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The Boomers are Leaving! – How to Create and Implement a Knowledge.

Strategy Driven

– How to Create and Implement a Knowledge Transfer Program, part 1 Posted by Ken Ball and Gina Gotsill on November 10, 2010 · 2 Comments The clock is ticking: next year, in 2011, the oldest of the 76 million Baby Boomers turn 65. Will younger workers have the knowledge and skills to run our organizations when they do?

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The Boomers are Leaving! – How to Create and Implement a Knowledge.

Strategy Driven

– How to Create and Implement a Knowledge Transfer Program, part 1 ), you’re ready to design and develop a program that retains Baby Boomers’ knowledge. But your program should do more than just capture and transfer valuable knowledge – it should also sow the seeds of a knowledge culture in the organization.

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How Women of Color Get to Senior Management

Harvard Business Review

Developing a diverse leadership pipeline can benefit companies in all sectors. And yet black women’s advancement into leadership roles has remained stagnant , even as the number of them in professional and managerial roles has increased. How People Get Ahead. What were the critical events, and what lessons did they learn?

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We Learn More When We Learn Together

Harvard Business Review

However, we don’t need to learn with others in formal training or development programs: we can architect our own opportunities to gain insight, knowledge, and skills that move us on an upward trajectory. Take charge of your own development. Don’t let the word “love” scare you. You and Your Team.

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Getting Smarter about Google's "Brain Drain"

Harvard Business Review

Lesson 2: If you want to keep great contributors, develop better managers. That's why, over the long term, it's just so hard to hold on to your top talent--because it's so hard to maintain the quality of your in-the-trenches leadership, especially in a fast-growth environment. What if smart people are overrated?".