GovLoop

Getting Butts in the Seats – Conference Style, Plus Your Weekend Reads

Welcome to GovLoop Insights Issue of the Week with Chris Dorobek where each week, our goal is to find an issue — a person — an idea — then helped define the past 7-days and we work to find an issue that will also will have an impact on the days, weeks and months ahead. And, as always, we focus on six words: helping you do your job better.

A busy week here on GovLoop Insights’ DorobekINSIDER:

Our issue of the Week: at conferences in 2013
With shrinking budgets and fewer resources to support mission goals, federal government decision makers and influencers plan on attending fewer events this year.
Market Connections polled 400 feds about their plans to attend conferences in FY 2012. And the results were bleak for contractors.
Lisa Dezzutti is the President of Market Connections. She told Chris Dorobek on the DorobekINSIDER program that only 5% of respondents said they would attend more conferences this year than last.


“The survey validated what we already know, federal managers and leaders are attending fewer events,” said Dezzutti.

Getting Feds in the Seats

Impact of GSA and VA Scandals
“The scandals will have a ripple effect for the next few years. Right now people are still avoiding any mention of the word resort in a conference title,” said Dezzutti.

Weekend Reads:

Governing:What Darwin Can Teach Government: Charles Darwin’s revolutionary ideas about evolution are once again making waves, but this time in a way that offers governments and other organizations a tool for overcoming systemic challenges through the evolution of the way work is done. Darwin’s theory of natural selection was simple but significant: Variation occurs naturally within any population, and nature will favor and spread characteristics that are advantageous for survival.

Edward I. Koch, Ex-Mayor of New York, passed away this week.
The New York Times called him the “brash embodiment of the city he led.” Mr. Koch, a showman of City Hall, was a three-term mayor who steered New York City through the fiscal austerity of the late 1970s and the racial conflicts of the 1980s. He was 88. AtlanticCities pulled together 8 Pearls of Wisdom From Ed Koch.

Fast Company: Screwing Up Could Be Your Best Career Move–If You Do It Right

The rules for a proper mistake:

  1. Be first with the news if you can. You get much better control of the matter if the bad news comes straight from you. Plus, right after delivering the news, you can show that you…
  2. Have a plan. People get over the shock of your screwup pretty quickly if you show you have a way to fix it. But don’t wait to give the plan. You need to present it immediately after giving the news. Why? Because that way you…
  3. Shift to the future. Focus on what happens next. That’s what Clinton did.
  4. Don’t apologize. This is the most controversial advice I give. Apologies come with several problems. First, they focus on the past, on the screwup, reminding people of what you did. Second, apologies rarely satisfy people. They almost always seem inadequate. That’s because apologies are “self-belittling”–they shrink you down to the size of the victim or smaller. People often demand an apology more as vengeance than as any way to improve matters. Instead, you need to be in a position of strength so that you can solve the problem and get past the screwup.

Making a business case for bedtime:WSJ: Go Ahead, Hit the Snooze Button Weary Workers Learn to Count Sheep Using Special Lighting, Office Nap Pods One-third of American workers aren’t sleeping enough to function at peak levels, and that chronic exhaustion is costing billions of dollars in lost productivity, according to researchers from Harvard Medical School.

And a off-topic weekend diversion:
Disney has just released its Oscar-nominated short, Paperman, online for all of us to see an enjoy. If you haven’t seen it, it is nothing short of delightful. But it is also the technological next step in animation mixing both computer generated animination with hand-drawn pictures. Not is the story heartwarming, but it is simply georgous — UK’s Telegraph called it the best thing Disney has done in years.

Paperman is the best thing Disney has done in years – Telegraph
Disney’s Beautiful Gamechanger Paperman Debuts Online –

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