Workers say ketamine, other drugs boost job performance | Music majors can be great employees | Failure is key to success, says Gen Z CEO
Created for newsletter@newslettercollector.com |  Unknown Title at Unknown Company
Update Profile  |  Web Version
April 23, 2024
CONNECT WITH SMARTBRIEF LinkedInFacebookXSmartBlogs
SmartBrief on Workforce
Essential reading for HR professionalsSIGN UP ⋅   SHARE
ADVERTISEMENT
Top Story
Workers say ketamine, other drugs boost job performance
(Cole Burston/Getty Images)
Taboos about using drugs such as psylocybin and ketamine to enhance job performance may be easing up in the workplace, especially where the substances have been made legal for common use, but the practice is still cause for controversy. The FDA has issued warnings that off-label, unmonitored and mental health use of drugs such as ketamine may come with serious risks.
Full Story: The Wall Street Journal (4/21) 
LinkedIn X Facebook Email
UofL Online MS in HR and Org. Dev.
Do you have a passion for people? Turn your people skills into a career with UofL's online MS in HR and Org. Dev. program! Prepare to sit for the SHRM-CP exam with fully asynchronous classes. Start in 2024 and graduate in 2 years or less. LEARN MORE.
ADVERTISEMENT:
Recruiting & Retention
Music majors can be great employees
(Icon Sportswire/Getty Images)
A new study has revealed that musicians often bring exemplary skills to the workplace ... even when they're working jobs that aren't related to music. Experience collaborating with others, working independently, paying attention to detail and managing time wisely are among the many skills that transfer from music education to an employment setting.
Full Story: The Conversation (4/14) 
LinkedIn X Facebook Email
Last Chance to Earn Your SHRM-CP® or SHRM-SCP®!
Kickstart your SHRM-CP or SHRM-SCP journey before May 12 to take advantage of the extended application deadline! Seize this final opportunity to secure a testing window from May to July. Your future starts now. Don't wait to earn a globally valued and recognized HR credential.
ADVERTISEMENT:
Leadership & Development
 
Free eBooks and Resources
Free eBooks and resources brought to you by our sponsors
Strategies for Success from TrainingMag.com
Benefits technology doesn't come in a one-size-fits-all solution and needs to be customized for each business's needs, writes Frank Mengert, CEO of ebm. Benefits technology needs to handle more than payroll and be tailored for atypical benefits like pet insurance and tuition reimbursement while being easily accessible to employees.
Full Story: Training magazine (4/22) 
LinkedIn X Facebook Email
Benefits & Compensation
Why employers should prioritize new health options
(Pixabay)
Employers that focus on only a few health and wellness options during open enrollment will save money, reduce confusion and see higher program participation, says Gravie Chief People Officer Amy Spartz, who suggests determining priorities by conducting employee surveys and listening sessions, reviewing claims data and working with a broker. "It takes time and resources to set up a new point solution provider and the overall cost of managing health insurance administration is extremely high, so working with a trusted broker and staying focused on key priorities will give your employees and company the best ROI," Spartz says.
Full Story: StrategicCHRO360 (4/16) 
LinkedIn X Facebook Email
The HR Leader
Nobody puts Beyonce in a corner: Overcoming exclusion
Beyonce (Angela Weiss/AFP/Getty Images)
Despite her Southern roots, Beyonce didn't get the warmest of reactions from some country music fans when she performed with the Chicks at an awards show in 2016 -- but her new "Cowboy Carter" album gave the naysayers something to talk about. Three businesswomen explain how, in the intervening years, Beyonce went through an exclusion evolution with three strategies: Exiting the conversation, working for change and creating your own lane.
Full Story: Harvard Business Review (tiered subscription model) (4/22) 
LinkedIn X Facebook Email
SmartBreak: Question of the Day
Of the banks listed here, which one did NOT adopt "chair" instead of "chairman" for their top corporate title?
VoteBank of America
VoteCitigroup
VoteJPMorgan
VoteWells Fargo
About the Editor
Reflections
Reflections
Kanoe Namahoe
What’s in your cup?
 
A man named Joe Stan posted a video to social media* in which he describes a scenario where you, the listener, are holding a cup of coffee and someone bumps you, sending coffee everywhere. He asks why you spilled the coffee.  
 
“See, a lot of you will say the reason you spilled coffee was because someone bumped into you,” he explains. “That’s the wrong answer. The reason you spilled coffee is because that’s what was in the cup.”
 
That metaphor made me sit straight up. It jolted me. It made me ask, “What spills out of me?” 
 
Every day, we get bumped. Big bumps, little bumps, bumps we hardly notice. But we’re in contact with people and circumstances every day. When we brush up against them, what comes out of our cups? 
 
That all depends on what we’re putting into them, doesn’t it? We are around others all the time. Do we allow what’s in their cups -- good or bad -- to trickle into ours? And books and media. Are we intentional about what we read and watch, knowing that what we consume has an impact on us?
 
Case in point. I saw an email Sunday that annoyed me. I started to argue with the sender, in my head. I even made a snarky comment aloud. And that’s when I felt the nudge in my spirit. Something inside me quietly asked, “What’s spilling out of you right now? Is that sarcasm and anger?"
 
Ouch. 
 
I needed that. I don’t want to continue bad habits or engage in biting communication. It's unproductive. But more than that, I want what comes out of me -- what spills onto others -- to be kind, honest, friendly, gentle, courageous and compassionate. 
 
I'm a work in progress. What about you? Do you know what’s in your cup? Do you know what spills out of you when Life bumps you?  Let me know! And if you enjoy this brief, tell others so they can benefit also.

*Note: This video is from TikTok, but I don't personally have a TikTok profile. I am frugal with social media and only use my  accounts on Facebook and Instagram. If I'm covering a show, I might use X. 
LinkedIn X Facebook Email
Sharing SmartBrief on Workforce with your network keeps the quality of content high and these newsletters free.
Help Spread the Word
SHARE
Or copy and share your personalized link:
smartbrief.com/workforce/?referrerId=hCgswturix
You can't get away from yourself by moving from one place to another.
Ernest Hemingway,
writer, journalist, Nobel Prize for Literature recipient
LinkedIn X Facebook Email
 
SmartBrief publishes more than 200 free industry newsletters - Browse our portfolio
Sign Up  |    Update Profile  |    Advertise with SmartBrief
Unsubscribe  |    Privacy policy
CONTACT US: FEEDBACK  |    ADVERTISE
SmartBrief Future
Copyright © 2024 SmartBrief. All Rights Reserved.
A division of Future US LLC
Full 7th Floor, 130 West 42nd Street, New York, NY, 10036.