11 episodes

"What's Next at 3M” shares conversations from a company focused on science and innovation and its response to some of today's biggest challenges.

What’s Next at 3M 3M

    • Science

"What's Next at 3M” shares conversations from a company focused on science and innovation and its response to some of today's biggest challenges.

    Meet Ron Stafne, a counterpoint to the Great Resignation

    Meet Ron Stafne, a counterpoint to the Great Resignation

    There’s a flip side to the Great Resignation, and it might be embodied in one Ron Stafne.
    Fresh out of high school in 1965, Ron went looking for a job and found 3M. Fifty-seven years later, he’s still here, working as a lean value stream engineer at our ceramic fibers manufacturing plant in Menomonie, Wisconsin.
    What's kept him engaged for so long?
    “I just say ask questions. There's no question that is not meaningful, and that's the only way to continue to broaden your knowledge,” Ron told us. “Just continue to ask for a sharing of information. I still learn stuff. Each day it seems, new things come up. We have such a unique business and product that it's just fun.”
    So, in a time when everybody is talking about leaving, we talked with Ron about why he stays, what motivates him to continue working into his later years, and the sign he’s looking for to determine when it’s the right time to retire.

    • 13 min
    Purpose, culture and the pandemic

    Purpose, culture and the pandemic

    As employees adapt to new ways of working, companies are reacting to the changes, and trying to get ahead of trends like the Great Resignation. But with more opportunities than employees in some industries, it’s been an easier decision for millions of workers over the last two years to leave their jobs rather than stick it out.   
    So, how do employers attract and keep talent for the long haul?
    Guest: Zoe Dickson, executive vice president and chief Human Resources officer, 3M
    Season 2, Episode 5

    • 17 min
    Have you seen my 5G antenna?

    Have you seen my 5G antenna?

    As the 5G rollout continues around the world, one thing is certain – it’s going to take a lot of antennas for the upgraded signal to reach everyone. And that means a lot of visual disruption – or maybe not, if 3M's Taesung Kim has anything to say about it.
    He's working on a few new product introductions tied to the broader 5G rollout, and one of them – a transparent antenna – sounds like it's straight science fiction.
    Guest: Taesung Kim, segment marketer, Electronics Materials Solutions Division
    Season 2, Episode 4

    • 15 min
    Getting back to something like normal

    Getting back to something like normal

    As we go back to doing things that we did before the pandemic – maybe even going into the office a couple times a week – Jonathan Hefner of 3M’s Employee Assistance Program says our old ways aren’t going to feel the same immediately. “We're all going to have to get used to things. Be patient with each other. Be kind and forgiving with each other and slowly, as we spend more and more time together, then we'll figure out that little dance that we need to do to get re-engaged with each other,” he said.
    Guest: Jonathan Hefner, 3M EAP manager
    Season 2, Episode 3

    • 10 min
    It's okay to not be okay

    It's okay to not be okay

    Anxiety & depression have risen across all age groups during the pandemic. How can we get help, be of help and make mental health a priority? “Giving ourselves permission to not be okay is important. Just to acknowledge and let our pride suffer a little bit. We're probably not going to perform exactly as we have in in the past. … we're all under pressure. We're just going to be patient and kind with each other.”
    Guest: Jonathan Hefner, manager, 3M Employee Assistance Program
    Season 2, episode 2

    • 8 min
    Disrupting how medicine is made

    Disrupting how medicine is made

    The ramp-up in vaccine manufacturing during the pandemic shows us how medicines could be made in the future – faster than before, thanks in part to disruptive technology. That's why we’re talking with two 3Mers who had front row seats to the process during the pandemic, due to the filtration products they make that help manufacturers figure out ways to produce more vaccine, more quickly. 
    “I think as a human being, there’s a certain amount of humility and joy in knowing that the work that you do is critical to solving fairly serious problems of humankind at the moment."
    Guests: Robert Befidi, president, and Jonathan Hester, scientist, both of 3M's Separation and Purification Sciences Division. 
    Season 2, Episode 1

    • 15 min

Top Podcasts In Science

Utelias mieli
Helsingin yliopisto
Sean Carroll's Mindscape: Science, Society, Philosophy, Culture, Arts, and Ideas
Sean Carroll | Wondery
Making Sense with Sam Harris
Sam Harris
Språket
Sveriges Radio
P3 Dystopia
Sveriges Radio
Sotataidon ytimessä
Maanpuolustuskorkeakoulu