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Center Stage: The Voice of The Project Economy Profile

Center Stage: The Voice of The Project Economy

English, Finance, 3 seasons, 33 episodes, 19 hours, 47 minutes
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The Future Ready Enterprise – Lessons From Healthcare

Dr. Yousuf Ahmad has over 25 years of healthcare experience including health insurance, physician group practices, and multi-hospital health system. For the past 5 years, he has been leading AssureCare, transforming it from a start-up to a high-growth company with industry leading care management technology platforms. In this episode of Center Stage, Dr. Ahmad shares the importance of learning and gaining knowledge in his journey in the healthcare industry from programmer, to president of a large health system, to the CEO of a healthcare technology company. He speaks to the importance of building collaborative, motivated teams with open communication and commitment to an agreed-upon set of outcomes.Dr. Ahmad also offers insight into how technology, including artificial intelligence and machine learning, is revolutionizing healthcare, from increasing diagnostic accuracy on mammograms to improving racial disparities in care and health outcomes. As technology continues to evolve, practitioners including project managers must be open to lifelong learning to remain relevant and future proof their careers.
11/23/202134 minutes, 58 seconds
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Real Consequences of Valuing Cultural Diversity

Marcia Anderson, MD, is Cree-Anishinaabe whose roots go back to the Norway House Cree Nation and Peguis First Nation in Manitoba. She graduated with her M.D. from the University of Manitoba in 2002 and has since served in a variety of leadership roles, including as head of the Section of First Nations, Métis and Inuit Health; medical officer of health for the Winnipeg Regional Health Authority; a past president of the Indigenous Physicians Association of Canada and executive director, Indigenous academic affairs, Ongomiizwin-Indigenous Institute of Health and Healing.As a medical resident, Dr. Anderson found the opportunity to connect with her cultural identity through experiences with healthcare for indigenous peoples. This journey also showed her firsthand the racism that is systemic in healthcare and how it can have marginalizing and even life-threatening effects on minority peoples. Dr. Anderson shares with the Center Stage audience her efforts to combat discrimination against and promote diversity, equity, and inclusion for indigenous peoples, their knowledge, and their traditions. She also challenges us to think about our biases and make ourselves uncomfortable in the pursuit of inclusiveness in our organizations and communities. Dr. Anderson is an advocate, researcher, and leader in the areas of Indigenous health, primary health care, and medical education. In 2016, she presented a TED Talk on Indigenous Knowledge to Close Gaps in Indigenous Health. In 2018, she was named as one of Canada’s 100 Most Powerful Women by Women’s Executive Network.
11/9/202134 minutes, 15 seconds
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Helping Organizations to Change Faster

How good is your company at change management? How can we combine technology and change to improve performance? How can organizations create more effective environments of learning? How do we find the hidden talent within our organization? This Center Stage podcast is with professor and entrepreneur Dr. Nabeel Ahmad about the disruptive effects of change, automation and data on talent development. Dr. Ahmad is Chief Strategy Officer of Changeforce.AI, a software platform for helping organizations to change faster. This discussion is focused on keeping up with the rapid pace of change though technology that helps people focus on critical strategy outcomes and finding the hidden talent within an organization.
10/26/202129 minutes, 43 seconds
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Reinventing Organizations Through Networks

Katrina Pugh, a faculty member and former Academic Director of Columbia University’s Information and Knowledge Strategy (IKNS) Master of Science program, helps our Center Stage audience explore the value of networks.  Kate has over 20 years of consulting and industry experience in the financial services, life sciences, energy, information technology, and international development sectors. She was co-investigator with Monash University on a PMI-funded research study, Building project managers capability: Knowledge transfer in projects using knowledge networks.Kate emphasizes how networks build interdependence and spaces where people come together for conversation, collaboration and co-creation.  She highlights the significant variety in networks, spreading a spectrum of possible outcomes, from marketable products, to providing just-in-time problem-solving, to providing solidarity and scale.  She also helps us distinguish between enduring networks and time-bounded project teams.Given work and other pressures, one might ask, “What’s the value of investing in networks?”  Kate walks us through the knowledge-sharing and knowledge-creation benefits from networks, resulting from the network’s capitalizing on its diversity of thought, reach, scale, and sense of belonging.  A leading value of networks is the efficiency that comes from stacking experiences and solutions, rather than reinventing the wheel.  This pooled knowledge can help organizations and professionals accelerate projects and reduce time-to-market.  Research has shown that networked projects far outperform non-networked projects.Networks generate benefits for professionals but also for their employers.  Staff engaged in networks become better risk-takers, advocates and innovators for the business and for customers.  Encouraging network engagement demonstrates management’s support for employee growth and professional development. And, it goes without saying that organizations benefit by learning faster about key developments and capabilities outside of their walls.Networks need a vision, governance, expertise and energy to be successful.  Focus helps network participants concentrate their attention.  Governance and structure need to be tailored to enable the right forms of engagement. For example, networks focused on members’ problem-solving need different structures from those which are co-creating products like open source software.  And all networks need a variety of people with expertise, willingness to share and ability to reach out to others to help the network grow and thrive.  Over time, networks may need to refresh to stay relevant and broaden their diversity of thought, experiences and perspectives. When aligned to the organization’s strategy, networks can prove to be a cost-effective pathway to market innovation, job satisfaction, and project efficiency.  To explore more about networks, check out Kate’s books on the topic:·       Smarter Innovation: How Interactive Processes Drive Better Business Results (Ark Group, 2014); and·       Sharing Hidden Know-How: How Managers Solve Thorny Problems with the Knowledge Jam (Jossey-Bass/Wiley, April 2011).Kate has also delivered webinars on collaborative work and knowledge networks for Projectmanagement.com:·       Sustainably Smarter: How Knowledge Networks Build PM Skills.·       In the Digital Fray, Don’t Just Converse. Collaborate Inclusively.&
10/12/202129 minutes, 12 seconds
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Empowering Women for the Future of Work

In this podcast, Susan Coleman and Ed Hoffman discuss the importance of empowering women in order to create collaborative organization cultures where diversity, creativity, innovation and the easy negotiation of difference can thrive. Susan Coleman has over 30 years of experience training and facilitating tens of thousands of people around the world in negotiation and collaborative strategies to build common ground as well as empowering women through negotiation. Susan works extensively on developing negotiation and intercultural communication skills, coaching/mediating difficult conversations, providing large group facilitation to groups as large as 1000 to arrive at a shared vision for forward action, and more. Susan hosts The Peacebuilding Podcast: From Conflict to Common Ground – a gathering for today’s most innovative, courageous and inspired practitioners exploring the best strategies and ideas to build common ground across the divides of worldview, gender, culture and difference.
9/28/202128 minutes, 51 seconds
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Leading the James Webb Space Telescope

In this podcast, Greg Robinson discusses leading complex programs and the leadership required for the James Webb Space Telescope. The James Webb Space Telescope (Webb) will be the world’s premier space science observatory when it launches later in 2021. Webb’s revolutionary technology will explore every phase of cosmic history—from within our solar system to the most distant observable galaxies in the early universe, to everything in between. This podcast features themes around leading complex missions, learning to be a leader, global collaboration, and the future of work. We also listen to Greg describe the emotions of launch.
9/14/202134 minutes, 9 seconds
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Making Work Fun

Knowledge is about learning from experience – whether your personal exploits or from the experiences of others.  Pim de Morree and Joost Minnaar quit their professional jobs and co-founded Corporate Rebels to identify companies that have innovated how to better engage people with their work.By learning from the experiences of others, they developed insights on things that any organization or practitioner can do to make work fun.  Their work captured the attention of such media as The New York Times, Forbes and BBC, and they achieved the “Top 30 Emergent Management Thinkers” from Thinkers50 Institute.Pim de Morree joins this episode of Center Stage to share those insights and a new venture to help shape the future of work.  Starting his career as an in industrial engineering, Pim became frustrated with the outdated working practices that challenge productivity, creativity and performance.  After working three years in a corporate job, he knew he needed something different. With his long-time friend Joost, both quit their jobs, formed a partnership, and set off to research, write about and share knowledge of organizations that make work fun.Some of the key insights surfaced during this podcast episode include:Anyone can enable change, from people just entering the workforce to innovators at the staff level.Innovation and change in structures and ways of working are happening everywhere around the globe and in all types of organizations, including long-time traditional organizations as well as start-ups.The future of work – whether changing organizational structures, cultures or ways of working – require all of us to embrace continuous learning.  That also means we have to unlearn or let go of things that made us successful in the past because those factors may hold us back from ensuring our future relevance.For more details about the Corporate Rebels, their new Academy or for robust conversation about the future of work, visit:  https://corporate-rebels.com/reinvent-your-organizational-culture/.
8/31/202133 minutes, 54 seconds
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Replacing Brain Drain with Brain Gain

Ronit Avni founded Localized, a platform that unlocks educated talent for global companies, because she wanted to enable talented professionals living in emerging markets to have world-class career opportunities regardless of where they live. As an immigrant to the United States, Avni knew firsthand that poor local economic conditions often lead to “brain drain” in which educated workers leave their home countries to seek better jobs elsewhere. “Many countries lose 30% of their population to brain drain,” says Avni. “They're losing all this talent that they have nurtured.”As a social entrepreneur who previously started and exited a successful mission-driven media company, Avni saw an opportunity to help reverse this trend. The combination of mobile device penetration around the world, internet connectivity, and a knowledge economy now makes it possible for people to work and learn from others across geographies and time zones. “None of this is rocket science, but it is a fundamental shift in how these interactions happen,” she says. With the ability to connect to global firms through technology, professionals no longer have to leave the countries where they’ve been raised to find a job. The resulting “brain gain” can increase the share of knowledge economy jobs in countries that have previously struggled to grow in knowledge-intensive industries.
8/17/202132 minutes, 30 seconds
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Re-Envisioning Management through Teaming

Are you working in an organization where it seems there are lose-lose internal dynamics among managers?  If so, why is that and how can you help to change it?The nature of work today requires collaboration and teaming to drive business outcomes like never before.  Johanna Rothman, known as the “Pragmatic Manager,” provides frank advice for organizational leaders, managers and teams tackling tough problems.   In this episode of Center Stage, Johanna shares how optimizing individual achievement over that of the team or organization deeply roots lose-lose propositions into organizational culture.  Incorporating key concepts and learnings from her books, the Modern Management Made Easy series, she provides practical examples of how organizations are shifting structures and reward systems to create win-win engagements among managers.  More importantly, she offers seven principles of modern management aimed at increasing performance, rather than overseeing people and their work.  For example, the principle of catch people succeeding flips on its head the traditionally punitive, disciplinary role of management and moves it more toward motivation and recognition.Johanna also talks about how the impact of subtle change can impact management.  She presents examples that illustrate the differences among managers who have a mindset of being “responsible for” versus “responsible to” their teams.  She talks about how behaviors, actions and motivations are different for each mindset as well as the impacts of each mindset on individuals and teams.Having started her career as a software developer, Johanna has also worked as a project manager, program manager, and people manager. Today, as a consultant and trainer/coach, she helps leaders, teams, and organizations create successful teams and projects and manage risk. She has authored more than 18 books on modern management, leading teams, agile and lean program management, portfolio management and related topics. Read more of her blog, articles, and her Pragmatic Manager newsletter on www.jrothman.com.Chock full of good practices from real-life situations, this Center Stage podcast emphasizes the key role the modern manager can play in helping teams and organizations realize outcomes.  
8/3/202132 minutes, 26 seconds
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Preparing Cognitive Athletes to Tackle Disruption

For the past two years, PMI has discussed gymnastic organizations that need to be adaptive and innovative to survive disruption.  This session explores how practitioners too need to become cognitive athletes, putting adaptive, creative and sensing muscles into enhanced performance.  Listen as Ade McCormack, the founder of the Disruption Readiness Institute, and Joseph Cahill explore how to prepare for an unknowable future.As work continues to shift from enacting processes to more creative and innovative work, Ade proposes that professionals should similarly adapt:Develop your brand.Focus on traits rather than emphasizing skills.Focus on your humanity, rather than just your work accomplishments.Shift and pivot from repeatable skills and capabilities that can easily be subsumed by AI and other technologies.Sense for environmental, social and organizational change so you can experiment early, learn from failure and be in demand as the change wave takes hold.Ade also identifies that the future of work will create challenges for organizations. Employers will need to shift their talent management approach from viewing people as simply cogs in the machine to treating them as cognitive assets that are the source of market-pleasing innovative products and services. This cultural shift means that instead of promoting efficiency and punishing failure, organizational leaders need to embrace experimenting and determining whether they are “failing enough.”This podcast is full of insights focused on the post-Industrial age and 21st century talent.In addition to founding the Disruption Readiness Institute, Ade has worked with some of the world's best-known brands in more than 40 countries. He has authored six books on digital and disruption and wrote for the Financial Times on the theme of digital leadership for over a decade. You can learn more about Ade’s perspectives, by visiting his blog at www.ademccormack.com. 
7/20/202130 minutes, 41 seconds