Post by account_disabled on Jan 2, 2024 22:52:00 GMT -7
Natives find collaboration. I spend a lot of time with high school students trying to encourage them to get into tech because I'm just concerned about the lack of interest in tech in the United States, Pfister said. When I look at those high school students, I see everything is done in a collaborative, social way. They all work together in groups. Get a group of kids together for really cool stuff happen. So shocking. I dare you to go to a local high school and see how the kids operate. You'll also see how their approach accomplishes the global task. It used to be that you wouldn't share information with your classmates at school. I think the adjective at the time was cheating. Jim Pfister Inside the company, we all talk about teamwork, but really, when we come in, we all get our own individual projects and then we roll them up into team tasks and make them successful. But the employees coming in now are naturally good at sharing information and collaborating. They can't imagine it any other way. Their approach is incomprehensible to those of us with personal training.
About the Author Michael Hopkins is editor-in-chief of MIT Sloan Management Review. Tags: Collaborative Information Sharing Social Networks Technology Innovation Reposted: More like this Rethinking the Governance of Digital Innovation What the FTC Non-Compete Ban Means for Workers and Businesses What Questions Managers Should Ask About AI Models and Datasets A must-read book on artificial Job Function Email List intelligence in Provincial Polytechnic Institute. You must be logged in to post a comment. First time here? Sign up for a free account: comment on articles and access more articles. Comments: Yongmin is very pursuing! Maybe you're perfect for kids in the U.S., but it's hard to find digital natives in Korea.
South Korea has advanced telecommunications infrastructure and Koreans are very Internet users. High school students rarely collaborate on anything, and even college students are less willing to collaborate on their school projects. Competition is still better than cooperation. By the way, who do you think is the exception, the United States or South Korea? Spring Magazine Are you pushing in a world of pull? A new book argues that companies need to adapt to fundamental changes.
About the Author Michael Hopkins is editor-in-chief of MIT Sloan Management Review. Tags: Collaborative Information Sharing Social Networks Technology Innovation Reposted: More like this Rethinking the Governance of Digital Innovation What the FTC Non-Compete Ban Means for Workers and Businesses What Questions Managers Should Ask About AI Models and Datasets A must-read book on artificial Job Function Email List intelligence in Provincial Polytechnic Institute. You must be logged in to post a comment. First time here? Sign up for a free account: comment on articles and access more articles. Comments: Yongmin is very pursuing! Maybe you're perfect for kids in the U.S., but it's hard to find digital natives in Korea.
South Korea has advanced telecommunications infrastructure and Koreans are very Internet users. High school students rarely collaborate on anything, and even college students are less willing to collaborate on their school projects. Competition is still better than cooperation. By the way, who do you think is the exception, the United States or South Korea? Spring Magazine Are you pushing in a world of pull? A new book argues that companies need to adapt to fundamental changes.