Business Research Insight
1. Preparing for the Future Workforce and Strategic Leadership IESE highlights that by 2025, companies must address urgent skill gaps caused by AI, remote work, and demographic shifts. Priorities include developing transversal skills like agility, teamwork, and resilience—especially among younger employees—alongside data analytics and ethical AI capabilities. Leaders must improve virtual team management with clear communication and empathy. Aging workforce strategies, such as intergenerational mentoring, are vital for sustainability and talent retention. From IMD, Johanna Grosgurin advises leaders to be selective in workplace conflicts, using mindfulness and strategic thinking to focus energy on meaningful challenges. Alyson Meister further emphasizes that advancing to senior leadership requires a mindset shift: fostering strategic vision, building influential networks, and engaging in authentic, courageous conversations while managing energy and staying open to learning. 2. Embracing Innovation and Agility in Business Innovation often emerges unpredictably. The development of the “like” button, as discussed by Knut Haanaes and Martin Reeves at IMD, is a case in point—it began as a simple friction-reducing tool and became a cultural fixture. This reminds leaders to stay humble, open, and flexible in their innovation approaches. Pushan Dutt’s analysis of the AI race between the US and China explores how innovation and scalability both determine technological dominance. While the US leads in R&D, China's cost-efficient infrastructure and deployment speed offer key competitive insights. Companies should aim for both breakthrough ideas and scalable systems. David Bach, Richard Baldwin, and Simon J. Evenett emphasize that today’s multipolar geopolitical environment demands that businesses design for volatility. Firms must decentralize, diversify supply chains, and embed geopolitical strategy into leadership structures. Doing so not only mitigates risk but turns fragmentation into strategic advantage. 3. Building Inclusive and Community-Centric Organizations Creating inclusive cultures isn’t just about policy—it’s about practice. Robert Vilkelis (IMD) urges leaders to foster LGBTQ+ inclusion by affirming identities, challenging assumptions, and ensuring benefits reflect diverse needs. This strengthens belonging and enhances innovation. Michael Skapinker builds on this by stressing that DE&I should move beyond metrics. Real progress stems from merit-based recruitment, tapping into broader talent sources, and creating cultures where diverse voices are empowered and respected. David Wagner presents a framework for embedding community orientation into business models. This includes aligning missions with social impact, involving communities in design processes, and integrating belonging into the organizational fabric. Finally, Anne Kawalerski, Michelle Lynn, and Elisabeth Oak argue for employee-centric strategies as a foundation for modern workplaces. Emphasizing purpose, trust, and empowerment helps attract and retain talent while fostering innovation and organizational resilience.
6 episodios
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