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Welcome to the Contributed Articles & Papers Section
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Featured In Contributed Articles & Papers
ASTD Articles
HRMJ Articles
Selected Readings from Consulting Firms

This section includes articles and papers contributed by other associations, publishers and consulting firms. Current contributed material includes:
American Society for Training & Development (ASTD), Selected articles from T+D Magazine.
BNA, Inc., Selections from the BNA Bulletin to Management.
Industrial Relations Services and Personnel Publications Limited, Selected articles from Human Resource Management Journal (HRMJ).
International Society for Performance Improvement (ISPI), Selected articles from Performance Improvement.
Selected papers and reports from the following consulting firms:
Blessing White.
Development Dimensions International.
The Hay Group.
Hewitt Associates.
Mercer.
PricewaterhouseCoopers.
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Flexible Work Arrangements: A Productivity Triple Play
When flexible work arrangements are understood and used as a management strategy
for creating more effective workplaces, they enhance organization performance in three
ways: (1) Produce measurable improvements in individual and team performance; (2)
Reduce stress on employees and more fully engage them in accomplishing organization
goals; and (3) Strengthen a results-focused management culture. When flexible work
arrangements are introduced as an employee perk or an accommodation to individual
employees, companies often fail to realize these benefits. In contrast, a team-based,
results-focused approach to the introduction of flexible work arrangements capitalizes on
the shared need of both companies and their employees for increased flexibility. The
experience of ten American companies in a variety of industries proves that, when
flexible work arrangements are introduced with the two-fold purpose of enhancing
performance and creating more flexibility for employees, everyone wins.
Read the full article
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Worker's Identity Issues Influence Success of Integration Efforts During M & A
Mergers and acquisitions can create a number of unintended consequences leading to
value destruction. Because much of the integration effort rests on the shoulders of the
individual, the individual's response to the uncertainty during a merger determines the
outcome of the integration efforts.
Read the full article
Understanding Psychiatric Disabilities.
When it comes to employees with psychiatric disabilities, some human resource
professionals want to know only what is absolutely necessary. That attitude is
understandable, at least from the perspective of employment law. An employer is less
likely to be accused of taking adverse action based on a psychiatric disability if decision
makers in the organization have been told as little as possible about that disability
Read the full article
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Recent Reports From Consulting Firms |
Sourcing Strategy: Knowing When to Outsource
Companies often treat outsourcing as a solution, without evaluating or understanding the
true strategic rationales for pursuing it. Yet many forge ahead, making significant
structural changes to the enterprise without a cohesive master plan. Building a
corporate "Sourcing Strategy" is a straightforward exercise with a very high ROI, aligning
the outsourcing agenda with corporate strategy and creating a context for success -
hopefully, before it's too late. This paper defines an approach for constructing the needed
Sourcing framework, so executives can know when it's time to outsource, and when it's
not.
Click here to read the full paper
Coaching Conundrum 2 - The Heart of Coaching
In the fall of 2005 BlessingWhite conducted its second annual survey on how managers
and employees view coaching. BlessingWhite periodically conducts surveys such as this
one to investigate workplace and alert business leaders to potential implications of the
results. The following pages describe what we found: higher expectations and awareness
of the importance of coaching, coupled with the persistence of many of the same issues
that affect its ultimate impact. This paper also offers a specific recommendation for
organizations to address the conundrum so that they can close the gap between
coaching's promise and its results.
Click here to read the full paper
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