The pandemic caused a tsunami of emotions for CEOs and their people: shock, fear, frustration, resentment. At the pointy end of decision-making, CEOs have had to make tough calls. In their report Navigating C19 July 2020, researchers reported that amongst UK CEOs, 41% are more anxious than they were before, an increase of 9%; 45% […] License and Republishing: The views expressed in this article How to be an energy broker while under the pandemic pump are those of the author Zoe Routh alone and not the CEOWORLD magazine . from My reading List https://ift.tt/2VanKV2
After I had finished presenting on how to build psychologically safe virtual teams at a conference earlier this week, one of the delegates asked me what suggestions I’d have to help her with a team where some of the members refused to turn their cameras on during video meetings. I’m not going to challenge the reasons as to why some team members might be reluctant about being on camera. Even if a team has developed ground rules encouraging everyone to use their web cameras, such working agreements need to evolve as the team’s culture evolves. Faced with this, team members who are willing to turn their cameras on would have an advantage when compared against their “anti-camera” peers as their body language will be visible to the facilitator and to the other meeting participants. If they seem to be uncomfortable about a topic, someone else is likely to notice and might either openly or using a one-on-one chat ask them to share their concerns. But in the case of those team members who c...
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