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Tag: Game Changers

Posted on August 3, 2014June 29, 2023

2014 Game Changer: Danielle Weinblatt

Danielle Weinblatt Game Changer 2014
Danielle Weinblatt

While pursuing her MBA from Harvard Business School, Danielle Weinblatt was looking for a way to solve the various problems she thinks plague the interview process. In 2011 she used her previous experience as a hiring manager to help her launch Take the Interview to eliminate her perceived lack of communication between managers and recruiters, coordination issues and transparency with candidates throughout the interview process.

Weinblatt, 31, created the company’s interview management platform, which uses video interviews and data analytics to help clients make well-informed hiring decisions. More recently, Take the Interview launched a new interviewing platform powered by Google Glass with hope that wearable technology will soon transform the recruiting industry.

Posted on June 11, 2012June 29, 2023

Game Changers Awards

2012 Game Changers – Nomination deadline has been EXTENDED – Monday, September 10th!

Workforce is pleased to announce its second annual Game Changers awards. This award recognizes the next generation of innovative, dynamic leaders to watch in human resources and workplace management.

We are seeking nominations of high-potential people under the age of 40 who already are making their mark. They can be HR professionals, consultants, academics, technology experts or members of companies that develop HR products and services. Professional accomplishments are key, but community service and other achievements will also be considered.

This is an excellent opportunity for you to publicly recognize your employees or colleagues. (We also will accept self-nominations as long as they are accompanied by a letter of recommendation from an executive in your organization or with whom you have previously worked.)

Winners will receive a Game Changers award and be profiled in Workforce Management magazine and on Workforce.com. In addition, winners will join a community of game changers with whom they can network and be tapped to provide their point of view on timely HR or workplace topics.

GUIDELINES
It is important that you state a clear, business-oriented reason for the nomination and that the nominee will still be under the age of 40 as of December 1, 2012.

The deadline for nominations has been EXTENDED to midnight CT on September 10, 2012. Entries will be judged by Workforce’s senior editors and writers. The 2012 Game Changers will be announced and profiled in the December issue of Workforce Management and on workforce.com in early December.

You can submit your nomination form and supporting documents either online or by mail.

Workforce Game Changers
c/o Rick Bell
150 N. Michigan Ave.
Chicago, IL 60601

QUESTIONS?
Contact Rick Bell at rbell@workforce.com, or Andrea Whitney at awhitney@workforce.com.

MEET THE 2011 GAME CHANGERS!

The 15 winners of Workforce‘s first Game Changers award competition have demonstrated the kinds of skills and achievements that are so necessary in the competitive 21st century workplace.

Posted on September 29, 2011August 8, 2018

Meet the 2011 Game Changers

[vc_row][vc_column] Workplace challenges have never been greater than in this era of globalization, economic uncertainty and accelerated technological change. At the same time, nimble workforce management is ever more critical to an organization’s success.

The 15 winners of Workforce Management’s first Game Changers award competition have demonstrated the kinds of skills and achievements that are so necessary in the competitive 21st century workplace.

The winners are all rising stars, 40 years old and younger, who are making their mark in human resources and other areas of workplace management. They come from corporations, startups and not-for-profits, and they are finding innovative ways to create a new generation of leaders, shed light on how companies compensate and treat their employees, bridge global cultural differences in HR management, and use social media to facilitate employee collaboration.

Winners were chosen by Workforce Management’s editorial staff from a pool of approximately 50 nominees. We considered not only professional accomplishments but also community service and other achievements.


Dana Aspillera

Managing director, Charles Schwab & Co., San Francisco

Dana Aspillera, 34, makes sure her team has an active presence in the community for seeking out new talent.

Read more.


Tim Besse

Co-founder and vice president of product and marketing, Glassdoor Inc., Sausalito, California

Tim Besse, 31, was nominated in part because he motivates his staff to think on their feet and to come to meetings with thought-out ideas to help spur progressive conversations.

Read more.


Nicholas Christenson

Manager of talent management, Doosan Infracore Construction Equipment, Seoul, South Korea

Nicholas Christenson, 30, has discovered that uniting the strengths of HR practices for his company in the United States and South Korea has been invigorating.

Read more.


Jennifer Cozier

Director, Automatic Data Processing, Norcross, Georgia

Jennifer Cozier, 38, is interested in the science of people and how to get the best out of a team, which translates into her personal standing as an individual who cares about talent.

Read more.


Sara Sutton Fell

Founder and CEO, FlexJobs

Boulder, Colorado

Sara Sutton Fell, 37, created FlexJobs to streamline the job-hunting process for those looking for something besides full-time work. She has also built a collaborative culture for her 16 employees, many of whom are scattered across the country.

Read more.


Julie Heitzler

Human resources manager

Orlando (Florida) Airport Marriott

Julie Heitzler, 29 is recognized by her peers as a savvy leader and represents a future in which HR leaders are trusted business partners.

Read more.


Kelly Lewis

Founder and managing partner, Bounce Collective, Richmond, Virginia

Kelly Lewis, 39, works with schoolchildren, either in their own leadership learning groups or as part of what she calls “Leaders as Learners,” which brings adult clients into a sixth-grade classroom once a week for six months for a new approach to learning.

Read more.


Lisa Lyssand

Global human resources director, BroadVision Inc., Redwood City, California

Lisa Lyssand, 38, initiated blog posts to spur interest in the use of internal social media and drew up guidelines to help employees stay within the company’s legal, technical and social bounds.

Read more.


D. Zachary Misko

Vice president, Kelly Services’ Outsourcing & Consulting Group

Troy, Michigan

D. Zachary Misko, 39, calls himself a “brand differentiator,” saying it makes sense that an expert in the staffing field would do a better job of spreading the word about his company’s services rather than a marketing manager who may not know as much about the business.

Read more.


Tiffani Murray

Consultant, Atlanta

Tiffani Murray, 34, is taking her technology know-how from the corporate world to help her clients advance their human resources strategies through social media.

Read more.


Ryan O’Leary

Manager, human capital consulting,

PDRI, Arlington, Virginia

Ryan O’Leary, 35, leads a team that is creating the job-discovery portion of a Web portal for what President Barack Obama has called the “9/11 generation” by thinking of new, better and innovative ways to produce better returns for his customers.

Read more.


Laura Picking

Human resources manager, Delta Dental of Kansas, Wichita

Laura Picking, 29, created a job-shadowing program through which employees sign up to follow two jobs for two hours each after employees expressed curiosity about other departments.

Read more.


David Sacks

Founder and CEO,

Yammer, San Francisco

David Sacks, 39, is a CEO who practices what he preaches, saying his goal is to create a corporate culture that is very open and transparent, which helps lead to a happier, more engaged workplace.

Read more.


Benedict ‘Ned’ Salvador

Senior director, Integra Business Processing Solutions Inc., Manila, Philippines

Benedict “Ned” Salvador, 33, makes sure that those around him recognize that the knowledge-process-outsourcing industry provides not only a good career-development path but also careers in which employees’ ability is maximized.

Read more.


Wendy Savlin

Manager, talent development, Sprint Nextel Corp., Overland Park, Kansas

Wendy Savlin, 35, produced a series of short videos that employees could access from the company’s intranet. The videos have helped cut training costs while creating unexpected benefits for the company.

Read more.


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