Posts Tagged ‘employee engagement’
Background
The organisation is an ex-MOD facility, a big engineering employer in the local area, with an enviable steady state history and past protection from commercial pressures, which is now experiencing accelerating change. It has already passed into commercial ownership and is beginning to adapt to commercial pressures. At the point we are asked to help they have just been acquired by a new owner, and no one is quite sure what their plans might be. A new Managing Director has been appointed with a very different focus and orientation to the previous one. There is a new leader in this particular unit. And the end is in sight for the product on which this team works – no one is quite sure what this means for them.
Read on »
Tags: acting appreciatively, appreciating change, appreciative enquiry, appreciative inquiry, business psychology, Case Studies, case study, employee engagement, facilitation, leadership, positive psychology, positive psychology at work, sarah lewis, team development, uncertainty
Posted in Appreciative Inquiry, Case Studies, Change, Leadership, Positive Psychology |
As we note above, and much further research is confirming, happiness has many benefits. One easy way to introduce this into the work place is by opening a meeting with a ‘success round’. Very often in meetings we plunge straight into the business of the day. By starting the meeting by giving people a chance to share a recent success we not only boost people’s mood in the moment, we also prepare them to engage more productively with what ever is to follow, and we learn lots about what makes our colleagues tick.
Read on »
Tags: acting appreciatively, appreciating change, business psychology, change, change techniques, employee engagement, leadership, management, positive psychology, positive psychology at work, practical application, sarah lewis
Posted in Employee Engagement, Leadership, Positive Psychology |
While much research confirms that successful outcomes can foster happiness, it has tended to be seen as a one-way linear relationship: you have to be successful to be happy. But might it be more of a circular relationship? A virtuous circle where being happy makes it more likely you will succeed? In 2005 Sonja Lyubomirsky, Ed Diener and Laura King pulled together all the research they could find that addressed the question: does happiness contribute to success?
Read on »
Tags: appreciating change, business psychology, employee engagement, leadership, positive psychology, positive psychology at work, sarah lewis
Posted in Employee Engagement, Leadership, Organisational Development, Positive Psychology, Research |
I recently used the cards with the CIO Board of a large international company about to embark on a new IT strategy that essentially involves cultural change in the organization, and in their relationship with the organization. This is the first time I have used them.
The board is a relatively new team.
Read on »
Tags: ac cards, acting appreciatively, ai, ai at work, appreciating change, appreciative enquiry, appreciative inquiry, business psychology, change, employee engagement, od, organisational development, positive psychology, positive psychology at work, positive psychology cards, psychology, sarah lewis, sarah lewis cards, strengthening teams, strengths-based, team development
Posted in Change, Organisational Development, Positive Psychology Concept Cards, Team Development |
This was the question posed to me recently by an HR Director taking up a new post with a big change agenda. He was attracted to the idea of positive change, but working with an organization with a long and successful history, he was challenged about how to galvanise the workforce into engaging with the necessary changes. I thought it was a great question and it has stayed with me.
Read on »
Tags: acting appreciatively, ai at work, already successful, appreciating change, appreciative enquiry, appreciative inquiry, business psychology, change, employee engagement, facilitation, leadership, management, od, organisational development, positive psychology, resistance to change, sarah lewis, strengths-based
Posted in Change, Organisational Development, Positive Psychology |
Ways to use Positive Psychology Concept Cards: Ten ideas to get you started
General
You can use these cards in a number of ways to stimulate discussion; create commonality and motivation; and to identify agreed action. Some general ideas are:
- Use the cards as they stand, the questions and the action points
- Use a rating scale ‘To what extent is this present in our team/organization/group at the moment on a scale of 1-10? What would we like to be? How can we move towards this?’etc.
- As a prioritizing tool. ‘Which five of these are most key to our future success/our development/our strategy?’
- As playing cards. Each person has some. Someone starts by laying down a card they think is important (to the topic under discussion) explaining why they think so, the person who thinks they can build on this with one of the cards in their hand lays it down with ‘yes and…’. This is a cooperative card game, with no winners or losers.
Read on »
Tags: acting appreciatively, ai, appreciating change, appreciating change cards, appreciative enquiry, appreciative inquiry, business psychology, change, employee engagement, facilitation, leadership, management, od, organisational development, positive change, positive psychology, positive psychology at work, positive psychology cards, practical positive psychology, psychology, resistance to change, sarah lewis, sarah lewis cards, strengthening teams, strengths, strengths-based, team development, working with strengths
Posted in Appreciative Inquiry, Change, Organisational Development, Positive Psychology Concept Cards, Strengths, Team Development |

Introducing the Positive Psychology Concept Cards
The concepts reflect key findings from positive psychology research of things that make a positive difference to organisational life. Each card lists the benefits of the concept, provides three questions to stimulate discussion, and is followed by three pointers for development. Each is introduced briefly below, arranged in four groups.
Read on »
Tags: appreciating change, appreciating change cards, appreciative enquiry, appreciative inquiry, business psychology, employee engagement, leadership, management, positive psychology, positive psychology at work, positive psychology cards, practical positive psychology, psychology, sarah lewis, sarah lewis cards, strengthening teams, strengths-based
Posted in Positive Psychology Concept Cards |
Barack Obama famously crowd-sourced the finance for his election campaign, a powerful example of the ability of new technology to create a great aggregate result out of lots of small voluntary actions. But this process is not as new as it seems: Sir James Murray used a similar approach to creating the Oxford English Dictionary, a project he began in 1897.
Read on »
Tags: acting appreciatively, ai, ai at work, appreciating change, appreciative enquiry, appreciative inquiry, business psychology, crowd sourcing, employee engagement, facilitation, large group change, positive co-creation, positive psychology, positive psychology at work, practical positive psychology, psychology, sarah lewis, volunteer principle
Posted in Appreciative Inquiry |
At the recent WAIC conference I fell into conversation with Stefan Cantore. Stefan is busy thinking about ‘our love affair with problems’ in preparation for writing a chapter for a forthcoming publication (details at end). We had a great discussion about this that stayed with me and caused me further thought.
How do we know when we encounter a problem? While completing a personality profile questionnaire recently I noticed that I have a problem with the word problem. As the questionnaire asked me variations on how I deal with problems, I struggled to answer: the questions just didn’t connect. It would seem that just don’t think in terms of problems and problem-solving: I don’t notice when I encounter them.
Read on »
Tags: acting appreciatively, ai at work, appreciating change, appreciative enquiry, appreciative inquiry, business psychology, employee engagement, leadership, management, positive psychology, positive psychology at work, problem, problem solving, problems, psychology, sarah lewis
Posted in Appreciative Inquiry |
At a conference attended by over 500 people from 42 nations, with 9 keynotes by names like David Cooperrider, Diane Whitney, Ken Gergen, Gervase Bushe and Ron Fry, and innumerable workshop sessions and poster presentations, my experience of the conference could only ever be partial. Here are some of the best bits for me.
Read on »
Tags: acting appreciatively, ai, ai at work, ai world congress, appreciating change, appreciative enquiry, appreciative inquiry, appreciative leadership, best bits, business psychology, employee engagement, generativity, ghent, highlights, leadership, management, micro moments, positive psychology, positive psychology at work, psychology, sarah lewis, world ai congress, world appreciative inquiry congress
Posted in Appreciative Inquiry, Leadership |