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Ep 674: Seeing Skills Differently: Lessons from Elite Sports

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Manage episode 465486031 series 1535872
Content provided by Matt Alder. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Matt Alder or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.

Have you ever wondered how an elite baseball player can track a 95-mile-per-hour fastball and actually connect? Or how a Premier League footballer can deliver a perfect pass over half the pitch to a moving teammate? The way elite athletes develop their attributes and build skills has big lessons for how we need to think about talent and hiring in the workplace.

We've been discussing skills-based hiring and skills-based organizations for a while now. As the need for skills agility grows, we must deepen our understanding of the attributes, skills, and potential to make better hiring decisions.

One area that uses cutting-edge science to do this is elite sport. My guest this week is Dr. Daniel Laby, a Sports Vision Ophthalmologist who works with elite athletes and top baseball teams, including the Chicago Cubs and the Boston Red Sox.

This is a really fascinating discussion with some important lessons for HR and Talent Acquisition, for example, why we should emphasize future potential over past performance, the importance of recognizing that sometimes there is a specific order in which skills need to be developed, and why average can sometimes be mistaken for best in skills assessment.

In the interview, we discuss:

  • How do you improve elite performance?

  • Working with Red Bull and Trent Alexander-Arnold

  • A common misconception about vision

  • The importance of specific attributes in specific sports

  • Nature, nurture and brain plasticity

  • The skills pyramid

  • How small changes make a big difference

  • The role of technology

Follow this podcast on Apple Podcasts

Follow this podcast on Spotify.

A full transcript will appear here shortly

  continue reading

762 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 465486031 series 1535872
Content provided by Matt Alder. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Matt Alder or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.

Have you ever wondered how an elite baseball player can track a 95-mile-per-hour fastball and actually connect? Or how a Premier League footballer can deliver a perfect pass over half the pitch to a moving teammate? The way elite athletes develop their attributes and build skills has big lessons for how we need to think about talent and hiring in the workplace.

We've been discussing skills-based hiring and skills-based organizations for a while now. As the need for skills agility grows, we must deepen our understanding of the attributes, skills, and potential to make better hiring decisions.

One area that uses cutting-edge science to do this is elite sport. My guest this week is Dr. Daniel Laby, a Sports Vision Ophthalmologist who works with elite athletes and top baseball teams, including the Chicago Cubs and the Boston Red Sox.

This is a really fascinating discussion with some important lessons for HR and Talent Acquisition, for example, why we should emphasize future potential over past performance, the importance of recognizing that sometimes there is a specific order in which skills need to be developed, and why average can sometimes be mistaken for best in skills assessment.

In the interview, we discuss:

  • How do you improve elite performance?

  • Working with Red Bull and Trent Alexander-Arnold

  • A common misconception about vision

  • The importance of specific attributes in specific sports

  • Nature, nurture and brain plasticity

  • The skills pyramid

  • How small changes make a big difference

  • The role of technology

Follow this podcast on Apple Podcasts

Follow this podcast on Spotify.

A full transcript will appear here shortly

  continue reading

762 episodes

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