How to prepare for a virtual job interview | What workers need to succeed while working from home | Hiring creative people isn't enough
Created for newsletter@newslettercollector.com |  Web Version
March 20, 2020
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Getting Ahead
Half of American professionals are switching to phone or video meetings, according to LinkedIn, so it's important for job candidates to be fully prepared for a remote interview. Best practices for getting ready include testing your internet connection, picking a good background and dressing professionally while avoiding bright colors, which can be distracting over video.
Full Story: Fast Company online (3/19) 
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Skills are essential to the success of a remote team, not software, according to two Canadian research professors. Among the skills needed for being productive while working from home include open communication, self-motivation without being rewarded, trustworthiness to get the work done and adaptability to quick changes.
Full Story: Forbes (3/19) 
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Hire Smart
Simply recruiting creative people is not enough to ensure an organization tackles challenges in creative ways. A new study found dysfunctional management can block the path to creative solutions, so maybe it's not always best to just hire creative people and get out of the way -- but to lead them instead.
Full Story: PhysOrg/University of Jyväskylä (3/19) 
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Poll
What do you wear when working from home?
Pajamas
 10.58%
Athleisure wear
 46.64%
Jeans and a shirt
 33.05%
Business casual
 9.73%
The Landscape
Working from home challenges attorneys with children
(Pixabay)
The coronavirus has created a difficult situation at home between legal professionals who are telecommuting and children whose schools are closed, says Summer Eberhard of Major, Lindsey & Africa. In a Q&A, Eberhard notes that lawyers who are mothers will be affected disproportionately, and she says law firms need to be "more patient and understanding during this transition."
Full Story: The American Lawyer magazine online (3/18) 
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Balancing Yourself
While the world is dealing with the coronavirus outbreak, but "the most widespread health problem in the nation" is actually loneliness, according to then-Surgeon General Vivek Murthy in 2017. Calling friends and family, connecting with others and talking to strangers are ways for everyone to fight off loneliness during a time of social distancing.
Full Story: The Dallas Morning News (tiered subscription model) (3/19) 
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Experts: Keep exercising during pandemic to reduce stress
(Oleksandr Gimanov/Getty Images)
Fitness experts say working out can be a good way to help manage the stress of the coronavirus pandemic, and while gyms and studios may close or limit occupancy there are ways to keep up an exercise routine at home. Create a walking or running routine, tap into some high-intensity interval training sessions or yoga classes available online, and find household items to use as weights for strength training.
Full Story: The Washington Post (tiered subscription model) (3/18) 
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The Water Cooler
Researchers examining the fossilized bones of a 380 million-year-old lobe-finned fish have discovered the first evidence of fingers. "The origin of digits relates to developing the capability for the fish to support its weight in shallow water or for short trips out on land. The increased number of small bones in the fin allows more planes of flexibility to spread out its weight through the fin," explains paleontologist Richard Cloutier.
Full Story: ScienceAlert (Australia) (3/18) 
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There's always something to occupy the inquiring mind.
Margaret Atwood,
writer
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