Tuesday, March 9, 2010

MS Awareness Week is March 8-14, 2010

National Multiple Sclerosis Society wants you to move it! MS Awareness Week is March 8-14 and there are so many ways to move it toward a world free of MS!

http://tinyurl.com/y9l5tq8

Thursday, March 4, 2010

Using CSR To Attract (and keep!) Millenial Workers

This is re-printed from Helping Hand Rewards
http://tinyurl.com/yaptqyy

by Hinda Incentives

The unconventional is slowly becoming conventional.

According to an article by The Economic Times, more young entreprenuers are opting for less conventional career paths, looking to pursue social missions using for-profit business models. Many people agree that younger entreprenuers are a model for necessary change in how we do business. Not only making money, but helping others and creating better sustainability in the process (also known as social enterprises). These business ideals are becoming more and more mainstream with Generation Y and Millenial workers. It’s the ideal that business is no longer just about making money but making the world a better place in the process.

There are several other like-minded workers that have a passion for sustainability but without the ability to pursue their own private venture. What makes this sort of talent choose which organization they want to work for? For these folks, an organizations involvement in social responsibility will have a huge impact on how they ultimately choose (and more importantly remain with) an employer. How a company gives back, whether it be through volunteer time, money, or using fair trade products as corporate gifts, influences a person’s view and/or loyalty toward that organization.

How are you using social responsibility to maintain employee engagement and loyalty?

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

What You Put Your Attention On...Grows Stronger in your Life: Nathan Myhrvold, inventor

Nathan Myhrvold, inventor

In Nathan Myhrvold's world, mosquito repellent is so old-fashioned.

The inventor, former Microsoft Corp. executive and CEO of Intellectual Ventures is developing a prototype device that would create walls of lasers that are impenetrable by malaria-causing mosquitoes.

Myhrvold demonstrated the technology at the TED Conference and said lasefortresses could surround health clinics in the developing world.

http://www.cnn.com/2010/OPINION/02/16/ted.people/

TED2010: Ten fascinating people you've never heard of:

Temple Grandin, autistic professor

Temple Grandin sees her autism as a gift, not a disability. The professor at Colorado State University, who has become a prominent animal rights activist, spoke at TED about how people's brains work in different ways -- and how that's something that should be appreciated, not stigmatized. Grandin, for instance, thinks in pictures, "like Google for images," she said.

She also grabs hold of details, a brain function she feels could help politicians.

"I get satisfaction out of seeing stuff that makes real change in the real world," she said. "We need a lot more of that and a lot less abstract stuff." One of her biggest real-world accomplishments, she said, was that a mother recently told her that her autistic child had gone to college because of Grandin's inspiration.

Grandin's life also is the subject of an HBO film.

TED2010: Ten fascinating people you've never heard of: Philip Howard

A partner in the New York-based law firm Covington & Burling, Philip Howard is a crusader against the excesses of his own profession. Howard, author of "Life Without Lawyers: Liberating Americans from Too Much Law," gave a blistering talk at TED about how "the land of the free has become a legal minefield."

He cited the Florida school district that banned running at recess as an example of how "people no longer feel free to act on their best judgment" for fear of getting sued. "People are acting like idiots," he said. "For law to be a platform for freedom, people have to trust it."

Howard pushes for policy changes in health care, education and other fields through an organization he founded, Common Good, which describes itself as "a non-profit, non-partisan legal reform coalition dedicated to restoring common sense to America."

TED2010: Ten fascinating people you've never heard of. 1. Esther Duflo, poverty economist

A 37-year-old MacArthur "genius" award winner, and professor at MIT, Esther Duflo sidesteps the grand armchair debate about whether charitable aid to poor countries does more harm than good. The French economist has been a champion of using random trials, like those used for prescription drugs, to test whether some aid policies work in the real world.

Such tests have shown, for example, that giving a kilo of lentils to a family in India to get them to immunize a child against disease sharply increases the rate of immunizations. The same approach can be used to study the merits of giving out free bed nets to fight malaria and to examine ways to get children in developing countries to go to school.

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Wall St. Weighs a Challenge to a Proposed Tax

"President Obama urged the financial lobby to stand down when he introduced the tax proposal last week: “Instead of sending a phalanx of lobbyists to fight this proposal or employing an army of lawyers and accountants to help evade the fee, I suggest you might want to consider simply meeting your responsibilities.”

What a concept. Meeting your responsibilities.

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Greater NY Area, NY/NJ, United States
I am an executive recruiter with 10 years experience in corporate recruiting and human services.