48 min

Disrupted! A Talent Development Perspective What's Your Story: How Leaders Tell Stories to Influence and Connect with Audiences

    • Management

Disruption happens every day across the corporate world. As employees, we experience reorgs, layoffs and acquisitions, and as disrupters ourselves we move cross country, chase ideas and challenge norms. But amidst all the disruption we all experience, some of us seem to thrive in times of turmoil.
These are the communicators who have mastered the two secret arts hidden within corporate disruption: learning how to establish a compelling brand and build an intriguing career narrative. They are skills that take time to perfect, but they’re the differentiator factors between those who are cast adrift from disruption and those who prosper from it.
We believe in this strongly...and it’s why we wrote our latest book: Disruption: How to Reset Your Brand & Your Career.
But don’t just take our word for it. On this episode, Hurst Williamson is joined by 3 Talent Development specialists to share their perspectives on what makes an employee a high-potential candidate and what traits they look for in tomorrow’s leaders.
More About the Guests
Alexandra Daily-Diamond is the Northwest Regional Talent Development Manager at Gensler, a design and architecture firm. In her role she identifies people-focused solutions to HR challenges. She focuses on organizational and employee development and engagement, talent management, coaching, and HR strategies that promote wellbeing.
Hilda Currey is the Enterprise Learning Management Systems Administrator for Methodist Health System, a non-profit healthcare organization located in Dallas, Texas. Hilda has over 25 years of experience in corporate & healthcare learning and talent development, and has held a series of progressive positions in the training and development field.
Megan Breiseth is the Senior Director of Learning and Development at InsideTrack. Megan has worked  in employee development since 2006. At InsideTrack, she coached online adult learners and eventually moved into Learning and Development leadership. During her career, Megan has built and managed learning programs that unlock the potential in coaches, managers, and support staff.
Show Notes
Disruption is happening across the board in companies and for employees. Employees no longer have a mapped-out career path. Seek opportunities to expand your skills and repackage your potential. What do companies think about talent development?  What percentage of the workforce has needed to do some kind of rest in 2020? 100% of the team had a reset in priorities, personal goals, and how they do the work. All training was converted to virtual learning, 10% of corporate employees shifted to work from home. 100% of people's jobs changed and circumstances changed. Staff neededg to focus on what is most essential for students and institutions to meet their basic needs. Prioritize safety, wellness, and how to set up systems to support employees so they could show up.
Pandemic aside - What other things would be examples of organization disruptions? Integrating separate systems into one Transition from for profit to nonprofit business  Change roles to be more scalable and sustainable More efficiency changes in the workplace Pandemic heightened changes that would have happened otherwise but pandemic made it more urgent. Economy is a general factor in disruption. - Global company and global economic impact. Companies are shifting to have a clear focus to elevate the human experience.
What is the organization's responsibility in an employee’s development and what is the employee's responsibility in that? Company being intentional to listen and empower. Employees seek out feedback on what the individual could do better. Ask the questions that are going to get employees thinking deeply. Empower employees to own their career and see themselves. Have a specific program for leaders. Offer employees training or tuition reimbursement. Encourage them to play a visible role in committees. Offer the opportunity to get input from

Disruption happens every day across the corporate world. As employees, we experience reorgs, layoffs and acquisitions, and as disrupters ourselves we move cross country, chase ideas and challenge norms. But amidst all the disruption we all experience, some of us seem to thrive in times of turmoil.
These are the communicators who have mastered the two secret arts hidden within corporate disruption: learning how to establish a compelling brand and build an intriguing career narrative. They are skills that take time to perfect, but they’re the differentiator factors between those who are cast adrift from disruption and those who prosper from it.
We believe in this strongly...and it’s why we wrote our latest book: Disruption: How to Reset Your Brand & Your Career.
But don’t just take our word for it. On this episode, Hurst Williamson is joined by 3 Talent Development specialists to share their perspectives on what makes an employee a high-potential candidate and what traits they look for in tomorrow’s leaders.
More About the Guests
Alexandra Daily-Diamond is the Northwest Regional Talent Development Manager at Gensler, a design and architecture firm. In her role she identifies people-focused solutions to HR challenges. She focuses on organizational and employee development and engagement, talent management, coaching, and HR strategies that promote wellbeing.
Hilda Currey is the Enterprise Learning Management Systems Administrator for Methodist Health System, a non-profit healthcare organization located in Dallas, Texas. Hilda has over 25 years of experience in corporate & healthcare learning and talent development, and has held a series of progressive positions in the training and development field.
Megan Breiseth is the Senior Director of Learning and Development at InsideTrack. Megan has worked  in employee development since 2006. At InsideTrack, she coached online adult learners and eventually moved into Learning and Development leadership. During her career, Megan has built and managed learning programs that unlock the potential in coaches, managers, and support staff.
Show Notes
Disruption is happening across the board in companies and for employees. Employees no longer have a mapped-out career path. Seek opportunities to expand your skills and repackage your potential. What do companies think about talent development?  What percentage of the workforce has needed to do some kind of rest in 2020? 100% of the team had a reset in priorities, personal goals, and how they do the work. All training was converted to virtual learning, 10% of corporate employees shifted to work from home. 100% of people's jobs changed and circumstances changed. Staff neededg to focus on what is most essential for students and institutions to meet their basic needs. Prioritize safety, wellness, and how to set up systems to support employees so they could show up.
Pandemic aside - What other things would be examples of organization disruptions? Integrating separate systems into one Transition from for profit to nonprofit business  Change roles to be more scalable and sustainable More efficiency changes in the workplace Pandemic heightened changes that would have happened otherwise but pandemic made it more urgent. Economy is a general factor in disruption. - Global company and global economic impact. Companies are shifting to have a clear focus to elevate the human experience.
What is the organization's responsibility in an employee’s development and what is the employee's responsibility in that? Company being intentional to listen and empower. Employees seek out feedback on what the individual could do better. Ask the questions that are going to get employees thinking deeply. Empower employees to own their career and see themselves. Have a specific program for leaders. Offer employees training or tuition reimbursement. Encourage them to play a visible role in committees. Offer the opportunity to get input from

48 min