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Changing Times
Ready for things to get back to normal? You're not alone, but the leaders who force a full return to the office may create the very "Turnover Tsunami" they fear. With Wollard and Shuck's antecedents of engagement, GM's "Work Appropriately" policy under Mary Barra, and Bob Dylan's reminder that the times they are a-changin', this article makes the research case for remote-work flexibility and the leadership posture required to retain talent on the other side of the pandemic.

Dr. David Macauley
7 min read


Missing Link: Individual Efforts And Organizational Performance
A third of workers believe their jobs are meaningless, and the disconnection between individual effort and organizational outcomes costs firms $125 to $190 billion a year in lost productivity and turnover. William Forster Lloyd named the pattern in 1833 as the Tragedy of the Commons. No leader can eliminate it, but every leader can narrow it, through mission clarity, compelling vision, identifiable contribution, and the systems that tie each person's work to the firm's outcom

Dr. David Macauley
8 min read


Engagement and Work-life Balance: What We Know and Why it Matters
Leaders get pulled between two supposedly opposing goals: engage people harder or protect their work-life balance. A September 2020 meta-analysis in Human Resource Development Review synthesized 37 studies and found engagement and work-life balance are not opposites at all, they are reciprocal. High engagement raises work-life balance; high work-life balance raises engagement. The leadership task is not choosing one. It is designing the conditions that let both compound.

Dr. David Macauley
4 min read


Meaningful Relationships and Remote Work
When 44.4% of newly remote workers reported declining mental health, the culprit wasn't distance, it was cadence. Wilson, O'Leary, and colleagues call it the "perceived proximity paradox": geographic closeness doesn't guarantee connection, and miles apart doesn't guarantee isolation. What actually binds remote teams is the rhythm of contact leaders set. Frequency without meaning feels like surveillance. Meaning without frequency feels like abandonment. Leaders are now digital

Dr. David Macauley
5 min read


Mentoring and Burnout Prevention
Not all relationships are created equal. Some friendships at work are pleasant. Others quietly prevent you from burning out. Research across eight meta-analyses and the newest work in Human Resource Development Quarterly confirms what the best leaders already know: formal mentorship reduces stress, prevents burnout, and strengthens career outcomes, even for people predisposed to high-strain jobs. The catch? Informal mentorship does not produce the same effect. Quality matter

Dr. David Macauley
4 min read


Relationships and Meaningful Work
Leaders spend enormous energy on mission, vision, and values, and then wonder why their employees still feel disconnected from the work. The missing link is relationships. Research shows that meaningful work depends less on what leaders say about it and more on the social networks surrounding employees while they do it. In a post-proximity world, great leaders have to build those networks on purpose. Chance encounters are no longer going to do the job for them.

Dr. David Macauley
4 min read


Corona Connections
When the COVID-19 pandemic sent more than a quarter of the US population into shelter-in-place orders, businesses and employees had to adjust to a new normal overnight. People embraced remote technology to conduct their business, educate their children, and nurture their spiritual life. In one week alone, Facebook recorded a 70% surge in video calls hosted on its platform.
Among the many lessons being learned was the importance of sustained social connection. Social bonds mat

Dr. David Macauley
2 min read
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