Healthcare Data Warehouse: Why You Need One

We often hear a lot of questions when we talk about healthcare clinical data warehouse, such as: Is data warehousing in healthcare necessary? How important it is to have a tool like a clinical data warehouse for Hospitals and Medical Centers?

Can business intelligence (BI) be the answer for hospitals looking for data-driven improvements and cost reduction? Yes… with new and improved techniques to handle BI and clinical data warehouse you can unlock the value of data and here’s why.

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Jamie Dimon on JPMorgan’s Big Data Strategy

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Large banks like JPMorgan have always had big data, but in a letter to shareholders released Wednesday, JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon likened the difference between yesterday’s and today’s big data to the difference between a rotary phone and a cellphone.

“To best utilize our data assets and spur innovation, we have built our own extraordinary in-house big data capabilities – we think as good as any in Silicon Valley – populated with more than 200 analysts and data scientists, which we call Intelligent Solutions,” Dimon wrote.

Dimon outlined at least five ways the firm has incorporated big data into improving business processes. In the corporate and investment bank, big data is being deployed to improve operational efficiency by analyzing errors. In custody for example, the firm uses big data to identify and find the root cause of breaks in processes or variances in the net asset values of funds. The result has reduced the operational burden and improved client service, Dimon wrote. Continue reading

What Leaders Are Not: Flexible Leadership Fundamentals

To say that leadership is important for the success of a company does not mean that a chief executive can single-handedly determine the fate of the company, as suggested by some journalists and leadership gurus.

By now we are so used to seeing corporate leaders described in such terms that we hardly even notice it. But when you stop to think about it, there is something a little askew about that assumption. Any transformation, any turnaround, depends on many people. The future of a large organization does not depend on a single leader, however powerful, clever and visionary.

The Myth of the Heroic Leader

Depicting a senior executive as a heroic individual is a dramatic, romantic notion of leadership, similar to that of other stereotyped heroes in our culture, such as the lone cowboy who single-handedly vanquishes the bad guys or the secret agent who saves the world from nuclear destruction. We saw this perception when the new Target CEO Brian Cornell took the reins in August 2014. He immediately began making sweeping changes, including closing all Target’s Canadian stores and offering free shipping on online orders during the holidays. He made an effort to meet with customers and rejected a large and newly refurbished office for a smaller one closer to the data center. This caused the media to wonder out loud whether he would be the one to re-energize sluggish sales and re-ignite growth.

There is something satisfying about the fairy-tale character of the knight on the white horse who ensures victory for the organization. But like any fairy tale, this heroic conception of leadership does not quite align with reality; it greatly exaggerates the influence of a single leader on organization performance, and it has some negative consequences.

One consequence is over-reliance on the leader to make decisions and solve important problems. No single leader has the necessary knowledge and expertise to solve difficult problems for an organization-it is essential to involve other people with relevant knowledge and diverse perspectives.

And it is by no means clear that today’s employees really want to be led by a figure on a white horse. In today’s world, a model of leadership in which leaders guide the organization through enlisting cooperation and consulting with others, rather than making unilateral decisions, may be more appropriate.

The Myth of the Born Leader

One danger of viewing senior executives as heroic leaders is that it makes leadership sound like it is innate in certain people, rather than anything people simply do.

For decades, leadership scholars have been trying to define which traits are associated with effective leadership. But despite hundreds of studies over the past 80 years comparing more and less effective leaders, researchers have failed to identify any specific traits that guarantee leadership success.

To understand the reasons for effective leadership, inherent traits and abilities are much less useful than observable behavior and concrete knowledge. When the focus is on what leaders actually do, it is easier to understand the situational nature of leadership and the importance of flexible leadership. It’s not that personality traits and inherent abilities are irrelevant for understanding why some people want to become leaders or which people are most likely to be successful as leaders, only that traits are less useful than concrete behaviors for understanding what leaders must do to be effective in a given situation.

The Myth of the Celebrity Leader

How powerful is the impact of a celebrity CEO? Several examples over the years would indicate that investors put a great deal of faith in the CEO as savior.

However, in a company with a celebrity leader, a single highly publicized mistake or misdemeanor by a senior executive can have a catastrophic effect on a company’s profits. The case of Martha Stewart, who built a lifestyle empire that includes magazines, cookbooks, television shows, designer sheets, and endorsements of other domestic products, is a perfect example. When it was learned in December 2001 that an insider-trading charge was being brought against her for selling her shares in another company, her own company’s stock plunged by 54 percent and profits declined by 45 percent in the third quarter of the fiscal year.

A more common side effect of the celebrity leader is unrealistic expectations. When a celebrity leader is appointed to a troubled company, expectations (and stock prices) are dramatically raised, only to be deflated if no miracles occur. We’ve seen this with Marissa Mayer, who became Yahoo’s new CEO in 2012 after tremendous success at Google. During her first year at Yahoo, its stock almost doubled from $15.74 to $28 per share. However, in September 2015 the stock began to drop after many of Ms. Mayer’s decisions did not meet expectations and it was determined Yahoo would have to pay taxes on the sales of its stake in Chinese e-commerce company Alibaba. In recent months, top leaders have begun to question her strategy, employees have lost trust amid recent layoffs and others are even calling for her to be replaced, according to a recent Business Inside article.

The idea that leadership is something provided only by those at the top is dangerous for another reason. In today’s volatile business environment, the need to be responsive to rapidly changing conditions is too urgent to wait until all the information possessed by those at different levels of the organization filters up to the senior executives and penetrates the cocoon in which many such figures live. If people depend entirely on top management to identify emerging problems or threats, or to recognize promising opportunities, it may not be possible to make a timely, successful response.

The Myth of Leaders and Managers

Many scholars and practitioners view leadership as a different and more important process than management. Some contend that the two processes are mutually exclusive and cannot occur in the same person, because the values and personality traits essential for leadership are incompatible with those essential for management. Managers value stability, order and efficiency, whereas leaders value flexibility, innovation and adaptation. Managers are concerned about how things get done, and they try to get people to perform better. Leaders are concerned with what things mean to people, and they try to get people to agree about the most important things to be done.

Other scholars view leading and managing as distinct processes or roles that have some incompatible elements that are difficult to reconcile. Strong leadership can disrupt order and efficiency, and strong management can discourage risk taking and innovation.

A broader perspective is needed to understand how leaders can influence organizational processes and outcomes. To be effective, managers must also be leaders, and leaders must manage. Misconceptions about leading and managing have impeded progress in understanding how to integrate the two types of processes and balance the inherent tradeoffs.

The Myth of Easy Answers

An astounding number of books about leadership take a relatively narrow approach to the subject, and few of them are based on solid research. The best-selling books usually offer simple answers for complex problems, such as “one-minute” actions or a list of “leadership secrets” that can be applied in any situation.

Books written by celebrity leaders (and their ghostwriters) also sell well. Readers probably assume that, “if it worked for a famous leader, it must work for me also.” The popularity of leadership books seems to indicate a widespread belief that a few best practices or secret remedies can easily transform the reader into an effective leader. The appeal is not unlike many products and services that promise to make people attractive, healthy and happy with minimal effort.

The reality is that there are few, if any, easy answers. Leadership is difficult and demanding, and leaders must be flexible because the situation is constantly changing. The number of problems is endless, and they seem to appear out of nowhere like waves crashing on the shore. And like waves, they can drag you under if you do not understand the risks or disregard them. Best practices, improvement programs and other remedies can be useful, but they are only tools, not solutions. To be successful, leaders must understand the challenges they face and the relevance of different ways to meet these challenges.

The model of flexible leadership can be immensely helpful to improve understanding and guide action.

The flexible leadership model is based on three distinct determinants of organizational performance: Efficiency and process reliability; innovation and adaptation; and human resources and relations. Each is important to performance, but when to emphasize one over the other depends on a number of factors. To be successful, leaders must have a strong understanding of these factors and be able to adapt their strategy accordingly.

To learn more about the principles of flexible leadership and how to apply them, read my book, Flexible Leadership: Creating Value by Balancing Multiple Challenges and Choices http://www.onpointconsultingllc.com/flexible-leadership-book


Article Source: https://EzineArticles.com/expert/Richard_Lepsinger/1458752

 

Struggling to Build a Successful Team? Leadership Development Methods

“Leaders are born, not created,” true… maybe.

Strong leadership skills are taught and nurtured just like many other capabilities. Perhaps your company has not done a good job creating effective leadership development programs. This article gives you the most important leadership aspects to grow your business.

This article is also useful if you are the leader of your own creative business.

Throughout my coaching programs, I stress the importance of keeping your team members involved. Building a team means you keep recruits responsive, engaged, and energetic about the business.

Above all, this principle is the most important aspect to a successful business. Even more important, I believe, than recruiting.

Why?

You can recruit thousands of team members. You can spend all day, every day recruiting. But if those members lose interest and quit, then you are spending your time in vain.

I encourage you to recruit with the end goal of supporting your team. And this goes for as many people you sign up (small or large numbers).

Leadership Development: Host Live Team Trainings

There is a certain level of fear when you realize you have just sponsored a team member. Now it is up to you to teach them how to be successful. In fact, this fear is what keeps many people from being successful in their business. They refuse to learn how to train other team members. I have heard the excuse “How can I teach someone when I am not successful yet myself?” The best response I give? Get over the fear. Every leader once started exactly where you are now! Leaders had to step up into a role they may not have been comfortable with at that moment.

Leaders look to build a performance driven, direct sales team that delivers results. Plain and simple.

The only way to achieve this goal is to start hosting live team trainings every week. It is not enough to send your new recruits to the weekly company call, or to send them to their back office. They need you! There are some amazing (and free) live video services that you can use to host your own live trainings. I encourage you to get online today and find a service that suits your needs.

Training your own team will be a huge factor in developing your leadership skills.

Once you achieve a weekly training schedule, I encourage you to teach your up and coming leaders. Teaching your down line leaders to train will prove invaluable to your whole organization.

Here is an example of a problem that live trainings will solve:

You have just sponsored a person onto your team. But, they were mistaken and thought they could ‘get rich’ by signing up and not working. Live trainings teach them how to work without forcing them to do anything more than “show up”.

Your basic responsibility as team leader is to support individual team members. A one-on-one relationship recognizes and encourages good performance. Its principle objectives are improving well-being, resolving problems, and developing the team member.

Your end goal is to have a personal relationship with each team member. But not to become so overwhelmed that you have no time left to keep building your personal business.

Solution:

Weekly live trainings. As the leader, you must be available to have training for at least a half hour every week. This will include question and answer time. Every week your team will recognize that you are there to support them. The team grows when new members can join the training and support already in place.

As the leader (at ANY level) you have a responsibility to assist and develop team members. Remember, first you are a trainer and teacher. As leader, counseling your team members is necessary to keep them motivated and expanding.

Leadership Development: Maintain a strong personal business, a large team, and still enjoy life!

Being the leader of your team is going to come with some adjustments on your part.

One of the largest adjustments you are going to make is to your mentality. The only person responsible for your success is you. The only way to be successful is to have a successful attitude. Your attitude makes all the difference to the survival and success of your team. Your business, and team success depends on your mentality.

Leadership Development Questionnaire:

1. As the leader of my team, do I have a passion for the products?

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2. Do I have passion for the business opportunity? What has this business opportunity given me in my life that I did not have before?

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3. Does my charisma and joy for the business overshadow any stress, time commitment, and unforeseen obstacles I will face while supporting my team?

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Take Advantage Of Ayurveda – Read Top Tips on Ayurveda

Delhi has been the capital of India from ancient times. It is one of the oldest capitals of the world. Indraprastha was the old name of Delhi as mentioned in Mahabharata. It has been a center of art & culture and administrative activities. The city receives lakhs of visitors every year from all parts of the world.

 

The Ayurveda therapies are one of the main attractions for tourists visiting India; Delhi has seen a surge in the number of people opting for Ayurveda therapies/treatments in recent years.

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