| Square Community, |
| We realize that everyone around the world is facing unique challenges right now, and for business owners, the stakes are particularly high. In this challenging and uncertain time some of you are able to continue with little change, while others have been required to temporarily shut your doors. We want to offer some support in the ways we can. Here are the immediate steps we are taking to help: |
| Today Square Online Store released the option for curbside pickup, and later this week a local delivery feature will be available for all businesses so that you can quickly adapt to this changing environment. We are also waiving curbside pickup and delivery fees for the next three months. Square Online Store already offers online orders for in-store pickup with no monthly fee. We are refunding all software subscription fees for the month of March, which includes Square Appointments, Retail, Restaurants, Loyalty, Team Management, Payroll, Marketing, and Square Online Store. Square will manage the process for you—there’s no need to do anything. We’re also offering a resource hub with information and advice for businesses to navigate this new environment, which covers how to offer local delivery, set up and promote electronic gift cards, utilize free marketing campaigns, turn off signature requirements for in-person purchases, and more. |
| We are taking proactive steps to ensure we can continue to provide you with both advice and assistance. Customer Support is here to help with questions or concerns. As we continue to assess the situation, teams across the company are prioritizing how we can provide additional support during this time. |
| Please take care of yourselves, your families, your employees, and your customers. |
| The Square Team |
Category: Coronavirus COVID-19 Blog
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Square Account Users
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Leading People Through Uncharted Waters
by Adena Johnston, D. Mgt., MCEC
Several clients have reached out asking what they can do to support their employees during this difficult and confusing time. Not every organization uses team technology nor does team technology get back to the basics.
Our bad habits are on full display as we begin to see the damaging impact of searching for true information on untrusted sites or relying on social media to inform us of something so critical as our health and safety. Now is not only the time to spot (sorry for the oxymoron) real fake news, but it is also the time to increase personal discipline. Please remind people to FIRST access their local district information and SECOND the CDC.gov website. Local responders are moving quickly right now.
Here are critically important tips to assist individuals and managers as they swim in uncharted waters.
Establish Discipline
- Set a schedule – wake up at the same time each day and instill this in your children.
- Schedule “standing” meetings with the team. These should be held at the same time, so people have a schedule to manage.
- If members of your team have young children home from school, take the time to ask them when it would be most convenient to check in since now, they have two full-time jobs.
Get “Closer”
- Schedule virtual coffees. These are opportunities to connect in real time and keep colleagues connected to work and projects.
- Set individual calls to touch base with teams, clients, and managers to build continuity so work does not fall behind or get disconnected.
- When people feel disoriented or discouraged, help them to focus on what they can control.
- Reassure people that they are not alone.
Go to the “Mindset” Gym
- Help yourself and those you manage identify opportunities and not challenges.
- Demonstrate confidence that you will be there, everyone is in this together, and the organization will get through this uncertain time.
- Don’t be a pie-in-the-sky optimist. This is a time for objectivity with a dose of positivity.
- Remain flexible with others! This is the time to adapt your style and approach and meet people where they are.
- Be flexible in your own head! Continuously generate new ideas and approaches for how you and others can respond to this changing environment.
Take Good Self-Care
- Create regular opportunities to move. Exercise as simple as a walk around the block each hour will prevent other issues brought on from a sedentary experience.
- Eat at structured intervals to ward off over-eating or grazing out of boredom.
- Find humor. Think about ways to bring on laughter. There are great websites of truly funny jokes and stories, or videos to prompt an authentic response.
Breathe…

Adena Johnston, D. Mgt., MCEC
Vice President & Practice Leader, Talent Development CCI Consulting -
COVID-19 Strategies and Policies of the World’s Largest Companies by Larry Emond and Ellyn Maese
Story Highlights
- New teams are critical for developing policies and providing information
- Learn COVID-19 protocols and business contingency plans
- Monitor impact and conduct assessments to sustain business function
Gallup Managing Director Larry Emond gathered the strategies and policies of 100 members of the CHRO Roundtable, an organization that includes the CHROs of more than 650 of the world’s largest companies, for their responses to the COVID-19 pandemic. The companies in this sampling average $27 billion in revenue with 80,000 employees and most are global organizations. This is what Emond found.
Crisis Management Teams
Most organizations have created crisis management teams, task forces or committees with a response tailored to specific geographic regions. These task forces meet regularly to develop policies and provide information to leaders, managers and front-line employees regarding COVID-19 awareness, prevention, management and hygiene practices.
These teams are also focused on management protocols and business continuity plans to guide current actions and forecast possible responses to future events. In general, their protocols and plans include:
- developing succession contingencies for all major executives
- conducting business using virtual, video or audio capabilities
- restricting travel
- reducing to business-critical operations only
- moving critical operations to unaffected regions
- cross-training team members to perform critical functions in the event of an unexpected absence or quarantine of another team member
- documenting business-critical functions, processes or procedures in the event of an unexpected absence or quarantine of a team member
- distributing call center scripts and agent communications
If an employee is diagnosed with COVID-19, many companies have established protocols like these:
- Require employees to report confirmed cases — either of self or family member — of COVID-19 to HR or management. The affected are typically required to stay home for 14 days and/or until cleared by a doctor to return to work with confirmation that there is no diagnosis of COVID-19.
- Isolate employees diagnosed at work; immediately disinfect objects they’ve touched; trace their contact with other employees, customers, and clients; and notify those who may have been exposed without releasing the diagnosed employee’s name.
- Ask employees to log all contact with other employees or visitors in case they become symptomatic so that others can be informed of potential exposure.
Travel Requirements
Most companies have recommended limiting personal and professional travel, and some have assured workers they could decline professional invitations without penalty. Generally called soft bans, these partial travel restrictions have been issued with requests to inform HR of travel and avoid air travel, public transportation and large gatherings, as well as 14-day self-quarantines following travel to affected areas.
However, hard bans are in effect in many companies, and travel to China, Italy, South Korea, Iran, Japan, Hong Kong and Taiwan has been prohibited. Indeed, most intercontinental travel — and, more recently, even travel in general — has stopped for the time being, unless it’s mission-critical.
Business Impact
Leaders are holding additional meetings to monitor business impact in efforts to protect or sustain business functions. Many companies with facilities in affected areas have closed them and are canceling their own — or their employees’ presence at — conferences, events and face-to-face meetings. Some have been able to move operations to unaffected locations.
Simultaneously, CHROs are:
- monitoring supply chains or providers for potential impacts
- conducting ongoing supply chain risk assessment and operation impact assessment
- considering alternative suppliers
- preparing for shortages, transportation delays or communication delays
- approving additional budget for supplies or additional paid time off
- reducing or suspending bonuses for top earners
- analyzing and forecasting potential market impacts
Wellbeing
Companies are also assessing risks to their employees’ physical and financial wellbeing. Their mitigation efforts include:
- instituting mandatory work-from-home or remote work policies where possible
- closing on-site facilities such as gyms, cafeterias and common areas
- making revisions to employee compensation and benefits policies
- granting paid time off for symptomatic employees, employees who must care for family members who are diagnosed with COVID-19, and/or employees with diagnosed cases of COVID-19
- using standing sick leave, extended sick leave, vacation time, paid time off or flex-time policies
- increasing sick leave or paid time off for all or on a case-by-case basis
- utilizing short-term disability, family leave (FMLA) or other existing benefits
- recommending available Employee Assistance Programs (EAPs)
- reminding employees about mental health services for stress management
- using back-up care programs, childcare subsidies or other dependent care benefits
- refraining from penalizing time off of any kind
- permitting unlimited unpaid time off without penalty
- providing travel/international SOS (medical and travel security) services
- paying for time spent under quarantine
- offering work-from-home options or adjusting schedules due to school closures
- communicating employer-sponsored insurance and other relevant benefits
- advising employees to avoid public transportation
- staggering shifts to help employees avoid busy commutes
- advising employees to avoid visiting high-traffic events or locations on personal time
- reconfiguring meeting rooms, break rooms and other common areas to promote social distancing
- expanding the time of meal service to avoid congestion, and asking employees to consider alternate meal times to reduce crowds
Technology
These companies are testing technological (e.g., remote work) capabilities, emergency notification systems and updating employee contact information. They’re advising employees to take their laptops or other portable equipment home each night, and they are devoting IT staff to help employees set up remote connections at home, sometimes on employees’ personal computers.
Leaders are holding additional meetings to monitor business impact in efforts to protect or sustain business functions.
Many companies have required or are encouraging video or audio-conferencing meetings (e.g., Skype, Zoom, Microsoft Teams) or phone calls in lieu of face-to-face meetings. They also recommend conducting collaborative projects by video or audio-conferencing, Google Docs, emails or other online channels.
Communications
Corporate leadership is communicating frequently — daily, weekly or as available — to address their organization’s COVID-19 response, advice, policies and protocols. Many are issuing FAQ guides, and many are including links to authorities and external organizations such as the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), The World Health Organization (WHO), Johns Hopkins University, local governments and outbreak maps.
Along with expert advice, these messages often include a genuinely personal element, i.e., reminding workers to get information from credible organizations, assuring them that none of their fellow employees have tested positive for the virus (where applicable) and urging employees not to panic or spread rumors. They will also often encourage employees to obtain enough food, water, medicines and other essentials for their families in case of quarantine or scarcity.
Corporate leadership is communicating frequently — daily, weekly or as available — to address their organization’s COVID-19 response, advice, policies and protocols.
Communications are usually tailored to the recipients — whether leaders, managers, employees or clients/customers, respectively — and methods include:
- social media for public messages
- email, mail, text messages, hotlines and internal systems (i.e., intranet) to propagate pertinent information
- signage to reinforce hygiene, screening and other organizational policies
Members of the CHRO Roundtable are conscious of the effects of their communication, particularly on customers. To that end, many have:
- Proscribed responses from managers/leaders if contacted by the media. Many have designated media relations personnel who address all questions from the media.
- Asked employees not to violate the privacy of diagnosed employees or clients/customers in social media messages.
- Deployed social media and marketing messaging about customer policies and alternative commerce/services.
Training
Businesses are rapidly expanding training opportunities. Much of it concerns managers, who are being tasked with assisting in coronavirus containment, responding to employee needs or concerns, and communicating disease-management policies and preventative measures, such as hygiene practices. But CHROs are also creating COVID-19-specific training programs for security professionals, cleaning crews, maintenance and groundskeeping staff.
These protocols and responses, we’re told, will be operational as long as is needed — the end of May is the current long-term projection — and all are subject to revision. Gallup will continue to report on our findings as the situation evolves.
Adapt quickly to COVID-19.
Watch our live webinar “COVID-19: Managing Your Workforce Through Disruption” to get everything Gallup knows about disruption and other crises. Join us on Thursday, March 19, at 2:30 p.m. CT. Dr. Jim Harter, Gallup’s chief workplace scientist, and other experts will share what we’ve learned through research, hands-on experience and our connections with leaders around the world.
Larry Emond is Managing Director of Global Leadership Advisory at Gallup.
Ellyn Maese is a Research Associate at Gallup. Jennifer Robison contributed to this article.
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COVID-19 Has My Teams Working Remotely: A Guide for Leaders by Jennifer Robison
Story Highlights
- Individualization, expectations, communication are key for remote workers
- Managers need their leaders’ support more than ever during this time
- Going fully remote may be your organization’s new way to work
The novel coronavirus outbreak has put Italy on lockdown, closed schools in Madrid, shuttered the Securities and Exchange Commission’s D.C. headquarters, turned New Rochelle into a containment zone — and prompted business leaders everywhere to tell employees to take their laptops home at night in case a COVID-19 diagnosis suddenly turns the company remote.
If so, they’ll join what Time calls “the World’s Largest Work-From-Home Experiment,” but without the preparation other companies have had. If your company is one of them — or you think it will be — this is what Gallup analytics reveals about managing remote workers.
Individualization is key. The best managers have always individualized their coaching to the worker, but doing so at a distance requires greater intentionality. Managers need to ask each team member to describe the conditions under which they perform best, their concerns about their workflow and their emotional response to the situation.
Managers in strengths-based businesses have a huge asset — they can predict employees’ reactions. Whether that means a driving need to complete projects, keep promises, maintain relationships or any other motivator, those traits are powerful … and different for everyone. Managers will need to individualize to the person to get the best performance. A one-size-fits-all response never fits anyone very well.
Set expectations early and clearly. About half of all U.S. employees — remote or not — don’t know what’s expected of them at work. That’s a bad beginning, and it’ll get worse for employees sent home without good guidance. So managers must make expectations crystal clear: X is the work you should do, Y is the quality standard, Z is the deadline. Executives should provide higher-level expectations aligned with the company’s purpose: We’ll keep our customers engaged by doing X, we’ll maintain our standards by doing Y, we’ll fulfill our mission by doing Z. The more detail, the better.
But remember, fulfilling expectations requires equipment and information. Research from University of California Irvine professor Judith Olson found that the most successful remote work situations are those in which workers have similar work styles, know and like each other, have technology that allows them to collaborate, and know how to use that technology. You may not have time to create great working relationships — though you should try — but now’s the time to explore your digital options. That’s how people will meet the expectations you set.
Communication. Employees who are accustomed to working in-house may feel cut off from the resources, information or relationships they need to do their jobs well, so plan for more conference calls. It’s OK to pad socializing into the timeframe; indeed, it may be vital for people who need lots of interaction to keep their energy up. Managers will have to be diligent about communicating productively — coaching high performance requires frequent conversations, and there won’t be chance conversations in the hall.
But your staff needs to hear from you too, especially as economic fears worsen, to maintain their trust in leadership. Keep the lines of communication open, honest and broad. Send emails or post videos about your reasoning, intentions and expectations. Make it easy for managers to know your thoughts and contribute their own.
Support your managers: A sudden change in the practice of management can be hard on managers. They may worry about disruptions to the workflow they’re accountable for. Some may feel they have to be physically present to be good coaches, unsure that they can engage workers from a distance. Rather more negatively, there are still some managers who don’t trust workers they can’t see. All of them will have to manage workers in a new way, and fast.
So give them your support, both practical and emotional, during what may be a tough transition. Invest in management development and coaching ahead of the budget plan, and be affirming about the situation and understanding about altered deadlines. Just remember, your managers always need to know you have their back — but never more so than when they feel insecure.
Looking Ahead
Gallup finds that 43% of U.S. employees work remotely some or all of the time, and many, many studies show remote workers are more productive and profitable than in-house employees. So don’t worry — telework can succeed spectacularly. Although your company will have to learn quickly, your people may perform at levels that surprise you.
But don’t be surprised if they don’t want to come back to the office.
Gallup research shows that 53% of employees say greater work-life balance and personal wellbeing are “very important” to them when considering a new job — as do 60% of women, of whom 48% are actively looking for a new employer — and that 51% of U.S. workers say they would quit their current job for one that allows flextime.
A huge proportion of workers already have. Gallup found that the number of remote workers grew by four percentage points — representing millions of employees — between 2012 and 2016, that workers are spending more time off-site than ever before, and that more and more industries are putting remote work policies in place (primarily finance, insurance and real estate, followed by transportation, retail, manufacturing and construction). “Remote work is no longer a privilege,” Forbes recently reported. “It’s become the standard operating mode for at least 50% of the U.S. population.”
That percentage is about to explode, whether companies are prepared for it or not. So if you have to send people home to keep them safe, individualize, communicate and set expectations so your managers can coach effectively during a crisis. But keep this in mind: While COVID-19 won’t be an issue forever, remote work will be. What you learn about leading a remote workforce now will likely become best practice for your company later on.
Adapt quickly to COVID-19.
Watch our live webinar “COVID-19: Managing Your Workforce Through Disruption” to get everything Gallup knows about disruption and other crises. Join us on Thursday, March 19, at 2:30 p.m. CT. Dr. Jim Harter, Gallup’s chief workplace scientist, and other experts will share what we’ve learned through research, hands-on experience and our connections with leaders around the world.
Jennifer Robison is a Senior Editor at Gallup. Adam Hickman, Ph.D., contributed to this article.
Original article appears here with additional tips: https://www.gallup.com/workplace/288956/covid-teams-working-remotely-guide-leaders.aspx?utm_source=workplace-newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=WorkplaceNewsletter_March_03172020&utm_content=readourrecommendations-CTA-2&elqTrackId=5425240020ec4c2297f4836b9fb5810c&elq=c7db8c639bfa4d5bbe2551a4f67d607b&elqaid=3589&elqat=1&elqCampaignId=787
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How to Manage the Loneliness and Isolation of Remote Workers
Story Highlights
- Loneliness is emotional and isolation is structural
- Managers need to know the difference to help remote workers thrive
- A strategy of engagement can help managers keep remote workers connected
Despite the productivity gains and cost savings associated with remote work, many leaders worry that those advantages come at the expense of remote workers’ emotional health — in particular, that remote work causes loneliness and isolation. Ultimately, it’s feared, remote workers’ engagement and productivity will suffer.
Gallup finds that remote workers can feel lonely and isolated — but it’s not typical and it is preventable. In fact, a recent Buffer study of 1,900 remote workers around the world found that 90% intend to work remotely for the rest of their lives and 94% recommend off-site careers. And when asked to name the biggest struggle with working remotely, just 21% named “loneliness.”
Still, one-fifth of a workforce is a lot of people, and leaders need measures in place to fix that problem before it damages engagement and performance. Gallup research shows that managers are best positioned to implement the strategies that make the biggest difference for their teams — but first, they have to know the difference between loneliness and isolation.
Loneliness is emotional. Isolation is structural.
First, it helps to understand that loneliness is an emotional response to lack of connection — and people can feel just as lonely in the office as outside of it. One quasi-field experiment conducted at a global headquarters that was transitioning to open office workstations documented an interesting phenomenon. Instead of the open floorplan encouraging collaboration, the study found the volume of face-to-face interaction between employees decreased by approximately 70%, while electronic communication increased. Employees appeared to react to the workspace by socially withdrawing from peers and partners to interact over email and IM instead.
Isolation, on the other hand, is related to access — or lack of it. The isolated can’t get the materials or information they need, they think their achievements or development are ignored, they feel cut off from the business. That isn’t an emotional issue, it’s a technical one.
This is a manager’s top priority — having the materials and equipment you need to do your work right is fundamental to engagement.
Loneliness can contribute to isolation and isolation can contribute to loneliness, but managers can address both by talking about the issues that cause them. Gallup workplace research recommends frequent, ongoing conversations — in fact, we recommend five distinct types of conversations that drive performance, each timed for maximum impact — but with specific language framed for remote workers: “I need to know how you’re getting along. So tell me, is it too quiet at home? Do you miss having people around? Do you feel left out?”

Direct questions get direct answers, and managers should be prepared with appropriate solutions. Here’s what Gallup recommends, geared toward the individual and the issue.
Only the Lonely: How to Help Your Remote Workers
If the worker’s answers indicate loneliness, the manager’s strategy must reflect the worker’s personality. If he’s lonely because he’s shy, trying to turn him into a social butterfly is a waste of the manager’s time and the worker’s patience. A better bet is creating low-stakes opportunities for meaningful connections, but the manager should take the lead — making formal introductions to colleagues, accepting the emotional labor of pre-meeting small talk, linking him with partners for projects.
If the worker is more outgoing, his manager just needs to help him open his office door, metaphorically, to visitors. Online group chats allow teams a kind of ongoing hallway chatter. Managers can set up weekly “phone trees” for remote workers organized around a workplace topic. Managers can even send remote workers a list of local coffee shops along with a small gift card: “You need to be around people to keep your energy up. Get a cup of coffee and have a great workday.”
In any case, managers who ask lonely employees for their opinions can gain some valuable insight. Opinions are especially fruitful post-project or at the achievement of a milestone — reflection helps workers process learning opportunities — yet remote workers may feel their perspective is so narrow that their opinion isn’t needed.
When managers can meet the basics needs of engagement, even casual, friendly conversations turn into innovative discussions that help the team and organization thrive.
In fact, remote workers’ perspectives can provide rare insights into the organization. Shy, lonely workers need to hear they offer unique value — it can ease social anxiety — and outgoing, lonely workers need more contact. Either way, their insights on the work environment can bring to light connections they ought to make, as well as show managers new ways to improve processes.
Out of Sight, but Not Out of Mind
The isolated need a more tactical approach, but it requires a judicious balance. Remember, some people choose remote work because isolation boosts their productivity. IBM learned this the hard way. In 2009, IBM reported that 40% of its workforce (386,000 employees in 173 countries) worked remotely. In 2017, after 20 straight quarters of losses IBM’s leadership decided that it needed to generate more serendipitous ideas from its employees. So “Big Blue” called in its remote workers to boost collaboration and innovation.
It didn’t work. Those remote employees who loved to work remotely immediately began searching for new jobs that would continue to allow them to work from home. Those who did return to an office deliberately isolated themselves, possibly to recreate the environment that had best suited them — research has demonstrated as much in other workplaces. It’s a cautionary tale for managers: The isolated aren’t sad, they’re cut off. Managers can fix that by integrating remote workers deeper into the organization, despite their distance.
For instance, managers can bring a list of their remote workers to strategic meetings, annotated with their CliftonStrengths if available, to help the manager’s recall when projects are being planned. That keeps remote workers visible and their advancement, development, and recognition top of mind. Managers can make time with their own managers to specifically discuss the engagement of remote workers and ways to help them learn and grow.
If remote workers can’t access the materials and equipment they need, managers should work with departments that can solve the problem, such as IT or legal. Cybersecurity can be an obstacle, but tech is increasingly capable of keeping employees in the loop on secure channels. This is a manager’s top priority — having the materials and equipment you need to do your work right is fundamental to engagement.
And remote workers who simply feel left out can really benefit from being brought in, physically. And as one Gallup manager of remote workers says, there’s always a business case to be made for in-person meetings at HQ, even if the purpose is as much social as practical. Or borrow a page from university alumni chapters’ regional meetups and organize remote-worker get-togethers somewhere central to them. It’s a cost-effective way to keep relationships alive and far-flung teams engaged, as any alumni director can tell you.
Employee Engagement as an Organizing Principle
Supporting the unique needs of remote workers may seem like a lot of work for a manager. It can be. Though the best managers are masters of individualization, staying on top of the psychological welfare and work environments of remote employees takes time and concern.
It helps to use the elements of engagement as an organizing principle. The five conversations that drive performance are oriented toward engagement, and they keep managers focused where their attention most helps performance. Those conversations also give managers time and opportunity to really understand remote employees. To consider their unique contributions. To watch how they like to communicate. To discover how they respond to workplace situations. To understand loneliness when they see it or isolation for what it is.
When managers can meet the basics needs of engagement, even casual, friendly conversations turn into innovative discussions that help the team and organization thrive. That’s what leaders want from remote workers, of course, and they’re right to worry that loneliness and isolation may get in the way.
They can — but they don’t have to. Not if managers know the difference between loneliness and isolation and have the tools they need to solve for both.
Explore more resources for supporting remote workers:
- Read about “The Changing Place and Space of Work” in Gallup’s State of the American Workplace report which includes research on remote work trends and best practices.
- Learn strategies for adapting to the future of work including new demands for flexibility with Gallup’s latest book, It’s the Manager.
- Attend the free webinar “Managing Your Remote Workers” and learn more about the intentionality and deliberate communication that managing remote workers requires.
- Partner with Gallup to equip managers to have coaching conversations that improve employee performance.
Adam Hickman, Ph.D., is Content Manager at Gallup. Jennifer Robison contributed to this article.
Original Article appears here with additional tips: https://www.gallup.com/workplace/268076/manage-loneliness-isolation-remote-workers.aspx?utm_source=workplace-newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=WorkplaceNewsletter_March_03172020&utm_content=howtomanageremoteworkers-CTA-3&elqTrackId=d32e757e608e45adb6f99b65dfe34e9e&elq=c7db8c639bfa4d5bbe2551a4f67d607b&elqaid=3589&elqat=1&elqCampaignId=787
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COVID-19: The State & Future of Pandemics hosted by Singularity University
Join us for multiple days of live streamed content from Singularity University’s community of global experts on COVID-19, the current challenges and solutions, and future impact on our health, business, government, and communities.Our goal is to bring you the facts about this global health challenge and to give you practical information and tools to keep you healthy and prepared for what might come. The virtual summit will take place March 16-18, 2020 and will be completely free for anyone to join. We’ll be releasing specific sessions and topics this week.
All session will be live-streamed to our following social channels:
Linkedin
Virtual Summit Schedule Day 1 – March 16, 2020 (Pacific Time)8:45am – 9:00am Opening Remarks – Adam Hofmann
9:00am – 9:45am Everything you need to know about COVID-19, tracking epidemics, and vaccine development strategies – Dr. Divya Chander
10:00am – 10:45 am Perspectives from Responding to Other Outbreaks including SARS, Monkeypox, and Influenza – Dr. David Bray
11:00am – 12:15 pm State of the Global Response to COVID-19 – Dr. Daniel Kraft
12:30pm – 1:00pm: A practical guide to staying healthy during COVID-19 – Nell Watson
1:15pm – 1:45pm Slowing contagion – Amory B. Lovins
2:00pm – 2:45pm Curing Diseases & DNA – Raymond McCauley
3:00pm – 3:45pm Pandemics and resilient cities – Dr. Robert Muggah
4:00pm – 4:30pm Leadership in the Time of COVID-19 – Elie Losleben4:35pm – 5:05pm Bold Choices and Rapid Innovation – Julia Cheek
5:05pm – 5:20pm Wrap up – Adam Hofmann Day 2 – March 17, 2020 (Pacific Time)9:00am – 9:10am Opening Remarks – Adam Hofmann9:10 – 9:55 How crowdsourcing and mobile devices helped to monitor epidemics during the 2014 World Cup and Olympics 2016 – Onicio Leal Neto
10:00am – 10:30am Digital Identity in Times of Epidemic – Dr. Mariana Dahan
10:40am – 11:10am Food for Earth: unleash the regenerative power of food during and beyond the CoronaV-ERA – Sara Roversi
11:20am – 11:50am Emerging Digital technologies for Epidemic management: obstacles, opportunities and outcomes – Dr. Sonny Kohli
12:00pm – 12:30pm How can you use data to monitor your lifestyle (from food to exercise) to boost your body’s resilience against diseases? – Sabine Seymour
12:40pm – 1:30pm Why Authoritarianism is Bad for Public Health – Alex Gladstein
1:40pm- 2:15pm The Future of Safe Living in Self-Reliant Neighborhoods – James Ehrlich
2:20pm- 2:55pm Are New Genetic Technologies a Match for the Coronavirus? – Jamie Metzl
3:00pm – 3:30pm How AI can be leveraged for the increasing threats of future pandemics – Bradley Twyham
3:45pm – 4:30pm Polarizing the positive and negative of pandemics and putting it into action – Lisa Andrews
4:30pm – 4:45pm Wrap up – Adam Hofmann Day 3 – March 18, 2020 (Pacific Time)8:20am – 8:30am Opening Remarks – Adam Hofmann8:30am – 9:05am Crisis Mode Education: How to Make the Most of Learning in a Global Pandemic – Jos Dirkx
9:15am – 10:00am Five Ways Your Leadership Must Change To Thrive With Remote Work – Charlene Li
10:15am – 11:00am Remote & Distributed Work During Crises – Gary A. Bolles
11:15am – 11:45am Using Virtual Worlds in a Time Of Travel Disruption – Aaron Frank
12:00pm – 12:30pm Opportunities for more automation and remote delivery of goods and services – Peter Xing
1:00pm – 1:45pm Updates from the field: How governments and organizations are responding – Dr. Eric Rasmussen
2:00pm – 2:45pm Strengthening your company’s resilience against existential threats – Chipp Norcross & Paul D. Roberts
3:00pm – 3:45pm Fake news and media’s role in global emergencies – James Del
4:00pm – 4:45pm How you can take action during times of uncertainty – Christina Gerakiteys
4:55pm – 5:40pm Complexity: How leaders can navigate unpredictable situations – Catherine Brown & Chipp Norcross
5:40pm – 6:10pm Closing Thoughts – Dr. Tiffany Vora
About Singularity University -
Letter from the CEO of Korn Ferry: Gary Burnison
Hello,
No one thinks much about this leadership quality—until the you-know-what hits the fan.
It’s crisis management.
Thankfully, crises are rare occurrences—the black swans of leadership.
We’ve done nearly 70 million assessments of executives, so we know what makes a great leader—the best-in-class who are among the top 20 percent. Our research shows that three of the four qualities of a great CEO are largely intuitive: (1) sets vision and strategy; (2) drives growth; and (3) displays financial acumen. The fourth, which no one mentions, is managing crises. It’s underappreciated, overlooked, and often not even one of the top requirements—until a crisis hits.
This is one of those times.
A month ago, when the stock market was making all-time highs, only the rare few could have predicted universities would close, companies would tell employees to work from home en masse, and the NBA season would abruptly be suspended, followed by museums, cathedrals, and Broadway darkening.
While it’s natural in uncertain times for people to turn to the leader for definitive answers, sometimes the authentic answer is “I don’t know right now”—quickly followed by, “And here’s what we are going to do.” In a crisis such as today, leaders need a Plan B—and a Plan C and Plan D as well.
Leaders always deal with ambiguity—it’s timeless and comes with the job. During crises, ambiguity becomes exponential. As fear becomes contagious across organizations, leaders must manage their own responses to ambiguity.
How do they do that? By following our six steps of leadership:
Anticipate – predicting what lies ahead
Navigate – course correcting in real time
Communicate – continually
Listen – to what you don’t want to hear
Learn – learning from experience to apply in the future
Lead – improve yourself to elevate others Let me provide some color commentary on what leaders can do to put crisis management in action.
Start at the Bottom of Maslow’s Hierarchy:
In a crisis, you first need to meet people where they are. Their most basic needs must be met first and they need to feel safe. Naturally, no one is interested in talking about the company’s strategic plan when they are out buying hand sanitizer and toilet paper. Once their essential needs are addressed, then the focus can shift to alignment, common purpose, elevating others and even opportunities for growth.
Earthquakes and Aftershocks:
In Los Angeles, where our firm is based, we’re accustomed to earthquakes—knowing that, when one occurs, the aftershocks are coming. In the same way, in a crisis, you have to anticipate the aftershocks—the unintended consequences of the initial shock to the system. Too often, people don’t consider all the possibilities. Anticipation becomes a Monte Carlo simulation in action. For example, what if travel bans expand, commerce slows, or a liquidity crisis develops, etc.? What is the impact on all aspects of my business? What are the implications for all stakeholders—employees, customers, and investors? Strategy is making a bet, and the skill of anticipating improves one’s odds.
Urgent vs. Important:
Day to day, leaders face a multitude of issues—both urgent and important. In the normal course of business, I’ve found that many leaders have difficulty distinguishing between the two. When a crisis hits, though, everything blurs as events and their implications constantly change. What’s important often becomes urgent, and the urgent becomes critical. Leaders must delegate the urgent by empowering others to lead around a common purpose.
Leave No One Behind:
In a crisis, leaders must connect with, motivate, and inspire others—and show genuine compassion. In the military, for example, leaders put the safety and well-being of others before themselves. I’ve met a number of military leaders who led during periods of conflict, and many have voluntarily told me, “I’ve never lost a soldier.” This reveals a deep mindset of humility and accountability, rather than hubris and bravado.
Know What to Do When You Don’t Know What to Do:
There’s nothing like a crisis or a complex problem to accelerate learning. This is learning agility to the “Nth” degree—applying past lessons to new and unfamiliar situations. It really is knowing what to do when you don’t know what to do. In a crisis, this has never been more profound. Amid uncertainty, leaders need to be hyper-focused on past experiences and synthesize and apply them to real-time, fluid conditions. Clarity comes from finding a close comparison. Is it like the Great Recession? The 1987 stock market crash? The outbreaks of SARS or MERS? By running the “unknown” of the current crisis against the “known” of previous ones, leaders gain perspective, identify patterns, connect the dots, and determine appropriate and timely responses. The eventual recovery may be a V or a U or some other alphabet letter, but there will be a new normal—thanks, ultimately, to the scientists, innovators, and dreamers. The natural inclination in a crisis may be to go into command-and-control. That’s not leadership! It’s creating a “bottom-up” culture of world-class observers to accurately perceive today in order to predict tomorrow.
Regards,Gary Burnison
Korn Ferry CEO -
The Opposite of Fear
In uncertain times, the leader is the message, says Korn Ferry CEO Gary Burnison.
Published: Mar 12, 2020
When we face fear—whether personally or of the more existential variety— the natural inclination for any of us is to be paralyzed. But taking no action is an action – often, an ill-advised action.
If knowledge is power, then people need to be empowered by information.
As a CEO, I’ve always compared the leader’s role to that of a shepherd: occasionally in front, sometimes beside, and often behind. These days, however, the leader must be in front.
Sharing information is critical, but far less than half the battle. Of course, people need to know about strategy, speed, direction, and results. But it can’t stop there.
Language is an art to express ideas—but the messenger is the message. “Actions speak louder than words” is true for everyone—and twice as true for leaders. It’s not just what you say, but how you say it. It’s not just what you say, but how you say it.
Verbally and non-verbally, the way in which communication occurs—humbly, passionately, confidently—has more impact than merely the words chosen.
Communication is where leadership lives and breathes. It informs, persuades, guides, assures, and inspires. Here’s how:Listen for the truth.
If leaders want to hear the truth, they must welcome it. That won’t happen, though, unless people feel it’s safe to say what they really think without fear of retribution and not just what they think leadership wants to hear. Leaders need to ensure a culture of world-class observers, where information doesn’t just cascade down—it bubbles up. Observation needs to be a “team sport” as people throughout the organization are empowered to speak up and share their views about what they see. Perspectives will differ, but that only enriches the discussion. And, when perspectives are shared, people learn.The information highway.
Communication is far more than a transmission of information. Communication needs to be the “information highway,” flowing freely in both directions and in every circumstance. Important in good times—crucial in challenging ones.More assurance, less authority.
Communication is connecting and engaging with others. Messages must be delivered frequently and consistently, with candor and honesty. That means speaking with more assurance than authority—and being concerned with tone as well as content. Passionate, confident words motivate. Although information is crucial, if the message lacks authenticity, the team’s follow-through may be lackluster—or even lacking.People would rather know the truth.
In bull markets, people look to the leader for validation. In bear markets, they look to the leader for assurance. When faced with a challenge, people would rather know the truth than dwell in the worst-case scenarios residing in their imaginations. Leaders who don’t communicate will become the subject of others’ communication—and not in a flattering way.Beware the vacuum.
If not addressed, a lack of information can lead to hazardous uncertainty. People will spend their time speculating, because there’s an information vacuum that needs to be filled. Uncertainty breeds conjecture, escalating fear and causing chaos. No matter how serious the news, people prefer certainty. To predict tomorrow, people have to accurately perceive the reality of today. Then you can plot a course for tomorrow.No shortcuts allowed.
Communication takes time—and lots of it. The temptation, therefore, is to take shortcuts such as assuming that people already know certain information or else glossing over a message from an employee or passing it along to someone else. Take time to acknowledge messages—and the messengers. Show others that they matter.Remember, for a leader in uncertain times—and, in particular, these times—it’s not simply about staying on message. The leader is the message.
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