage by 2018.Four keys to proactive resilience through a gig mindset work cultureReverse leadership: possibly the key to all the restDecentralization: based on freedom within a frameworkImprovisation: using what’s available in real time to solve a problemLearning fast: enabling people to take charge of their development I have a story about learning in the podcast and will have future episodes about the first 3 points later.Thinking about resilience when there is no crisis is a sign of proactive resilienceD. Christopher Kayes says, “Thinking about resilience, when there isn’t a catastrophe going on is one of the hallmarks of a resilient organization. It’s not only about responding to problems, but also about how to get ahead of them.”
Believer in the long life of books
03-07-2021
Believer in the long life of books
See show notes: Chris explains the unusual origin of his name, Labonté, which means “the goodness”. I asked him how he got that name, which I have never heard in my over 30 years of living in France.  He told me the story which started back in the late 17th century and says it is a lot to live up to.In one of his early jobs, Chris was very much a gig mindsetter, bringing new ideas to his boss, who, to his credit, listened and implemented them.Chris believes in the importance of creating a culture that nurture individuals with a gig mindset. He feels they potentially bring high value to an organization because they will bring innovation and new ideas that go beyond what the “normal employee” brings. He even expresses a mathematical ratio as an example.I asked Chris how the publishing industry has and is evolving. He told me there has long been the feeling that the industry “is about to die” with a “bit of a sky is falling” mindset. He goes on to talk about the fact that books are still selling at a high rate, but underlines the current difficulties for independent booksellers because of Amazon and the superstores or big box stores. Amazon is 50% of the entire market in the United States and he says that’s too much power for any single vendor.There’s also a fear the book market will diminish with the advent of ebooks, but Chris feels the ebook has become a sort of replacement for paperbacks, cheaper than hardbacks.Audio books are also on the rise. However, he strongly believes that there are  a lot of people who want to sit back with a print book in hand.