<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<rss version="2.0" xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom" xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/" xmlns:googleplay="http://www.google.com/schemas/play-podcasts/1.0" xmlns:itunes="http://www.itunes.com/dtds/podcast-1.0.dtd" xmlns:media="http://search.yahoo.com/mrss/" xmlns:podcast="https://podcastindex.org/namespace/1.0">
  <channel>
    <atom:link href="https://feeds.simplecast.com/t5PeOiog" rel="self" title="MP3 Audio" type="application/atom+xml"/>
    <atom:link href="https://simplecast.superfeedr.com" rel="hub" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"/>
    <generator>https://simplecast.com</generator>
    <title>Rotman Executive Summary</title>
    <description>In a world overloaded with opinions, hot takes and half-truths, the Rotman Executive Summary offers something rare: trusted insight. The Rotman Executive Summary cuts through the clutter to bring you research-backed insights from the University of Toronto’s Rotman School of Management — Canada’s leading business school.

Each episode features Rotman faculty unpacking timely research and big ideas on the issues organizational leaders care about most: building compassionate and effective workplaces, navigating AI-driven changes, strategizing for chaos and more. These are ideas worth knowing — delivered in brief, engaging conversations you can listen to anytime, anywhere.

Whether you’re a curious leader, a lifelong learner or someone who simply wants to understand what’s really driving change in business and society, this podcast delivers credible, research-backed intelligence in under 20 minutes.</description>
    <language>en</language>
    <pubDate>Wed, 11 Mar 2026 12:54:36 +0000</pubDate>
    <lastBuildDate>Wed, 11 Mar 2026 12:54:46 +0000</lastBuildDate>
    <image>
      <link>https://rotman-executive-summary.simplecast.com</link>
      <title>Rotman Executive Summary</title>
      <url>https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/7177fa79-dd58-49b7-bdc8-6371171ca32b/ad570e8d-7501-40f7-b85f-ce6b34434837/3000x3000/executivesummary-logo.jpg?aid=rss_feed</url>
    </image>
    <link>https://rotman-executive-summary.simplecast.com</link>
    <itunes:type>episodic</itunes:type>
    <itunes:summary>In a world overloaded with opinions, hot takes and half-truths, the Rotman Executive Summary offers something rare: trusted insight. The Rotman Executive Summary cuts through the clutter to bring you research-backed insights from the University of Toronto’s Rotman School of Management — Canada’s leading business school.

Each episode features Rotman faculty unpacking timely research and big ideas on the issues organizational leaders care about most: building compassionate and effective workplaces, navigating AI-driven changes, strategizing for chaos and more. These are ideas worth knowing — delivered in brief, engaging conversations you can listen to anytime, anywhere.

Whether you’re a curious leader, a lifelong learner or someone who simply wants to understand what’s really driving change in business and society, this podcast delivers credible, research-backed intelligence in under 20 minutes.</itunes:summary>
    <itunes:author>Rotman School of Management</itunes:author>
    <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
    <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/7177fa79-dd58-49b7-bdc8-6371171ca32b/ad570e8d-7501-40f7-b85f-ce6b34434837/3000x3000/executivesummary-logo.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
    <itunes:new-feed-url>https://feeds.simplecast.com/t5PeOiog</itunes:new-feed-url>
    <itunes:keywords>business, business school, management, research, research management, rotman school of management, the future of work, university of toronto, uoft</itunes:keywords>
    <itunes:owner>
      <itunes:name>Rotman School of Management</itunes:name>
      <itunes:email>insightshub@rotman.utoronto.ca</itunes:email>
    </itunes:owner>
    <itunes:category text="Business">
      <itunes:category text="Careers"/>
    </itunes:category>
    <itunes:category text="Business">
      <itunes:category text="Management"/>
    </itunes:category>
    <itunes:category text="Business">
      <itunes:category text="Entrepreneurship"/>
    </itunes:category>
    <item>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">9f723ea5-c1c3-472b-aeb9-539f18cb75a0</guid>
      <title>When markets move as one: The hidden forces driving collective investing behaviour</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Why do markets dip after the clocks change? Why do investors become more risk averse in the fall? And what does this mean for your portfolio? We like to think we’re rational investors. We’re not. On the latest episode, professor Lisa Kramer explores how hidden behavioural biases influence our portfolios — and even shift global markets.   </p>
<p><strong>Show notes</strong></p>
<p>Show notes</p>
<p>[0:00] Humans tend to overestimate our abilities. We tend to think of ourselves as better than average. </p>
<p>[0:33] Meet Lisa Kramer, a professor of finance at the University of Toronto, and an expert in the psychology of financial decision-making.</p>
<p>[1:20] While thinking we’re better than average benefits us in certain situations — think dating and job hunting — it can be detrimental to our finances. </p>
<p>[2:13] This over-confidence is clearest when people try to outperform the stock market. </p>
<p>[2:56] But beyond internal biases, there are also external factors that influence our financial decisions. </p>
<p>[3:19] Lisa and her colleagues studied how the clock changes influenced the market as a whole and found that the day after the clocks changed, stock markets tumbled. But why? </p>
<p>[5:30] Seasonal changes — like the shift to winter — also make us more risk averse, en masse. </p>
<p>[7:16] Lisa’s research shows this isn’t just in the stock market; investors sought out safer products, like mutual funds and treasury bonds, in the winter. </p>
<p>[8:44] What does this mean for companies? </p>
<p>[9:28] Will AI save us (hint…not so much). </p>
<p>[10:29] And can the average investor do anything to mitigate these biases (hint…not so much). </p>
<p>[12:30] “The best we can do is educate people that these are common biases, and get people to think about decisions that they've made in their own lives and self-evaluate the extent to which maybe they've been subject to these biases.”</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 11 Mar 2026 12:54:36 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>insightshub@rotman.utoronto.ca (Megan Haynes, Lisa Kramer)</author>
      <link>https://rotman-executive-summary.simplecast.com/episodes/hidden-investing-behaviour-oZIciIh8</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Why do markets dip after the clocks change? Why do investors become more risk averse in the fall? And what does this mean for your portfolio? We like to think we’re rational investors. We’re not. On the latest episode, professor Lisa Kramer explores how hidden behavioural biases influence our portfolios — and even shift global markets.   </p>
<p><strong>Show notes</strong></p>
<p>Show notes</p>
<p>[0:00] Humans tend to overestimate our abilities. We tend to think of ourselves as better than average. </p>
<p>[0:33] Meet Lisa Kramer, a professor of finance at the University of Toronto, and an expert in the psychology of financial decision-making.</p>
<p>[1:20] While thinking we’re better than average benefits us in certain situations — think dating and job hunting — it can be detrimental to our finances. </p>
<p>[2:13] This over-confidence is clearest when people try to outperform the stock market. </p>
<p>[2:56] But beyond internal biases, there are also external factors that influence our financial decisions. </p>
<p>[3:19] Lisa and her colleagues studied how the clock changes influenced the market as a whole and found that the day after the clocks changed, stock markets tumbled. But why? </p>
<p>[5:30] Seasonal changes — like the shift to winter — also make us more risk averse, en masse. </p>
<p>[7:16] Lisa’s research shows this isn’t just in the stock market; investors sought out safer products, like mutual funds and treasury bonds, in the winter. </p>
<p>[8:44] What does this mean for companies? </p>
<p>[9:28] Will AI save us (hint…not so much). </p>
<p>[10:29] And can the average investor do anything to mitigate these biases (hint…not so much). </p>
<p>[12:30] “The best we can do is educate people that these are common biases, and get people to think about decisions that they've made in their own lives and self-evaluate the extent to which maybe they've been subject to these biases.”</p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <enclosure length="20694232" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://cdn.simplecast.com/media/audio/transcoded/3c087647-869e-48c6-87ba-12ea6dfe7358/78b75df0-de19-43b9-b1da-218fdb076f70/episodes/audio/group/bf70e423-877a-4791-a5c5-07278ecb28ce/group-item/dcc903b6-6a68-4129-8720-1b54f74658c5/128_default_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&amp;feed=t5PeOiog"/>
      <itunes:title>When markets move as one: The hidden forces driving collective investing behaviour</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Megan Haynes, Lisa Kramer</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/7177fa79-dd58-49b7-bdc8-6371171ca32b/f2b9965d-1944-484e-a682-47493d3ba9d6/3000x3000/episodeartwork_execsummary_investor_behaviour_markets.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:13:34</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Why do markets dip after the clocks change? Why do investors become more risk averse in the fall? And what does this mean for your portfolio? We like to think we’re rational investors. We’re not. On the latest episode, professor Lisa Kramer explores how hidden behavioural biases influence our portfolios — and even shift global markets.   </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Why do markets dip after the clocks change? Why do investors become more risk averse in the fall? And what does this mean for your portfolio? We like to think we’re rational investors. We’re not. On the latest episode, professor Lisa Kramer explores how hidden behavioural biases influence our portfolios — and even shift global markets.   </itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>rotman executive programs, investor behaviour, university of toronto, investing, research, winter blues, university of toronto scarborough, psychology, rotman school of management, daylight savings time, biases, rotman, uoft</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>7</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>4</itunes:season>
    </item>
    <item>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">8640bf79-f5ba-4e8d-a29d-75560dcefba1</guid>
      <title>From #MeToo to breakthrough: How social movements drive innovation</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>#MeToo forced Hollywood to reckon with its past — but did it actually change the future of filmmaking? </p><p>Looking at years of behind-the-scenes and on-screen data, associate professor Hong Luo explores how the wide-spread social movement did — and did not — change movie-making; how stigma, coordination and market-wide shocks influence organizational behaviour; and why large-scale movements can create opportunities for change that just weren’t profitable or possible before.</p><p><strong>Show Notes</strong></p><p><strong>Show notes</strong></p><p>[0:22]<strong> </strong>It’s been nearly a decade since the New York Times broke the news of Harvey Weinstein’s abuse of women in Hollywood, sparking the #MeToo movement, which called out multiple men in the film and TV industry. </p><p>[1:28] Meet Hong Luo, an associate professor of strategic management at the Rotman School of Management, who studies how industry-wide innovation happens. So, in the wake of #MeToo, she turned her attention to Hollywood. </p><p>[2:49] Women are underrepresented behind the camera in Hollywood – and while many factors contribute, widespread sexual abuse is among one of the reasons. </p><p>[3:36] To determine whether #MeToo had the power to change the film industry, she looked at how film teams associated with Harvey Weinstein changed compared to those not associated with him. </p><p>[4:37] Producers with a history of working with Weinstein were more likely to hire female talent behind the camera after the #MeToo movement than those without. </p><p>[5:55] Lots of reasons probably drove the change, but Hong hypothesizes that the publicity and associated guilt helped the change along. </p><p>[6:54] One key finding; projects that had at least one woman on the creative team were more likely than those without to make it to theatre. </p><p>[8:06] After the behind-the-camera shift, Hong wanted to know if more female-fronted stories were told.</p><p>[8:31] If the team behind the scenes was all male, then yes – they were more likely to produce a movie with a female lead. But if the team had a woman, then no – they were more likely to work on male-fronted stories. </p><p>[9:11] This is likely a result of how people felt the need to respond in the face of widespread social pressure. </p><p>[9:39] All-male teams tended to develop female characters that conformed to traditional gender stereotypes.</p><p>[10:53] Ok, so #MeToo changed Hollywood; what does that mean for other industries? Well, to really understand how social movements can spur innovation, let’s look also at the medical device industry. </p><p>[12:18] Social movements let industries capitalize on a need for change that would have otherwise been too expensive or unprofitable before. </p><p>[14:16] But when the movement wanes, momentum of the change also falters. </p><p>[14:38] But for advocates, the long game is probably worth it: “The literature shows that when you actually have more female talent in a particular field, especially if those talent could use that opportunity to gain experience and gain track record…then we may actually sustain more longer run change.”</p><p> </p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 10 Feb 2026 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>insightshub@rotman.utoronto.ca (Megan Haynes, Hong Luo)</author>
      <link>https://rotman-executive-summary.simplecast.com/episodes/social-movements-drive-innovation-K1FRa6M7</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>#MeToo forced Hollywood to reckon with its past — but did it actually change the future of filmmaking? </p><p>Looking at years of behind-the-scenes and on-screen data, associate professor Hong Luo explores how the wide-spread social movement did — and did not — change movie-making; how stigma, coordination and market-wide shocks influence organizational behaviour; and why large-scale movements can create opportunities for change that just weren’t profitable or possible before.</p><p><strong>Show Notes</strong></p><p><strong>Show notes</strong></p><p>[0:22]<strong> </strong>It’s been nearly a decade since the New York Times broke the news of Harvey Weinstein’s abuse of women in Hollywood, sparking the #MeToo movement, which called out multiple men in the film and TV industry. </p><p>[1:28] Meet Hong Luo, an associate professor of strategic management at the Rotman School of Management, who studies how industry-wide innovation happens. So, in the wake of #MeToo, she turned her attention to Hollywood. </p><p>[2:49] Women are underrepresented behind the camera in Hollywood – and while many factors contribute, widespread sexual abuse is among one of the reasons. </p><p>[3:36] To determine whether #MeToo had the power to change the film industry, she looked at how film teams associated with Harvey Weinstein changed compared to those not associated with him. </p><p>[4:37] Producers with a history of working with Weinstein were more likely to hire female talent behind the camera after the #MeToo movement than those without. </p><p>[5:55] Lots of reasons probably drove the change, but Hong hypothesizes that the publicity and associated guilt helped the change along. </p><p>[6:54] One key finding; projects that had at least one woman on the creative team were more likely than those without to make it to theatre. </p><p>[8:06] After the behind-the-camera shift, Hong wanted to know if more female-fronted stories were told.</p><p>[8:31] If the team behind the scenes was all male, then yes – they were more likely to produce a movie with a female lead. But if the team had a woman, then no – they were more likely to work on male-fronted stories. </p><p>[9:11] This is likely a result of how people felt the need to respond in the face of widespread social pressure. </p><p>[9:39] All-male teams tended to develop female characters that conformed to traditional gender stereotypes.</p><p>[10:53] Ok, so #MeToo changed Hollywood; what does that mean for other industries? Well, to really understand how social movements can spur innovation, let’s look also at the medical device industry. </p><p>[12:18] Social movements let industries capitalize on a need for change that would have otherwise been too expensive or unprofitable before. </p><p>[14:16] But when the movement wanes, momentum of the change also falters. </p><p>[14:38] But for advocates, the long game is probably worth it: “The literature shows that when you actually have more female talent in a particular field, especially if those talent could use that opportunity to gain experience and gain track record…then we may actually sustain more longer run change.”</p><p> </p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <enclosure length="23518778" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://cdn.simplecast.com/audio/78b75df0-de19-43b9-b1da-218fdb076f70/episodes/8e8ca4e7-d325-4bf4-b85c-d2dc4f058b17/audio/6ad33cc9-1080-4edf-b498-7039c7efc00a/default_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&amp;feed=t5PeOiog"/>
      <itunes:title>From #MeToo to breakthrough: How social movements drive innovation</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Megan Haynes, Hong Luo</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/7177fa79-dd58-49b7-bdc8-6371171ca32b/f2b46cc2-4f91-4e28-bd81-ae6f0d36769c/3000x3000/episode-artwork-execsummary-me-too-innovation.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:16:31</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>#MeToo forced Hollywood to reckon with its past — but did it actually change the future of filmmaking? Looking at years of behind-the-scenes and on-screen data, associate professor Hong Luo explores how the wide-spread social movement did — and did not — change movie-making; how stigma, coordination and market-wide shocks influence organizational behaviour; and why large-scale movements can create opportunities for change that weren’t profitable or possible before.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>#MeToo forced Hollywood to reckon with its past — but did it actually change the future of filmmaking? Looking at years of behind-the-scenes and on-screen data, associate professor Hong Luo explores how the wide-spread social movement did — and did not — change movie-making; how stigma, coordination and market-wide shocks influence organizational behaviour; and why large-scale movements can create opportunities for change that weren’t profitable or possible before.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>gender equality, rotman executive programs, inclusion, diversity, university of toronto, innovation, research, movies, social movement, strategy, hollywood, metoo, television, rotman school of management, rotman, uoft, social change, film</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>6</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>4</itunes:season>
    </item>
    <item>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">21ee7574-2194-4841-b5bc-f12158bd4890</guid>
      <title>Creativity killers: Busting the myths that stop great ideas before they start</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Where do great ideas come from...really? And how can you stifle brilliant thoughts before they have a chance to flourish? Associate professor George Newman joins the Executive Summary to share what the research actually tells us about how to foster —  and kill — a creative buzz, and how to spark more innovation at both work and home in the year ahead. </p><p> </p><p><strong>Show notes</strong></p><p>[0:00] What comes to mind when you think of the word creativity? That paint-splattered easel? The next great novel? What about a simple innovative pitch to a company? Or a new way of approaching a formula? Creativity comes in many shapes, but ultimately, it’s all about bringing new ideas to the fore. </p><p>[0:55] Meet George Newman, an associate professor of organizational behaviour and HR management, and author of the new book <i>How Great Ideas Happen. </i></p><p>[2:10] There are a few big mistakes we make when thinking about creativity – and the first is all about the “genius creator myth.” </p><p>[3:16] It turns out, when we think people are “born with” the creative gene, it really influences who is allowed to be creative, which is ultimately limiting to both individuals and organizations. </p><p>[4:16] Where do new ideas really come from? George’s research shows it’s not from within, but the world around us. </p><p>[5:20] It’s time to think of creativity as a path of discovery, rather than a lightning strike of brilliance. </p><p>[6:25] The second big mistake we make is jumping into brainstorming too quickly. </p><p>[6:50] We also prioritize the novelty of new ideas over value.</p><p>[7:50] To brainstorm better, you need to have a concrete plan. And George wants people to approach it like an archaeologist.</p><p>[8:41] First, survey the landscape.</p><p>[9:03] Second, create a “grid” or organize your thoughts.</p><p>[10:00] Third, dig in (aka, start throwing those ideas on a whiteboard!). And make sure you don’t quit before you get to the good stuff. </p><p>[11:33] The last big mistake in the quest for new ideas is soliciting feedback at the wrong time. Don’t get feedback while still generating ideas. </p><p>[12:41] Also, accept that there’s going to be some negative feedback along the way, and that you’re just going to have some bad ideas along the way too. </p><p>[14:28] Also, recognize that you’re your own worst critic.</p><p>[15:09] In the end, breakthrough ideas don't just manifest out of thin air. You have to sift through the layers of rubble, dust off plenty of false leads, so that every so often, you uncover something remarkable. The key is to keep going.</p><p>Be sure to check out the <a href="https://rotman-executive-summary.simplecast.com/">Executive Summary</a> back catalogue. We tackle everything from <a href="https://rotman-executive-summary.simplecast.com/episodes/ip-strategy-success" target="_blank">how where you work influences the types of innovation you create </a>to <a href="https://rotman-executive-summary.simplecast.com/episodes/the-art-of-advice" target="_blank">how to give better feedback</a>. </p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 13 Jan 2026 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>insightshub@rotman.utoronto.ca (George Newman, Megan Haynes)</author>
      <link>https://rotman-executive-summary.simplecast.com/episodes/creativity-killers-d0t95G6g</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Where do great ideas come from...really? And how can you stifle brilliant thoughts before they have a chance to flourish? Associate professor George Newman joins the Executive Summary to share what the research actually tells us about how to foster —  and kill — a creative buzz, and how to spark more innovation at both work and home in the year ahead. </p><p> </p><p><strong>Show notes</strong></p><p>[0:00] What comes to mind when you think of the word creativity? That paint-splattered easel? The next great novel? What about a simple innovative pitch to a company? Or a new way of approaching a formula? Creativity comes in many shapes, but ultimately, it’s all about bringing new ideas to the fore. </p><p>[0:55] Meet George Newman, an associate professor of organizational behaviour and HR management, and author of the new book <i>How Great Ideas Happen. </i></p><p>[2:10] There are a few big mistakes we make when thinking about creativity – and the first is all about the “genius creator myth.” </p><p>[3:16] It turns out, when we think people are “born with” the creative gene, it really influences who is allowed to be creative, which is ultimately limiting to both individuals and organizations. </p><p>[4:16] Where do new ideas really come from? George’s research shows it’s not from within, but the world around us. </p><p>[5:20] It’s time to think of creativity as a path of discovery, rather than a lightning strike of brilliance. </p><p>[6:25] The second big mistake we make is jumping into brainstorming too quickly. </p><p>[6:50] We also prioritize the novelty of new ideas over value.</p><p>[7:50] To brainstorm better, you need to have a concrete plan. And George wants people to approach it like an archaeologist.</p><p>[8:41] First, survey the landscape.</p><p>[9:03] Second, create a “grid” or organize your thoughts.</p><p>[10:00] Third, dig in (aka, start throwing those ideas on a whiteboard!). And make sure you don’t quit before you get to the good stuff. </p><p>[11:33] The last big mistake in the quest for new ideas is soliciting feedback at the wrong time. Don’t get feedback while still generating ideas. </p><p>[12:41] Also, accept that there’s going to be some negative feedback along the way, and that you’re just going to have some bad ideas along the way too. </p><p>[14:28] Also, recognize that you’re your own worst critic.</p><p>[15:09] In the end, breakthrough ideas don't just manifest out of thin air. You have to sift through the layers of rubble, dust off plenty of false leads, so that every so often, you uncover something remarkable. The key is to keep going.</p><p>Be sure to check out the <a href="https://rotman-executive-summary.simplecast.com/">Executive Summary</a> back catalogue. We tackle everything from <a href="https://rotman-executive-summary.simplecast.com/episodes/ip-strategy-success" target="_blank">how where you work influences the types of innovation you create </a>to <a href="https://rotman-executive-summary.simplecast.com/episodes/the-art-of-advice" target="_blank">how to give better feedback</a>. </p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <enclosure length="23424337" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://cdn.simplecast.com/audio/78b75df0-de19-43b9-b1da-218fdb076f70/episodes/58572fb4-d846-49d1-af78-d8ed9819652c/audio/2bfdfb12-db0b-4a99-ae37-f72622b211ac/default_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&amp;feed=t5PeOiog"/>
      <itunes:title>Creativity killers: Busting the myths that stop great ideas before they start</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>George Newman, Megan Haynes</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/7177fa79-dd58-49b7-bdc8-6371171ca32b/f6e858f9-6524-4728-a4ee-305ebdb29eb2/3000x3000/episode-artwork-execsummary-creativity.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:16:25</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Where do great ideas come from...really? And how can you stifle brilliant thoughts before they have a chance to flourish? Associate professor George Newman joins the Executive Summary to share what the research actually tells us about how to foster —  and kill — a creative buzz, and how to spark more innovation at both work and home in the year ahead. </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Where do great ideas come from...really? And how can you stifle brilliant thoughts before they have a chance to flourish? Associate professor George Newman joins the Executive Summary to share what the research actually tells us about how to foster —  and kill — a creative buzz, and how to spark more innovation at both work and home in the year ahead. </itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>rotman executive programs, creativity skills, innovation in teams, boosting creativity, organizational behaviour, u of t, university of toronto, research, team creativity, creative thinking, creativity killers, creativity at work, rotman school of management, creativity myths, rotman, workplace creativity</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>5</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>4</itunes:season>
    </item>
    <item>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">7e9a9c83-b8bc-4499-a47d-7f728e8c3995</guid>
      <title>Hidden biases: Why audits aren’t as objective as you think they are (and what we can do to fix it)</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>In theory, auditing should be unbiased and independent. In reality, biases abound. Auditors are human, and companies — even auditing firms— have agendas that shape how they approach audits. These blind spots can have real consequences for investors and the economy. Associate professor Minlei Ye joins Executive Summary to reveal where these hidden biases come from, how they influence decision-making, and why stronger safeguards and a shift in business thinking are essential for fairer results.</p><p><strong>Show notes</strong></p><p>[0:00] What happened with Enron and Arthur Andersen </p><p>[0:53] Meet Minlei Ye, an associate professor of accounting at the University of Toronto, and she says when audits fail to catch red flags, it can have devastating consequences on individuals and the economy.</p><p>[2:22] What is the role of an auditor, exactly? </p><p>[2:59] What role did auditors play in the Enron and Lehman Brothers scandals?</p><p>[4:49] How can an organizational focus on compliance lead to misrepresentation? And is fair representation a better option?</p><p>[6:03] Other systemic biases that shape an audit firms’ accuracy include the need to keep the client happy.</p><p>[6:42] Auditors’ personal biases – like familiarity bias, confirmation bias and groupthink also shape how accurate an audit will be. </p><p>[7:38] Minlei’s research into otherwise positive programs – like rewards for whistleblowing – can have unintentional consequences on how auditors approach a client. </p><p>[9:01] And then there are egos – like when bosses pull superstar employees off key client accounts out of fear the superstar will be poached by another firm. </p><p>[9:45] Team makeup – whether homogenous or diverse – matters too. </p><p>[10:40] Auditing is built on the fundamental principle of independence. </p><p>[11:29] To help mitigate some of the aforementioned biases, regulation is needed to protect that independence. But, in the U.S. in particular, those protections are under attack. </p><p>[13:00] In the meantime auditing firms need to step up to protect their independence…and so do the companies being audited. </p><p>[14:21] “Instead of looking at auditing as something that they have to do, like a compliance thing that you have to hire the auditor, they can think of the auditor as a strategic safeguard for the capital needs, for their reputation and stakeholder trust.”</p><p>Be sure to check out the <a href="https://rotman-executive-summary.simplecast.com/">Executive Summary</a> back catalogue. We tackle everything from <a href="https://rotman-executive-summary.simplecast.com/episodes/how-to-build-a-better-board" target="_blank">how to build a better board room</a> to <a href="https://rotman-executive-summary.simplecast.com/episodes/accounting-for-labour" target="_blank">what employees can tell leaders about an organization's financial health</a>.  </p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 9 Dec 2025 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>insightshub@rotman.utoronto.ca (Minlei Ye, Megan Haynes)</author>
      <link>https://rotman-executive-summary.simplecast.com/episodes/hidden-bias-auditing-mRX98r8b</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In theory, auditing should be unbiased and independent. In reality, biases abound. Auditors are human, and companies — even auditing firms— have agendas that shape how they approach audits. These blind spots can have real consequences for investors and the economy. Associate professor Minlei Ye joins Executive Summary to reveal where these hidden biases come from, how they influence decision-making, and why stronger safeguards and a shift in business thinking are essential for fairer results.</p><p><strong>Show notes</strong></p><p>[0:00] What happened with Enron and Arthur Andersen </p><p>[0:53] Meet Minlei Ye, an associate professor of accounting at the University of Toronto, and she says when audits fail to catch red flags, it can have devastating consequences on individuals and the economy.</p><p>[2:22] What is the role of an auditor, exactly? </p><p>[2:59] What role did auditors play in the Enron and Lehman Brothers scandals?</p><p>[4:49] How can an organizational focus on compliance lead to misrepresentation? And is fair representation a better option?</p><p>[6:03] Other systemic biases that shape an audit firms’ accuracy include the need to keep the client happy.</p><p>[6:42] Auditors’ personal biases – like familiarity bias, confirmation bias and groupthink also shape how accurate an audit will be. </p><p>[7:38] Minlei’s research into otherwise positive programs – like rewards for whistleblowing – can have unintentional consequences on how auditors approach a client. </p><p>[9:01] And then there are egos – like when bosses pull superstar employees off key client accounts out of fear the superstar will be poached by another firm. </p><p>[9:45] Team makeup – whether homogenous or diverse – matters too. </p><p>[10:40] Auditing is built on the fundamental principle of independence. </p><p>[11:29] To help mitigate some of the aforementioned biases, regulation is needed to protect that independence. But, in the U.S. in particular, those protections are under attack. </p><p>[13:00] In the meantime auditing firms need to step up to protect their independence…and so do the companies being audited. </p><p>[14:21] “Instead of looking at auditing as something that they have to do, like a compliance thing that you have to hire the auditor, they can think of the auditor as a strategic safeguard for the capital needs, for their reputation and stakeholder trust.”</p><p>Be sure to check out the <a href="https://rotman-executive-summary.simplecast.com/">Executive Summary</a> back catalogue. We tackle everything from <a href="https://rotman-executive-summary.simplecast.com/episodes/how-to-build-a-better-board" target="_blank">how to build a better board room</a> to <a href="https://rotman-executive-summary.simplecast.com/episodes/accounting-for-labour" target="_blank">what employees can tell leaders about an organization's financial health</a>.  </p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <enclosure length="22705470" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://cdn.simplecast.com/audio/78b75df0-de19-43b9-b1da-218fdb076f70/episodes/1ca0e5b4-e7b6-464c-b77c-a4cfda3b1dbe/audio/2dc7e966-0a05-4dbb-9f4c-466b4fb6e371/default_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&amp;feed=t5PeOiog"/>
      <itunes:title>Hidden biases: Why audits aren’t as objective as you think they are (and what we can do to fix it)</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Minlei Ye, Megan Haynes</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/7177fa79-dd58-49b7-bdc8-6371171ca32b/0171a737-94e3-45fc-a6b4-3b4ad3c2b9b3/3000x3000/insights-execsummary-audit-bias-episode-feature.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:15:40</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>In theory, auditing should be unbiased and independent. In reality, biases abound. Auditors are human, and companies — even auditing firms— have agendas that shape how they approach audits. These blind spots can have real consequences for investors and the economy. Associate professor Minlei Ye joins Executive Summary to reveal where these hidden biases come from, how they influence decision-making, and why stronger safeguards and a shift in business thinking are essential for fairer results.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>In theory, auditing should be unbiased and independent. In reality, biases abound. Auditors are human, and companies — even auditing firms— have agendas that shape how they approach audits. These blind spots can have real consequences for investors and the economy. Associate professor Minlei Ye joins Executive Summary to reveal where these hidden biases come from, how they influence decision-making, and why stronger safeguards and a shift in business thinking are essential for fairer results.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>rotman executive programs, arthur andersen, university of toronto, research, accounting, lehman brothers, enron, rotman school of management, bias, rotman, auditing, uoft, auditing bias</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>4</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>4</itunes:season>
    </item>
    <item>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">169e0ba0-b3a3-43c8-a55d-2141061a7128</guid>
      <title>Beyond doctor shortages: Rethinking Canada’s healthcare bottleneck</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Canada faces an acute shortage of doctors and medical equipment. But simply hiring more people or buying more machines won’t fix our healthcare backlog. In this episode of <i>The Executive Summary</i>, professor Opher Baron explains how — from an operations management perspective — we got into this mess, and why smarter planning and better use of data are just as essential as addressing our shortages if we really want to dig out of Canada’s healthcare deficit.</p><p><strong>Show notes: </strong></p><p>[0:00] Canadians are in a healthcare crisis. </p><p>[0:12] Meet Opher Baron, a professor of operations management at the Rotman School, and an expert in hospital queues. He doesn’t believe more doctors and medical equipment will get us out of our healthcare crisis. </p><p>[1:34] A recognition that our healthcare system – and its problems – is nuanced and complex, and this episode is just 15 minutes. </p><p>[2:07] Canada has a supply shortage: too few doctors and too little equipment to meet the population demand. </p><p>[2:42] This shortage is felt across all sectors of healthcare, but acutely in family care and emergency care. </p><p>[3:12] The provincial governments are taking steps to remediate the problems, but it won’t happen quickly.</p><p>[4:20] So how did we get here? In short: Poor planning. </p><p>[5:31] Hospitals are chaotic, and that makes it difficult to plan. </p><p>[7:21] Let’s look at how one issue – continuity of care, coupled with physician incentives – can affect how quickly patients move through an emergency room. Simply, doctors are more likely to take patients at the beginning of their shift than at the end of it. </p><p>[9:57] How do you address these types of issues? First, you need to be measuring the right key performance indicators…which we’re not. And you can’t fix a problem, if you can’t identify the problem. </p><p>[11:49] Let’s start by recognizing that healthcare professionals aren’t operations management experts. </p><p>[12:33] Opher has worked with several hospitals to test new operational efficiencies, including Erie Shores. </p><p>[13:58] With the advent of AI, there’s also a lot of opportunity in what Opher calls “digital twin” environments, which will allow hospital administrators to test changes virtually before implementing them in real life. </p><p>[15:13] We can’t just throw money at the problem and expect we’ll fix our healthcare system. “I hope that once people understand better what is the important data for them and what they can do with the right data…we can improve the efficiency of our systems, and given the current resources, investing a little bit more kind of in the right places.”</p><p>Be sure to check out the <a href="https://rotman-executive-summary.simplecast.com/">Executive Summary</a> back catalogue. We tackle everything from whether we can fix <a href="https://www-2.rotman.utoronto.ca/insightshub/behavioural-economics-marketing/fake-reviews">our broken online review system</a> to how <a href="https://www-2.rotman.utoronto.ca/insightshub/sustainability-social-impact/extreme-heat-profits">extreme heat negatively impacts companies' bottom lines. </a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 11 Nov 2025 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>insightshub@rotman.utoronto.ca (Opher Baron, Megan Haynes)</author>
      <link>https://rotman-executive-summary.simplecast.com/episodes/beyond-doctor-shortages-nxk1fsnF</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Canada faces an acute shortage of doctors and medical equipment. But simply hiring more people or buying more machines won’t fix our healthcare backlog. In this episode of <i>The Executive Summary</i>, professor Opher Baron explains how — from an operations management perspective — we got into this mess, and why smarter planning and better use of data are just as essential as addressing our shortages if we really want to dig out of Canada’s healthcare deficit.</p><p><strong>Show notes: </strong></p><p>[0:00] Canadians are in a healthcare crisis. </p><p>[0:12] Meet Opher Baron, a professor of operations management at the Rotman School, and an expert in hospital queues. He doesn’t believe more doctors and medical equipment will get us out of our healthcare crisis. </p><p>[1:34] A recognition that our healthcare system – and its problems – is nuanced and complex, and this episode is just 15 minutes. </p><p>[2:07] Canada has a supply shortage: too few doctors and too little equipment to meet the population demand. </p><p>[2:42] This shortage is felt across all sectors of healthcare, but acutely in family care and emergency care. </p><p>[3:12] The provincial governments are taking steps to remediate the problems, but it won’t happen quickly.</p><p>[4:20] So how did we get here? In short: Poor planning. </p><p>[5:31] Hospitals are chaotic, and that makes it difficult to plan. </p><p>[7:21] Let’s look at how one issue – continuity of care, coupled with physician incentives – can affect how quickly patients move through an emergency room. Simply, doctors are more likely to take patients at the beginning of their shift than at the end of it. </p><p>[9:57] How do you address these types of issues? First, you need to be measuring the right key performance indicators…which we’re not. And you can’t fix a problem, if you can’t identify the problem. </p><p>[11:49] Let’s start by recognizing that healthcare professionals aren’t operations management experts. </p><p>[12:33] Opher has worked with several hospitals to test new operational efficiencies, including Erie Shores. </p><p>[13:58] With the advent of AI, there’s also a lot of opportunity in what Opher calls “digital twin” environments, which will allow hospital administrators to test changes virtually before implementing them in real life. </p><p>[15:13] We can’t just throw money at the problem and expect we’ll fix our healthcare system. “I hope that once people understand better what is the important data for them and what they can do with the right data…we can improve the efficiency of our systems, and given the current resources, investing a little bit more kind of in the right places.”</p><p>Be sure to check out the <a href="https://rotman-executive-summary.simplecast.com/">Executive Summary</a> back catalogue. We tackle everything from whether we can fix <a href="https://www-2.rotman.utoronto.ca/insightshub/behavioural-economics-marketing/fake-reviews">our broken online review system</a> to how <a href="https://www-2.rotman.utoronto.ca/insightshub/sustainability-social-impact/extreme-heat-profits">extreme heat negatively impacts companies' bottom lines. </a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <enclosure length="24256255" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://cdn.simplecast.com/audio/78b75df0-de19-43b9-b1da-218fdb076f70/episodes/dbb0ae46-005b-48d5-acc9-787624939201/audio/6dec2692-b775-4117-86a2-8353a07e0a17/default_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&amp;feed=t5PeOiog"/>
      <itunes:title>Beyond doctor shortages: Rethinking Canada’s healthcare bottleneck</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Opher Baron, Megan Haynes</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/7177fa79-dd58-49b7-bdc8-6371171ca32b/2a6d3c45-226d-4c58-960c-244c7bfb8cb1/3000x3000/episode-artwork-execsummary-opher-baron.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:17:14</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Canada faces an acute shortage of doctors and medical equipment. But simply hiring more people or buying more machines won’t fix our healthcare backlog. In this episode of The Executive Summary, professor Opher Baron explains how — from an operations management perspective — we got into this mess, and why smarter planning and better use of data are just as essential as addressing our shortages if we really want to dig out of Canada’s healthcare deficit.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Canada faces an acute shortage of doctors and medical equipment. But simply hiring more people or buying more machines won’t fix our healthcare backlog. In this episode of The Executive Summary, professor Opher Baron explains how — from an operations management perspective — we got into this mess, and why smarter planning and better use of data are just as essential as addressing our shortages if we really want to dig out of Canada’s healthcare deficit.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>rotman executive programs, healthcare, doctor shortages, doctors, university of toronto, family doctors, research, emergency rooms, canadian healthcare, patient flow, analytics, rotman school of management, nurses, data, operations management, rotman, uoft, ai, family doctor shortage</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>3</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>4</itunes:season>
    </item>
    <item>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">6a7a895c-71a7-43ba-853b-c9a664a7b4a1</guid>
      <title>Trading blows What history teaches us about today’s trade uncertainty</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>For decades, Canada’s economic fortunes have been tied to its southern neighbour — but what happens when that relationship falters? As a new wave of tariffs rattles global markets, professor Dimitry Anastakis joins The Executive Summary to trace Canada’s long history of trade wars with the U.S., the hard lessons they’ve taught us, and why this time, the old playbook may no longer work.</p><p><strong>Show Notes</strong></p><p>[0:00] Meet Dimitry Anastakis - a University of Toronto professor and expert on Canadian business and economic history, who says Donald Trump’s views on tariffs were really cemented in the ‘80s, putting him at odds with the Republican Party at the time. </p><p>[1:03] Canada’s economy is enmeshed with that of the U.S., which doesn’t bode well for us as we face a new trade war. </p><p>[2:07] A quick recap of the 2025 trade war between Canada and the U.S. to date. </p><p>[3:43] Lessons from the past — we’ve been in this type of situation with the U.S. before. </p><p>[3:59] We’ve faced familiar trade disputes in the 1890s, 1920s to ‘30s and the ‘70s to 80s. </p><p>[5:57] Reagan-era trade disputes — The trade war of the ‘80s was different from the earlier spats – with the U.S. using it as a tool to convince Canada to join the North American Free Trade Agreement. </p><p>[7:10] Canada’s historical options in trade disputes — historically, trade wars are an opportunity for Canadians to reflect on their best path forward. And we usually face three choices. </p><p>[8:01] Why have we eschewed the “third option” of diversifying our trading partners and instead increasingly turned into partnerships with the U.S.?</p><p>[9:01] And how has closer ties to the U.S. helped us through post-trade war recessions? </p><p>[10:18] Why this trade war is different.</p><p>[10:38] How are tariffs actually supposed to work, and why is that incongruent with how Donald Trump is wielding them? </p><p>[11:22] What role do previous trade agreements play if a key player just decides to ignore them entirely? </p><p>[12:09] Canadians are feeling betrayed. </p><p>[12:37] And if these tariffs remain in place long term, it does not bode well for the Canadian economy. </p><p>[13:40] Resilience in the face of disruption — perhaps now is a time for us to reflect and move towards a new economic path, less dependent on the U.S.</p><p>[15:29] “We do need to expect that there's going to be a rough ride. But most importantly, we need to rise to the challenge. We need entrepreneurs and governments and firms to start thinking about how Canadians can exploit the advantages that they have in a new kind of economy in the 21st century. Canadians should recognize that this provides an opportunity for us to start building on our strengths. And, you know, the great thing is that history shows us that the Canadian people have been pretty resilient in these situations.”</p><p>Be sure to check out the <a href="https://rotman-executive-summary.simplecast.com/">Executive Summary</a> back catalogue. We tackle everything from why it’s time to explore a <a href="https://rotman-executive-summary.simplecast.com/episodes/4-day-work-week">four-day work week </a>to <a href="https://rotman-executive-summary.simplecast.com/episodes/location-and-innovation">where you can actually get the best innovation</a>.</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 14 Oct 2025 04:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>insightshub@rotman.utoronto.ca (Rotman School of Management)</author>
      <link>https://rotman-executive-summary.simplecast.com/episodes/trading-blows-ahQX5WtF</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>For decades, Canada’s economic fortunes have been tied to its southern neighbour — but what happens when that relationship falters? As a new wave of tariffs rattles global markets, professor Dimitry Anastakis joins The Executive Summary to trace Canada’s long history of trade wars with the U.S., the hard lessons they’ve taught us, and why this time, the old playbook may no longer work.</p><p><strong>Show Notes</strong></p><p>[0:00] Meet Dimitry Anastakis - a University of Toronto professor and expert on Canadian business and economic history, who says Donald Trump’s views on tariffs were really cemented in the ‘80s, putting him at odds with the Republican Party at the time. </p><p>[1:03] Canada’s economy is enmeshed with that of the U.S., which doesn’t bode well for us as we face a new trade war. </p><p>[2:07] A quick recap of the 2025 trade war between Canada and the U.S. to date. </p><p>[3:43] Lessons from the past — we’ve been in this type of situation with the U.S. before. </p><p>[3:59] We’ve faced familiar trade disputes in the 1890s, 1920s to ‘30s and the ‘70s to 80s. </p><p>[5:57] Reagan-era trade disputes — The trade war of the ‘80s was different from the earlier spats – with the U.S. using it as a tool to convince Canada to join the North American Free Trade Agreement. </p><p>[7:10] Canada’s historical options in trade disputes — historically, trade wars are an opportunity for Canadians to reflect on their best path forward. And we usually face three choices. </p><p>[8:01] Why have we eschewed the “third option” of diversifying our trading partners and instead increasingly turned into partnerships with the U.S.?</p><p>[9:01] And how has closer ties to the U.S. helped us through post-trade war recessions? </p><p>[10:18] Why this trade war is different.</p><p>[10:38] How are tariffs actually supposed to work, and why is that incongruent with how Donald Trump is wielding them? </p><p>[11:22] What role do previous trade agreements play if a key player just decides to ignore them entirely? </p><p>[12:09] Canadians are feeling betrayed. </p><p>[12:37] And if these tariffs remain in place long term, it does not bode well for the Canadian economy. </p><p>[13:40] Resilience in the face of disruption — perhaps now is a time for us to reflect and move towards a new economic path, less dependent on the U.S.</p><p>[15:29] “We do need to expect that there's going to be a rough ride. But most importantly, we need to rise to the challenge. We need entrepreneurs and governments and firms to start thinking about how Canadians can exploit the advantages that they have in a new kind of economy in the 21st century. Canadians should recognize that this provides an opportunity for us to start building on our strengths. And, you know, the great thing is that history shows us that the Canadian people have been pretty resilient in these situations.”</p><p>Be sure to check out the <a href="https://rotman-executive-summary.simplecast.com/">Executive Summary</a> back catalogue. We tackle everything from why it’s time to explore a <a href="https://rotman-executive-summary.simplecast.com/episodes/4-day-work-week">four-day work week </a>to <a href="https://rotman-executive-summary.simplecast.com/episodes/location-and-innovation">where you can actually get the best innovation</a>.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <enclosure length="24135698" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://cdn.simplecast.com/audio/78b75df0-de19-43b9-b1da-218fdb076f70/episodes/a330c753-b453-40ba-81c7-935c070a289a/audio/ddf1b2e8-1f6b-431d-9ff8-c7944995418d/default_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&amp;feed=t5PeOiog"/>
      <itunes:title>Trading blows What history teaches us about today’s trade uncertainty</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Rotman School of Management</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/7177fa79-dd58-49b7-bdc8-6371171ca32b/f75391a0-205f-47d5-8832-d2d1a3c8ce1b/3000x3000/episode-artwork-execsummary-s04e02.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:17:09</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>For decades, Canada’s economic fortunes have been tied to its southern neighbour — but what happens when that relationship falters? As a new wave of tariffs rattles global markets, professor Dimitry Anastakis joins The Executive Summary to trace Canada’s long history of trade wars with the U.S., the hard lessons they’ve taught us, and why this time, the old playbook may no longer work.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>For decades, Canada’s economic fortunes have been tied to its southern neighbour — but what happens when that relationship falters? As a new wave of tariffs rattles global markets, professor Dimitry Anastakis joins The Executive Summary to trace Canada’s long history of trade wars with the U.S., the hard lessons they’ve taught us, and why this time, the old playbook may no longer work.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>rotman executive programs, economy, tariffs, business history, university of toronto, recession, trading relations, nafta, international relations, research, bilateral relations, uscma, government, cusma, rotman school of management, trump, trade, uoft, policy</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>2</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>4</itunes:season>
    </item>
    <item>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">6d5cdaeb-7b9c-49ad-bd50-7e089a604c77</guid>
      <title>The trust factor: How trust can help companies through uncertainty</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Trust in institutions and leaders is on the decline. That's bad news for organizations navigating difficult times. How can companies build trust, and can you repair it once it's been broken? Professor Bill McEvily joins the season premiere of the Executive Summary podcast to explores those questions and more.</p><p><strong>Show notes:</strong></p><p>[0:00] <strong>Declining trust in institutions, businesses, and CEOs</strong> – Why public trust is at an all-time low.</p><p>[0:33] <strong>Meet Bill McEvily</strong> – University of Toronto professor and expert in organizational trust and leadership.</p><p>[1:42] <strong>Defining trust</strong> – What trust really means in the workplace and beyond.</p><p>[2:46] <strong>The three dimensions of trust</strong> – Understanding reliability, competence and integrity in people and organizations.</p><p>[4:02] <strong>The role of trust in the workplace</strong> – How trust drives productivity, collaboration and resilience during chaotic times.</p><p>[5:46] <strong>What breaks trust</strong> – Common behaviours, decisions and policies that erode trust in organizations.</p><p>[6:15] <strong>Examples of companies breaking trust</strong> – Real-world corporate missteps and lessons learned.</p><p>[7:39] <strong>Consequences of broken trust</strong> – Impact on employees, customers and overall organizational performance.</p><p>[8:24] <strong>Repairing trust</strong> – Why there is no magic formula, but consistently delivering on promises works.</p><p>[9:15] <strong>The importance of communication</strong> – How transparent, honest communication strengthens trust.</p><p>[11:21] <strong>Building trust remotely</strong> – Introducing Bill’s concept of “prismatic trust” for teams and stakeholders you don’t interact with directly.</p><p>[12:26] <strong>Lessons from EZ Trade</strong> – How companies can implement systems to build trust with people you’ve never met.</p><p>[13:14] <strong>Signals of trustworthiness</strong> – How organizations communicate who and what can be trusted.</p><p>[14:18] “It's important for people to understand that there are mechanisms for ascertaining trust, even when we don't have the ability to know people personally… Human beings are ingenious in figuring out how to trust strangers. But therein lies the paradox… it's just how human society functions.”</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 9 Sep 2025 04:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>insightshub@rotman.utoronto.ca (Bill McEvily, Megan Haynes)</author>
      <link>https://rotman-executive-summary.simplecast.com/episodes/the-trust-factor-I9ksSvan</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Trust in institutions and leaders is on the decline. That's bad news for organizations navigating difficult times. How can companies build trust, and can you repair it once it's been broken? Professor Bill McEvily joins the season premiere of the Executive Summary podcast to explores those questions and more.</p><p><strong>Show notes:</strong></p><p>[0:00] <strong>Declining trust in institutions, businesses, and CEOs</strong> – Why public trust is at an all-time low.</p><p>[0:33] <strong>Meet Bill McEvily</strong> – University of Toronto professor and expert in organizational trust and leadership.</p><p>[1:42] <strong>Defining trust</strong> – What trust really means in the workplace and beyond.</p><p>[2:46] <strong>The three dimensions of trust</strong> – Understanding reliability, competence and integrity in people and organizations.</p><p>[4:02] <strong>The role of trust in the workplace</strong> – How trust drives productivity, collaboration and resilience during chaotic times.</p><p>[5:46] <strong>What breaks trust</strong> – Common behaviours, decisions and policies that erode trust in organizations.</p><p>[6:15] <strong>Examples of companies breaking trust</strong> – Real-world corporate missteps and lessons learned.</p><p>[7:39] <strong>Consequences of broken trust</strong> – Impact on employees, customers and overall organizational performance.</p><p>[8:24] <strong>Repairing trust</strong> – Why there is no magic formula, but consistently delivering on promises works.</p><p>[9:15] <strong>The importance of communication</strong> – How transparent, honest communication strengthens trust.</p><p>[11:21] <strong>Building trust remotely</strong> – Introducing Bill’s concept of “prismatic trust” for teams and stakeholders you don’t interact with directly.</p><p>[12:26] <strong>Lessons from EZ Trade</strong> – How companies can implement systems to build trust with people you’ve never met.</p><p>[13:14] <strong>Signals of trustworthiness</strong> – How organizations communicate who and what can be trusted.</p><p>[14:18] “It's important for people to understand that there are mechanisms for ascertaining trust, even when we don't have the ability to know people personally… Human beings are ingenious in figuring out how to trust strangers. But therein lies the paradox… it's just how human society functions.”</p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <enclosure length="23079284" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://cdn.simplecast.com/audio/78b75df0-de19-43b9-b1da-218fdb076f70/episodes/4975954d-3873-4b67-9961-f18b35c43125/audio/a18c294e-6344-4fb1-86a3-438c810540d9/default_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&amp;feed=t5PeOiog"/>
      <itunes:title>The trust factor: How trust can help companies through uncertainty</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Bill McEvily, Megan Haynes</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/7177fa79-dd58-49b7-bdc8-6371171ca32b/0ad9545f-543b-40ce-848f-e1deba440dc5/3000x3000/the-20trust-20factor-20how-20trust-20can-20help-20companies-20through-20uncertainty.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:16:00</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Trust in institutions and leaders is on the decline. That&apos;s bad news for organizations navigating difficult times. How can companies build trust, and can you repair it once it&apos;s been broken? Professor Bill McEvily joins the season premiere of the Executive Summary podcast to explores those questions and more.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Trust in institutions and leaders is on the decline. That&apos;s bad news for organizations navigating difficult times. How can companies build trust, and can you repair it once it&apos;s been broken? Professor Bill McEvily joins the season premiere of the Executive Summary podcast to explores those questions and more.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>rotman executive programs, university of toronto, research, leadership, strategy, trust, employee relationships, rotman school of management, edelman, employee management, uncertainty, rotman, uoft</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>1</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>4</itunes:season>
    </item>
    <item>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">13cc9950-0682-4f0d-86f8-4e73f41cc5a5</guid>
      <title>Season 4 Launches September 9!</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p><strong>Season 4 launches September 9 — don’t miss it.</strong></p><p>In today’s noisy world, finding clear, credible insight isn’t easy. That’s where the Rotman Executive Summary comes in. In less than 20 minutes, we bring you sharp, research-backed ideas from the University of Toronto’s Rotman School of Management — Canada’s leading business school.</p><p><strong>This season, we’re tackling the questions leaders are asking right now</strong>:</p><ul><li>How can organizations rebuild trust when uncertainty is the only constant?</li><li>What lessons from history can guide Canada’s economy today?</li><li>Why more healthcare workers alone won’t fix our healthcare system — and what will.</li><li>How to reignite creativity in your team, with evidence (not clichés).</li><li>What can innovative companies learn from the #MeToo movement?</li><li>What does the science say about persuasive writing?</li></ul><p>Perfect for curious leaders, lifelong learners and anyone who wants to understand what’s really driving change in business and society. Listen between meetings, on your commute or over coffee — follow now so you never miss an episode.</p><p>Subscribe on Apple, Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts.</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 26 Aug 2025 11:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>insightshub@rotman.utoronto.ca (Rotman School of Management)</author>
      <link>https://rotman-executive-summary.simplecast.com/episodes/season-4-launches-september-9-le0uLYYJ</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Season 4 launches September 9 — don’t miss it.</strong></p><p>In today’s noisy world, finding clear, credible insight isn’t easy. That’s where the Rotman Executive Summary comes in. In less than 20 minutes, we bring you sharp, research-backed ideas from the University of Toronto’s Rotman School of Management — Canada’s leading business school.</p><p><strong>This season, we’re tackling the questions leaders are asking right now</strong>:</p><ul><li>How can organizations rebuild trust when uncertainty is the only constant?</li><li>What lessons from history can guide Canada’s economy today?</li><li>Why more healthcare workers alone won’t fix our healthcare system — and what will.</li><li>How to reignite creativity in your team, with evidence (not clichés).</li><li>What can innovative companies learn from the #MeToo movement?</li><li>What does the science say about persuasive writing?</li></ul><p>Perfect for curious leaders, lifelong learners and anyone who wants to understand what’s really driving change in business and society. Listen between meetings, on your commute or over coffee — follow now so you never miss an episode.</p><p>Subscribe on Apple, Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <enclosure length="9150788" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://cdn.simplecast.com/audio/78b75df0-de19-43b9-b1da-218fdb076f70/episodes/b15ccfaa-e041-4bf7-88bf-411c69615dc6/audio/4a5cbf49-54c1-45cb-9cf1-c211cd1aec25/default_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&amp;feed=t5PeOiog"/>
      <itunes:title>Season 4 Launches September 9!</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Rotman School of Management</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:01:30</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Season 4 launches September 9 — don’t miss it.
In today’s noisy world, finding clear, credible insight isn’t easy. That’s where the Rotman Executive Summary comes in. In less than 20 minutes, we bring you sharp, research-backed ideas from the University of Toronto’s Rotman School of Management — Canada’s leading business school.
This season, we’re tackling the questions leaders are asking right now:
•	How can organizations rebuild trust when uncertainty is the only constant?
•	What lessons from history can guide Canada’s economy today?
•	Why more healthcare workers alone won’t fix our healthcare system — and what will.
•	How to reignite creativity in your team, with evidence (not clichés).
•	What can innovative companies learn from the #MeToo movement?
•	What does the science say about persuasive writing?
Perfect for curious leaders, lifelong learners and anyone who wants to understand what’s really driving change in business and society. Listen between meetings, on your commute or over coffee — follow now so you never miss an episode.
Subscribe on Apple, Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts.
</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Season 4 launches September 9 — don’t miss it.
In today’s noisy world, finding clear, credible insight isn’t easy. That’s where the Rotman Executive Summary comes in. In less than 20 minutes, we bring you sharp, research-backed ideas from the University of Toronto’s Rotman School of Management — Canada’s leading business school.
This season, we’re tackling the questions leaders are asking right now:
•	How can organizations rebuild trust when uncertainty is the only constant?
•	What lessons from history can guide Canada’s economy today?
•	Why more healthcare workers alone won’t fix our healthcare system — and what will.
•	How to reignite creativity in your team, with evidence (not clichés).
•	What can innovative companies learn from the #MeToo movement?
•	What does the science say about persuasive writing?
Perfect for curious leaders, lifelong learners and anyone who wants to understand what’s really driving change in business and society. Listen between meetings, on your commute or over coffee — follow now so you never miss an episode.
Subscribe on Apple, Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts.
</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>trailer</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:season>4</itunes:season>
    </item>
    <item>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">8e6b9dfe-3021-4373-a0bf-8cd08b961a9d</guid>
      <title>Accounting for labour: What your employees can reveal about company success</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>What can your employees' LinkedIn and Glassdoor activity tell you about a company's prospects?  More than you might think. From competition for top talent to out-of-sync business prospects, these platforms offer valuable insights — but are leaders paying attention? Assistant professor Nan Li joins Executive Summary to unpack what employees are really signaling and why companies must start listening.</p><p><strong>Show notes</strong></p><p>[0:00] Are you listening to what your employees are and aren’t telling you about your company’s prospects?</p><p>[0:29] Meet <a href="https://www.rotman.utoronto.ca/the-rotman-experience/our-community/people/li-nan/" target="_blank">Nan Li</a>, an assistant professor of accounting at the Rotman School of Management who studies human capital – that is employees – and its impact on company performance. </p><p>[1:46] Big changes are coming to the reporting standards world. Starting in 2027, companies in the U.S. will have to disclose how much of their expense line items (think R&D, administration, marketing) is spent on compensation. </p><p>[3:22] This news makes Nan and other researchers excited, since it’s a goldmine of insights. </p><p>[4:00] The changes are long overdue. While once a company’s output and profits were driven by things like machinery and widgets – so that was a primary focus on reports; as we shift into a knowledge economy, employees are becoming the biggest asset. </p><p>[5:11] What are peer firms, and why does it matter when it comes to talent pools? </p><p>[5:30] LinkedIn is changing how we define peer firms. </p><p>[7:13] Why is it important to know that, says, a car company isn’t just competing against other car manufacturers for talent?</p><p>[8:29] Glassdoor reviews, specifically “employee business outlook,” is predictive of firm performance. A bad employee outlook will likely mean a bad earnings report down the line. </p><p>[9:46] So why aren’t company leaders and financial analysts paying attention to social media as a source of information? </p><p>[11:36] Certain types of labour costs are directly tied to future sales growth. More money into R&D translates into greater profit down the line, while fixed costs like administration can make it easy to grow in good times, but dampen growth in hard times, Nan’s research finds. </p><p>[13:34] Employees certainly pay attention to company earning calls, and adjust their own outlook on a company accordingly. So perhaps it’s time employers start doing the same. </p><p>[15:11] “All the information there is public. So as a manager or analyst, you can just sign on to Glassdoor, write your own review about your company. And there are some academics and also practitioners already noticed or recognize that we are kind of falling behind.” That’s because employees aren’t just workers; they’re insiders. They are on the ground seeing how your company is really performing. So maybe it’s time leaders start treating employees not just as assets, but as one of their most valuable sources of insight.</p><p> </p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 8 Apr 2025 04:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>insightshub@rotman.utoronto.ca (Nan Li, Megan Haynes)</author>
      <link>https://rotman-executive-summary.simplecast.com/episodes/accounting-for-labour-7k2ImSNt</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>What can your employees' LinkedIn and Glassdoor activity tell you about a company's prospects?  More than you might think. From competition for top talent to out-of-sync business prospects, these platforms offer valuable insights — but are leaders paying attention? Assistant professor Nan Li joins Executive Summary to unpack what employees are really signaling and why companies must start listening.</p><p><strong>Show notes</strong></p><p>[0:00] Are you listening to what your employees are and aren’t telling you about your company’s prospects?</p><p>[0:29] Meet <a href="https://www.rotman.utoronto.ca/the-rotman-experience/our-community/people/li-nan/" target="_blank">Nan Li</a>, an assistant professor of accounting at the Rotman School of Management who studies human capital – that is employees – and its impact on company performance. </p><p>[1:46] Big changes are coming to the reporting standards world. Starting in 2027, companies in the U.S. will have to disclose how much of their expense line items (think R&D, administration, marketing) is spent on compensation. </p><p>[3:22] This news makes Nan and other researchers excited, since it’s a goldmine of insights. </p><p>[4:00] The changes are long overdue. While once a company’s output and profits were driven by things like machinery and widgets – so that was a primary focus on reports; as we shift into a knowledge economy, employees are becoming the biggest asset. </p><p>[5:11] What are peer firms, and why does it matter when it comes to talent pools? </p><p>[5:30] LinkedIn is changing how we define peer firms. </p><p>[7:13] Why is it important to know that, says, a car company isn’t just competing against other car manufacturers for talent?</p><p>[8:29] Glassdoor reviews, specifically “employee business outlook,” is predictive of firm performance. A bad employee outlook will likely mean a bad earnings report down the line. </p><p>[9:46] So why aren’t company leaders and financial analysts paying attention to social media as a source of information? </p><p>[11:36] Certain types of labour costs are directly tied to future sales growth. More money into R&D translates into greater profit down the line, while fixed costs like administration can make it easy to grow in good times, but dampen growth in hard times, Nan’s research finds. </p><p>[13:34] Employees certainly pay attention to company earning calls, and adjust their own outlook on a company accordingly. So perhaps it’s time employers start doing the same. </p><p>[15:11] “All the information there is public. So as a manager or analyst, you can just sign on to Glassdoor, write your own review about your company. And there are some academics and also practitioners already noticed or recognize that we are kind of falling behind.” That’s because employees aren’t just workers; they’re insiders. They are on the ground seeing how your company is really performing. So maybe it’s time leaders start treating employees not just as assets, but as one of their most valuable sources of insight.</p><p> </p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <enclosure length="24091172" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://cdn.simplecast.com/audio/78b75df0-de19-43b9-b1da-218fdb076f70/episodes/8f0adb68-9d38-4675-8ed0-8b39a83f4a0c/audio/e065c05c-8adc-43a5-beeb-6795070c2f2e/default_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&amp;feed=t5PeOiog"/>
      <itunes:title>Accounting for labour: What your employees can reveal about company success</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Nan Li, Megan Haynes</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:17:03</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>What can your employees&apos; LinkedIn and Glassdoor activity tell you about a company&apos;s prospects?  More than you might think. From competition for top talent to out-of-sync business prospects, these platforms offer valuable insights — but are leaders paying attention? Assistant professor Nan Li joins Executive Summary to unpack what employees are really signaling and why companies must start listening.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>What can your employees&apos; LinkedIn and Glassdoor activity tell you about a company&apos;s prospects?  More than you might think. From competition for top talent to out-of-sync business prospects, these platforms offer valuable insights — but are leaders paying attention? Assistant professor Nan Li joins Executive Summary to unpack what employees are really signaling and why companies must start listening.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>rotman executive programs, accounting standards, university of toronto, linkedin, research, labour costs, labour, accounting, annual reports, financial reports, rotman school of management, financial reporting, employee insights, rotman, social media, glassdoor, uoft, employees</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>8</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>3</itunes:season>
    </item>
    <item>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">4778a63e-40f5-414f-ade5-b9252d8b456c</guid>
      <title>When autonomy backfires: When &apos;control&apos; creates more stress</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>The push to return to the office has sparked backlash — employees felt trusted to work remotely, so why take that control away? But what role does control play in mitigating or causing stress? And when is autonomy a bad thing? Professor Jia Lin Xie joined the Executive Summary to unpack how job demands, individual traits and culture shape our experience at work, and how to determine if complete control will be empowering or stress-inducing.</p><p><strong>Show notes</strong></p><p>[0:00] Meet professor Jia Lin Xie, an expert in job design, stress and employee well being. She’s in the middle of research exploring attitudes towards return to office.</p><p>[0:25] The pandemic gave employees control and autonomy over their work, and now many employees feel that control is being taken away by the RTO request. It turns out, once given, removing control can be detrimental. But should it always be given? </p><p>[1:26] We’re working in a “boundaryless” world, where technology enables us to be always connected.</p><p>[1:56] Research shows boundarylessness can boost job satisfaction, but it also contributes to emotional exhaustion and stress.</p><p>[3:35] Those who struggle with boundarylessness might blame their person-environment (P-E) fit. </p><p>[4:23] What happens when you have a “good” versus “bad” P-E fit? (Hint: it’s burnout!)</p><p>[4:48] Job demands — whether physical, cognitive, or emotional — can make or break your workplace experience.</p><p>[6:24] How does having control offset the risks of stressful job demands? </p><p>[8:35] Jia Lin questioned the widely held theory that control is always a buffer to job demand stress.</p><p>[10:08] Control isn’t always a good thing; things that affect your control include your abilities to do a task…</p><p>[11:41] …your attribution style…</p><p>[11:59] … and even your cultural background can impact its effectiveness at buffering stress. Take the difference between American and Hong Kong bank tellers.</p><p>[14:20] So if you’re struggling with control and autonomy, and think it’s causing you stress, you have to reflect on why that is.</p><p>[16:11] So, how can you tell if having more control at work will help or hurt you? Jia Lin has some questions you can ask yourself.</p><p>[18:26] The takeaway? Control isn’t one-size-fits-all. It’s about self-awareness, personal preferences, and the right support system.</p><p> </p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 11 Mar 2025 04:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>insightshub@rotman.utoronto.ca (Rotman School of Management)</author>
      <link>https://rotman-executive-summary.simplecast.com/episodes/illusion-of-control-Mw5H3EI0</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The push to return to the office has sparked backlash — employees felt trusted to work remotely, so why take that control away? But what role does control play in mitigating or causing stress? And when is autonomy a bad thing? Professor Jia Lin Xie joined the Executive Summary to unpack how job demands, individual traits and culture shape our experience at work, and how to determine if complete control will be empowering or stress-inducing.</p><p><strong>Show notes</strong></p><p>[0:00] Meet professor Jia Lin Xie, an expert in job design, stress and employee well being. She’s in the middle of research exploring attitudes towards return to office.</p><p>[0:25] The pandemic gave employees control and autonomy over their work, and now many employees feel that control is being taken away by the RTO request. It turns out, once given, removing control can be detrimental. But should it always be given? </p><p>[1:26] We’re working in a “boundaryless” world, where technology enables us to be always connected.</p><p>[1:56] Research shows boundarylessness can boost job satisfaction, but it also contributes to emotional exhaustion and stress.</p><p>[3:35] Those who struggle with boundarylessness might blame their person-environment (P-E) fit. </p><p>[4:23] What happens when you have a “good” versus “bad” P-E fit? (Hint: it’s burnout!)</p><p>[4:48] Job demands — whether physical, cognitive, or emotional — can make or break your workplace experience.</p><p>[6:24] How does having control offset the risks of stressful job demands? </p><p>[8:35] Jia Lin questioned the widely held theory that control is always a buffer to job demand stress.</p><p>[10:08] Control isn’t always a good thing; things that affect your control include your abilities to do a task…</p><p>[11:41] …your attribution style…</p><p>[11:59] … and even your cultural background can impact its effectiveness at buffering stress. Take the difference between American and Hong Kong bank tellers.</p><p>[14:20] So if you’re struggling with control and autonomy, and think it’s causing you stress, you have to reflect on why that is.</p><p>[16:11] So, how can you tell if having more control at work will help or hurt you? Jia Lin has some questions you can ask yourself.</p><p>[18:26] The takeaway? Control isn’t one-size-fits-all. It’s about self-awareness, personal preferences, and the right support system.</p><p> </p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <enclosure length="26858046" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://cdn.simplecast.com/audio/78b75df0-de19-43b9-b1da-218fdb076f70/episodes/e8cd9869-aaf8-4ee3-8c10-afcd9a2fb6f1/audio/d9841864-7fed-4b0e-8f5f-e1a43ed06588/default_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&amp;feed=t5PeOiog"/>
      <itunes:title>When autonomy backfires: When &apos;control&apos; creates more stress</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Rotman School of Management</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:19:56</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>The push to return to the office has sparked backlash — employees felt trusted to work remotely, so why take that control away? But what role does control play in mitigating or causing stress? And when is autonomy a bad thing? Professor Jia Lin Xie joined the Executive Summary to unpack how job demands, individual traits and culture shape our experience at work, and how to determine if complete control will be empowering or stress-inducing.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>The push to return to the office has sparked backlash — employees felt trusted to work remotely, so why take that control away? But what role does control play in mitigating or causing stress? And when is autonomy a bad thing? Professor Jia Lin Xie joined the Executive Summary to unpack how job demands, individual traits and culture shape our experience at work, and how to determine if complete control will be empowering or stress-inducing.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>7</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>3</itunes:season>
    </item>
    <item>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">4770b58c-5ea6-4b6c-89b1-0cc4af9547a7</guid>
      <title>Are we thinking about traffic congestion wrong</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>We’ve been thinking about traffic all wrong. Sitting in congestion costs local economies billions in lost productivity, and governments invest heavily in easing the gridlock. But what if we’re solving the wrong problem? Associate Professor Victor Couture joins <i>The Executive Summary</i> to challenge conventional wisdom on city transportation networks — and explain why accessibility and density might be worth the slowdown.</p><p><strong>Show notes</strong></p><p>[0:00] Not only does sitting in traffic suck, it has an economic impact, which cities and governments try to blunt through traffic mitigation strategies. </p><p>[1:38] Meet Victor Couture, an expert on urban issues such as housing, gentrification and transportation. </p><p>[3:04] In 2023, Victor and colleagues released a paper benchmarking the fastest and slowest cities in the world. </p><p>[4:20] What makes a city fast versus slow? </p><p>[6:41] Flint, Michigan, in the U.S. earns the distinction as the world’s fastest city, but it’s not a blueprint for other cities to model. </p><p>[7:22] When it comes to moving people around a city, what is the ultimate goal of a city, and why isn’t it speed? </p><p>[8:38] What is the transportation network?</p><p>[9:07] What is accessibility in terms of transportation networks? </p><p>[10:46] When is speed via cars a good option? </p><p>[11:26] How does density affect productivity? </p><p>[11:40] Reducing congestion isn’t going to magically make a city more economically vibrant or affordable.</p><p>[12:12] Toronto is a case study for the density versus traffic speed debate. Victor’s research shows that the city is, on average, getting slower despite traffic mitigation strategies. </p><p>[13:32] So what about that tunnel under highway 401? </p><p>[14:41] Should the city rip out newly installed bike lanes? </p><p>[15:44] So what is the purpose of a trip? </p><p>[16:19] “For 1,000s of years, cities have been about bringing people into closer proximity. They've been about facilitating the flows of goods, the flows of people, the flows of ideas and the purpose of urban policy makers should be to facilitate those flows and create infrastructure and create institutions that let people realize those benefits of cities, that let people meet easily. That's the goal of a transportation network.”</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 11 Feb 2025 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>insightshub@rotman.utoronto.ca (Victor Couture, Megan Haynes)</author>
      <link>https://rotman-executive-summary.simplecast.com/episodes/rethinking-congestion-txYiI_5c</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>We’ve been thinking about traffic all wrong. Sitting in congestion costs local economies billions in lost productivity, and governments invest heavily in easing the gridlock. But what if we’re solving the wrong problem? Associate Professor Victor Couture joins <i>The Executive Summary</i> to challenge conventional wisdom on city transportation networks — and explain why accessibility and density might be worth the slowdown.</p><p><strong>Show notes</strong></p><p>[0:00] Not only does sitting in traffic suck, it has an economic impact, which cities and governments try to blunt through traffic mitigation strategies. </p><p>[1:38] Meet Victor Couture, an expert on urban issues such as housing, gentrification and transportation. </p><p>[3:04] In 2023, Victor and colleagues released a paper benchmarking the fastest and slowest cities in the world. </p><p>[4:20] What makes a city fast versus slow? </p><p>[6:41] Flint, Michigan, in the U.S. earns the distinction as the world’s fastest city, but it’s not a blueprint for other cities to model. </p><p>[7:22] When it comes to moving people around a city, what is the ultimate goal of a city, and why isn’t it speed? </p><p>[8:38] What is the transportation network?</p><p>[9:07] What is accessibility in terms of transportation networks? </p><p>[10:46] When is speed via cars a good option? </p><p>[11:26] How does density affect productivity? </p><p>[11:40] Reducing congestion isn’t going to magically make a city more economically vibrant or affordable.</p><p>[12:12] Toronto is a case study for the density versus traffic speed debate. Victor’s research shows that the city is, on average, getting slower despite traffic mitigation strategies. </p><p>[13:32] So what about that tunnel under highway 401? </p><p>[14:41] Should the city rip out newly installed bike lanes? </p><p>[15:44] So what is the purpose of a trip? </p><p>[16:19] “For 1,000s of years, cities have been about bringing people into closer proximity. They've been about facilitating the flows of goods, the flows of people, the flows of ideas and the purpose of urban policy makers should be to facilitate those flows and create infrastructure and create institutions that let people realize those benefits of cities, that let people meet easily. That's the goal of a transportation network.”</p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <enclosure length="24520388" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://cdn.simplecast.com/audio/78b75df0-de19-43b9-b1da-218fdb076f70/episodes/966b9ac2-0bf4-41e9-8107-7f0d50576018/audio/0167cc62-84be-4e5b-a763-d35d68c5dfe9/default_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&amp;feed=t5PeOiog"/>
      <itunes:title>Are we thinking about traffic congestion wrong</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Victor Couture, Megan Haynes</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:17:30</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>We’ve been thinking about traffic all wrong. Sitting in congestion costs local economies billions in lost productivity, and governments invest heavily in easing the gridlock. But what if we’re solving the wrong problem? Associate Professor Victor Couture joins The Executive Summary to challenge conventional wisdom on city transportation networks — and explain why accessibility and density might be worth the slowdown.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>We’ve been thinking about traffic all wrong. Sitting in congestion costs local economies billions in lost productivity, and governments invest heavily in easing the gridlock. But what if we’re solving the wrong problem? Associate Professor Victor Couture joins The Executive Summary to challenge conventional wisdom on city transportation networks — and explain why accessibility and density might be worth the slowdown.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>rotman executive programs, economics, construction, doug ford, university of toronto, research, congestion, ontario politics, accessibility, cities, rotman school of management, transit, city speeds, transportation, traffic, trade, rotman, uoft, municipal politics</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>6</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>3</itunes:season>
    </item>
    <item>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">155d158c-4b50-4358-9fb6-82a4bebf1db2</guid>
      <title>Taming the machine: Why regulating AI feels impossible (but we have to try anyways)</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>"If AI didn’t offer such massive opportunities... we’d likely regulate it out of existence." On the latest episode of the Executive Summary, professor Dan Trefler explores the double-edged sword of artificial intelligence: Are the risks worth the rewards? Is bureaucratic red tape the solution — or just another hurdle? And how can the average citizen help fight the "great regulatory" battle? </p><p><strong>Show notes:</strong></p><p>[0:00] In 2023, tech leaders and academics signed a letter agreeing to hold off on future AI development until government regulation caught up…spoiler alert: it didn’t. </p><p>[0:48] Five years ago, it would have been impossible to imagine where AI development was going to be today…what will we see in the next five years? </p><p>[1:36] Meet Dan Trefler, a professor of economics and policy at the Rotman School of Management. </p><p>[2:29] Regulating “Artificial Intelligence” is impossible. </p><p>[3:50] What’s the 2025 state of affairs when it comes to regulating uses of AI? </p><p>[4:29] Dan sees one region of the world regulating the tech use about as well as they can. </p><p>[7:12] What is the competition problem? </p><p>[7:48] What is the coordination problem? </p><p>[8:29] What happens when we have competition and coordination working together seamlessly? </p><p>[9:46] So why can’t AI regulations follow the same successful model as car regulations? </p><p>[10:19] What’s the interpretability problem? </p><p>[11:18] California’s failed attempt at regulating AI companies is the perfect microcosm of the challenges we face. </p><p>[12:45] Where is the last place governments should regulate? </p><p>[13:49] To get a handle on things now, Dan wants us to focus on (1) extreme risks; </p><p>[14:28] (2) learning from other successful regulatory bodies like the FDA;</p><p>[14:49] and (3) exploring regulatory incentives that encourage positive uses of the technology.</p><p>[15:33] And citizens can help wage the great AI regulatory battle with their own personal choices. </p><p>[16:03] “I'm asking people to be much more forward looking than we normally tend to be. I want them to start anticipating risks which don't exist yet, because when they do come, as we've seen with past changes in AI, they will come in such a flurry that we won't be able to shovel our way out of our own homes. So let's start thinking hard about regulating things on a precautionary principle, not because they've happened, but because they might happen.”</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 14 Jan 2025 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>insightshub@rotman.utoronto.ca (Dan Trefler, Megan Haynes)</author>
      <link>https://rotman-executive-summary.simplecast.com/episodes/taming-the-machine-eKpPoKj0</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>"If AI didn’t offer such massive opportunities... we’d likely regulate it out of existence." On the latest episode of the Executive Summary, professor Dan Trefler explores the double-edged sword of artificial intelligence: Are the risks worth the rewards? Is bureaucratic red tape the solution — or just another hurdle? And how can the average citizen help fight the "great regulatory" battle? </p><p><strong>Show notes:</strong></p><p>[0:00] In 2023, tech leaders and academics signed a letter agreeing to hold off on future AI development until government regulation caught up…spoiler alert: it didn’t. </p><p>[0:48] Five years ago, it would have been impossible to imagine where AI development was going to be today…what will we see in the next five years? </p><p>[1:36] Meet Dan Trefler, a professor of economics and policy at the Rotman School of Management. </p><p>[2:29] Regulating “Artificial Intelligence” is impossible. </p><p>[3:50] What’s the 2025 state of affairs when it comes to regulating uses of AI? </p><p>[4:29] Dan sees one region of the world regulating the tech use about as well as they can. </p><p>[7:12] What is the competition problem? </p><p>[7:48] What is the coordination problem? </p><p>[8:29] What happens when we have competition and coordination working together seamlessly? </p><p>[9:46] So why can’t AI regulations follow the same successful model as car regulations? </p><p>[10:19] What’s the interpretability problem? </p><p>[11:18] California’s failed attempt at regulating AI companies is the perfect microcosm of the challenges we face. </p><p>[12:45] Where is the last place governments should regulate? </p><p>[13:49] To get a handle on things now, Dan wants us to focus on (1) extreme risks; </p><p>[14:28] (2) learning from other successful regulatory bodies like the FDA;</p><p>[14:49] and (3) exploring regulatory incentives that encourage positive uses of the technology.</p><p>[15:33] And citizens can help wage the great AI regulatory battle with their own personal choices. </p><p>[16:03] “I'm asking people to be much more forward looking than we normally tend to be. I want them to start anticipating risks which don't exist yet, because when they do come, as we've seen with past changes in AI, they will come in such a flurry that we won't be able to shovel our way out of our own homes. So let's start thinking hard about regulating things on a precautionary principle, not because they've happened, but because they might happen.”</p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <enclosure length="24302667" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://cdn.simplecast.com/audio/78b75df0-de19-43b9-b1da-218fdb076f70/episodes/b39fe23e-095c-4faa-bade-5eee80c5d60d/audio/e2448c94-f849-4f1d-8483-98cc8b5f45ee/default_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&amp;feed=t5PeOiog"/>
      <itunes:title>Taming the machine: Why regulating AI feels impossible (but we have to try anyways)</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Dan Trefler, Megan Haynes</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:17:17</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>&quot;If AI didn’t offer such massive opportunities... we’d likely regulate it out of existence.&quot; On the latest episode of the Executive Summary, professor Dan Trefler explores the double-edged sword of artificial intelligence: Are the risks worth the rewards? Is bureaucratic red tape the solution — or just another hurdle? And how can the average citizen help fight the &quot;great regulatory&quot; battle? </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>&quot;If AI didn’t offer such massive opportunities... we’d likely regulate it out of existence.&quot; On the latest episode of the Executive Summary, professor Dan Trefler explores the double-edged sword of artificial intelligence: Are the risks worth the rewards? Is bureaucratic red tape the solution — or just another hurdle? And how can the average citizen help fight the &quot;great regulatory&quot; battle? </itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>rotman executive programs, coordination, university of toronto, generative artificial intelligence, research, artificial intelligence, regulation, rotman school of management, competition, chatgpt generative ai, machine learning, trade, uoft, ai, policy</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>5</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>3</itunes:season>
    </item>
    <item>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">c9420d03-6d9f-4f11-9464-fbfdc0d337d1</guid>
      <title>Too hot to handle: How extreme heat damages businesses&apos; bottom lines</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Extreme heat is reshaping daily life, but what does it mean for companies? Assistant Professor Nora Pankratz joined the Executive Summary to unpack the financial toll of rising temperatures on organizations, and what — if anything— companies can do about it. </p><p><strong>Show notes</strong></p><p>[0:00] The world is getting warmer, and it’s costing businesses.</p><p>[0:37] Meet Nora Pankratz, an assistant professor at the University of Toronto Mississauga, with a cross appointment to the Rotman School of Management. She studies the impact of climate change on organizations.</p><p>[1:48] One of the biggest risks of heat is its impact on production. </p><p>[3:06] What does “heat exposure” even mean? </p><p>[3:32] Heat – specifically days over 30 degrees Celsius – might be costing businesses an average of $650,000 per quarter. </p><p>[3:54] And it affects indoor and outdoor industries alike, albeit in slightly different ways. </p><p>[4:49] It also has an impact on investors…</p><p>[5:39] …and supplier relationships. </p><p>[7:39] How can businesses adapt?</p><p>[8:40] Importantly, no one can really study what businesses are doing, since they aren’t sharing, nor are they required to share, their heat mitigation strategies. As a result, we don’t know what works, and what doesn’t. </p><p>[9:17] Nora studied the impact of heat on worker safety, and the results weren’t great. </p><p>[10:38] What’s driving heat-related injuries? </p><p>[11:39] But a simple, low-cost heat-mitigation strategy – training to identify signs of heat stroke – had a huge impact. </p><p>[12:35] So are businesses doing anything? Well…maybe? </p><p>[13:46] Nora is hopeful: “Overall, I think over the last couple of years, there has been an uptake in this type of data and analytical work at the firm level. So, I think firms will explore this more and more going forward.”</p><p> </p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 10 Dec 2024 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>insightshub@rotman.utoronto.ca (Nora Pankratz, Megan Haynes)</author>
      <link>https://rotman-executive-summary.simplecast.com/episodes/extreme-heat-JalnBBIL</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Extreme heat is reshaping daily life, but what does it mean for companies? Assistant Professor Nora Pankratz joined the Executive Summary to unpack the financial toll of rising temperatures on organizations, and what — if anything— companies can do about it. </p><p><strong>Show notes</strong></p><p>[0:00] The world is getting warmer, and it’s costing businesses.</p><p>[0:37] Meet Nora Pankratz, an assistant professor at the University of Toronto Mississauga, with a cross appointment to the Rotman School of Management. She studies the impact of climate change on organizations.</p><p>[1:48] One of the biggest risks of heat is its impact on production. </p><p>[3:06] What does “heat exposure” even mean? </p><p>[3:32] Heat – specifically days over 30 degrees Celsius – might be costing businesses an average of $650,000 per quarter. </p><p>[3:54] And it affects indoor and outdoor industries alike, albeit in slightly different ways. </p><p>[4:49] It also has an impact on investors…</p><p>[5:39] …and supplier relationships. </p><p>[7:39] How can businesses adapt?</p><p>[8:40] Importantly, no one can really study what businesses are doing, since they aren’t sharing, nor are they required to share, their heat mitigation strategies. As a result, we don’t know what works, and what doesn’t. </p><p>[9:17] Nora studied the impact of heat on worker safety, and the results weren’t great. </p><p>[10:38] What’s driving heat-related injuries? </p><p>[11:39] But a simple, low-cost heat-mitigation strategy – training to identify signs of heat stroke – had a huge impact. </p><p>[12:35] So are businesses doing anything? Well…maybe? </p><p>[13:46] Nora is hopeful: “Overall, I think over the last couple of years, there has been an uptake in this type of data and analytical work at the firm level. So, I think firms will explore this more and more going forward.”</p><p> </p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <enclosure length="21687477" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://cdn.simplecast.com/audio/78b75df0-de19-43b9-b1da-218fdb076f70/episodes/ff3d5f60-0c07-4ae8-a725-0dde731b654f/audio/40d53778-023e-4eea-9bdd-5fd52fa29c4a/default_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&amp;feed=t5PeOiog"/>
      <itunes:title>Too hot to handle: How extreme heat damages businesses&apos; bottom lines</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Nora Pankratz, Megan Haynes</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:14:33</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Extreme heat is reshaping daily life, but what does it mean for companies? Assistant Professor Nora Pankratz joined the Executive Summary to unpack the financial toll of rising temperatures on organizations, and what — if anything— companies can do about it. </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Extreme heat is reshaping daily life, but what does it mean for companies? Assistant Professor Nora Pankratz joined the Executive Summary to unpack the financial toll of rising temperatures on organizations, and what — if anything— companies can do about it. </itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>finance, rotman executive programs, economics, climate change, supply chain, university of toronto, research, corporate finances, corporate profit, financial research, rotman school of management, operating expenses, supply chain resilience, extreme heat, uoft</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>4</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>3</itunes:season>
    </item>
    <item>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">ff715dc4-6b40-4287-83a4-a3f60d20b671</guid>
      <title>Beyond Burnout: How to cultivate resilience in your workforce</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>In just four years, it feels like our workplaces have changed irrevocably. New technologies like AI threaten old jobs; shifting demographics bring new interpersonal challenges on teams; and our work location — be it home, the traditional office or a hybrid of the two — has become a flashpoint between leaders and employees. So what's the antidote? Professor Julie McCarthy joined the podcast to talk about resilience, why organizations should work to instill it in their teams, and how it can help us all move beyond burnout. </p><p><strong>Show notes: </strong></p><p>[0:00] The world has been a very stressful place, and some people are talking about burnout as the new baseline. </p><p>[1:02] Meet Julie McCarthy, a professor of organizational behaviour and HR at the Rotman School of Management. She studies workplace stress. </p><p>[1:20] Her antidote for a stressful life? Resilience. </p><p>[1:44] How do you define stress, stress reactions and anxiety? </p><p>[3:13] While a little bit of anxiety can be useful…</p><p>[3:36] …too much is detrimental to your well-being. </p><p>[4:23] What is resilience?</p><p>[4:48] What chips away at your resilience? </p><p>[6:10] How do you build resilience? </p><p>[8:27] What does this look like, organizationally? </p><p>[9:14] What does anxiety cost organizations? </p><p>[10:30] Why a one-size-fits-all approach to resilience is destined to fail. </p><p>[10:55] Step 1: recognize there’s a problem and commit to dealing with it strategically. </p><p>[11:22] Step 2: Don’t waste your money fixing the wrong problem. </p><p>[12:04] Step 3: evaluate, re-evaluate, and then evaluate again.</p><p>[12:53] Be prepared: this is a big cultural shift for lots of organizations. </p><p>[13:31] Questions to ask yourself to kick things off. </p><p>[14:46] Look deeper: do you need to change procedures, the people you hire, or the types of training you offer? </p><p>[15:42] It is a time and financial investment. </p><p>[17:18] “But if it's done properly, it's not a matter of, will it work, but it's just a matter of when.”</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 12 Nov 2024 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>insightshub@rotman.utoronto.ca (Rotman School of Management)</author>
      <link>https://rotman-executive-summary.simplecast.com/episodes/beyond-burnout-resilience-RMEiKCdC</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In just four years, it feels like our workplaces have changed irrevocably. New technologies like AI threaten old jobs; shifting demographics bring new interpersonal challenges on teams; and our work location — be it home, the traditional office or a hybrid of the two — has become a flashpoint between leaders and employees. So what's the antidote? Professor Julie McCarthy joined the podcast to talk about resilience, why organizations should work to instill it in their teams, and how it can help us all move beyond burnout. </p><p><strong>Show notes: </strong></p><p>[0:00] The world has been a very stressful place, and some people are talking about burnout as the new baseline. </p><p>[1:02] Meet Julie McCarthy, a professor of organizational behaviour and HR at the Rotman School of Management. She studies workplace stress. </p><p>[1:20] Her antidote for a stressful life? Resilience. </p><p>[1:44] How do you define stress, stress reactions and anxiety? </p><p>[3:13] While a little bit of anxiety can be useful…</p><p>[3:36] …too much is detrimental to your well-being. </p><p>[4:23] What is resilience?</p><p>[4:48] What chips away at your resilience? </p><p>[6:10] How do you build resilience? </p><p>[8:27] What does this look like, organizationally? </p><p>[9:14] What does anxiety cost organizations? </p><p>[10:30] Why a one-size-fits-all approach to resilience is destined to fail. </p><p>[10:55] Step 1: recognize there’s a problem and commit to dealing with it strategically. </p><p>[11:22] Step 2: Don’t waste your money fixing the wrong problem. </p><p>[12:04] Step 3: evaluate, re-evaluate, and then evaluate again.</p><p>[12:53] Be prepared: this is a big cultural shift for lots of organizations. </p><p>[13:31] Questions to ask yourself to kick things off. </p><p>[14:46] Look deeper: do you need to change procedures, the people you hire, or the types of training you offer? </p><p>[15:42] It is a time and financial investment. </p><p>[17:18] “But if it's done properly, it's not a matter of, will it work, but it's just a matter of when.”</p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <enclosure length="25188301" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://cdn.simplecast.com/audio/78b75df0-de19-43b9-b1da-218fdb076f70/episodes/65539e1a-c584-4eac-a0c2-71ae3794e820/audio/f8ad19fa-9f13-4478-9384-0dc91d0b5ab3/default_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&amp;feed=t5PeOiog"/>
      <itunes:title>Beyond Burnout: How to cultivate resilience in your workforce</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Rotman School of Management</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:18:12</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>In just four years, it feels like our workplaces have changed irrevocably. New technologies like AI threaten old jobs; shifting demographics bring new interpersonal challenges on teams; and our work location — be it home, the traditional office or a hybrid of the two — has become a flashpoint between leaders and employees. So what&apos;s the antidote? Professor Julie McCarthy joined the podcast to talk about resilience, why organizations should work to instill it in their teams, and how it can help us all move beyond burnout. </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>In just four years, it feels like our workplaces have changed irrevocably. New technologies like AI threaten old jobs; shifting demographics bring new interpersonal challenges on teams; and our work location — be it home, the traditional office or a hybrid of the two — has become a flashpoint between leaders and employees. So what&apos;s the antidote? Professor Julie McCarthy joined the podcast to talk about resilience, why organizations should work to instill it in their teams, and how it can help us all move beyond burnout. </itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>3</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>3</itunes:season>
    </item>
    <item>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">86540b29-abef-4882-99ff-797487584861</guid>
      <title>Unlocking success: Why your IP strategy could make or break your business</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Intellectual property may not be glamorous, but it’s essential to future business success. Professor Alberto Galasso explains how the right IP strategy can drive growth — or hold your business back— on the latest Rotman Executive Summary.</p><p><strong>Show notes: </strong></p><p>[0:00] There are a lot of factors that go into whether a company is innovative or not, so  much so that Professor Alberto Galasso wrote a book on the topic. </p><p>[1:50] But he warns that people often overlook the importance of IP to the innovation process. </p><p>[2:25] Let’s define IP, copyright and patents. </p><p>[3:52] The importance and value of IP has ballooned over the past 20 years. </p><p>[4:48] Today, it’s something companies big and small are increasingly reliant on.</p><p>[6:06] How often do patent applications succeed? How often do they fail? </p><p>[6:58] To get your IP and innovation strategy right, you have to know the overall goal of your organization, and you should think about it early and often. </p><p>[8:44] Is IP protection even the right approach? Or should you consider trade secrets? What are the trade-offs?</p><p>[10:59] How can you use IP data to boost innovation? </p><p>[12:31] And how can you use IP protection like patent filings to incentivize workers? </p><p>[13:41] What is absorptive capacity, and how does IP protection allow organizations to tap into this critical element of innovation? </p><p>[15:18] “So from that perspective, it is a crucial asset to this intellectual property to protect the area that are more valuable of your company, but also to share technology and access technology with other firms for which you want to collaborate.”</p><p> </p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 8 Oct 2024 04:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>insightshub@rotman.utoronto.ca (Alberto Galasso, Megan Haynes)</author>
      <link>https://rotman-executive-summary.simplecast.com/episodes/ip-strategy-success-uIg6IW5e</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Intellectual property may not be glamorous, but it’s essential to future business success. Professor Alberto Galasso explains how the right IP strategy can drive growth — or hold your business back— on the latest Rotman Executive Summary.</p><p><strong>Show notes: </strong></p><p>[0:00] There are a lot of factors that go into whether a company is innovative or not, so  much so that Professor Alberto Galasso wrote a book on the topic. </p><p>[1:50] But he warns that people often overlook the importance of IP to the innovation process. </p><p>[2:25] Let’s define IP, copyright and patents. </p><p>[3:52] The importance and value of IP has ballooned over the past 20 years. </p><p>[4:48] Today, it’s something companies big and small are increasingly reliant on.</p><p>[6:06] How often do patent applications succeed? How often do they fail? </p><p>[6:58] To get your IP and innovation strategy right, you have to know the overall goal of your organization, and you should think about it early and often. </p><p>[8:44] Is IP protection even the right approach? Or should you consider trade secrets? What are the trade-offs?</p><p>[10:59] How can you use IP data to boost innovation? </p><p>[12:31] And how can you use IP protection like patent filings to incentivize workers? </p><p>[13:41] What is absorptive capacity, and how does IP protection allow organizations to tap into this critical element of innovation? </p><p>[15:18] “So from that perspective, it is a crucial asset to this intellectual property to protect the area that are more valuable of your company, but also to share technology and access technology with other firms for which you want to collaborate.”</p><p> </p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <enclosure length="23292032" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://cdn.simplecast.com/audio/78b75df0-de19-43b9-b1da-218fdb076f70/episodes/c992aa51-dc08-4bbb-9182-0aa70d711db4/audio/5eccdff6-0ac1-42eb-89eb-4a142f2abbe2/default_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&amp;feed=t5PeOiog"/>
      <itunes:title>Unlocking success: Why your IP strategy could make or break your business</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Alberto Galasso, Megan Haynes</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:16:13</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Intellectual property may not be glamorous, but it’s essential to future business success. Professor Alberto Galasso explains how the right IP strategy can drive growth — or hold your business back— on the latest Rotman Executive Summary.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Intellectual property may not be glamorous, but it’s essential to future business success. Professor Alberto Galasso explains how the right IP strategy can drive growth — or hold your business back— on the latest Rotman Executive Summary.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>copyright, startups, university of toronto, innovation, research, funding, collaboration, intellectual property, trade secrets, ip protection, rotman school of management, patents, entrepreneurs, uoft</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>2</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>3</itunes:season>
    </item>
    <item>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">d34fdfe2-ad95-4d87-ab91-fd30e27e668c</guid>
      <title>Location, location, innovation: Why where you work changes (almost) everything</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>As companies wrestle with the return-to-office debate, it’s crucial to ask: How much does location really matter for innovation? Surprisingly, where you work can significantly shape how—and how much—you innovate. Assistant Professor Ruben Gaetani dives into the research, revealing why dragging everyone back to their cubicles could stifle the very creativity you’re trying to spark.</p><p><strong>Show notes</strong><br />[0:00] Downtown offices are in the midst of an identity crisis. As vacancy rates rise, some leaders are demanding workers return to their towers to strengthen culture and innovation. </p><p>[1:11] Meet Ruben Gaetani, an assistant professor at the University of Toronto, who specifically looks at how office location influences innovation strategy. </p><p>[2:22] What is conventional versus unconventional innovation, and how do they differ? </p><p>[3:48] You’re most likely to see unconventional innovation in dense, urban environments, while conventional innovation thrives in the suburbs. But why?</p><p>[5:53] How should leaders be thinking about office location in relation to their innovation strategy? </p><p>[6:44] Don’t discount conventional innovation: it plays an important role in company growth.</p><p>[7:27] But don’t get stuck chasing iterative innovation; make sure you have a strategy for unconventional ideas too. </p><p>[10:21] If you’re calling people back to their downtown office cubicle, ask yourself: What kind of innovation am I actually chasing…and is an office tower really helping my team meet strangers? </p><p>[11:48] Downtowns might be dense, but they are not the dense, urban environments that Ruben is talking about. Instead, he says companies chasing unconventional innovation should look for places that encourage random encounters. </p><p>[13:07] If innovation is the goal of your office strategy, there are some questions to keep in mind. </p><p>[13:48] Post COVID-19, it’s a great opportunity for businesses and policy makers to reflect on how companies influence their surroundings, and vice versa; Ruben has some not-so-great research to share.</p><p>[14:36] What can policy makers do to alleviate this negative gentrification of innovative tech clusters? </p><p>[15:26] And why should business care? “We have been observing in some instances, tech firms, innovative firms are consider by the public opinion as responsible for these negative effects they have on local communities. It reduces their ability to attract talent if a location is extremely segregated. And it reduces the amount of diversity and richness of interactions that firms have in their geographical location.” </p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 10 Sep 2024 04:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>insightshub@rotman.utoronto.ca (Ruben Gaetani, Megan Haynes)</author>
      <link>https://rotman-executive-summary.simplecast.com/episodes/location-and-innovation-3iELfKCG</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>As companies wrestle with the return-to-office debate, it’s crucial to ask: How much does location really matter for innovation? Surprisingly, where you work can significantly shape how—and how much—you innovate. Assistant Professor Ruben Gaetani dives into the research, revealing why dragging everyone back to their cubicles could stifle the very creativity you’re trying to spark.</p><p><strong>Show notes</strong><br />[0:00] Downtown offices are in the midst of an identity crisis. As vacancy rates rise, some leaders are demanding workers return to their towers to strengthen culture and innovation. </p><p>[1:11] Meet Ruben Gaetani, an assistant professor at the University of Toronto, who specifically looks at how office location influences innovation strategy. </p><p>[2:22] What is conventional versus unconventional innovation, and how do they differ? </p><p>[3:48] You’re most likely to see unconventional innovation in dense, urban environments, while conventional innovation thrives in the suburbs. But why?</p><p>[5:53] How should leaders be thinking about office location in relation to their innovation strategy? </p><p>[6:44] Don’t discount conventional innovation: it plays an important role in company growth.</p><p>[7:27] But don’t get stuck chasing iterative innovation; make sure you have a strategy for unconventional ideas too. </p><p>[10:21] If you’re calling people back to their downtown office cubicle, ask yourself: What kind of innovation am I actually chasing…and is an office tower really helping my team meet strangers? </p><p>[11:48] Downtowns might be dense, but they are not the dense, urban environments that Ruben is talking about. Instead, he says companies chasing unconventional innovation should look for places that encourage random encounters. </p><p>[13:07] If innovation is the goal of your office strategy, there are some questions to keep in mind. </p><p>[13:48] Post COVID-19, it’s a great opportunity for businesses and policy makers to reflect on how companies influence their surroundings, and vice versa; Ruben has some not-so-great research to share.</p><p>[14:36] What can policy makers do to alleviate this negative gentrification of innovative tech clusters? </p><p>[15:26] And why should business care? “We have been observing in some instances, tech firms, innovative firms are consider by the public opinion as responsible for these negative effects they have on local communities. It reduces their ability to attract talent if a location is extremely segregated. And it reduces the amount of diversity and richness of interactions that firms have in their geographical location.” </p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <enclosure length="24100788" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://cdn.simplecast.com/audio/78b75df0-de19-43b9-b1da-218fdb076f70/episodes/c3b5bb4b-3f28-4ef8-9eb8-aa7b637c85a7/audio/a431f439-2645-4508-b26f-23e79886d707/default_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&amp;feed=t5PeOiog"/>
      <itunes:title>Location, location, innovation: Why where you work changes (almost) everything</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Ruben Gaetani, Megan Haynes</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:17:04</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>As companies wrestle with the return-to-office debate, it’s crucial to ask: How much does location really matter for innovation? Surprisingly, where you work can significantly shape how — and how much — you innovate. Assistant professor Ruben Gaetani dives into the research, revealing why dragging everyone back to their office tower cubicles could stifle the very creativity you’re trying to spark.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>As companies wrestle with the return-to-office debate, it’s crucial to ask: How much does location really matter for innovation? Surprisingly, where you work can significantly shape how — and how much — you innovate. Assistant professor Ruben Gaetani dives into the research, revealing why dragging everyone back to their office tower cubicles could stifle the very creativity you’re trying to spark.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>university of toronto, innovation, novel innovation, research, strategy, real estate, return to office, work-from-home, rotman school of management, remote work, conventional innovation, uoft, hybrid work</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>1</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>3</itunes:season>
    </item>
    <item>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">b075bac8-4299-47f0-9611-b25b2c8cd300</guid>
      <title>Mind the gap: Should brands weigh in on divisive topics?</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>From issues of bodily autonomy to climate change to social equality, the world is increasingly polarized, and even companies can't escape hot-button topics. While once, organizations could keep their positions on divisive issues to themselves, consumers are demanding they take sides. But should they? And how can brands weigh in without alienating the people who disagree with their stance? Assistant professor Rhia Catapano explores how businesses can navigate these polarizing topics on the latest episode of the Executive Summary. </p><p><strong>Show notes:</strong></p><p>[0:00] In 2022, Disney and the state of Florida became embroiled in a polarizing debate over the state's alleged "Don't Say Gay" bill, which Disney opposed, albeit belatedly. </p><p>[0:56] Once, businesses could stay silent when hot topics arose, but today consumers are demanding they take sides. </p><p>[1:32] Meet Rhia Catapano, an assistant professor at the Rotman School of management who studies consumer persuasion. </p><p>[2:20] Brands most often worry about consumer boycotts when they take stances their audiences disagree with. But that worry might be misplaced. </p><p>[2:49] Consumers tend to buy from companies when it's inconvenient to maintain their boycott. </p><p>[3:14] We're also likely to change our memories, thinking we boycotted a product, even when we still loaded it into our carts. </p><p>[6:10] And we often believe signaling our intentions to boycott is "enough," so we feel less guilty even as we're purchasing items from a brand we've said we'll avoid. </p><p>[7:36] So if we're so bad at boycotting, why should businesses care? For one, the reputational hit is very real. </p><p>[7:51] There are always cases where brands don't have to worry - particularly when the audience boycotting the brand isn't it's target audience. See Nike, Colin Kaepernick and the social right in the U.S. </p><p>[8:31] But when the audiences align, boycotts are particularly effective in this age of social media. First, because social media makes it easier to propagate messages. </p><p>[9:23] Second, social media creates a "safe space" to share polarizing opinions. </p><p>[10:10] So how can companies navigate hot button issues? First, make sure you're not being a hypocrite. </p><p>[10:49] Consider how you frame your stance around an issue, and what you want to achieve by making public statements. </p><p>[13:08] Be real about whether you can take the heat. </p><p>[13:58] And consider new audience opportunities when your values don't align with your existing customer base. "It makes the most sense for the company to stick to what are their core values and what can they do that will align with what they've done in the past and what they want to do moving forward, rather than trying to please everyone.</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 9 Apr 2024 04:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>insightshub@rotman.utoronto.ca (Rhia Catapano, Megan Haynes)</author>
      <link>https://rotman-executive-summary.simplecast.com/episodes/brands-and-politics-MfXfIzxv</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>From issues of bodily autonomy to climate change to social equality, the world is increasingly polarized, and even companies can't escape hot-button topics. While once, organizations could keep their positions on divisive issues to themselves, consumers are demanding they take sides. But should they? And how can brands weigh in without alienating the people who disagree with their stance? Assistant professor Rhia Catapano explores how businesses can navigate these polarizing topics on the latest episode of the Executive Summary. </p><p><strong>Show notes:</strong></p><p>[0:00] In 2022, Disney and the state of Florida became embroiled in a polarizing debate over the state's alleged "Don't Say Gay" bill, which Disney opposed, albeit belatedly. </p><p>[0:56] Once, businesses could stay silent when hot topics arose, but today consumers are demanding they take sides. </p><p>[1:32] Meet Rhia Catapano, an assistant professor at the Rotman School of management who studies consumer persuasion. </p><p>[2:20] Brands most often worry about consumer boycotts when they take stances their audiences disagree with. But that worry might be misplaced. </p><p>[2:49] Consumers tend to buy from companies when it's inconvenient to maintain their boycott. </p><p>[3:14] We're also likely to change our memories, thinking we boycotted a product, even when we still loaded it into our carts. </p><p>[6:10] And we often believe signaling our intentions to boycott is "enough," so we feel less guilty even as we're purchasing items from a brand we've said we'll avoid. </p><p>[7:36] So if we're so bad at boycotting, why should businesses care? For one, the reputational hit is very real. </p><p>[7:51] There are always cases where brands don't have to worry - particularly when the audience boycotting the brand isn't it's target audience. See Nike, Colin Kaepernick and the social right in the U.S. </p><p>[8:31] But when the audiences align, boycotts are particularly effective in this age of social media. First, because social media makes it easier to propagate messages. </p><p>[9:23] Second, social media creates a "safe space" to share polarizing opinions. </p><p>[10:10] So how can companies navigate hot button issues? First, make sure you're not being a hypocrite. </p><p>[10:49] Consider how you frame your stance around an issue, and what you want to achieve by making public statements. </p><p>[13:08] Be real about whether you can take the heat. </p><p>[13:58] And consider new audience opportunities when your values don't align with your existing customer base. "It makes the most sense for the company to stick to what are their core values and what can they do that will align with what they've done in the past and what they want to do moving forward, rather than trying to please everyone.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <enclosure length="22569800" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://cdn.simplecast.com/audio/78b75df0-de19-43b9-b1da-218fdb076f70/episodes/0beedea5-9ce1-4dd0-a69d-1042a49a6531/audio/1b115e27-6f4c-4261-b9dc-d7a35798b666/default_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&amp;feed=t5PeOiog"/>
      <itunes:title>Mind the gap: Should brands weigh in on divisive topics?</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Rhia Catapano, Megan Haynes</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:15:28</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>From issues of bodily autonomy to climate change to social equality, the world is increasingly polarized, and even companies can&apos;t escape hot-button topics. While once, organizations could keep their positions on divisive issues to themselves, consumers are demanding they take sides. But should they? And how can brands weigh in without alienating the people who disagree with their stance? Assistant professor Rhia Catapano explores how businesses can navigate these polarizing topics on the latest episode of the Executive Summary. </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>From issues of bodily autonomy to climate change to social equality, the world is increasingly polarized, and even companies can&apos;t escape hot-button topics. While once, organizations could keep their positions on divisive issues to themselves, consumers are demanding they take sides. But should they? And how can brands weigh in without alienating the people who disagree with their stance? Assistant professor Rhia Catapano explores how businesses can navigate these polarizing topics on the latest episode of the Executive Summary. </itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>polarization, nike, marketing, boycotting, university of toronto, consumer behaviour, esg, research, politics, disney, rotman school of management, uber, uoft</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>8</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>2</itunes:season>
    </item>
    <item>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">c8b45895-c6dc-4ffe-b213-a1bd36f4589a</guid>
      <title>Emotions and Excellence: Why processing feelings is important for leadership</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>We often reach adulthood without ever being taught how to process our emotions. But an unprocessed emotion never goes away; it simply festers and grows. </p><p>Associate professor Maja Djikic joined the Executive Summary podcast to talk about how to identify if we're bad at processing our feelings, how we can get better at it, and what role organizations have in helping their leaders and teams understanding that skillset. </p><p><strong>Show notes</strong></p><p>[0:00] “A lot of discussion on managing emotions has to do with how to make emotions go away.  Usually they're seen as something negative, something you don't want to have. This is why being called emotional seems like an insult.”</p><p>[0:48] Meet Maja Djikic, an associate professor at Rotman who studies adult development and authored the recently released book, <a href="https://www.penguinrandomhouse.ca/books/743096/the-possible-self-by-maja-djikic/9781523006014" target="_blank">The Possible Self. </a></p><p>[1:18] If there’s one thing she wants you to know about emotions, it’s that an unprocessed emotion never goes away. </p><p>[1:36] Emotions are tied to our goals, and when we ignore them, we might be missing out on important information that helps move our lives forward. </p><p>[2:05] What is an emotion? </p><p>[2:30] How are our emotions tied to our goals, and how does this present itself?</p><p>[2:53] Positive emotions reinforce that things are going well. </p><p>[3:10] Negative emotions might tell us something is wrong on our path to our goal. For example, fear might tell you that you’re afraid of getting fired, and that your relationships with colleagues have gone amiss. </p><p>[4:15] People are bad at processing and understanding their emotions. </p><p>[4:25] Some of this is evolutionary – our fight or flight instinct often kicks in when we have a strong emotion. </p><p>[5:07] Let’s sidebar to explain the difference between processing and expressing emotions. </p><p>[5:55] The other reason we’re bad at processing emotions is we’re likely never taught how.</p><p>[6:45] The first step in processing emotions is to recognize you’re bad at it and work to improve that skillset. </p><p>[7:16] The second step is to recognize you’re having a strong negative emotion and bring your pre-frontal cortex back online. </p><p>[8:34] Step three is to identify what you’re feeling and try and link it back to the goal you’re trying to achieve. </p><p>[10:11] Why does this matter for a workplace? Leaders who can’t process emotions create toxic environments. </p><p>[10:55] Learning to process feelings should be top-down. </p><p>[11:17] As a leader, how can you help your team better process their emotions? </p><p>[13:10] And when those around you can’t or won’t learn to process their emotions? “If you're in a situation where the leadership is not interested at all and processing there. So then that becomes a choice for you to stay or to leave. There’s all these people around me they're doing a lot of negative expression because they're not able to process. They don't seem to be interested in anything to do with processing in education. Okay, well, how long do I want to hang out here?</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Mon, 11 Mar 2024 04:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>insightshub@rotman.utoronto.ca (Maja Djikic)</author>
      <link>https://rotman-executive-summary.simplecast.com/episodes/processing-emotions-xq0D7Kmy</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>We often reach adulthood without ever being taught how to process our emotions. But an unprocessed emotion never goes away; it simply festers and grows. </p><p>Associate professor Maja Djikic joined the Executive Summary podcast to talk about how to identify if we're bad at processing our feelings, how we can get better at it, and what role organizations have in helping their leaders and teams understanding that skillset. </p><p><strong>Show notes</strong></p><p>[0:00] “A lot of discussion on managing emotions has to do with how to make emotions go away.  Usually they're seen as something negative, something you don't want to have. This is why being called emotional seems like an insult.”</p><p>[0:48] Meet Maja Djikic, an associate professor at Rotman who studies adult development and authored the recently released book, <a href="https://www.penguinrandomhouse.ca/books/743096/the-possible-self-by-maja-djikic/9781523006014" target="_blank">The Possible Self. </a></p><p>[1:18] If there’s one thing she wants you to know about emotions, it’s that an unprocessed emotion never goes away. </p><p>[1:36] Emotions are tied to our goals, and when we ignore them, we might be missing out on important information that helps move our lives forward. </p><p>[2:05] What is an emotion? </p><p>[2:30] How are our emotions tied to our goals, and how does this present itself?</p><p>[2:53] Positive emotions reinforce that things are going well. </p><p>[3:10] Negative emotions might tell us something is wrong on our path to our goal. For example, fear might tell you that you’re afraid of getting fired, and that your relationships with colleagues have gone amiss. </p><p>[4:15] People are bad at processing and understanding their emotions. </p><p>[4:25] Some of this is evolutionary – our fight or flight instinct often kicks in when we have a strong emotion. </p><p>[5:07] Let’s sidebar to explain the difference between processing and expressing emotions. </p><p>[5:55] The other reason we’re bad at processing emotions is we’re likely never taught how.</p><p>[6:45] The first step in processing emotions is to recognize you’re bad at it and work to improve that skillset. </p><p>[7:16] The second step is to recognize you’re having a strong negative emotion and bring your pre-frontal cortex back online. </p><p>[8:34] Step three is to identify what you’re feeling and try and link it back to the goal you’re trying to achieve. </p><p>[10:11] Why does this matter for a workplace? Leaders who can’t process emotions create toxic environments. </p><p>[10:55] Learning to process feelings should be top-down. </p><p>[11:17] As a leader, how can you help your team better process their emotions? </p><p>[13:10] And when those around you can’t or won’t learn to process their emotions? “If you're in a situation where the leadership is not interested at all and processing there. So then that becomes a choice for you to stay or to leave. There’s all these people around me they're doing a lot of negative expression because they're not able to process. They don't seem to be interested in anything to do with processing in education. Okay, well, how long do I want to hang out here?</p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <enclosure length="15016999" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://cdn.simplecast.com/audio/78b75df0-de19-43b9-b1da-218fdb076f70/episodes/3fcf8a8c-45d6-4ce9-9fec-9a9f6746211f/audio/a0a9e8a0-6534-4d66-9056-ec0a4e720829/default_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&amp;feed=t5PeOiog"/>
      <itunes:title>Emotions and Excellence: Why processing feelings is important for leadership</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Maja Djikic</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:14:26</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>We often reach adulthood without ever being taught how to process our emotions. But an unprocessed emotion never goes away; it simply festers and grows. 

Associate professor Maja Djikic joined the Executive Summary podcast to talk about how to identify if we&apos;re bad at processing our feelings, how we can get better at it, and what role organizations have in helping their leaders and teams understanding that skillset. </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>We often reach adulthood without ever being taught how to process our emotions. But an unprocessed emotion never goes away; it simply festers and grows. 

Associate professor Maja Djikic joined the Executive Summary podcast to talk about how to identify if we&apos;re bad at processing our feelings, how we can get better at it, and what role organizations have in helping their leaders and teams understanding that skillset. </itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>rotman executive programs, processing emotions, emotional resilience, university of toronto, emotional intelligence, research, leadership, people skills, career development, rotman school of management, management, rotman self-development lab, emotions, uoft</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>7</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>2</itunes:season>
    </item>
    <item>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">50bd9d65-84cc-4a0f-ab11-2051a889bdcd</guid>
      <title>Retirement savings is daunting: Can you nudge your brain to boost your savings rate?</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>A recent study from BMO found that Canadians believed they would need more than $1.7 million to comfortably retire. Yet many individuals nearing retirement have less than $100,000 saved. Why is thinking about saving - even when you have the means - such a daunting prospect? Assistant professor Avni Shah joined the Executive Summary to explain the behavioural barriers to retirement savings, and showcase some of her research into how we might overcome these blockers. </p><p><strong>Show notes</strong></p><p>[0:00] Retirement is a rich man’s opportunity, and many people don’t feel they’ll ever have the luxury. </p><p>[0:30] Meet Avni Shah, an assistant professor of marketing who studies how and why people make financial decisions. </p><p>[1:14] People probably aren’t saving enough for retirement, even if they understand conceptually that they need to save more. </p><p>[2:08] Why? Well, we have a bias towards dealing with the needs of today…</p><p>[2:35] …the future is hard to imagine… </p><p>[3:07] …and it’s cognitively costly to think about ephemeral things like money when it’s so far into the future. </p><p>[3:33] Finally, the narrative around retirement – living your best life – might not be effective for large swaths of the population. </p><p>[5:35] Avni partnered with Ideas 42 and the Mexican government to help increase the rates of voluntary retirement contribution. They devised three experiments. </p><p>[5:46] How the Mexican pension system works. </p><p>[6:18] How does beautifying a form impact retirement savings? </p><p>[8:20] To increase your desire to save, tell yourself a story about your future. </p><p>[9:40] Sometimes what’s requires is a shift in messaging. Instead of selling the idea of “saving for your future,” companies might want to consider selling the idea of “saving for your family’s future.” </p><p>[11:58] But it’s important to remember that any behavioural nudge is going to be contextual, and there’s no one-size-fits all approach. </p><p>[12:48] Simplifying information can also backfire if the info that’s left is demotivating. </p><p>[13:34] And, for individuals, picturing your life in retirement can be a huge motivator for squirreling away a bit more cash. </p><p>[14:06] “It makes it easier to see and it's something that is beneficial to them to say okay, that in conjunction with then making it savings automatic and can be tremendously valuable in encouraging people to save and really living in a way that they're not scared about the future.”</p><p> </p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 13 Feb 2024 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>insightshub@rotman.utoronto.ca (Avni Shah, Megan Haynes)</author>
      <link>https://rotman-executive-summary.simplecast.com/episodes/retirement-nudges-7_We0wS5</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>A recent study from BMO found that Canadians believed they would need more than $1.7 million to comfortably retire. Yet many individuals nearing retirement have less than $100,000 saved. Why is thinking about saving - even when you have the means - such a daunting prospect? Assistant professor Avni Shah joined the Executive Summary to explain the behavioural barriers to retirement savings, and showcase some of her research into how we might overcome these blockers. </p><p><strong>Show notes</strong></p><p>[0:00] Retirement is a rich man’s opportunity, and many people don’t feel they’ll ever have the luxury. </p><p>[0:30] Meet Avni Shah, an assistant professor of marketing who studies how and why people make financial decisions. </p><p>[1:14] People probably aren’t saving enough for retirement, even if they understand conceptually that they need to save more. </p><p>[2:08] Why? Well, we have a bias towards dealing with the needs of today…</p><p>[2:35] …the future is hard to imagine… </p><p>[3:07] …and it’s cognitively costly to think about ephemeral things like money when it’s so far into the future. </p><p>[3:33] Finally, the narrative around retirement – living your best life – might not be effective for large swaths of the population. </p><p>[5:35] Avni partnered with Ideas 42 and the Mexican government to help increase the rates of voluntary retirement contribution. They devised three experiments. </p><p>[5:46] How the Mexican pension system works. </p><p>[6:18] How does beautifying a form impact retirement savings? </p><p>[8:20] To increase your desire to save, tell yourself a story about your future. </p><p>[9:40] Sometimes what’s requires is a shift in messaging. Instead of selling the idea of “saving for your future,” companies might want to consider selling the idea of “saving for your family’s future.” </p><p>[11:58] But it’s important to remember that any behavioural nudge is going to be contextual, and there’s no one-size-fits all approach. </p><p>[12:48] Simplifying information can also backfire if the info that’s left is demotivating. </p><p>[13:34] And, for individuals, picturing your life in retirement can be a huge motivator for squirreling away a bit more cash. </p><p>[14:06] “It makes it easier to see and it's something that is beneficial to them to say okay, that in conjunction with then making it savings automatic and can be tremendously valuable in encouraging people to save and really living in a way that they're not scared about the future.”</p><p> </p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <enclosure length="15671137" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://cdn.simplecast.com/audio/78b75df0-de19-43b9-b1da-218fdb076f70/episodes/f374c7c9-3dd1-4afe-8ee0-8e0bafa3902a/audio/8d620931-89a0-447e-98cf-01c9b2476f93/default_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&amp;feed=t5PeOiog"/>
      <itunes:title>Retirement savings is daunting: Can you nudge your brain to boost your savings rate?</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Avni Shah, Megan Haynes</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:15:07</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>A recent study from BMO found that Canadians believed they would need more than $1.7 million to comfortably retire. Yet many individuals nearing retirement have less than $100,000 saved. Why is thinking about saving - even when you have the means - such a daunting prospect? Assistant professor Avni Shah joined the Executive Summary to explain the behavioural barriers to retirement savings, and showcase some of her research into how we might overcome these blockers. </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>A recent study from BMO found that Canadians believed they would need more than $1.7 million to comfortably retire. Yet many individuals nearing retirement have less than $100,000 saved. Why is thinking about saving - even when you have the means - such a daunting prospect? Assistant professor Avni Shah joined the Executive Summary to explain the behavioural barriers to retirement savings, and showcase some of her research into how we might overcome these blockers. </itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>pension plans, bear, retirement goals, retirement savings, university of toronto, tfsa, research, savings, canadian pension plan, retirement, behavioural economics, pension, rotman school of management, rrsps, behavioural economics in action research, uoft</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>6</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>2</itunes:season>
    </item>
    <item>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">d156b866-f4af-4abb-a97d-0eebd9467567</guid>
      <title>The real dangers of fake reviews: How a billion-dollar industry is reshaping e-commerce</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Phony stars and false testimonials are rampant online. But is this really a problem, how did we get here, and what responsibility to e-commerce platforms have in addressing the problem? Assistant professor Shreyas Sekar explores what the future of reviews looks like, and why platforms like Amazon should probably take the issue of fake reviews more seriously. </p><p><strong>Show notes: </strong></p><p>[0:00] When you see thousands of version of the same product you’re looking to buy online, how do you parse through the options to make a selection? This is where reviews come in. </p><p>[0:46] Shreyas Sekar, an assistant professor at the Rotman School of Management/University of Toronto Scarborough studies how consumers make choices online, and how these choices can be manipulated.</p><p>[0:59] More than 29 million Canadians made an online purchase in 2022 – and with that comes inevitable fraud. </p><p>[1:23] Fake reviews are likely a billion-dollar industry. </p><p>[2:08] A quick brief on how Amazon shows you products in your search results, and why results near the top of the search are more likely to get purchased. </p><p>[3:31] Reviews play a crucial role in helping sort the rankings, with products with more plentiful and favourable reviews landing higher in the results. </p><p>[3:57] Estimates peg phony reviews and algorithm manipulation between four and 40 per cent. Shreyas suspects it’s somewhere in the middle. </p><p>[4:14] Why is this a problem? </p><p>[5:29] Consumers are likely also buying products on false information, resulting in a substandard experience, likely costing $150 million a year. </p><p>[6:07] This is likely to erode trust in the entire online buying ecosystem.</p><p>[6:49] So how did we get here? Let’s look first at how we used to shop a few decades ago.</p><p>[7:17] Amazon changed the game, first by offering online shopping, but second helping popularize the “marketplace.” </p><p>[8:02] What is a marketplace? </p><p>[8:44] How did the marketplace create an even greater reliance on reviews?</p><p>[9:14] And, in the current system, e-commerce platforms have little incentives to fight this issue.</p><p>[9:36] Fake reviews have gotten very sophisticated.</p><p>[10:58] So what can consumers and small businesses do? </p><p>[12:25] How can AI be utilized to help solve the problem of fake reviews? Shreyas has two suggestions. First, it can create a Coles’ Notes for consumers. </p><p>[12:56] Second, it can be used to create some randomness. </p><p>[14:11] Why does it even matter? “Algorithms play a huge role in our life, which means that we have to critically examine this pipeline, in terms of the different ways in which humans can manipulate the algorithms to do their bidding.</p><p>But when you trick the algorithm, you're not just tricking one consumer, you're tricking 1000s of future consumers, who are going to rely on this algorithm for the purchasing decision.”</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 16 Jan 2024 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>insightshub@rotman.utoronto.ca (Shreyas Sekar, Megan Haynes)</author>
      <link>https://rotman-executive-summary.simplecast.com/episodes/fake-reviews-xINjxmjS</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Phony stars and false testimonials are rampant online. But is this really a problem, how did we get here, and what responsibility to e-commerce platforms have in addressing the problem? Assistant professor Shreyas Sekar explores what the future of reviews looks like, and why platforms like Amazon should probably take the issue of fake reviews more seriously. </p><p><strong>Show notes: </strong></p><p>[0:00] When you see thousands of version of the same product you’re looking to buy online, how do you parse through the options to make a selection? This is where reviews come in. </p><p>[0:46] Shreyas Sekar, an assistant professor at the Rotman School of Management/University of Toronto Scarborough studies how consumers make choices online, and how these choices can be manipulated.</p><p>[0:59] More than 29 million Canadians made an online purchase in 2022 – and with that comes inevitable fraud. </p><p>[1:23] Fake reviews are likely a billion-dollar industry. </p><p>[2:08] A quick brief on how Amazon shows you products in your search results, and why results near the top of the search are more likely to get purchased. </p><p>[3:31] Reviews play a crucial role in helping sort the rankings, with products with more plentiful and favourable reviews landing higher in the results. </p><p>[3:57] Estimates peg phony reviews and algorithm manipulation between four and 40 per cent. Shreyas suspects it’s somewhere in the middle. </p><p>[4:14] Why is this a problem? </p><p>[5:29] Consumers are likely also buying products on false information, resulting in a substandard experience, likely costing $150 million a year. </p><p>[6:07] This is likely to erode trust in the entire online buying ecosystem.</p><p>[6:49] So how did we get here? Let’s look first at how we used to shop a few decades ago.</p><p>[7:17] Amazon changed the game, first by offering online shopping, but second helping popularize the “marketplace.” </p><p>[8:02] What is a marketplace? </p><p>[8:44] How did the marketplace create an even greater reliance on reviews?</p><p>[9:14] And, in the current system, e-commerce platforms have little incentives to fight this issue.</p><p>[9:36] Fake reviews have gotten very sophisticated.</p><p>[10:58] So what can consumers and small businesses do? </p><p>[12:25] How can AI be utilized to help solve the problem of fake reviews? Shreyas has two suggestions. First, it can create a Coles’ Notes for consumers. </p><p>[12:56] Second, it can be used to create some randomness. </p><p>[14:11] Why does it even matter? “Algorithms play a huge role in our life, which means that we have to critically examine this pipeline, in terms of the different ways in which humans can manipulate the algorithms to do their bidding.</p><p>But when you trick the algorithm, you're not just tricking one consumer, you're tricking 1000s of future consumers, who are going to rely on this algorithm for the purchasing decision.”</p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <enclosure length="16417214" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://cdn.simplecast.com/audio/78b75df0-de19-43b9-b1da-218fdb076f70/episodes/ff226926-058b-4b22-885e-fb1c45e37948/audio/13f0e5dd-6dda-47f3-af0c-6116e044b500/default_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&amp;feed=t5PeOiog"/>
      <itunes:title>The real dangers of fake reviews: How a billion-dollar industry is reshaping e-commerce</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Shreyas Sekar, Megan Haynes</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:15:53</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Phony stars and false testimonials are rampant online. But is this really a problem, how did we get here, and what responsibility to e-commerce platforms have in addressing the problem? Assistant professor Shreyas Sekar explores what the future of reviews looks like, and why platforms like Amazon should probably take the issue of fake reviews more seriously. </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Phony stars and false testimonials are rampant online. But is this really a problem, how did we get here, and what responsibility to e-commerce platforms have in addressing the problem? Assistant professor Shreyas Sekar explores what the future of reviews looks like, and why platforms like Amazon should probably take the issue of fake reviews more seriously. </itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>e-commerce, shopify, algorithms, marketing, university of toronto, consumer behaviour, research, retail, fake reviews, artificial intelligence, fraud, gig economy, rotman school of management, amazon, uoft, ai</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>5</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>2</itunes:season>
    </item>
    <item>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">ac27cb39-e719-49e0-918c-4f2aacce1842</guid>
      <title>How to perfect your gift giving, according to research</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Research tells us we're probably not as good at gift giving as we'd like to think. Assistant professor Cindy Chan joined the Rotman Executive Summary podcast to explore the science behind better gift exchanges, how we approach the process asymmetrically, and how presents can actually change - and improve - our relationships. This is an episode you'll definitely want to unwrap ahead of the holidays. </p><p><strong>Show notes: </strong></p><p>[0:00] How confident are you in your gift-giving game? </p><p>[0:55] Meet Cindy Chan, an expert in gifts, experiences and relationships.</p><p>[1:15] Social norms make gift giving a complex dance. </p><p>[2:49] Gifts play a role in a system of reciprocity in our society and play a part in building an strengthening our relationships. </p><p>[3:44] What are the three stages of gift giving?</p><p>[5:25] Gift giving is asymmetrical - take gifts given out of guilt. </p><p>[6:44] To give better gifts, stick to wishlists. </p><p>[7:53] Think about desirability versus feasibility.</p><p>[8:30] As a giver, remember the gift isn't about you. </p><p>[9:07] To really build or strengthen relationships, give the gift of experiences. </p><p>[9:35] The emotions we feel while enjoying that experience is what's socially connecting. </p><p>[10:44] Bonus: The giver doesn't even need to participate in the experience for it to work. </p><p>[11:20] That being, shared experience that help you learn, grow or experience something new - typically an active experience - are more socially bonding when shared with another individual. </p><p>[12:15] Always remember feasibility versus desirability, and keep the recipient's age in mind as well. How people define "happiness" changes as they get older. </p><p>[13:00] Ultimately think about what you hope to achieve with the present. </p><p>[13:24] "If you're looking to foster relationship with someone, give an experience rather than a material thing. Give an experience that is emotionally evocative to consume. And if you can share that experience with someone, give them something that's active to share so that you can you know, grow together and as a result grow closer together." </p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 5 Dec 2023 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>insightshub@rotman.utoronto.ca (Rotman School of Management)</author>
      <link>https://rotman-executive-summary.simplecast.com/episodes/gift-giving-w4vt1Kqh</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Research tells us we're probably not as good at gift giving as we'd like to think. Assistant professor Cindy Chan joined the Rotman Executive Summary podcast to explore the science behind better gift exchanges, how we approach the process asymmetrically, and how presents can actually change - and improve - our relationships. This is an episode you'll definitely want to unwrap ahead of the holidays. </p><p><strong>Show notes: </strong></p><p>[0:00] How confident are you in your gift-giving game? </p><p>[0:55] Meet Cindy Chan, an expert in gifts, experiences and relationships.</p><p>[1:15] Social norms make gift giving a complex dance. </p><p>[2:49] Gifts play a role in a system of reciprocity in our society and play a part in building an strengthening our relationships. </p><p>[3:44] What are the three stages of gift giving?</p><p>[5:25] Gift giving is asymmetrical - take gifts given out of guilt. </p><p>[6:44] To give better gifts, stick to wishlists. </p><p>[7:53] Think about desirability versus feasibility.</p><p>[8:30] As a giver, remember the gift isn't about you. </p><p>[9:07] To really build or strengthen relationships, give the gift of experiences. </p><p>[9:35] The emotions we feel while enjoying that experience is what's socially connecting. </p><p>[10:44] Bonus: The giver doesn't even need to participate in the experience for it to work. </p><p>[11:20] That being, shared experience that help you learn, grow or experience something new - typically an active experience - are more socially bonding when shared with another individual. </p><p>[12:15] Always remember feasibility versus desirability, and keep the recipient's age in mind as well. How people define "happiness" changes as they get older. </p><p>[13:00] Ultimately think about what you hope to achieve with the present. </p><p>[13:24] "If you're looking to foster relationship with someone, give an experience rather than a material thing. Give an experience that is emotionally evocative to consume. And if you can share that experience with someone, give them something that's active to share so that you can you know, grow together and as a result grow closer together." </p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <enclosure length="14980130" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://cdn.simplecast.com/audio/78b75df0-de19-43b9-b1da-218fdb076f70/episodes/919587ad-7a12-4602-ad21-87cb48529680/audio/9e5e9ee8-16dd-4c1b-95a7-d0fd49590c61/default_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&amp;feed=t5PeOiog"/>
      <itunes:title>How to perfect your gift giving, according to research</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Rotman School of Management</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:14:24</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Research tells us we&apos;re probably not as good at gift giving as we&apos;d like to think. Assistant professor Cindy Chan joined the Rotman Executive Summary podcast to explore the science behind better gift exchanges, how we approach the process asymmetrically, and how presents can actually change - and improve - our relationships. This is an episode you&apos;ll definitely want to unwrap ahead of the holidays. </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Research tells us we&apos;re probably not as good at gift giving as we&apos;d like to think. Assistant professor Cindy Chan joined the Rotman Executive Summary podcast to explore the science behind better gift exchanges, how we approach the process asymmetrically, and how presents can actually change - and improve - our relationships. This is an episode you&apos;ll definitely want to unwrap ahead of the holidays. </itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>4</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>2</itunes:season>
    </item>
    <item>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">f95ad84e-ec26-4e60-b3b8-53a98e61ac4f</guid>
      <title>Now is the right time to bake quantum into your R&amp;D strategy...yes really</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Even as they wrap their heads around AI, business leaders and organizations should be devoting some R&D resources to quantum computing. Though it's still a nascent technology, Professor Francesco Bova joined the Executive Summary to explore the huge potential economic benefits of the new form of computing, and explains why every business should be getting themselves "quantum ready" today.</p><p><strong>Show notes: </strong></p><p>[0:00] A new technology is waiting on the sidelines; quantum computing is poised to be worth trillions. </p><p>[0:23] Meet Associate Professor Francesco Bova, who has been studying the economic potential of quantum for the past five years. </p><p>[0:45] And he believes now is the time for businesses to get themselves quantum ready. </p><p>[1:14] What is quantum, and how is it different from classical, or traditional computing?</p><p>[1:58] The real potential benefit of quantum is speed and it's ability to solve "intractable" problems - that is problems too large for a traditional computer. </p><p>[3:26] What is the quantum advantage?</p><p>[3:56] Quantum is in the noisy intermediate scale; it's not fault tolerant, must operate in very specific conditions and isn't commercially available. But it can work, and people are using it in a "hybrid" approach. </p><p>[5:00] And both public and private investment is flowing.</p><p>[6:28] A big reason is the "threat" that quantum might break the encryptions that currently underpin much of our secure digital activity, like banking or health data. </p><p>[7:25] But it may also be a boon for industry, particularly pharmaceuticals, chemicals, automotive and finance. </p><p>[8:20] It could, for example, be a way to speed up drug discovery. </p><p>[9:00] And it has a number of applications in the data-heavy finance industry. </p><p>[11:27] A number of businesses are currently playing around in this space using the hybrid approach. </p><p>[11:57] So how should businesses get "quantum ready"? Step one: identify your pain points. </p><p>[12:56] Step two: consider experimenting with the hardware or partnering with a company already in this space. </p><p>[13:48] Finally, explore a formal education or boot camp on the topic to get up to speed. </p><p>[14:00] "I would argue that in most cases, especially for larger companies, the opportunity cost of spending a bit of time doing these things is comparatively small, relative to maybe even the short-term benefit you can generate from experimenting with this hardware."</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 7 Nov 2023 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>insightshub@rotman.utoronto.ca (Francesco Bova, Megan Haynes)</author>
      <link>https://rotman-executive-summary.simplecast.com/episodes/quantum-strategy-zCuTPjba</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Even as they wrap their heads around AI, business leaders and organizations should be devoting some R&D resources to quantum computing. Though it's still a nascent technology, Professor Francesco Bova joined the Executive Summary to explore the huge potential economic benefits of the new form of computing, and explains why every business should be getting themselves "quantum ready" today.</p><p><strong>Show notes: </strong></p><p>[0:00] A new technology is waiting on the sidelines; quantum computing is poised to be worth trillions. </p><p>[0:23] Meet Associate Professor Francesco Bova, who has been studying the economic potential of quantum for the past five years. </p><p>[0:45] And he believes now is the time for businesses to get themselves quantum ready. </p><p>[1:14] What is quantum, and how is it different from classical, or traditional computing?</p><p>[1:58] The real potential benefit of quantum is speed and it's ability to solve "intractable" problems - that is problems too large for a traditional computer. </p><p>[3:26] What is the quantum advantage?</p><p>[3:56] Quantum is in the noisy intermediate scale; it's not fault tolerant, must operate in very specific conditions and isn't commercially available. But it can work, and people are using it in a "hybrid" approach. </p><p>[5:00] And both public and private investment is flowing.</p><p>[6:28] A big reason is the "threat" that quantum might break the encryptions that currently underpin much of our secure digital activity, like banking or health data. </p><p>[7:25] But it may also be a boon for industry, particularly pharmaceuticals, chemicals, automotive and finance. </p><p>[8:20] It could, for example, be a way to speed up drug discovery. </p><p>[9:00] And it has a number of applications in the data-heavy finance industry. </p><p>[11:27] A number of businesses are currently playing around in this space using the hybrid approach. </p><p>[11:57] So how should businesses get "quantum ready"? Step one: identify your pain points. </p><p>[12:56] Step two: consider experimenting with the hardware or partnering with a company already in this space. </p><p>[13:48] Finally, explore a formal education or boot camp on the topic to get up to speed. </p><p>[14:00] "I would argue that in most cases, especially for larger companies, the opportunity cost of spending a bit of time doing these things is comparatively small, relative to maybe even the short-term benefit you can generate from experimenting with this hardware."</p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <enclosure length="15504762" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://cdn.simplecast.com/audio/78b75df0-de19-43b9-b1da-218fdb076f70/episodes/649ef7cd-221d-4856-a03d-689377250a8c/audio/426b174f-8be7-426a-aee4-8a767698824a/default_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&amp;feed=t5PeOiog"/>
      <itunes:title>Now is the right time to bake quantum into your R&amp;D strategy...yes really</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Francesco Bova, Megan Haynes</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:14:56</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Even as they wrap their heads around AI, business leaders and organizations should be devoting some R&amp;D resources to quantum computing. Though it&apos;s still a nascent technology, Professor Francesco Bova joined the Executive Summary to explore the huge potential economic benefits of the new form of computing, and explains why every business should be getting themselves &quot;quantum ready&quot; today.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Even as they wrap their heads around AI, business leaders and organizations should be devoting some R&amp;D resources to quantum computing. Though it&apos;s still a nascent technology, Professor Francesco Bova joined the Executive Summary to explore the huge potential economic benefits of the new form of computing, and explains why every business should be getting themselves &quot;quantum ready&quot; today.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>d-wave, creative destruction lab, quantum computing, xanadu, university of toronto, innovation, research, caixabank, r&amp;d, cdl, rotman school of management, ibm, traditional computing, quantum, research and development, oti, uoft, google</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>3</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>2</itunes:season>
    </item>
    <item>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">9d2c3701-046d-475f-b261-faeda1bab396</guid>
      <title>Why isn&apos;t Canada in a recession and what does it mean for our long-term prosperity?</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Professor Walid Hejazi joins the Executive Summary to explain the macro-economic trends keeping the economy chugging along and kept us out of a recession (so far), and why they might be detrimental to our economic health.</p><p><strong>Show notes: </strong></p><p>[0:00] In 2022 and 2023, talk of recession was everywhere.</p><p>[0:20] Historically, when central banks raise rates to fight high inflation, recession follows – though this hasn’t been really tested since the 1980s, according to professor Walid Hejazi.</p><p>[1:17] And as of October 2023, despite numerous predictions of a recession, none have come to pass. So does that mean we’re economically in the clear? And why is that potentially a bad thing for Canadian prosperity?</p><p>[2:45] Important caveat: We interviewed Walid in August, recorded the rest of the episode in mid-September, and it airs in October, and while the economy moves slowly, it can sometimes move quickly and in unexpected ways.</p><p>[3:27] What is the technical and practical definition of a recession?</p><p>[3:47 Does Canada meet either of those definitions? No – we saw growth in GDP and jobs in the first quarter, a small contraction in the second quarter, and net gain in jobs in that same time period. </p><p>[4:20] Why did everyone think we were headed towards a recession? Because history tells us that’s the way it is.</p><p>[4:47] And the leading indicators have all been pointing that a recession is imminent.</p><p>[5:30] But there’s growing optimism that the central banks will have achieved a soft landing.</p><p>[6:15] Economist are surprised. They predicted the rate hike cycle would slow the economy. It did, but not as drastically as expected.</p><p>[6:38] Walid believes there are four reasons we haven’t tipped into a recession yet: low interest rates for too long, the unexpected war in Ukraine, the government’s COVID stimulus and Canada’s immigration policy.</p><p>[8:41] Are those sources of resilience a good thing? Maybe. But that resiliency might be detrimental to the long-term prosperity of Canadians.</p><p>[9:13] Why do we have a hot labour economy?</p><p>[10:03] How might our current approach to immigration cause a problem?</p><p>[10:50] The heavy debt load as a result of COVID-19 means focus on growth spending takes a back seat to interest payments.</p><p>[11:35] this is an opportunity for governments to think about the long term, but Walid doubts they’ll be able to think beyond the short-term.</p><p>[12:11] 50 years ago, Canadians were third wealthiest by household, globally. Today, we’re 15th, and our PPP is about 30 per cent lower than the U.S.</p><p>[12:45] This is a problem as we look to repay our debts. The wrong way to pay back debt if you want a prosperous economy, is to raise taxes; the right way is to make the existing workforce more productive and wealthier.</p><p>[13:20] Walid believes Canada needs to fundamentally become more innovative and productive, and diversify into higher-valued industries.</p><p>[13:48] To do that, we need to first remove protectionism;</p><p>[14:03] Second, we need to decrease the burdens or credentialing on new immigrants;</p><p>[14:25] And third, we need to remove the bureaucratic red tape that hinders innovation.</p><p>[15:18] What we need, Walid says, is bold leadership.</p><p>[15:49] “Bold leadership is thinking about what's best for Canada's future when it comes to prosperity, and implementing the policies despite the opposition or pushback they get from special interest. Without that bold leadership, a lot can change in 50 years. What kind of a country are we going to leave to our children?”</p><p> </p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 10 Oct 2023 04:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>insightshub@rotman.utoronto.ca (Walid Hejazi, Megan Haynes)</author>
      <link>https://rotman-executive-summary.simplecast.com/episodes/canada-recession-and-prosperity-af9NpGFo</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Professor Walid Hejazi joins the Executive Summary to explain the macro-economic trends keeping the economy chugging along and kept us out of a recession (so far), and why they might be detrimental to our economic health.</p><p><strong>Show notes: </strong></p><p>[0:00] In 2022 and 2023, talk of recession was everywhere.</p><p>[0:20] Historically, when central banks raise rates to fight high inflation, recession follows – though this hasn’t been really tested since the 1980s, according to professor Walid Hejazi.</p><p>[1:17] And as of October 2023, despite numerous predictions of a recession, none have come to pass. So does that mean we’re economically in the clear? And why is that potentially a bad thing for Canadian prosperity?</p><p>[2:45] Important caveat: We interviewed Walid in August, recorded the rest of the episode in mid-September, and it airs in October, and while the economy moves slowly, it can sometimes move quickly and in unexpected ways.</p><p>[3:27] What is the technical and practical definition of a recession?</p><p>[3:47 Does Canada meet either of those definitions? No – we saw growth in GDP and jobs in the first quarter, a small contraction in the second quarter, and net gain in jobs in that same time period. </p><p>[4:20] Why did everyone think we were headed towards a recession? Because history tells us that’s the way it is.</p><p>[4:47] And the leading indicators have all been pointing that a recession is imminent.</p><p>[5:30] But there’s growing optimism that the central banks will have achieved a soft landing.</p><p>[6:15] Economist are surprised. They predicted the rate hike cycle would slow the economy. It did, but not as drastically as expected.</p><p>[6:38] Walid believes there are four reasons we haven’t tipped into a recession yet: low interest rates for too long, the unexpected war in Ukraine, the government’s COVID stimulus and Canada’s immigration policy.</p><p>[8:41] Are those sources of resilience a good thing? Maybe. But that resiliency might be detrimental to the long-term prosperity of Canadians.</p><p>[9:13] Why do we have a hot labour economy?</p><p>[10:03] How might our current approach to immigration cause a problem?</p><p>[10:50] The heavy debt load as a result of COVID-19 means focus on growth spending takes a back seat to interest payments.</p><p>[11:35] this is an opportunity for governments to think about the long term, but Walid doubts they’ll be able to think beyond the short-term.</p><p>[12:11] 50 years ago, Canadians were third wealthiest by household, globally. Today, we’re 15th, and our PPP is about 30 per cent lower than the U.S.</p><p>[12:45] This is a problem as we look to repay our debts. The wrong way to pay back debt if you want a prosperous economy, is to raise taxes; the right way is to make the existing workforce more productive and wealthier.</p><p>[13:20] Walid believes Canada needs to fundamentally become more innovative and productive, and diversify into higher-valued industries.</p><p>[13:48] To do that, we need to first remove protectionism;</p><p>[14:03] Second, we need to decrease the burdens or credentialing on new immigrants;</p><p>[14:25] And third, we need to remove the bureaucratic red tape that hinders innovation.</p><p>[15:18] What we need, Walid says, is bold leadership.</p><p>[15:49] “Bold leadership is thinking about what's best for Canada's future when it comes to prosperity, and implementing the policies despite the opposition or pushback they get from special interest. Without that bold leadership, a lot can change in 50 years. What kind of a country are we going to leave to our children?”</p><p> </p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <enclosure length="17424481" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://cdn.simplecast.com/audio/78b75df0-de19-43b9-b1da-218fdb076f70/episodes/d730cc90-df78-406b-be95-b95b5b55691a/audio/1aadd396-06ed-437d-8876-38f7b96599dc/default_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&amp;feed=t5PeOiog"/>
      <itunes:title>Why isn&apos;t Canada in a recession and what does it mean for our long-term prosperity?</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Walid Hejazi, Megan Haynes</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:16:56</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Professor Walid Hejazi joins the Executive Summary to explain the macro-economic trends keeping the economy chugging along and kept us out of a recession (so far), and why they might be detrimental to our economic health.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Professor Walid Hejazi joins the Executive Summary to explain the macro-economic trends keeping the economy chugging along and kept us out of a recession (so far), and why they might be detrimental to our economic health.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>canadian recession, covid-19, economy, canadian gdp, canadian inflation, university of toronto, recession, inflation, employment, research, canadian economy, canadian immigration, rotman school of management, uoft, job</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>2</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>2</itunes:season>
    </item>
    <item>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">c0f346d1-67f0-4df4-9d99-1d9ab53dc14a</guid>
      <title>Is it time we all embraced the 4 day work week?</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Four days of work, 100 per cent of the pay — that might sound like a fantastic idea for employees. But there's a lot of benefit to a reduced work-week for employers as well, says professor John Trougakos. He joins the Executive Summary to talk about why a four day work week is  better for employees, what it means for organizations, and how companies can actually make a shorter week work. </p><p><strong>Show notes</strong></p><p><strong>[0:00]</strong> In February 2023, news broke that a wide-scale experiment that shortened the traditional five-day work week to four days – without an associated reduction in pay – was a success. </p><p><strong>[0:50]</strong> 91 per cent of the participants in the experiment decided to continue, reporting that their employees were happier, more engaged and more productive.</p><p><strong>[1:12]</strong> Meet John Trougakos, a professor of organizational behaviour and HR management at the University of Toronto. He’s an expert in employee well-being, productivity, and recovery, and he’s been studying four-day work weeks for years. </p><p><strong>[1:44]</strong> His research is conclusive: to increase performance, companies need to give employees a break. </p><p><strong>[1:52]</strong> So as companies look at their post-COVID office structure, what does this mean? </p><p><strong>[2:27]</strong> How did we get to five days in the office, and has a four-day work week been tried before? </p><p><strong>[3:08]</strong> Those previous attempts failed because they tried to compress 40 hours into just four days. In comparison, the latest attempts are experimenting with a 32-hour week, which might be why it succeeds now. </p><p><strong>[3:55]</strong> Studies show that business leaders are increasingly on board. </p><p><strong>[4:32]</strong> And the pandemic proved to be a massive change management experiment, showcasing that things can be done differently…so businesses are more open to trying something a little different. </p><p><strong>[5:32]</strong> That’s probably important since employees want a shorter work week, especially as burnout continues to rise. </p><p><strong>[6:24]</strong> Burnout is costing businesses billions each year. </p><p><strong>[7:04]</strong> What is emotional exhaustion, and how does it manifest? </p><p><strong>[8:22]</strong> Time off and breaks play a crucial role in emotional exhaustion and burnout recovery.</p><p><strong>[9:52]</strong> So a four-day work week might be a great opportunity for businesses to give their employees time to properly recover. How do you go about implementing it. </p><p><strong>[10:03]</strong> You have to talk to employees and don’t be afraid to seek outside help.</p><p><strong>[10:46]</strong> Approach a four-day work week like a big change management project – it’s a great opportunity to find new efficiencies as well.</p><p><strong>[11:58]</strong> And don’t forget to communicate – to everyone – how you’re going to pull it off. </p><p><strong>[1:21]</strong> Avoid the pitfall of doing the work and not rewarding your employees. </p><p><strong>[12:59]</strong> If a four-day work week doesn’t work for your company, consider alternatives that still give your employees a meaningful break. </p><p><strong>[13:51]</strong> Companies are made up of people – they are your most important asset. So treat them well, and they will give back to you. </p><p><strong>[14:37]</strong> “We don't want to just keep weighing people down, if you can find an opportunity to reward people for their efficiency and their productivity and their performance. People will give back more at the end of the day.”</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 12 Sep 2023 04:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>insightshub@rotman.utoronto.ca (John Trougakos, Megan Haynes)</author>
      <link>https://rotman-executive-summary.simplecast.com/episodes/4-day-work-week-0PNQlvAx</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Four days of work, 100 per cent of the pay — that might sound like a fantastic idea for employees. But there's a lot of benefit to a reduced work-week for employers as well, says professor John Trougakos. He joins the Executive Summary to talk about why a four day work week is  better for employees, what it means for organizations, and how companies can actually make a shorter week work. </p><p><strong>Show notes</strong></p><p><strong>[0:00]</strong> In February 2023, news broke that a wide-scale experiment that shortened the traditional five-day work week to four days – without an associated reduction in pay – was a success. </p><p><strong>[0:50]</strong> 91 per cent of the participants in the experiment decided to continue, reporting that their employees were happier, more engaged and more productive.</p><p><strong>[1:12]</strong> Meet John Trougakos, a professor of organizational behaviour and HR management at the University of Toronto. He’s an expert in employee well-being, productivity, and recovery, and he’s been studying four-day work weeks for years. </p><p><strong>[1:44]</strong> His research is conclusive: to increase performance, companies need to give employees a break. </p><p><strong>[1:52]</strong> So as companies look at their post-COVID office structure, what does this mean? </p><p><strong>[2:27]</strong> How did we get to five days in the office, and has a four-day work week been tried before? </p><p><strong>[3:08]</strong> Those previous attempts failed because they tried to compress 40 hours into just four days. In comparison, the latest attempts are experimenting with a 32-hour week, which might be why it succeeds now. </p><p><strong>[3:55]</strong> Studies show that business leaders are increasingly on board. </p><p><strong>[4:32]</strong> And the pandemic proved to be a massive change management experiment, showcasing that things can be done differently…so businesses are more open to trying something a little different. </p><p><strong>[5:32]</strong> That’s probably important since employees want a shorter work week, especially as burnout continues to rise. </p><p><strong>[6:24]</strong> Burnout is costing businesses billions each year. </p><p><strong>[7:04]</strong> What is emotional exhaustion, and how does it manifest? </p><p><strong>[8:22]</strong> Time off and breaks play a crucial role in emotional exhaustion and burnout recovery.</p><p><strong>[9:52]</strong> So a four-day work week might be a great opportunity for businesses to give their employees time to properly recover. How do you go about implementing it. </p><p><strong>[10:03]</strong> You have to talk to employees and don’t be afraid to seek outside help.</p><p><strong>[10:46]</strong> Approach a four-day work week like a big change management project – it’s a great opportunity to find new efficiencies as well.</p><p><strong>[11:58]</strong> And don’t forget to communicate – to everyone – how you’re going to pull it off. </p><p><strong>[1:21]</strong> Avoid the pitfall of doing the work and not rewarding your employees. </p><p><strong>[12:59]</strong> If a four-day work week doesn’t work for your company, consider alternatives that still give your employees a meaningful break. </p><p><strong>[13:51]</strong> Companies are made up of people – they are your most important asset. So treat them well, and they will give back to you. </p><p><strong>[14:37]</strong> “We don't want to just keep weighing people down, if you can find an opportunity to reward people for their efficiency and their productivity and their performance. People will give back more at the end of the day.”</p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <enclosure length="16069319" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://cdn.simplecast.com/audio/78b75df0-de19-43b9-b1da-218fdb076f70/episodes/64d7626b-d75f-4f92-94ff-dffce749b863/audio/61e66188-410e-4afc-8ffd-599e1f67cadd/default_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&amp;feed=t5PeOiog"/>
      <itunes:title>Is it time we all embraced the 4 day work week?</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>John Trougakos, Megan Haynes</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:15:32</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Four days of work, 100 per cent of the pay — that might sound like a fantastic idea for employees. But there&apos;s a lot of benefit to a reduced work-week for employers as well, says professor John Trougakos. He joins the Executive Summary to talk about why a four-day work week is better for employees, what it means for organizations, and how companies can actually make a shorter week work. </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Four days of work, 100 per cent of the pay — that might sound like a fantastic idea for employees. But there&apos;s a lot of benefit to a reduced work-week for employers as well, says professor John Trougakos. He joins the Executive Summary to talk about why a four-day work week is better for employees, what it means for organizations, and how companies can actually make a shorter week work. </itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>talent management, employee productivity, organizational behaviour, great resignation, university of toronto, employee wellbeing, leadership, corporate strategy, 4 day work week, team, reduced hours, four day work week, rotman school of management, rotman, uoft</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>1</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>2</itunes:season>
    </item>
    <item>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">846c1eb0-6f7c-49d5-a723-6063988a7d9c</guid>
      <title>How to build a better board</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>With challenges including continued upheaval from the pandemic, political and global instability, a changing workforce, new technology, and more, the makeup of the board of directors — and it's ability to shape and influence organizational responses when things go wrong — is more important than ever. And it's crucial to ask: do boards have the right talent at the table, and what it will take to build a better one? </p><p><strong>Show notes</strong></p><p>[0:00] Drama is best kept out of the boardroom because when you hear about it, it’s probably no small issue</p><p>[1:03] Meet Aida Sijamic Wahid, a professor who studies board makeup </p><p>[1:30] It turns out who sits on a board influences how companies manage flux. So, do boards have the right talent at the table? </p><p>[2:18] What exactly does a corporate board do? </p><p>[3:33] Aida started studying board dynamics in the wake of the Enron scandal</p><p>[3:55] How the Enron fallout impacted its board, and why did no one notice? </p><p>[4:46] The roll of director homogeny in the scandal </p><p>[5:33] What is groupthink and why is it bad?</p><p>[6: 09] Aida’s research shows that when you change the variables – such as introducing a woman to the directors table – fraud and accounting mistakes decline</p><p>[7:14] Diversity improves board effectiveness by increasing perspective diversity</p><p>[7:35] Digging into different types of diversity – such as diversity of tenure or gender diversity – and the role it plays on board effectiveness </p><p>[8:23] Exchanges are now compelling organization to report on board makeup</p><p>[8:59] What is tokenism and why is it bad for a board? </p><p>[9:27] But increased diversification makes tokenism harder as the board becomes more balanced</p><p>[10:00] Director diversification is improving, if slowly, and there are still stumbling blocks </p><p>[10:29] Do we need to prove that diversification is needed to demand more balanced representation?</p><p>[11:21] What skills did directors need in the early 2000s? </p><p>[11:50] And today, they need tech know-how and an understanding of ESG – or environmental, social, governance. </p><p>[13:12] ESG is complicated and will have big ramifications on businesses, and not every board feels they’re ready for the ESG revolution </p><p>[13:38] And if a board doesn’t have the right talent, it doesn’t necessarily take a crisis to shake stakeholder confidence – just ask <a href="https://hbr.org/2018/05/what-amazons-board-is-getting-wrong-about-diversity-and-hiring" target="_blank">Amazon</a></p><p>[14:25] Industries that have a diverse talent shortage – like energy – will have a harder time making sure their directors reflect the broader population; and that’s a problem for innovation</p><p>[15:08] But not all hope is lost. “It's now that these industries are attracting people with different skill sets in different backgrounds because they have no choice but to if they want to evolve and survive.”</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 11 Apr 2023 04:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>insightshub@rotman.utoronto.ca (Aida Sijamic Wahid, Megan Haynes)</author>
      <link>https://rotman-executive-summary.simplecast.com/episodes/how-to-build-a-better-board-UL4F1onr</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>With challenges including continued upheaval from the pandemic, political and global instability, a changing workforce, new technology, and more, the makeup of the board of directors — and it's ability to shape and influence organizational responses when things go wrong — is more important than ever. And it's crucial to ask: do boards have the right talent at the table, and what it will take to build a better one? </p><p><strong>Show notes</strong></p><p>[0:00] Drama is best kept out of the boardroom because when you hear about it, it’s probably no small issue</p><p>[1:03] Meet Aida Sijamic Wahid, a professor who studies board makeup </p><p>[1:30] It turns out who sits on a board influences how companies manage flux. So, do boards have the right talent at the table? </p><p>[2:18] What exactly does a corporate board do? </p><p>[3:33] Aida started studying board dynamics in the wake of the Enron scandal</p><p>[3:55] How the Enron fallout impacted its board, and why did no one notice? </p><p>[4:46] The roll of director homogeny in the scandal </p><p>[5:33] What is groupthink and why is it bad?</p><p>[6: 09] Aida’s research shows that when you change the variables – such as introducing a woman to the directors table – fraud and accounting mistakes decline</p><p>[7:14] Diversity improves board effectiveness by increasing perspective diversity</p><p>[7:35] Digging into different types of diversity – such as diversity of tenure or gender diversity – and the role it plays on board effectiveness </p><p>[8:23] Exchanges are now compelling organization to report on board makeup</p><p>[8:59] What is tokenism and why is it bad for a board? </p><p>[9:27] But increased diversification makes tokenism harder as the board becomes more balanced</p><p>[10:00] Director diversification is improving, if slowly, and there are still stumbling blocks </p><p>[10:29] Do we need to prove that diversification is needed to demand more balanced representation?</p><p>[11:21] What skills did directors need in the early 2000s? </p><p>[11:50] And today, they need tech know-how and an understanding of ESG – or environmental, social, governance. </p><p>[13:12] ESG is complicated and will have big ramifications on businesses, and not every board feels they’re ready for the ESG revolution </p><p>[13:38] And if a board doesn’t have the right talent, it doesn’t necessarily take a crisis to shake stakeholder confidence – just ask <a href="https://hbr.org/2018/05/what-amazons-board-is-getting-wrong-about-diversity-and-hiring" target="_blank">Amazon</a></p><p>[14:25] Industries that have a diverse talent shortage – like energy – will have a harder time making sure their directors reflect the broader population; and that’s a problem for innovation</p><p>[15:08] But not all hope is lost. “It's now that these industries are attracting people with different skill sets in different backgrounds because they have no choice but to if they want to evolve and survive.”</p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <enclosure length="16638519" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://cdn.simplecast.com/audio/78b75df0-de19-43b9-b1da-218fdb076f70/episodes/6f477325-4106-49ae-a9cd-8fff7decc2c7/audio/b04c8601-cd12-480f-b88a-87e60de440da/default_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&amp;feed=t5PeOiog"/>
      <itunes:title>How to build a better board</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Aida Sijamic Wahid, Megan Haynes</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:16:07</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>With challenges including continued upheaval from the pandemic, political and global instability, a changing workforce, new technology, and more, the makeup of the board of directors — and its ability to shape and influence organizational responses when things go wrong — is more important than ever. And it&apos;s crucial to ask: do boards have the right talent at the table, and what it will take to build a better one? </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>With challenges including continued upheaval from the pandemic, political and global instability, a changing workforce, new technology, and more, the makeup of the board of directors — and its ability to shape and influence organizational responses when things go wrong — is more important than ever. And it&apos;s crucial to ask: do boards have the right talent at the table, and what it will take to build a better one? </itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>s&amp;p 500, inclusion, svp, accountability, diversity, university of toronto, esg, research, ceo, silicon valley bank, tsx, directors, governance, board of directors, enron, social, environmental, rotman school of management, nasdaq, ceo compensation, risk management, amazon, uoft, board</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>8</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
    </item>
    <item>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">46c4ae9d-de2e-4ea1-98f7-99e2836ad0e0</guid>
      <title>How to create a remote work policy that works for everyone</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>What role should the office play, and can companies create equitable and sustainable WFH policies that work for all employees? Rotman's Sarah Kaplan and Carmina Ravanera weigh in on the future of hybrid work. </p><p><strong>Show notes</strong></p><p>[0:00] In 2020, the world embarked on the great work-from-home experiment. And while as of 2022, businesses have called people back to the office, a big question mark remains</p><p>[0:41] Meet Sarah Kaplan and Carmina Ravanera from the <a href="https://www.gendereconomy.org/" target="_blank">Institute for Gender and the Economy</a>, who <a href="https://www.gendereconomy.org/the-future-of-work/" target="_blank">explored </a>the tension between what workers and businesses want and need when it comes to a remote work policy</p><p>[2:10] It turns out remote work can work. But businesses need to make it work for everyone</p><p>[2:35] Keep in mind the people who can’t work from home</p><p>[3:24] But for those who can, there are compelling financial upsides for employees – particularly for Black and LatinX employees – when allowed to work from home</p><p>[4:09] Remote work can also reduce workplace micro-aggressions and discrimination</p><p>[5:02] And WFH are really beneficial for those in caregiving roles</p><p>[5:34] But despite the benefits, companies can’t use a WFH policy on its own to make the workplace more equitable</p><p>[6:01] What’s the ideal worker, and why is it detrimental to people who can’t dedicate their whole selves to their jobs </p><p>[6:41] There’s a persistent myth that remote workers aren’t as dedicated as those who come into the office. The ideal worker is one who shows up </p><p>[6:54] And women and people of colour are more likely to suffer from these misconceptions</p><p>[7:16] Remote work policies that focus on employee monitoring can exacerbate mental health issues and company trust issues </p><p>[8:02] You can’t just plonk a remote work policy onto an old system. To make it work, businesses will have to rethink the system</p><p>[8:36] The problem is that change is just hard. And leaders don’t always have time to think meaningfully about an equitable system redesign </p><p>[9:09] But there are upsides, particularly for companies looking to improve inclusion efforts</p><p>[10:46] And with employers in a war for talent, it’s worth looking at creating a solution for everyone </p><p>[11:35] Companies need to make the office worth their employees’ time </p><p>[11:55] Hotelling doesn’t need to be a bad word. Letting employees make the trade off might be key</p><p>[13:01] What role to offices play in our social lives?</p><p>[13:20] Leaders should introspect on why people don’t want to come back</p><p>[13:45] Effective and equitable remote work policies need government and societal support to change underlying gender and racial inequalities as well</p><p>[14:19] It’s part of a holistic conversation. “Building trust in organizations is extremely difficult, and it's easy to erode. And so I think we are at a time where the role of the leaders, anybody who has other people who work for them,  supervisors all the way up to CEOs, their role in terms of being culture creators, and maintainers is going to become even more important.”</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 14 Mar 2023 04:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>insightshub@rotman.utoronto.ca (Sarah Kaplan, Carmina Ravanera, Megan Haynes)</author>
      <link>https://rotman-executive-summary.simplecast.com/episodes/work-from-home-2PvtxHsp</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>What role should the office play, and can companies create equitable and sustainable WFH policies that work for all employees? Rotman's Sarah Kaplan and Carmina Ravanera weigh in on the future of hybrid work. </p><p><strong>Show notes</strong></p><p>[0:00] In 2020, the world embarked on the great work-from-home experiment. And while as of 2022, businesses have called people back to the office, a big question mark remains</p><p>[0:41] Meet Sarah Kaplan and Carmina Ravanera from the <a href="https://www.gendereconomy.org/" target="_blank">Institute for Gender and the Economy</a>, who <a href="https://www.gendereconomy.org/the-future-of-work/" target="_blank">explored </a>the tension between what workers and businesses want and need when it comes to a remote work policy</p><p>[2:10] It turns out remote work can work. But businesses need to make it work for everyone</p><p>[2:35] Keep in mind the people who can’t work from home</p><p>[3:24] But for those who can, there are compelling financial upsides for employees – particularly for Black and LatinX employees – when allowed to work from home</p><p>[4:09] Remote work can also reduce workplace micro-aggressions and discrimination</p><p>[5:02] And WFH are really beneficial for those in caregiving roles</p><p>[5:34] But despite the benefits, companies can’t use a WFH policy on its own to make the workplace more equitable</p><p>[6:01] What’s the ideal worker, and why is it detrimental to people who can’t dedicate their whole selves to their jobs </p><p>[6:41] There’s a persistent myth that remote workers aren’t as dedicated as those who come into the office. The ideal worker is one who shows up </p><p>[6:54] And women and people of colour are more likely to suffer from these misconceptions</p><p>[7:16] Remote work policies that focus on employee monitoring can exacerbate mental health issues and company trust issues </p><p>[8:02] You can’t just plonk a remote work policy onto an old system. To make it work, businesses will have to rethink the system</p><p>[8:36] The problem is that change is just hard. And leaders don’t always have time to think meaningfully about an equitable system redesign </p><p>[9:09] But there are upsides, particularly for companies looking to improve inclusion efforts</p><p>[10:46] And with employers in a war for talent, it’s worth looking at creating a solution for everyone </p><p>[11:35] Companies need to make the office worth their employees’ time </p><p>[11:55] Hotelling doesn’t need to be a bad word. Letting employees make the trade off might be key</p><p>[13:01] What role to offices play in our social lives?</p><p>[13:20] Leaders should introspect on why people don’t want to come back</p><p>[13:45] Effective and equitable remote work policies need government and societal support to change underlying gender and racial inequalities as well</p><p>[14:19] It’s part of a holistic conversation. “Building trust in organizations is extremely difficult, and it's easy to erode. And so I think we are at a time where the role of the leaders, anybody who has other people who work for them,  supervisors all the way up to CEOs, their role in terms of being culture creators, and maintainers is going to become even more important.”</p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <enclosure length="14668714" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://cdn.simplecast.com/audio/78b75df0-de19-43b9-b1da-218fdb076f70/episodes/f25e106d-fa17-4421-9e73-d2cb73b55851/audio/b9e2cc22-c796-4b66-a3f0-ddbd2239ad86/default_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&amp;feed=t5PeOiog"/>
      <itunes:title>How to create a remote work policy that works for everyone</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Sarah Kaplan, Carmina Ravanera, Megan Haynes</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:16:05</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>What role should the office play, and can companies create equitable and sustainable WFH policies that work for all employees? Rotman&apos;s Sarah Kaplan and Carmina Ravanera weigh in on the future of hybrid work. </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>What role should the office play, and can companies create equitable and sustainable WFH policies that work for all employees? Rotman&apos;s Sarah Kaplan and Carmina Ravanera weigh in on the future of hybrid work. </itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>covid-19, university of toronto, research, the future of work, pandemic response, equity, gate, work from home, teamwork, inclusive economy, rotman school of management, office culture, institute for gender and the economy, equality, wfh, remote work, uoft, office</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>7</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
    </item>
    <item>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">0890a676-2b7d-4948-873c-dab9568ee9bf</guid>
      <title>Where does Uber go from here? The future of the sharing and gig economy, explained</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Pre-2020, the sharing and gig economies were thriving. Then the pandemic changed the game. While Uber's food delivery was up, its ride sharing plummeted. Airbnb saw a wave of cancellations. The entire space stumbled. As we emerge from lockdowns and restrictions, new challenges face these Silicon Valley darlings. With ongoing rights over worker classification, and increased pressure to turn a profit in a rising rate environment, it's time to ask: What's next for the sharing economy?  </p><p><strong>Show notes</strong></p><p>[0:00] 2012 was a big year for the sharing economy</p><p>[00:28] But the following decade was even bigger</p><p>[00:56] Professor Ming Hu is <i>the </i>person to talk to about the sharing or gig economy </p><p>[01:43] The pandemic changed the game for companies in the sharing economy. Can the gig economy thrive in a sustainable way?</p><p>[03:14] What exactly is the sharing economy? </p><p>[03:47] These companies very quickly transformed parts of our lives…and quickly became the status quo in our lives</p><p>[04:42] You can thank the network effect for this rapid growth </p><p>[05:07] Uber is the poster child of the sharing economy</p><p>[05:25] The pandemic had a devastating impact on Uber’s ride sharing </p><p>[05:51] Future success is going to be dependent on its relationship with its workers </p><p>[06:26] The fight over Uber worker classification </p><p>[07:05] The two types of Uber drivers: Ad hoc and full-time workers</p><p>[08:00] Why a one-sized fits all solution doesn’t work</p><p>[08:27] Uber is changing how it deals with drivers as a result of proposed worker classification legislation, putting some control in the hands of drivers</p><p>[09:12] Ming proposes that different types of workers should be treated differently - just look at how the UK is handling things</p><p>[10:12] Why now is so pivotal for the sharing economy </p><p>[10:47] Rising inflation is having a big impact on sharing economy consumers…</p><p>[11:18] …and on the drivers - gig workers are likely to be the hardest hit by high inflation</p><p>[12:18] Beyond ride sharing, what at the big opportunities for innovation in the sharing economy? What about energy sharing? </p><p>[13:10] "There's no shortage of new applications and new markets, where we can apply these ideas to."</p><p> </p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 14 Feb 2023 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>insightshub@rotman.utoronto.ca (Ming Hu, Jessie Park)</author>
      <link>https://rotman-executive-summary.simplecast.com/episodes/ubers-future-CyGl0vxf</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Pre-2020, the sharing and gig economies were thriving. Then the pandemic changed the game. While Uber's food delivery was up, its ride sharing plummeted. Airbnb saw a wave of cancellations. The entire space stumbled. As we emerge from lockdowns and restrictions, new challenges face these Silicon Valley darlings. With ongoing rights over worker classification, and increased pressure to turn a profit in a rising rate environment, it's time to ask: What's next for the sharing economy?  </p><p><strong>Show notes</strong></p><p>[0:00] 2012 was a big year for the sharing economy</p><p>[00:28] But the following decade was even bigger</p><p>[00:56] Professor Ming Hu is <i>the </i>person to talk to about the sharing or gig economy </p><p>[01:43] The pandemic changed the game for companies in the sharing economy. Can the gig economy thrive in a sustainable way?</p><p>[03:14] What exactly is the sharing economy? </p><p>[03:47] These companies very quickly transformed parts of our lives…and quickly became the status quo in our lives</p><p>[04:42] You can thank the network effect for this rapid growth </p><p>[05:07] Uber is the poster child of the sharing economy</p><p>[05:25] The pandemic had a devastating impact on Uber’s ride sharing </p><p>[05:51] Future success is going to be dependent on its relationship with its workers </p><p>[06:26] The fight over Uber worker classification </p><p>[07:05] The two types of Uber drivers: Ad hoc and full-time workers</p><p>[08:00] Why a one-sized fits all solution doesn’t work</p><p>[08:27] Uber is changing how it deals with drivers as a result of proposed worker classification legislation, putting some control in the hands of drivers</p><p>[09:12] Ming proposes that different types of workers should be treated differently - just look at how the UK is handling things</p><p>[10:12] Why now is so pivotal for the sharing economy </p><p>[10:47] Rising inflation is having a big impact on sharing economy consumers…</p><p>[11:18] …and on the drivers - gig workers are likely to be the hardest hit by high inflation</p><p>[12:18] Beyond ride sharing, what at the big opportunities for innovation in the sharing economy? What about energy sharing? </p><p>[13:10] "There's no shortage of new applications and new markets, where we can apply these ideas to."</p><p> </p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <enclosure length="13492536" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://cdn.simplecast.com/audio/78b75df0-de19-43b9-b1da-218fdb076f70/episodes/054d3cbe-5bbd-4a29-ae37-7485c3b7bd8b/audio/7d6acd0f-2eb9-40a9-8bbb-37426af648fa/default_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&amp;feed=t5PeOiog"/>
      <itunes:title>Where does Uber go from here? The future of the sharing and gig economy, explained</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Ming Hu, Jessie Park</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:14:03</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Pre-2020, the sharing and gig economies were thriving. Then the pandemic changed the game. While Uber&apos;s food delivery was up, its ride sharing plummeted. Airbnb saw a wave of cancellations. The entire space stumbled. As we emerge from lockdowns and restrictions, new challenges face these Silicon Valley darlings. With ongoing rights over worker classification, and increased pressure to turn a profit in a rising rate environment, it&apos;s time to ask: What&apos;s next for the sharing economy? 
</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Pre-2020, the sharing and gig economies were thriving. Then the pandemic changed the game. While Uber&apos;s food delivery was up, its ride sharing plummeted. Airbnb saw a wave of cancellations. The entire space stumbled. As we emerge from lockdowns and restrictions, new challenges face these Silicon Valley darlings. With ongoing rights over worker classification, and increased pressure to turn a profit in a rising rate environment, it&apos;s time to ask: What&apos;s next for the sharing economy? 
</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>covid-19, skipthedish, university of toronto, recession, research, pandemic response, sharing economy, work from home, door dash, gig economy, rotman school of management, economic growth, lyft, wfh, airbnb, uber, rotman, uoft</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>6</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
    </item>
    <item>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">61fd07ba-c5d4-4d00-892a-c4152c850a6f</guid>
      <title>Is innovation in crisis? Why it&apos;s time to amp up research &amp; development</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>The state of innovation wasn't great, even before you threw a pandemic or recession into the mix. And while it's too early to tell the long-term implications that team isolation and rising interests rate might have on the research and development process, associate professor Kevin Bryan explores why our process of innovation might be in crisis, and what might be done to solve the problem. </p><p><strong>Show notes: </strong></p><p>[0:00] "There's this worry that growth is slowing down. you might think, how could that be an era of like artificial intelligence and robots and like how growth is slowing down. But if you think back toward, the early 20th century, with airplanes, and electricity, and modern research labs, and automobiles, and home appliances, it seemed like the world was changing very quickly."</p><p>[0:45] Meet Kevin Bryan, an associate professor at the Rotman School of Management, and expert in innovation. He has concerns. Growth in innovation seems to have stalled. Add a pandemic into the mix, and you have to wonder if innovation is in crisis? </p><p>[2:12] How do you define innovation?</p><p>[2:22] There was lots of diffusion and transformation early in the pandemic, but it wasn't true innovation. </p><p>[2:55] The root cause: a breakdown of teamwork caused by everyone working from home. </p><p>[3:30] There are two ways of transferring knowledge between colleagues and co-workers: direct and indirect. Both are equally important, and both suffered during the pandemic. </p><p>[4:51] Our introduction to new people and ideas likely fell during the pandemic, which can have a further impact on the process of knowledge transfer. </p><p>[6:12] It's too early to say what the long-term impact will be, but Kevin doesn't think it'll be positive. </p><p>[6:50] Money - or lack-thereof - also plays a roll in our lack of innovation. </p><p>[7:17] Canada just doesn't spend as much on R&D as other countries.</p><p>[7:50] Canada's high tax rates and lower income inequality also makes us less appealing for inventors and innovators. </p><p>[8:39] Rising interest rates does not bode well for research and development. </p><p>[9:15] Companies need to be judicious with long-run, uncertain projects, which means less investment in unproven ideas. </p><p>[10:04] COVID-19 vaccines is a good case study for innovating in a crisis, and speaks to what needs to change more broadly if we want to solve the problems surrounding innovation pipelines. </p><p>[10:50] The first idea isn't always the best idea - just look at the Wright Brothers. And in a crisis, coming in second might be a losing proposition, even if your idea is better. </p><p>[11:38] So how do you incentivize innovation in a socially useful way?</p><p>[11:55] Governments and public institutions need to step up and support and incentivize basic innovation.</p><p>[13:30] Companies probably need to stop being so precious with their trade secrets. Good ideas are more likely to come from outside your organization than within. </p><p>[14:31] "You know, Emerson, Ralph Waldo Emerson says ideas are in the air, and they literally are in the air, like they're not all written down on a piece of paper. I guess all we can say is that we know it's important and things that would block that informal transfer of knowledge can be really damaging for your organization's ability to take advantage of new ideas in the world."</p><p> </p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 10 Jan 2023 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>insightshub@rotman.utoronto.ca (Kevin Bryan, Megan Haynes)</author>
      <link>https://rotman-executive-summary.simplecast.com/episodes/innovation-in-crisis-RehiElqV</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The state of innovation wasn't great, even before you threw a pandemic or recession into the mix. And while it's too early to tell the long-term implications that team isolation and rising interests rate might have on the research and development process, associate professor Kevin Bryan explores why our process of innovation might be in crisis, and what might be done to solve the problem. </p><p><strong>Show notes: </strong></p><p>[0:00] "There's this worry that growth is slowing down. you might think, how could that be an era of like artificial intelligence and robots and like how growth is slowing down. But if you think back toward, the early 20th century, with airplanes, and electricity, and modern research labs, and automobiles, and home appliances, it seemed like the world was changing very quickly."</p><p>[0:45] Meet Kevin Bryan, an associate professor at the Rotman School of Management, and expert in innovation. He has concerns. Growth in innovation seems to have stalled. Add a pandemic into the mix, and you have to wonder if innovation is in crisis? </p><p>[2:12] How do you define innovation?</p><p>[2:22] There was lots of diffusion and transformation early in the pandemic, but it wasn't true innovation. </p><p>[2:55] The root cause: a breakdown of teamwork caused by everyone working from home. </p><p>[3:30] There are two ways of transferring knowledge between colleagues and co-workers: direct and indirect. Both are equally important, and both suffered during the pandemic. </p><p>[4:51] Our introduction to new people and ideas likely fell during the pandemic, which can have a further impact on the process of knowledge transfer. </p><p>[6:12] It's too early to say what the long-term impact will be, but Kevin doesn't think it'll be positive. </p><p>[6:50] Money - or lack-thereof - also plays a roll in our lack of innovation. </p><p>[7:17] Canada just doesn't spend as much on R&D as other countries.</p><p>[7:50] Canada's high tax rates and lower income inequality also makes us less appealing for inventors and innovators. </p><p>[8:39] Rising interest rates does not bode well for research and development. </p><p>[9:15] Companies need to be judicious with long-run, uncertain projects, which means less investment in unproven ideas. </p><p>[10:04] COVID-19 vaccines is a good case study for innovating in a crisis, and speaks to what needs to change more broadly if we want to solve the problems surrounding innovation pipelines. </p><p>[10:50] The first idea isn't always the best idea - just look at the Wright Brothers. And in a crisis, coming in second might be a losing proposition, even if your idea is better. </p><p>[11:38] So how do you incentivize innovation in a socially useful way?</p><p>[11:55] Governments and public institutions need to step up and support and incentivize basic innovation.</p><p>[13:30] Companies probably need to stop being so precious with their trade secrets. Good ideas are more likely to come from outside your organization than within. </p><p>[14:31] "You know, Emerson, Ralph Waldo Emerson says ideas are in the air, and they literally are in the air, like they're not all written down on a piece of paper. I guess all we can say is that we know it's important and things that would block that informal transfer of knowledge can be really damaging for your organization's ability to take advantage of new ideas in the world."</p><p> </p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <enclosure length="16191877" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://cdn.simplecast.com/audio/78b75df0-de19-43b9-b1da-218fdb076f70/episodes/9f41eb78-64e1-4bb1-9edb-4ac16e523a4d/audio/e1e3d540-fd4f-411a-baf8-781b59259700/default_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&amp;feed=t5PeOiog"/>
      <itunes:title>Is innovation in crisis? Why it&apos;s time to amp up research &amp; development</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Kevin Bryan, Megan Haynes</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:15:39</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>The state of innovation wasn&apos;t great, even before you threw a pandemic or recession into the mix. And while it&apos;s too early to tell the long-term implications that team isolation and rising interests rate might have on the research and development process, associate professor Kevin Bryan explores why our process of innovation might be in crisis, and what might be done to solve the problem. </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>The state of innovation wasn&apos;t great, even before you threw a pandemic or recession into the mix. And while it&apos;s too early to tell the long-term implications that team isolation and rising interests rate might have on the research and development process, associate professor Kevin Bryan explores why our process of innovation might be in crisis, and what might be done to solve the problem. </itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>covid-19, creative destruction lab, entrepreneurship, university of toronto, creative destruction, innovation, research, pandemic response, silicon valley, work from home, teamwork, cdl, business design, rotman school of management, economic growth, wfh, uoft</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>5</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
    </item>
    <item>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">009fa2cb-b6f6-4a9a-9615-85a1d647cae8</guid>
      <title>The Art of Advice: How to up your advice giving (and getting) game</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Giving feedback is like a hand grenade. No matter how positive a spin you put on it, criticism is still hard to hear. So what can we do differently in tough conversations for a better outcome? Assistant professor Rachel Ruttan shares best practices from her research on advice-giving...and getting. </p><p><strong>Show notes </strong></p><p>[0:00] “I read this book called difficult conversations. And they use this analogy, any kind of tough or difficult conversation, like negative feedback is basically hand grenade. no matter how much you dress up the hand grenade, it's still a hand grenade. So I think, in the role of giving that tough news or information or feedback, it's good to just accept the difficulty of that conversation going in and to be compassionate to yourself.”</p><p>[0:25] Meet Rachel Ruttan, an assistant professor of organizational behaviour who studies how to navigate difficult motivational tensions. She explores topics including how to make giving advice and feedback more palatable. </p><p>[1:28] Her interest stems from the sometimes compassionate, sometimes harsh world of competitive figure skating. </p><p>[2:16] How we hear and internalize feedback will influence whether or not we take the advice. </p><p>[3:37] To create a space where people are more welcoming of receiving feedback, Rachel suggest setting goals and expectations at the outset. </p><p>[4:10] The “Feedback Sandwich” is real, and it works. </p><p>[4:33] Advice is best received when your team believes you have their best interest at heart – and that your team is a safe place to take risks. </p><p>[5:13] Giving advice shouldn’t be a one-way street; people may have their own suggestions on how to improve performance. </p><p>[5:43] Be aware that your own emotions can get in the way. Don't give feedback in anger. </p><p>[6:37] And how can you provide feedback to a superior? Try framing issues and suggestions you might have as questions. </p><p>[8:00] Negative feedback is part of every career – consider talking to colleagues about the harsh criticism they've received over their careers to help normalize it. </p><p>[8:52] The TV show <i>The Voice</i> offers a fantastic lens into how we pick our mentors. It turns out, we’re drawn to mentors who shower us in positivity, even if someone a bit more negative might be a better fit for us. </p><p>[10:43] Social support and positivity are important, but so is a person’s success at mentorship. Ideally, you would have mentors who can do both. </p><p>[11:51] “We spend a lot of our time imagining what other people think, and want to hear, and what the right thing is for somebody to do. But we also know from a lot of literature that we're actually really bad at perspective taking. It's hard, you don't know what's going on in someone else's mind. So just ask them. Again, this sounds so simple, but I think it's something that we can forget to do along the way.”</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 6 Dec 2022 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>insightshub@rotman.utoronto.ca (Rachel Ruttan, Jessie Park)</author>
      <link>https://rotman-executive-summary.simplecast.com/episodes/the-art-of-advice-9lvNAqVx</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Giving feedback is like a hand grenade. No matter how positive a spin you put on it, criticism is still hard to hear. So what can we do differently in tough conversations for a better outcome? Assistant professor Rachel Ruttan shares best practices from her research on advice-giving...and getting. </p><p><strong>Show notes </strong></p><p>[0:00] “I read this book called difficult conversations. And they use this analogy, any kind of tough or difficult conversation, like negative feedback is basically hand grenade. no matter how much you dress up the hand grenade, it's still a hand grenade. So I think, in the role of giving that tough news or information or feedback, it's good to just accept the difficulty of that conversation going in and to be compassionate to yourself.”</p><p>[0:25] Meet Rachel Ruttan, an assistant professor of organizational behaviour who studies how to navigate difficult motivational tensions. She explores topics including how to make giving advice and feedback more palatable. </p><p>[1:28] Her interest stems from the sometimes compassionate, sometimes harsh world of competitive figure skating. </p><p>[2:16] How we hear and internalize feedback will influence whether or not we take the advice. </p><p>[3:37] To create a space where people are more welcoming of receiving feedback, Rachel suggest setting goals and expectations at the outset. </p><p>[4:10] The “Feedback Sandwich” is real, and it works. </p><p>[4:33] Advice is best received when your team believes you have their best interest at heart – and that your team is a safe place to take risks. </p><p>[5:13] Giving advice shouldn’t be a one-way street; people may have their own suggestions on how to improve performance. </p><p>[5:43] Be aware that your own emotions can get in the way. Don't give feedback in anger. </p><p>[6:37] And how can you provide feedback to a superior? Try framing issues and suggestions you might have as questions. </p><p>[8:00] Negative feedback is part of every career – consider talking to colleagues about the harsh criticism they've received over their careers to help normalize it. </p><p>[8:52] The TV show <i>The Voice</i> offers a fantastic lens into how we pick our mentors. It turns out, we’re drawn to mentors who shower us in positivity, even if someone a bit more negative might be a better fit for us. </p><p>[10:43] Social support and positivity are important, but so is a person’s success at mentorship. Ideally, you would have mentors who can do both. </p><p>[11:51] “We spend a lot of our time imagining what other people think, and want to hear, and what the right thing is for somebody to do. But we also know from a lot of literature that we're actually really bad at perspective taking. It's hard, you don't know what's going on in someone else's mind. So just ask them. Again, this sounds so simple, but I think it's something that we can forget to do along the way.”</p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <enclosure length="13749722" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://cdn.simplecast.com/audio/78b75df0-de19-43b9-b1da-218fdb076f70/episodes/0838add4-cddc-4f11-b99c-40abd239e6a1/audio/db252f1a-45c7-48ef-b093-46d504277622/default_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&amp;feed=t5PeOiog"/>
      <itunes:title>The Art of Advice: How to up your advice giving (and getting) game</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Rachel Ruttan, Jessie Park</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:13:07</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Giving feedback is like a hand grenade. No matter how positive a spin you put on it, criticism is still hard to hear. So what can we do differently in tough conversations for a better outcome? Assistant professor Rachel Ruttan shares best practices from her research on advice-giving...and getting. </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Giving feedback is like a hand grenade. No matter how positive a spin you put on it, criticism is still hard to hear. So what can we do differently in tough conversations for a better outcome? Assistant professor Rachel Ruttan shares best practices from her research on advice-giving...and getting. </itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>mentorship, the voice, advice, management advice, management skills, university of toronto, organizational behaviour and management, research, career development, career advancement, rotman school of management, teams, uoft</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>4</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
    </item>
    <item>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">6669874f-64b1-4841-8e4c-bd29e1c5b993</guid>
      <title>Talk human to me: Understanding the new ways we interact with brands</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>From social media to AI to celebrity endorsements — brands interact with us on a more personal level than ever. But how does that change our relationship with the products we buy and the companies that serve us? In the latest episode of the Rotman Executive Summary, professor Pankaj Aggarwal explores how the way we anthropomorphize brands is changing, and why that matters.</p><p><strong>Show notes </strong></p><p>[0:00] “Think back to your childhood and the foods you ate. Did you enjoy Tony the Tiger’s Frosted Flakes? Lucky the leprechaun’s Lucky Charms? Snap, Crackle and Pop’s Rice Krispies? </p><p>As adults, we cook with Betty Crocker, eat at Wendy’s, clean with Mr. Clean. The products we buy and the food we eat are replete with mascots and human stand-ins. </p><p>It’s called anthropomorphizing — the act of humanizing inanimate objects or situations. Companies have long known that putting a human — or human-esque — face on a brand makes it more relatable.”</p><p>[0:45] Why Coca-Cola might be the post famous anthropomorphized brand. </p><p>[1:21] Meet Pankaj Aggarwal, an expert in marketing who has extensively studied how, and why, we we sometime treat brands like humans. </p><p>[2:45]: Why do we anthropomorphize objects as kids? And how does that change as we become adults? </p><p>[3:48] A brief overview of how we humanize products, think mascots and celebrities. </p><p>[4:32] When we treat brands like their humans, we tend to form more “human-like” relationship and start applying human norms on otherwise inanimate objects<strong>. </strong></p><p>[6:00] For example, we use humanized products to be extensions of ourselves… </p><p>[6:41] …we’re less judgmental when it comes to anthropomorphized object… </p><p>[7:31] …and, we are less likely to haggle on prices… </p><p>[7:58] …and we really want all the parts to be from the same manufacturer. </p><p>[8:54] What are the implications in our social connected, "cancel culture" for when a humanized brand screws up?</p><p>[10:27] Gender-neutral products, and the unintended consequences of best intentions. </p><p>[12:09] Companies need to be more purposeful in how they talk to customers.</p><p>[13:13] The situations where you probably don’t want to anthropomorphize a brand</p><p>[15:36] "I think in some ways, it's better to be overtly clear to the consumers what gender for example, the brand has, what personality trait your brand has. Because that is the cue that people use to imbue on the brand. If you leave it abstract or vague, different consumers may think of it somewhat differently. And it's obviously going to be biased by say their own views of the world their own views of humans. And that's not ideal, so it's better to be as clear as possible, whether it's giving it a name, whether it's giving it a personality through advertising, through commercials, whether it's kind of showing the celebrity or the or the mascot, any of those things is better than just leaving it ambiguous."</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 8 Nov 2022 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>insightshub@rotman.utoronto.ca (Pankaj Aggarwal, Megan Haynes)</author>
      <link>https://rotman-executive-summary.simplecast.com/episodes/talk-human-to-me-qo22JEJx</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>From social media to AI to celebrity endorsements — brands interact with us on a more personal level than ever. But how does that change our relationship with the products we buy and the companies that serve us? In the latest episode of the Rotman Executive Summary, professor Pankaj Aggarwal explores how the way we anthropomorphize brands is changing, and why that matters.</p><p><strong>Show notes </strong></p><p>[0:00] “Think back to your childhood and the foods you ate. Did you enjoy Tony the Tiger’s Frosted Flakes? Lucky the leprechaun’s Lucky Charms? Snap, Crackle and Pop’s Rice Krispies? </p><p>As adults, we cook with Betty Crocker, eat at Wendy’s, clean with Mr. Clean. The products we buy and the food we eat are replete with mascots and human stand-ins. </p><p>It’s called anthropomorphizing — the act of humanizing inanimate objects or situations. Companies have long known that putting a human — or human-esque — face on a brand makes it more relatable.”</p><p>[0:45] Why Coca-Cola might be the post famous anthropomorphized brand. </p><p>[1:21] Meet Pankaj Aggarwal, an expert in marketing who has extensively studied how, and why, we we sometime treat brands like humans. </p><p>[2:45]: Why do we anthropomorphize objects as kids? And how does that change as we become adults? </p><p>[3:48] A brief overview of how we humanize products, think mascots and celebrities. </p><p>[4:32] When we treat brands like their humans, we tend to form more “human-like” relationship and start applying human norms on otherwise inanimate objects<strong>. </strong></p><p>[6:00] For example, we use humanized products to be extensions of ourselves… </p><p>[6:41] …we’re less judgmental when it comes to anthropomorphized object… </p><p>[7:31] …and, we are less likely to haggle on prices… </p><p>[7:58] …and we really want all the parts to be from the same manufacturer. </p><p>[8:54] What are the implications in our social connected, "cancel culture" for when a humanized brand screws up?</p><p>[10:27] Gender-neutral products, and the unintended consequences of best intentions. </p><p>[12:09] Companies need to be more purposeful in how they talk to customers.</p><p>[13:13] The situations where you probably don’t want to anthropomorphize a brand</p><p>[15:36] "I think in some ways, it's better to be overtly clear to the consumers what gender for example, the brand has, what personality trait your brand has. Because that is the cue that people use to imbue on the brand. If you leave it abstract or vague, different consumers may think of it somewhat differently. And it's obviously going to be biased by say their own views of the world their own views of humans. And that's not ideal, so it's better to be as clear as possible, whether it's giving it a name, whether it's giving it a personality through advertising, through commercials, whether it's kind of showing the celebrity or the or the mascot, any of those things is better than just leaving it ambiguous."</p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <enclosure length="17805188" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://cdn.simplecast.com/audio/78b75df0-de19-43b9-b1da-218fdb076f70/episodes/2f25a581-4c59-48a5-a2bb-caff76fd499c/audio/e637de43-0344-4aa1-8d08-c083d27a73fa/default_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&amp;feed=t5PeOiog"/>
      <itunes:title>Talk human to me: Understanding the new ways we interact with brands</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Pankaj Aggarwal, Megan Haynes</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:17:20</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>From social media to AI to celebrity endorsements — brands interact with us on a more personal level than ever. But how does that change our relationship with the products we buy and the companies that serve us? In the latest episode of the Rotman Executive Summary, professor Pankaj Aggarwal explores how the way we anthropomorphize brands is changing, and why that matters.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>From social media to AI to celebrity endorsements — brands interact with us on a more personal level than ever. But how does that change our relationship with the products we buy and the companies that serve us? In the latest episode of the Rotman Executive Summary, professor Pankaj Aggarwal explores how the way we anthropomorphize brands is changing, and why that matters.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>voice assistance, marketing, mascots, university of toronto, research, university of toronto scarborough, anthropomorphizing, branding, rotman school of management, brands, advertising, social media, uoft</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>3</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
    </item>
    <item>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">427783a8-e1f5-4b6f-99eb-030330754622</guid>
      <title>Cryptocurrency for the cautious business leader</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Blockchains and cryptocurrencies went into a spectacular meltdown in 2022. Professor Andreas Park — an expert of finance innovation at the University of Toronto — says that despite the ill tidings, businesses should keep an eye on the space...or risk missing out on a game-changing technology. </p><p><strong>Show notes: </strong></p><p>[0:00] “So I think there's a disconnect between what people are building on the blockchain and what the use cases are. There's a lot of beautiful ideas of how to streamline existing blockchain operations, how they can have some gimmicky trading tools and so on and so forth, but thinking about what business case you can solve and what value you bring to customers is a much harder problem.”</p><p>[1:08] A short journey through the recent history of cryptocurrency and blockchain. </p><p>[2:11] What is a blockchain? What is a cryptocurrency? What is a token? And how do they work together? </p><p>[3:17] Why Bitcoin is like Beanie Babies.</p><p>[4:16] A breakdown of utility tokens, stablecoins, asset tokens, futures and derivatives tokens, and governance tokens. </p><p>[7:10] Crypto’s first boom/bust/boom cycle.</p><p>[8:03] The current Crypto winter, and how it compares to the 2000s dot.com bubble bust. </p><p>[9:30] Is Cryptocurrency a Ponzi scheme? </p><p>[10:24] To solve the current crisis, cryptocurrency needs to be more user friendly… </p><p>[11:25] …and some regulatory support.</p><p>[12:07] But not all is lost. The dot.com bust paid dividends for some companies. Crypto and blockchain might follow the same path. </p><p>[13:00] Crypto and blockchain is more than just a currency to be traded and sold. So what businesses should keep an eye on this space?</p><p>[14:38] “The reality is that a blockchain is a very useful piece of technology for borderless digital transfers of value. I cannot see a world in which just is not used, and this is not useful.”</p><p> </p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 11 Oct 2022 04:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>insightshub@rotman.utoronto.ca (Andreas Park, Megan Haynes)</author>
      <link>https://rotman-executive-summary.simplecast.com/episodes/cryptocurrency-for-the-cautious-business-leader-NnMz_kSq</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Blockchains and cryptocurrencies went into a spectacular meltdown in 2022. Professor Andreas Park — an expert of finance innovation at the University of Toronto — says that despite the ill tidings, businesses should keep an eye on the space...or risk missing out on a game-changing technology. </p><p><strong>Show notes: </strong></p><p>[0:00] “So I think there's a disconnect between what people are building on the blockchain and what the use cases are. There's a lot of beautiful ideas of how to streamline existing blockchain operations, how they can have some gimmicky trading tools and so on and so forth, but thinking about what business case you can solve and what value you bring to customers is a much harder problem.”</p><p>[1:08] A short journey through the recent history of cryptocurrency and blockchain. </p><p>[2:11] What is a blockchain? What is a cryptocurrency? What is a token? And how do they work together? </p><p>[3:17] Why Bitcoin is like Beanie Babies.</p><p>[4:16] A breakdown of utility tokens, stablecoins, asset tokens, futures and derivatives tokens, and governance tokens. </p><p>[7:10] Crypto’s first boom/bust/boom cycle.</p><p>[8:03] The current Crypto winter, and how it compares to the 2000s dot.com bubble bust. </p><p>[9:30] Is Cryptocurrency a Ponzi scheme? </p><p>[10:24] To solve the current crisis, cryptocurrency needs to be more user friendly… </p><p>[11:25] …and some regulatory support.</p><p>[12:07] But not all is lost. The dot.com bust paid dividends for some companies. Crypto and blockchain might follow the same path. </p><p>[13:00] Crypto and blockchain is more than just a currency to be traded and sold. So what businesses should keep an eye on this space?</p><p>[14:38] “The reality is that a blockchain is a very useful piece of technology for borderless digital transfers of value. I cannot see a world in which just is not used, and this is not useful.”</p><p> </p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <enclosure length="16074335" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://cdn.simplecast.com/audio/78b75df0-de19-43b9-b1da-218fdb076f70/episodes/45f93de1-c1d2-4a1b-a40d-366904892c23/audio/f1348782-2efa-48e6-88ae-86e188517eaf/default_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&amp;feed=t5PeOiog"/>
      <itunes:title>Cryptocurrency for the cautious business leader</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Andreas Park, Megan Haynes</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:15:32</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Blockchains and cryptocurrencies went into a spectacular meltdown in 2022. Professor Andreas Park — an expert of finance innovation at the University of Toronto — says that despite the ill tidings, businesses should keep an eye on the space...or risk missing out on a game-changing technology. </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Blockchains and cryptocurrencies went into a spectacular meltdown in 2022. Professor Andreas Park — an expert of finance innovation at the University of Toronto — says that despite the ill tidings, businesses should keep an eye on the space...or risk missing out on a game-changing technology. </itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>bitcoin, university of toronto mississauga, financial systems, university of toronto, research, tokens, blockchain, international finance, etheruem, cryptocurrency, defi, rotman school of management, financial innovations, decentralized finance, uoft, nfts, finhub</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>2</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
    </item>
    <item>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">cf3f1637-a306-4d9a-acf9-1b1e0a51cd2b</guid>
      <title>Do you care about your employees? Prove it.</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>What are the dos and don'ts of improving employee engagement in 2022? Professor Alan Saks, a human resources expert from the University of Toronto Scarborough/Rotman School, explains why it's time for a different approach to HR management.</p><p> </p><p><strong>Show notes</strong></p><p>[0:00]: "When you don't care about your employees, they will not care about the organization, they will not be engaged, and they may quit." Professor Alan Saks has studied  the shifts in human resource management for the past three decades. He even co-wrote a book on employee engagement. With the pandemic changing the way we work, it's time to reflect on whether your employees are engaged with their jobs, and how you - as a company - can show you actually care about them.</p><p>[1:04]: A definition of employee engagement. </p><p>[3:35]: The business risk of employee burnout and how to help employees avoid it.</p><p>[5:09]: What exactly is a caring Human Resource Management system, and how does it benefit companies and employees?</p><p>[6:58]: What is Klick Health, and how are they proving they care?</p><p>[8:35]: The first step is <i>really</i> listening to what your employees need.</p><p>[9:33]: Compromise may be key. </p><p>[10:22]: Wading into the WFH debate.</p><p>[11:36]: What is organization engagement? And why does it matter for employee satisfaction?</p><p>[13:06]: Why organizational engagement may be more effective at decreasing turnover than job engagement.</p><p>[14:01]: Take note: employee perceptions really matter.</p><p>[14:41]: The case of Goldman Sachs and unlimited vacation days.</p><p>[15:30]: In argument against performance-based pay.</p><p>[16:08]: The cost of being an uncaring company.</p><p>[16:40]: Be prepared: Proving you care takes time.</p><p>[18:12]: "If you want employees to care about their job and the organization, you need to care about them. And you need to demonstrate that care with tangible actions that address employees needs and well-being."</p><p><i>For more reading (subscriptions may be required)</i></p><p><i>Saks, A. M. (2022). </i><a href="https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S1053482221000140" target="_blank"><i>Caring Human Resources Management and Employee Engagement</i></a><i>. Human Resource Management Review, 32(3), 100835. </i></p><p><i>Saks, A. M., Gruman, J. A., & Zhang, Q. (2022).</i><a href="https://www.emerald.com/insight/content/doi/10.1108/JOEPP-12-2020-0253/full/html" target="_blank"><i> Organization Engagement: A Review and Comparison to Job Engagement.</i></a><i> Journal of Organizational Effectiveness: People and Performance, 9, 20-49.  </i></p><p><i>Saks, A. M. (2006). </i><a href="https://www.emerald.com/insight/content/doi/10.1108/02683940610690169/full/html" target="_blank"><i>Antecedents and Consequences of Employee Engagement</i></a><i>. Journal of Managerial Psychology, 21 (7), 600-619. </i></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Wed, 7 Sep 2022 15:10:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>insightshub@rotman.utoronto.ca (Alan Saks, Jessie Park)</author>
      <link>https://rotman-executive-summary.simplecast.com/episodes/caring-for-employees-o6HV6mwn</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>What are the dos and don'ts of improving employee engagement in 2022? Professor Alan Saks, a human resources expert from the University of Toronto Scarborough/Rotman School, explains why it's time for a different approach to HR management.</p><p> </p><p><strong>Show notes</strong></p><p>[0:00]: "When you don't care about your employees, they will not care about the organization, they will not be engaged, and they may quit." Professor Alan Saks has studied  the shifts in human resource management for the past three decades. He even co-wrote a book on employee engagement. With the pandemic changing the way we work, it's time to reflect on whether your employees are engaged with their jobs, and how you - as a company - can show you actually care about them.</p><p>[1:04]: A definition of employee engagement. </p><p>[3:35]: The business risk of employee burnout and how to help employees avoid it.</p><p>[5:09]: What exactly is a caring Human Resource Management system, and how does it benefit companies and employees?</p><p>[6:58]: What is Klick Health, and how are they proving they care?</p><p>[8:35]: The first step is <i>really</i> listening to what your employees need.</p><p>[9:33]: Compromise may be key. </p><p>[10:22]: Wading into the WFH debate.</p><p>[11:36]: What is organization engagement? And why does it matter for employee satisfaction?</p><p>[13:06]: Why organizational engagement may be more effective at decreasing turnover than job engagement.</p><p>[14:01]: Take note: employee perceptions really matter.</p><p>[14:41]: The case of Goldman Sachs and unlimited vacation days.</p><p>[15:30]: In argument against performance-based pay.</p><p>[16:08]: The cost of being an uncaring company.</p><p>[16:40]: Be prepared: Proving you care takes time.</p><p>[18:12]: "If you want employees to care about their job and the organization, you need to care about them. And you need to demonstrate that care with tangible actions that address employees needs and well-being."</p><p><i>For more reading (subscriptions may be required)</i></p><p><i>Saks, A. M. (2022). </i><a href="https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S1053482221000140" target="_blank"><i>Caring Human Resources Management and Employee Engagement</i></a><i>. Human Resource Management Review, 32(3), 100835. </i></p><p><i>Saks, A. M., Gruman, J. A., & Zhang, Q. (2022).</i><a href="https://www.emerald.com/insight/content/doi/10.1108/JOEPP-12-2020-0253/full/html" target="_blank"><i> Organization Engagement: A Review and Comparison to Job Engagement.</i></a><i> Journal of Organizational Effectiveness: People and Performance, 9, 20-49.  </i></p><p><i>Saks, A. M. (2006). </i><a href="https://www.emerald.com/insight/content/doi/10.1108/02683940610690169/full/html" target="_blank"><i>Antecedents and Consequences of Employee Engagement</i></a><i>. Journal of Managerial Psychology, 21 (7), 600-619. </i></p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <enclosure length="19946073" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://cdn.simplecast.com/audio/78b75df0-de19-43b9-b1da-218fdb076f70/episodes/0207d2a2-bb74-481d-b7de-c405aea35f80/audio/3aafb304-64d2-46fe-8054-e5f71758d10b/default_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&amp;feed=t5PeOiog"/>
      <itunes:title>Do you care about your employees? Prove it.</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Alan Saks, Jessie Park</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>00:19:34</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>What are the dos and don&apos;ts of improving employee engagement in 2022? Professor Alan Saks, a human resources expert from the University of Toronto Scarborough/Rotman School, explains why it&apos;s time for a different approach to HR management.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>What are the dos and don&apos;ts of improving employee engagement in 2022? Professor Alan Saks, a human resources expert from the University of Toronto Scarborough/Rotman School, explains why it&apos;s time for a different approach to HR management.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>work-life-balance, university of toronto, employee wellbeing, research, the future of work, employers, hr management, human resources, rotman school of management, management research, organizational care, uoft, hybrid work, caring for employees</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>1</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
    </item>
  </channel>
</rss>