Discover HR solutions at the 2025 California HR Conference in Anaheim, [City], on [Date]. Join [Job_Title]s for hands-on workshops and expert-led sessions.
HR Metrics That Matter

HR Metrics That Matter

HR Metrics that Matter & Making Metrics Matter with Shane Yount at CAHR20

At this point, most businesses understand they need data to drive big decisions, and prudent organizations will look to HR for those metrics. But how do you determine which HR metrics provide the most value to your business strategy? 

Tying metrics to strategy has been an ongoing conversation, but the accumulation of data can overwhelm implementation without the right prioritization and process.

That’s where Shane Yount and his CAHR20 session, HR Metrics that Matter and Making Metrics Matter, come into play.

One of the greatest challenges organizations face is maintaining a common business focus on improving results across all functional areas and levels, as well as communicating these said results to all involved.

At CAHR20, Shane Yount’s interactive session outlines the process for developing, tracking, communicating and presenting workgroup business goals and objectives.

Attendees will learn the importance of a common business focus to organizational success through the development of a mission statement and specific, measurable business goals.

Shane Yount’s workshop will provide specific, measurable, attainable, relevant and timely methods for tracking and communicating business results for HR.

Shane, with over 25 years of scorecard development experience, will provide the knowledge and understanding to begin implementing practical, auditable business scorecard techniques to your individual work environments.

To learn more about Shane and why he’s excited to present at the 2020 California HR Conference, we asked him a few questions below.

Read on and be sure to sign up for CAHR20 and start making meaningful connections in our conference platform today!

Why See Shane at CAHR20?

Shane A. Yount is President of Competitive Solutions, Inc., an international Business Transformation consulting firm which pioneered the acclaimed organizational development system known as Process Based Leadership® – a business transformation methodology designed to create a sustainable culture of clarity, connectivity, and consistency through the use of Non-Negotiable Business Processes. Having performed such roles as Front Line Supervisor, Site Operations Manager, Quality Manager, Director of Human Resources, and Corporate Continuous Improvement Champion, Shane brings extensive experience in every aspect of organizational dynamics. His “Real World” process driven approach to creating and sustaining high performance has led leaders across the world to embrace the Process Based Leadership® methodology as a core operating system in driving organizational focus, urgency, and accountability. Since 1991 he has led the offices of Competitive Solutions, Inc. (CSI), personally working with such organizations as Michelin, Genentech, Pfizer, Lockheed Martin, the Department of Defense, and many others. His three books, Buried Alive: Digging out of the Management Dumpster, Leaving Your Leadership Legacy and Leading Your Business Forward: Aligning Goals, People, and Systems for Sustainable Success are required reading in many organizations.

Without further ado, here is our interview with CAHR20 Presenter Shane Yount!

 

CAHR20: Shane, thank you for taking the time to talk shop with us today. To start, can you tell us about a rewarding experience from your career?

Shane Yount: Thank you and I am delighted to support PIHRA! Having been in this space approaching 30 years (2021), it is hard to narrow down rewarding experiences. What drove me to start my firm in 1991 was a true desire to support leaders in their journey to be a better version of themselves. Having begun my career in manufacturing, sadly there were not a lot of good leadership examples for me to aspire to. I worked in a very traditional, command and control environment and I saw daily the pitfalls of that operating system. Being able to support some of the worlds most iconic brands and organizations has been the thrill of my life. And simply stated, the highest compliment my firm receives is when our clients recommend us to their colleagues or take us along on their leadership/career journeys. Being a personal spectator to dramatic personal and professional transformations keeps me motivated and rewarded on a daily basis.

Aithan Shapira, CAHR20 Keynote Speaker

CAHR20: In addition to your rich expertise and current role as President of Competitive Solutions, Inc., you’re an accomplished author! We’d love to know more about why your books are considered required reading in many organizations.

*Note for readers: Shane’s books include “Buried Alive: Digging out of the Management Dumpster,” “Leaving Your Leadership Legacy” and “Leading Your Business Forward: Aligning Goals, People, and Systems for Sustainable Success”

SY: The answer is simple. In each of my three books I have tried to write them from the most practical aspect possible. Too often business/leadership books are so aspirational the reader is left with nothing practical to go DO. Each of my books are filled with practical and proven systems, techniques, and processes that the reader could implement immediately. Additionally, I believe my books speak to where leaders are today. And that is often stuck is a loop of “managing by personality” – in essence leaning into their proximity, powers of persuasion, and positional authority to get things done.

Particularly in a COVID-19 world where we are operating in a “hyperactive daily rhythm,” leaders are just trying to find semblances of accomplishment. I teach the other path: a process driven path that creates a culture or Clarity, Connectivity, and Consistency.

The “Red Cape/Heroic” Leadership styles of Managing by Personality does get stuff done, but unfortunately it creates both Leadership and Organizational fatigue while also creating a dependency mindset in the organization. Leaders must confront the limitations on their leadership styles but also be given a life line to “Move the Business Forward.”

CAHR20: In the age of abundant data and measurements, HR metrics are so important. What is one false assumption or practice you tend to see organizations have in their HR metrics processes, and how would you begin to correct an organization that holds this assumption?

SY: The most fundamental issues facing data today is that it “isn’t about the data, it is about the system of use” – what does that mean? We don’t need more spreadsheets, KPI Dashboard, etc… What organizations need is a robust system of use that defines “how” the data will be used. This must be agreed upon in advance, documented, and routinely reviewed.

I believe a good system of use must have the following elements defined:

1. How will we EDUCATE the organization on the metrics that matter?
2. How will we use the data to FACILITATE the proper sense of urgency and accountability?
3. How will we use the data to MOTIVATE continuous improvement?

If these items are not defined, the data will be view as “in addition to the work” as opposed to “the enabler of the work.”

CAHR20: Without giving away too much, why should California HR Conference attendees see your presentation?

SY: Attendees will also learn:

  • How to differentiate HR metrics that are “Thermometers” or “Thermostats,” and
  • How to create a culture of clarity, connectivity, and consistency while leaving a leadership legacy.

 

Thank you for your time, Shane!

Gain even more actionable insights from Shane Yount LIVE at the Virtual 2020 California HR Conference.

Your time and budget are especially precious these days. That’s why we designed the Virtual CAHR20, happening October 27-29: a compact, 3-day live event featuring the top minds from a variety of industries, providing you with a whopping 30+ HR recertification credits. 

Secure excellent HR professional development at a reasonable cost. PIHRA members, save $100 off prevailing registration rates with your ID #!

 

Register for CAHR20 today!

Advance your organization.
Accelerate your professional growth.
Attend CAHR20!

Diversity and Inclusion Insights with Frans Johansson, CAHR20 Keynote

Diversity and Inclusion Insights with Frans Johansson, CAHR20 Keynote

Diversity and Inclusion can drive performance and innovation at the team level.

16 years ago, when Frans Johansson wrote his book, “The Medici Effect,” this statement about diversity and inclusion was not as commonplace as it is today in both HR and Board Member meetings.

Today the importance of diversity and inclusion initiatives at all organizational levels is clear, but the path to optimizing those against performance, business objectives, and innovation may not be as evident to everyone.

This is why PIHRA CEO, Rafael Rivera, invited Frans Johansson to the 2020 California HR Conference to keynote the General Session on Wednesday, October 28th.

Frans is known for his animated, engaging presentations, and for delivering actionable, relatable insights and guidance to his audiences.

Of course, we could just ask you to believe us and register for CAHR20 based on our word about Frans’s presentation, or you can watch Rafael’s interview with Frans below. It offers a preview of Frans’s energy and valuable insight you can take back to your organization.

Perhaps the most important question his presentation answers for HR and Business leaders is, “What does it mean to have an inclusive team and how can I see that expressed in the business outcomes I am responsible for?”

If the answer to this question is on your mind, watch the interview below, then register for your CAHR20 Ticket before the event kicks off next week!

Why See Frans speak about diversity and inclusion at CAHR20?

Frans Johansson has made it his life’s mission to prepare leaders and organizations around the world for this future. His high-energy, fast-paced keynotes have become legendary for how quickly they can drive leaders to action—and have made Johansson one of the most compelling speakers in the world.

He is the author of The Medici Effect: What Elephants and Epidemics Can Teach Us About Innovation, and The Click Moment: Seizing Opportunity in an Unpredictable World. Frans is the Co-Founder and CEO of The Medici Group, a firm that advises executive leadership from some of the world’s most influential organizations. His firm recently launched the world’s first team coaching platform, which leverages diversity and inclusion to drive business outcomes.

Raised in Sweden by his African-American/Cherokee mother and Swedish father, Johansson has lived all his life at the intersection. He holds a Bachelor of Science degree in Environmental Science from Brown University and a Master of Business Administration degree from Harvard Business School.

Here’s Frans in his interview with Rafael. 

Gain even more actionable insights on how diversity and inclusion drives innovation from Frans Johansson LIVE at the Virtual 2020 California HR Conference.

Your time and budget are especially precious these days. That’s why we designed the Virtual CAHR20, happening October 27-29: a compact, 3-day live event featuring the top minds from a variety of industries, providing you with a whopping 30+ HR recertification credits. 

 

Register for CAHR20 today!

Advance your organization.
Accelerate your professional growth.
Attend CAHR20!

Including Financial Well-being in Wellness Programs: CAHR20 Interview with Eva Allen

Including Financial Well-being in Wellness Programs: CAHR20 Interview with Eva Allen

Wellness programs must address more than stress relief.

Financial well-being is not nearly integrated enough into the holistic notion of health. When was the last time your doctor asked about your monthly budget ? Have you ever heard a yoga teacher lead off a meditation with retirement planning tips? And yet, feeling confident about and in charge about one’s financial situation is an enormous source of peace of mind. Studies show that not enough of our nation’s schools are addressing the lack of financial literacy in classrooms, for both students AND teachers. Here’s where HR can help. 2020 California HR Conference speaker Eva Allen, Engagement Director at Cigna, is leading the charge on changing how wellness programs are defined and the conversations surrounding them. We interviewed her about what HR leaders can do to ensure a “whole-person” approach is taken when managing worksite wellness initiatives. To see Eva speak about this critical topic, register today for the 2020 California HR Conference, this October 27 – 29. Read on and be sure to sign up for your CAHR20 Early Bird Ticket before prices increase after October 16!

Why See Eva at CAHR20?

Eva Allen is the Engagement Director for Cigna leading the consultative engagement operation for large employer groups in the Southern California and Nevada markets. She has been a wellness ambassador with Cigna for over a decade. She is responsible for the training, development and performance management of the Client & Customer Engagement team, including Engagement Consultants and Well-Being Coordinators. Eva’s career with Cigna began in June 2007. She is honored as an awarded graduate of the specialized group school program, Cigna Academy. She initially served as a Regional Sales Manager in the greater Los Angeles market.

She transitioned to the role of Well-Being Strategist in April 2013 in pursuit of her passion for wellness and helping others create and maintain healthy lifestyle behaviors. As a Well-Being Strategist, Eva effectively delivered tailored outcomes-based worksite wellness solutions for Cigna clients throughout Southern California. Eva became a Senior Well-Being Strategist and held Team Lead responsibilities in Los Angeles, Orange County and San Diego throughout 2014.

In 2016, Eva transitioned to the role of Engagement Director. She currently directs the well-being team and brings to life the vision of initiatives in the Southern California and Nevada market. Eva holds her Master’s in Business Administration (MBA) from University of Hartford’s Barney School of Business and Bachelor of Science (BS) in Cognitive Science from University of California, San Diego with a specialization in Human Behavior. She is a Certified Wellness Program Coordinator (CWPC).

She also sent us a video to give you a preview of her talk and her energy as a speaker.

Without further ado, here is our interview with CAHR20 Presenter Eva Allen!

CAHR20: What are some of the most common missteps organizations make when developing wellness programs for their employees?

Eva Allen: Traditional worksite well-being programs historically focus solely on nutrition and physical activity. At Cigna, we believe worksite well-being programs embrace a whole-person health approach by connecting Body + Mind across five dimensions of well-being: Physical, Emotional, Environmental, Financial and Social.

A one-dimensional approach in designing a worksite well-being strategy is a common misstep, which leads me to another key word – STRATEGY. You may think it’s intuitive; you’d be surprised at how many organizations have well-being programs designed without a strategic approach, “Let’s throw the entire bowl of spaghetti at the wall and see what sticks!” It is imperative to have a defined strategy inclusive of evaluation metrics in place when developing a worksite well-being program.

A clear strategy with measurable goals allows you to evaluate year-over-year and evolve your well-being program as needs change and goals are met. That’s why employer groups who have a certified wellness professional to provide consultative well-being engagement guidance is a strong value-add, and why Cigna prioritizes this role as a part of your designated account team for support in designing and executing your well-being strategy throughout the year and beyond.

Aithan Shapira, CAHR20 Keynote Speaker

CAHR20: When we hear about company well-being programs, finances aren’t usually included with the mindfulness, diet, stress-relief, etc. Why is that?

EA: This is true! Again, traditional worksite well-being programs tend to be less multifaceted. I am grateful we have seen a significant increase in recognition of mental health and emotional well-being over the past 5 years in the health services industry. The more research we conduct around behavior, lifestyle and health, the better we understand how the Body + Mind are one.

In our fast-paced 21st century world, we believe there are five dimensions of well-being we have the ability to influence within the workplace to help support positive behavior change: Physical, Emotional, Environmental, Financial and Social. We do not often see these last three dimensions in traditional worksite well-being programs, yet they all play a huge role in our health. Each dimension of well-being is not a silo, and you’ll find a lot of interconnectivity. For example, “85% of Americans are anxious about their financial lives” (Employee Financial Health, Center for Financial Services Innovation, 5/30/17).

In this example, you can see how financial well-being and emotional well-being are connected. The various elements of our lives impact one another. When organizations understand the importance of a multi-dimensional approach to designing their worksite well-being program, they increase their ability to influence positive behavior change and improved overall health.

CAHR20: How has the COVID-19 pandemic changed the way HR needs to approach their wellness programs??

EA: The answer is going to vary based on your industry, demographics, resources, goals and objectives. A strong well-being programs is going to be tailored to your unique architecture and foundations as an organization. Some organizations have needed to pivot more than others, especially those who have relied heavily on in-person and onsite wellness initiatives.

One commonality as a result of the COVID-19 global pandemic is HR has seen a fundamental shift in virtual care and connectivity alongside the demand for an engaging digital platform. We have seen companies lean heavily on these resources, and come up with some creative and unique ideas to engage their population. Join me for my Q&A session to ask questions directly and learn more!

CAHR20: Without giving away too much, why should CAHR20 attendees see your presentation?

EA: Well, there may be times where you feel as though life is pure chaos…but by the end of the session, I guarantee you will leave with a sense of hope and some fantastic actionable steps for you to create a workplace culture inclusive of financial well-being. Join and stick around until the end to reap the reward! The presentation is fun, informative and insightful.

 

Thank you for your time, Eva!

Gain even more actionable insights from Eva Allen LIVE at the Virtual 2020 California HR Conference.

Your time and budget are especially precious these days. That’s why we designed the Virtual CAHR20, happening October 27-29: a compact, 3-day live event featuring the top minds from a variety of industries, providing you with a whopping 30+ HR recertification credits. 

Plus, CAHR20 attendees get early access to complimentary weekly HR content & credits with our PIHRA Road to CAHR20 Webinar Series every Monday at 2:15pm!

Until 11:59pm Pacific on October 16, 2020, you can take advantage of the CAHR20 Early Bird Rate to secure excellent HR professional development – including Road to CAHR20 Bonus Sessions – at a reasonable cost.

 

Register for CAHR20 today!

Advance your organization.
Accelerate your professional growth.
Attend CAHR20!

10 Years of Support: Why Montage Insurance Solutions Sponsors the Virtual California HR Conference.

The pivot to a virtual California HR Conference this year has been anything but familiar. We’ve been asked what our HR event will be like and, frankly, we feel we’re too close to the subject matter to give an impartial answer.

(If you ask us, CAHR20 will OBVIOUSLY be the most high value and entertaining HR conference in the United States, if not the world.)

But if you ask the Montage Insurance Solutions team about our annual conference, they’ll give you an outside perspective based on a solid familiarity of our event built over the course of 10+ years.

So we asked them: What makes the California HR Conference special and why should anyone attend?

If you’re on the fence about registering for CAHR20, check out the video below.

Danone Simpson and Toby Kennedy from Montage share why they’ve been a proud sponsor of ours for so long, and describe the enduring heart and value of the in-person experience that we’ve translated into this year’s virtual event.

We feel lucky to have such a solid relationship with the Montage team, especially since they’re giving away such lavish prizes at their virtual booth. 

We hope their message has convinced you to support your continuing HR education, expand your HR network, and have a little fun with us this October 27-29. 

We’re encouraging HR professionals from all walks and industries and from all over the nation to join us and further their HR careers. As Danone said, “If you can get to the level of the California law, then you’re going to be okay.” 

Register here before October 16 to enjoy Early Bird rates!

Join us at CAHR20!

Early Bird Rates End
Friday, October 16
 

Strategies to Create Inclusive Teams with a Fair Pay Structure

Strategies to Create Inclusive Teams with a Fair Pay Structure

Addressing Pay Equity From The Ground Up with Parag Vaish

Did you know the first recorded awareness of pay inequity in the U.S. dates back to February 1869? Women federal employees received 50% of men’s salaries for the same work. Since then, decades of increased awareness, strikes, and legislation like California’s recent Ban The Box bill have brought real change. Over time, we’ve worked to create new structures to make corporate compensation more objective and unbiased, and provided more opportunities for employees based on their skills rather than gender, ethnicity, sexual orientation, or religion.

That specific discrepancy in the federal government was remedied in 1870, but it wasn’t until 1963 when President John F. Kennedy signed the Equal Pay Law into effect. Nearly 60 years later, women make 79% of what men make for the same work.

Pay equity should matter to everyone – and there’s a chance you have more to learn about it. (We sure did – see our first question below.) For employers looking to reduce turnover, compensation is a major factor in employee engagement and talent retention. How do you ensure your employees feel valued? Expressing appreciation in your company’s culture is meaningful, but how you develop and communicate your organization’s pay process can enhance employee satisfaction.

There’s still a long road ahead to reaching true equity in talent management and compensation. However, if you’re anything like Parag Vaish, you’ll know the best time to make a more equitable workplace is now! Not only is it wildly overdue, it is also wildly possible.

We’re so excited for Parag’s CAHR20 session because he has demonstrated what a leader in this space can achieve. In his career at Tesla, athenahealth, and Google, Parag has achieved monumental results in his efforts to reduce bias in hiring and compensation practices, increasing representation from underrepresented populations in the technology sector, and closing the wage gap entirely on his team at Tesla.

To learn more about Parag and why he’s excited to present at the 2020 California HR Conference, we asked him a few questions below.

Read on and be sure to sign up for your CAHR20 Early Bird Ticket before prices increase October 16!

Why See Parag at CAHR20?

Parag Vaish is Founder-in-Residence at Google’s Area 120 incubator. Parag is an innovative leader in the field of digital product management and design. He has an extensive track record of success in both product and business roles. Parag has helped industry giants like the Walt Disney Company, Microsoft, NBC News, StubHub!, athenahealth, and Tesla as well as innovative startups like Escapia (acquired by HomeAway) exceed their annual goals. Parag’s unique mixture of team leadership skills, emphasis on quantitative analysis and his overall vision make him an industry leader in his field. Parag is currently a Founder-in-Residence at Google in the Area 120 group after transitioning from his position as Head of Digital Product Management, Content & Design at Tesla. You can read more about Parag’s distinctive Team Decision Matrix model, developed while at StubHub! and refined at other companies, in his recently released book, “How to Rank and Prioritize Nearly Anything” which is now available on Amazon. Parag Vaish earned a Bachelor of Science, Business Administration, at California State University, and an MBA and M.S. in Information Systems at Boston University. Parag’s passions include speaking about product management, accelerating the growth of early-stage companies, market validation of new product introductions, gender diversity and inclusion, people development, data-driven decision making and maximizing resource efficiency.

Without further ado, here is our interview with CAHR20 Presenter Parag Vaish!

CAHR20: Fair Pay has been a widely discussed topic for quite a few years now, so why are organizations still struggling to properly implement it?

Parag Vaish: Equitable Pay is a phrase I prefer over Fair Pay. I believe organizations are struggling with this because the entry point for a candidate, into a company, is typically based on your compensation trajectory or your last wage rate (rather than the pay range for the job being offered).

I’m sure you’ve all heard the question in interviews…”What are you expecting in terms of compensation?” Inherently, this question is seeking the compensation numbers from the candidate rather than the pay range of the role in question.

Until companies define the role attributes, and then the level and associated compensation for the level, we’ll continue to have a male and female employee being paid differently for the same job. Keep in mind, I am not a compensation or HR professional, so this is just my operating manager viewpoint. 

Aithan Shapira, CAHR20 Keynote Speaker

CAHR20: What sparked your commitment to driving change around equitable pay and diverse teams?

PV: I’ve actually written a book on this exact question. It can be found here. The short version is that I’ve grown up trying to fit into a world where I often felt different than others, I went to schools where I felt disadvantaged relative to brand name schools and I like to consider myself one who is willing and able to challenge the status quo. This makes for the perfect cocktail of attributes to take on the topic whenever I am in a position of influence. 

CAHR20: What are the biggest challenges you’ve seen leaders in HR face when trying to implement more equitable compensation programs?

PV: Managers are often unwilling to partner closely with their HR business partner, recruiting team and compensation team to create holistic change. Often, managers are functional experts such as Engineering Lead, Design Lead, Finance Lead, etc where what they know best is their domain and they defer topics of diversity and pay equity to those who are in the HR roles. It starts with hiring managers having an interest in solving the problem. Now let’s suppose you have the interest and support from HR. The next challenge is going to be ensuring that you are setting a framework in place to allow for diversity to be woven into your hiring decisions in a natural way versus something which appears forced. If you are doing unnatural acts to shoehorn diversity into your organization, it may not go well. If you have the luxury of looking ahead towards growing your team by more than three people (remember, my experience at Tesla was taking a team from 8 to 43 people), then you can start to visualize what attributes, skills and team composition that you’d like like the collective team to have once they are fully hired. There are probably 8-10 more challenges one might face,but I’ll cover those in the Q&A session. 

CAHR20: Without giving away too much, why should CAHR20 attendees see your presentation?

PV: My story is somewhat unique in that the gender pay equity and diversity results on my team at Tesla were not as a result of a company mandate nor was it HR driven. It was initiated by me. Many speakers on this topic are coming from the HR perspective whereas my trade is Product Management and Design. So, for any HR professionals, functional department heads, CEO’s, etc who want to hear how a lone divisional leader addressed equity and diversity, without it being prescribed to them, this session will offer a detailed account of what I did, what I was surprised to learn and what I would do differently next time.

 

Thank you for your time, Parag!

Gain even more actionable insights from Parag Vaish LIVE at the Virtual 2020 California HR Conference.

Your time and budget are especially precious these days. That’s why we designed the Virtual CAHR20, happening October 27-29: a compact, 3-day live event featuring the top minds from a variety of industries, providing you with a whopping 30+ HR recertification credits. 

Plus, CAHR20 attendees get early access to complimentary weekly HR content & credits with our PIHRA Road to CAHR20 Webinar Series every Monday at 2:15pm!

Until October 16, 2020, you can take advantage of the CAHR20 Early Bird Rate to secure excellent HR professional development – including Road to CAHR20 Bonus Sessions – at a reasonable cost.

 

Register for CAHR20 today!

Advance your organization.
Accelerate your professional growth.
Attend CAHR20!

Unleash Creative Transformation in HR

Unleash Creative Transformation in HR

An Interview with Aithan Shapira

What’s stopping your employees from unleashing their full creative power at work? California HR Conference Keynote speaker Aithan Shapira, MFA, PhD has a few ideas.

We often hear words like “agile,” “innovation,” and “transform” used as shorthand or inspiration for improving workplace productivity and culture, but Aithan has arrived to share precisely how creativity can unlock the benefits of these buzzwords, and how HR can lead the way.

At CAHR20, we source expertise from many different backgrounds to bring you fresh, actionable insights to make work better for everyone. A polymath like Aithan Shapira (an MIT lecturer, renowned artist *and* business-launcher) is the perfect person to demonstrate how successfully fostering creativity can impact your company’s bottom line.

To learn more about what Aithan’s bringing to his Keynote session at the Virtual 2020 California HR Conference, we asked him a few questions about tapping into our creative power these days.

Why See Aithan at CAHR20?

If there’s anyone we’ve met with an equally strong command of both the left and right brain, it’s Aithan.

Aithan Shapira, MFA, PhD, is an established artist, Lecturer at MIT Sloan, and founder of Tilt, a culture design and transformation firm focused on change-ability.

As facilitator and coach, he draws on 20+ years of transforming creative process into cultural practice that he is applying with global leaders in organizations such as NASA, Google, and Roche.

Aithan serves on McKinsey’s think tank for Advancing Adult Learning and Development and has pioneered progressive curricula at the edge of leadership and skills retraining for the future of work at MIT Sloan, Harvard iLab, Stanford d.school, and the Berklee Institute for Creative Entrepreneurship.

Aithan developed his research on the creative process at the Royal College of Art & Design, lived in an Australian Aboriginal community for three years to study art’s impact on cultures of survival, and continues to be a visiting critic at arts institutions internationally. He exhibits his artwork in museums and galleries in New York, London, and Miami. 

Aithan’s skilled passion for art, research, and immersion will become tangible for CAHR20 attendees at his unforgettable Keynote presentation – we’re excited for you to experience it!

Until then, here’s Aithan’s insight on all things creativity for HR professionals.

CAHR20: Why is embracing creativity so critical during times of uncertainty?

Aithan Shapira: I never understood goalies. When an object is hurtling toward me at 60mph my human instinct is to duck, not to throw my body in front of it. High-performing goalies are continually training at transmuting that fear into purpose-driven action at this moment of opportunity.

Similarly, uncertainty creates profound anxiety for many of us. It is creativity that allows us to harness the opportunity of the unknown. For a creative leader, much like an artist, a blank slate is a high-potential moment – fertile for innovation, change, growth, and equally fertile for contracting and recoiling into the familiar and safe.

Creativity is knowing how to be when you don’t know what to do.

Aithan Shapira, CAHR20 Keynote Speaker

"It is creativity that allows us to harness the opportunity of the unknown."

-Aithan Shapira

Aithan Shapira, CAHR20 Keynote Speaker

CAHR20: HR professionals tend to focus on resolving conflict… How can they encourage creative conflict within and beyond their department?

AS: Difference drives creativity. Our unease with conflict, and often premature resolution, limits our ability to leverage the perspectives that diversity provides for innovation and growth. There is an art to curating organizational (and individual) cultural practices that contain a healthy dose of differentiation. Increasing capacity to work with the discomfort of holding competing points of view simultaneously and the practice of listening by dropping personal perspective in order to fully engage with another are bridge skills that enable high-performing cultures to reap the benefits of creative tension. 

Rather than avoiding or resolving tension too quickly, build a culture of candor and feedback loops that will actually enable the psychological safety necessary to operationalize diversity – of people, perspectives, processes, and skills.

CAHR20: Where would someone start if they want to position themselves as a leader that not only embraces, but builds progress during uncertain times?

AS: Uncertainty is what separates leadership from management. It is during uncertain times that our leadership stands out, whether we like what it looks like or not. We are constantly looking outside of ourselves for answers – asking experts, watching TED talks, consulting Google, reading blogs. We’ve forgotten how to look internally for our answers. The only thing you control is how to be – that’s where certainty lies. Understanding yourself and how you relate to those things outside of you – that’s how you begin thrive in a constantly changing world. 

At any time, and especially in uncertainty, a leader builds progress by measuring the success of a day by how closely she lives to her values.

CAHR20: Without revealing too much, what takeaways can our attendees expect from your keynote?

AS: Attendees can expect an experiential immersion, despite being virtual, on change-ability. We will engage in an avant-garde approach using the arts for transforming leadership, training to change in evolving contexts, and defining culture that changes together in more creative, agile, and adaptive ways.

 

Wow. Sounds cool! Thank you for your time, Aithan!

Gain even more actionable insights from Aithan Shapira LIVE at the Virtual 2020 California HR Conference.

Your time and budget are especially precious these days. That’s why we designed the Virtual CAHR20, happening October 27-29: a compact, 3-day live event featuring the top minds from a variety of industries, providing you with a whopping 30+ HR recertification credits. 

Plus, CAHR20 attendees get early access to complimentary weekly HR content & credits with our PIHRA Road to CAHR20 Webinar Series every Monday at 2:15pm!

Until October 16, 2020, you can take advantage of the CAHR20 Early Bird Rate to secure excellent HR professional development – including Road to CAHR20 Bonus Sessions – at a reasonable cost.

 

Register for CAHR20 today!

Advance your organization.
Accelerate your professional growth.
Attend CAHR20!