Tune in now to the final Season 4 Moments Move Us episode with Rebecca Coren 🎧

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Wambi has been named one of “Best Fit” Mental Health Services & Solutions by ANA\California.

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Real-time recognition is the driving force of the Wambi platform. Our holistic solution impacts patients, frontline staff, and every member of your organization.

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Our innovative employee recognition solution leverages gamification to positively transform the employee experience. Calculate your ROI, explore data insights, and read more about our success stories.

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New Podcast Episode:

Creating Change Through Connection: Leadership Lessons from Season 4 with host Rebecca Coren

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About Wambi
Meet The Team Our Partnerships Advisory Councils Newsroom Join Our Team
Platform
Leaders Team Members Patient & Family Engagement Download App
Why Wambi
ROI Calculator Testimonials Actionable Insights
Resources
National Nurses Week Blog Studies and Papers Podcast Events and Webinars Videos COVID-19 Resources
Request a Demo
Healthcare Series: The Impact of Social Network Mapping on Engagement | Greg Matthews
Other Posts at Wambi
Healthcare Series: The Impact of Social Network Mapping on Engagement | Greg Matthews
Wambi Chat: Dr. Bonnie Clipper + Chris McCarthy
Healthcare Leaders: 5 Ways to Improve Pandemic Work Culture
Wambi Chat: Dr. Bonnie Clipper + Brittany Merkle
Healthcare Series: The Impact of Social Network Mapping on Engagement | Greg Matthews
Tuesday, 18 August 2020
Healthcare Series: Navigating Toxic Leadership | Dan Weberg

Greg Matthews is an award-winning health innovator out to radically disrupt and improve the healthcare industry’s archaic methods for assessing true sources and patterns of influence. As an advisor to dozens of the largest and most successful healthcare companies in the world, he knows how to understand and quantify physicians’ behavior, networks and patterns of influence. On today’s episode, he shares his passion for data-centered innovation and how it affects engagement.

Truth You Can Act On

1. Engagement is about being part of something larger than yourself.
Supporting Quote:
Greg Matthews: “being able to connect yourself to a higher ideal is a big part of engagement and being able to do things that you couldn’t do on your own by being a part. Of a group of people focused on that.”

2. The connections your organization requires to function don’t follow your org chart.
Supporting Quote:
Greg Matthews: “that doesn’t necessarily mean that you have to throw out your org chart and replace it with a social network diagram, but that social network diagram can help you to actually understand how your organization functions on a day to day basis. It can show you where there are. Traps and blocks, uh, in communication and connection. It can show you where there are opportunities to enhance, um, communication and connection between individuals, between departments.

3. Promote the work of individuals on an organizational level.
Supporting Quote:
Greg Matthews: that doctor doesn’t necessarily have to adopt social networking behavior on their own. They don’t have to necessarily be responsible for emailing their colleagues to say, Hey, here are some cool things that our hospital is doing. The hospital can simply feature them in their content. Almost every employee loves to have the kind of recognition from the organization that says, Hey, we love what you’re doing, and we want to feature it as a way of talking about the great things our organization is doing externally.

Book Recommendation

Snow Crash by Neal Stephenson – Buy Here.

Sponsored by Wambi

In collaboration with Wambi, the Gut + Science Podcast Healthcare Series hosted by Nikki Lewellen, Director of Partnerships at Wambi, highlights accomplished, people-first healthcare CEOs (and executives) that share their powerful mindsets, experiences and tools that have helped them succeed. The show encompasses all areas of human capital at work and the successful best practices that breed healthy, engaged organizations.

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Wambi Chat: Dr. Bonnie Clipper + Chris McCarthy
Friday, 14 August 2020
The concept of the Beginner's Mind and Fresh Eyes

Dr. Bonnie Clipper and Chris McCarthy, Innovation and Design Leader and Vice President of Strategy and Design at HopeLab, discuss how being willing to learn at a rapid pace with an open heart and cultivating a mindset of learning will help build resiliency in the ever changing world we are living in right now.

How do we cultivate a mindset of learning?

Love this? Explore the series.

There’s more to explore in Wambi world! Click here to subscribe and keep your pulse on what we’re doing in the healthcare engagement space with thought leaders and the inspiring realm of employee recognition and gratitude.

Healthcare Leaders: 5 Ways to Improve Pandemic Work Culture
Thursday, 13 August 2020

Melanie Alm
Director of Sales at Wambi

 

How To Overcome the Negative Effects of the Pandemic

There has never been a more challenging time to be a leader in healthcare, and yet strong leadership has never been more important. We turned to four healthcare executives from across the country to share their expertise and key learnings in leading through the pandemic. Here are their tips for improving workplace culture and building resilience through COVID-19 and beyond.

5 Easy Ways to Improve Workplace Culture
  1. Create a Culture of Gratitude and WellbeingAll four leaders agreed that a culture of gratitude creates a thriving, resilient workforce. Bob Garrett, CEO of Hackensack Meridian Health, stressed the importance of a unified culture, especially one rooted in gratitude. He stated, “you can have the best strategies in the world but if you don’t have a culture that is unified… your strategies are going to fall flat.” Shanthi Margoschis, Chief Nursing Executive at Kaiser Permanente San Jose Medical Center, echoed this sentiment, saying, “it’s very important for the nurses to be recognized by their peers, their managers, and the organizational leaders so that they know that everybody is in this together.” All agreed that leaders set the tone for their organizations. Their focus on gratitude has a powerful impact on the overall wellbeing of their teams.
  2. Articulate Clear Values 
    Clear values and effective communication are critical, especially during a pandemic. Michelle Volpe, CEO at Penn Presbyterian Medical Center said, “communication [is] essential. We needed to up our game in terms of what we were communicating, how frequently we were communicating, keeping it simple, making it relevant, and making the information timely.” Dennis Murphy, CEO of IU Health, shared that his organization practiced “radical transparency” and repeatedly articulated the company’s core values to reinforce that they trusted their employees to do the right thing. This unified the team and drove meaning and purpose in their work.
  3. Encourage Wellness 
    Employee wellbeing and self-care must be a top priority, as “you can’t pour from an empty cup.” Dennis Murphy shared that “…one of the very first things we came to realize is there’s something different between physical safety and emotional safety and that you had to very quickly legitimize people’s concerns about emotional safety.” Bob Garrett shared that two key roles at Hackensack Meridian Health, the Chief Culture Officer and Chief Wellness Officer, coordinated programs to support team members’ physical and emotional wellbeing. These actions validated team members’ experiences and concerns and ensured that they felt valued and safe. 
  4. Create Opportunities for Social Connection
    Social ties at work are critical to employee health, happiness, and engagement. Our panelists organized daily briefings and regular town hall events to bring everyone together, fostering environments of collaboration. As a result, interdisciplinary cooperation, team effectiveness, and innovation flourished through the pandemic.
  5. Encourage a Growth Mindset
    When the panelists were asked what they were most proud of, all of them mentioned the innovation and can-do attitudes of their teams. The pandemic necessitated creativity and action, and trust in their team members paid off in rapid frontline innovation that ultimately saved lives. These leaders empowered team members to use their unique strengths to meet challenges head-on. As a result, adversity fueled greatness. 
A Final Word

While there is no rulebook on how to lead effectively during a pandemic, we are incredibly grateful that these amazing leaders were willing to share their experience and expertise. It was inspiring to hear how they set the tone for their organizations and prioritize areas where they can make an impact. They empower their teams by recognizing their contributions, validating their concerns, acting with “radical transparency”, and encouraging social connections between their employees. And most importantly, they celebrate meaningful moments. In a pandemic, every small win matters. They show that giving and receiving gratitude makes people feel more valued, motivated, and resilient, and is the catalyst towards a cultural transformation that will outlast the effects of COVID-19. 

 

Listen: What Experts are Saying About Leadership in the Time of a Pandemic

If you liked what you read today, check out the trailer for the Wambi Leadership Series: Pandemic Insights for key takeaways to support staff in mitigating stress, fighting burnout, and addressing mental health challenges. The full one-hour webinar can be accessed here. 

Wambi Chat: Dr. Bonnie Clipper + Brittany Merkle
Wednesday, 12 August 2020
You don't have to be a hero; you're human.

Dr. Bonnie Clipper and Brittany Merkle, Lead Innovation Strategist at University Hospitals Ventures, talk about how during this pivotal time in our history, there have been silver linings when it comes to the nursing field.

When crisis becomes an opportunity to innovate and be proactive.

Love this? Explore the series.

Along with sound advice to journal routinely as a means of reflection and catharsis, here are the books suggested:

  • Gray Rhino How To Act on the Obvious Dangers We Ignore by Michele Wucker – Buy Here
  • Becoming a Resonant Leader: Develop Your Emotional Intelligence, Renew Your Relationships, Sustain Your Effectiveness by Annie McKee – Buy Here

To learn more about Brittany Merkle, visit:

  • UH Hospitals Ventures
  • Connect with Brittany Merkle on LinkedIn

There’s more to explore in Wambi world! Click here to subscribe and keep your pulse on what we’re doing in the healthcare engagement space with thought leaders and the inspiring realm of employee recognition and gratitude.

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