Ladan Nikravan is an associate editor of Chief Learning Officer magazine.
Gen Y is the most stressed out generation, but learning leaders have the power to keep them sane.
Forget being profit-driven. Companies may find more success by enabling the actions that drive desired outcomes.
How does a company tasked with fitting candidates to jobs fill its own workforce? By using its own social recruiting tools, of course.
Despite unemployment and underemployment, members of Gen Y say they’re prepared for the workforce and feel confident about their future.
Gen Y job hops for experience, not money, which means learning leaders have the power to keep them happy and employed.
Gen Y job hops for experience, not money, which means learning leaders have the power to keep them happy and employed.
Gen Y job candidates are often stereotyped as lacking the soft skills needed for success. Research shows this isn’t always the case.
Millennials continue to filter into their first jobs, but not all are succeeding. Here’s how learning leaders can help.
Great Place to Work CEO Michael Bush talks about where the workforce’s youngest members want to work and learn — and it’s not where you think.
Millennials have the skills, but they don't always know how to use them in real world work situations.