by Jackie Acho | Jul 13, 2013 | Empathy, Fathers, Leadership, Parenting, Uncategorized, Work Family Balance
It’s Saturday morning – a good time to review and connect in cyberspace on issues that matter. The problem is that some of these debates further entrench us, rather than propel us to better solutions. Work/family balance is one of those, and I’m...
by Jackie Acho | Jun 17, 2013 | Empathy, Fathers, Leadership, Parenting, Uncategorized, Work Family Balance
Leaning into fatherhood is an investment the US does not make. That much is clear in study after study, no matter how we cut the data, as in this article by Emanuella Grinberg, CNN. The question is why? The answer is because we haven’t made the value/return on...
by Jackie Acho | Jun 14, 2013 | Empathy, Intrapraneurship, Parenting, Uncategorized, Women in Leadership, Work Family Balance
We are constantly reminded that research is only as good as the questions we ask and as imperfect as any other human endeavor. Research design is prone to misleading reductionism as well. The research highlighted in this blog post by Polly Toynbee in The Guardian is...
by Jackie Acho | Jun 3, 2013 | Empathy, Intrapraneurship, Women in Leadership, Work Family Balance
http://youtu.be/4X4inLUWfAk I had the pleasure and honor of attending and speaking at the 2013 Ashoka Future Forum http://www.ashokafutureforum.com/ in Washington, D.C. last week. Amazing, humbling, inspiring. View slides here: jacho_Currency (FINAL –...
by Jackie Acho | Mar 21, 2013 | Intrapraneurship, Parenting, Women in Leadership, Work Family Balance
Part I: What I Have Learned from My Children Part I is being published simultaneously by Whitney Johnson, author of Dare, Dream, Do. Click HERE to read Part I, then continue… *** Part II: Who are Our Leaders Now? Within current organizational constructs, is it...
by Jackie Acho | Mar 4, 2013 | Leadership, Women in Leadership, Work Family Balance
People are taking issue with Sheryl Sandberg’s privileged position as she encourages women to Lean In . That’s not what bothers me though, and in some ways is a red herring…a means to divide women, yet again (rich vs poor as we’ve long done...