In Person

Wisconsin CLO/CTO Cohort @ Marquette University

Past Event
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Session Focus: Leadership Development and Integrating Talent Practices with a Comprehensive Skills Strategy   During this afternoon session at O’Brien Hall, the new home for Marquette Business and leadership innovation programs, we plan to have a robust discussion on the following:
  1. #disruptivethinking panel: Do organizations need a comprehensive skills framework?
  2. Leadership Development Skill Analysis - What Leadership Development Should Look Like in the Hybrid Era?
  💥 Your Organization's Skills Need a Comprehensive Strategy Teri HartTeri Hart, the author of Hardwired to Learn, shared insights on Your Learning Needs a Comprehensive Strategy a few years ago for ELE.  During this strategy session, Teri illustrated that we are frequently tasked to build learning solutions to solve business problems. Quite often, these needs appear to be a worthwhile investment. But without the backdrop of strategy, we miss a critical piece of the decision-making framework – the relative value of specific learning needs a decision. Let's have Teri help guide a disruptive thinking roundtable panel on how HR functions can drive a Comprehensive Skills Framework to ensure business alignment. 💥 Talent functions that don’t have strategic planning capability are likely not focused on the right work. Organizations need a dynamic approach to teaching people new skills. We see that integrated talent practices based on skills are rising, and business leaders are talking about skills. Simplifies Journey to be a Skills-based Enterprise (Ravin Jesuthasan) 💥 Taking a skills-based approach to building the future workforce (McKinsey, Nov 2022) Unfortunately, i4cp research has found many organizations are merely guessing when it comes to crucial aspects of that equation, especially knowing their employees' skills and capabilities. When organizations build an employee skills inventory or database, what do they include in the talent profiles?  a common language to describe skills in the organization and enable an agile workforce by using skills as the common currency of the business. It helps integrate talent management processes.   💥 What Leadership Development Should Look Like in the Hybrid Era Key findings from Effective Leadership in a Hybrid World of Work (Udemy, December 2022) revealed that:

Hybrid work doesn’t fundamentally change what’s required to be an effective leader, but some skills are increasingly essential to manage mixed teams successfully.

Let's analyze skills for how leaders develop beyond the theory that 70% of learning happens through doing (on-the-job experience), 20% through feedback and greater self-awareness (gained via interactions with others), and 10% through formal training.  Quantitative and qualitative research conducted over the past three years points (2022, HBR: What Leadership Development Should Look Like in the Hybrid Era) to an alternative—a framework for the process that emphasizes three actions:
  • Sensemaking, or understanding how the business world and the organization work around you and how others relate to you.
  • Experimenting. or testing ideas picked up in a classroom session, from colleagues, or from personal experience.
  • Self-discovery, or figuring out your own identity in the workplace.
  What Leadership Development Should Look Like in the Hybrid Era ELE's Wisconsin cohort for Learning & HR Executives is a year-long learning process through face-to-face collaboration and networking with other local heads of Learning & Talent Development. Each senior leader is encouraged to bring a peer from their organization that contributes to, engages, or supports the Learning & Talent spectrum for their workplace. Our quarterly cohort exchanges use the following design elements:
  1. Sharing practical case studies aligned to business needs
  2. Identifying key issues and developing insights and solutions
  3. Canvassing learning industry trends applied at ELE members’ workplace
 
ELE produces this Wisconsin CLO Group.
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Brian Watkins
Founder @ BTOM ConsultantsChicagoland Talent Leaders
Chicagoland Talent Leaders

About Brian Watkins

With over twenty years of experience in learning, Brian has a reputation for being engaging, friendly and always had the best interests of his employees at the top of his list.

About Kacie Walters

Talent management leader with expertise in creating and aligning talent development plans to critical business needs, designing sustainable, programmatic solutions to develop leaders and managers, building and reinforcing skills and behaviors for employees to exceed performance and engage in their careers. Believe in streamlining processes and managing projects with rigor. Passionate about ensuring people have the skills, tools and desired culture they need to work collaboratively and effectively to stay engaged.

Wendy Greeson
Principal Consultant @ Amplify Your TalentGlobal Talent Leaders
Global Talent Leaders

About Wendy Greeson

Award-winning professional with demonstrated success in Talent Management, Learning, and Leadership Development. Consistently recruited to lead in newly created roles, generating transformational results impacting individuals, teams, and organizations.

Robin Hoke
Associate Director Executive EducationMarquette Executive Education
Marquette Executive Education

About Robin Hoke

Talent development leader who works across industry sectors and higher education. Specializing in working across geographies working to find creative learning solutions.

Megan Joecks
Vice President Talent ManagementCharter Manufacturing
Charter Manufacturing

About Megan Joecks

Driving results by maximizing individual and team potential motivates me. Asking questions and actually listening excites me. Solving problems inspires me. Leading change through people strengthens me. An organization's talent is its secret sauce. I'm committed to ensuring the right talent is in the right roles at the right time through effective talent management.

Teri Hart
VP, Head of Learning and DevelopmentZurich North America
Zurich North America

About Teri Hart

Teri is head of Learning & Development for Zurich North America. Teri has over 25 years’ experience in the Learning and Development space having served in learning leadership roles at Discover, McKinsey, and GE Healthcare. Teri has an MBA from Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern and an MSEd in Instructional Technology from Indiana University.

About Dirk Tussing

PASSIONATE COLLABORATOR with an extensive business and charity network that makes things happen.

About Jill Busch

I've held leadership roles in both my employment and my affiliation with the American Society for Talent Development. My focus has been in functional training, collaborative learning, performance support, eLearning, and leadership/professional development.

About Carrie Buchwald

I am a B2B learning services executive with a focus on leadership development and business education. By breaking the mold of traditional high educational models, I have created a nimble, relevant, and client centric team that sells, designs and delivers strategic talent development programs to organizations. This team is called the Lake Forest Center for Leadership. There is no other team like it in Higher Ed.

Mark Naidicz
Executive in Residence @ Marquette UniversityMarquette Executive Education
Marquette Executive Education

About Mark Naidicz

Mark is an Executive in Residence, member of the College of Business Leadership Council, and Advisory Board member at the Institute for Women's Leadership at Marquette University. Additionally, he provides HR advisory services through Korn Ferry, Group 360 Consulting, and Naidicz Consulting LLC.. He is an experienced corporate and non-profit director, and President of the Michael J. Naidicz Foundation.

Kevin Walsh
Director Executive EducationMarquette Executive Education
Marquette Executive Education

About Kevin Walsh

I have served as the Director of Executive Education at Marquette University's College of Business Administration since 2017. Additionally, I am a full time faculty member that teaches an "introduction to business"-type class called Business Day One. Students find that I use a variety of vehicles to maximize their learning and evaluate their performance including: technology, simulations, research reports and case studies. Further, I seek to instill a high ethical standard while stressing accountability and the value of supporting one’s claims with clear evidence and logic.

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