
Stop Monitoring Badge Swipes and Start Trusting People
A conversation on the future of work with work, technology, and organizations expert, author, and Harvard Business School professor Tsedal Neeley.
A conversation on the future of work with work, technology, and organizations expert, author, and Harvard Business School professor Tsedal Neeley.
Understanding what enables employees to do their best work is essential to finding the right kind of flexibility.
Employers underestimate how many PwD work for them, so they are missing opportunities to improve inclusion and retention. Here’s how they can do better.
Today more than ever, we are relying on our leaders to deliver. We’re asking more of them than we have in decades.
Today’s companies can transform their talent model—and business strategy—by using digital talent platforms to access highly skilled freelancers.
New research from BCG and Harvard Business School's Project on Managing the Future of Work suggests how companies can make the most of new talent models.
Many companies are struggling to hire and retain talent, but they fall short by not using a broad enough array of tools.
The pandemic has accelerated the trend of companies turning to digital talent platforms for highly skilled workers. Find out why these platforms appeal to workers.
Digital platforms for highly skilled freelancers are set to broker more strategic engagements for businesses in every industry.
Ulrike Schwarz-Runer, a managing director and senior partner and BCG's general counsel, shares her reflections on the value of having a mentor, though she believes this term to be inadequate.
When the stakes are highest, the best leaders take the time to listen, they make hard decisions to protect people and the business, and they lead from their heart.
Five key practices can unify leaders up, down, and across the organization—and spark concerted action.
Jim Hemerling lays out three points to consider in developing generative leaders within your organization.
Watch the Full Video
Attracting the right talent—and optimizing the skills of the current workforce—creates a “people advantage” that can help an organization navigate these uncertain times.
Americans with criminal records constitute a sizable talent pool. Fair chance hiring is good for companies and society, but employers need to do it right.
Companies take three key actions to find talent in new and hidden places.
To keep up with a rapidly evolving job market, hiring practices must also change. BCG managing director and partner Nithya Vaduganathan shares how to cultivate an inclusive work culture, inspire productivity, and unleash talent hiding in plain sight.
The successful companies of the future will not only invest in human capital but also track and report progress with the same attention they devote to other assets.
Our analysis of more than 15 million job postings reveals the future of work.
BCG’s Allison Bailey, Debbie Lovich, and Karalee Close shared their thoughts on the future of work at a recent Bloomberg Live event. They explained why leaders should take advantage of the current clean-sheet opportunity to broadly, intentionally, and boldly rethink what work is and how we do it.
Companies that build advanced continuous-learning organizations can attract and keep the best talent—and create lasting competitive advantage.
Revolutionary tech advances, the changing paradigm of training, and the rise of the bionic company demand radical rethinking of the corporate L&D function.
By investing in the cloud, data, and analytics, institutions can improve student success, operational efficiency, and innovation in research and learning.
Companies compete on their capacity to learn quickly—and building an effective learning ecosystem is essential to gaining advantage in this critical area.