Coaching employees to be more innovative

Betting, brainstorms, and workplace benefits. -

Inside this issue

  • Workplace trends
  • The AI corner
  • Coaching employees to be more innovative
  • Water cooler chatter
  • Question of the week
  • Just for laughs
  • Follow the monday.com weekly on LinkedIn

Benefits

Egg freezing benefits go mainstream

What started in Silicon Valley has spread across the corporate globe, with employers like Merck in Switzerland, Amazon in Spain, Centrica in the UK, and many others now offering egg freezing benefits to female employees.These programs are often pitched as a way for women to prioritize their careers today and family plans in the future. However, fertility experts warn that corporate marketing often glosses over key limitations. Success rates for frozen eggs rarely exceed 30% according to the UK's Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority, and most fertility clinic websites fail to clearly communicate actual baby success rates versus egg survival rates. Legal researchers caution these policies could create workplace pressure to undergo invasive procedures, while critics argue it represents another way employers influence women's reproductive choices rather than addressing systemic workplace inequality through policies like extended parental leave.

 

Finance

The betting economy invades Wall Street

Financial markets are experiencing an unprecedented convergence with gambling platforms as regulatory boundaries dissolve between investing and betting. The shift accelerated when Kalshi, a regulated prediction market, won legal approval to offer contracts on presidential elections and now provides betting on everything from NFL statistics to Emmy awards through major brokers like Robinhood. Traditional gambling giants are responding by partnering with financial exchanges: FanDuel recently announced plans to launch prediction markets with the Chicago Mercantile Exchange to offer binary bets on stock indices and economic indicators. Finance experts argue this blurring of lines reflects a broader cultural shift where speculation increasingly dominates over long-term investment strategies, fundamentally transforming how Americans approach both entertainment and wealth-building in the digital economy.

Competition

Musk challenges Apple-OpenAI partnership as anti-competitive

Elon Musk's companies are taking legal action against what they claim is an unfair AI alliance between tech giants Apple and OpenAI. The lawsuit centers on Apple's exclusive deal to integrate ChatGPT into iPhones, which gives OpenAI's assistant unique access to core device functions while blocking competitors like Musk's Grok chatbot. Legal experts say the partnership creates a powerful data advantage because generative AI learns from every user interaction. With ChatGPT potentially accessing prompts from hundreds of millions of iPhones, competition analysts say it builds an "impenetrable moat" around OpenAI's market position. The complaint also alleges Apple deliberately suppresses competing AI apps in its App Store while prominently featuring ChatGPT. The case could shape how AI competition develops as exclusive partnerships between tech giants become more common.

 

Careers

Coding newcomers face a brutal job market reality

The software engineering job market has contracted dramatically, with Indeed reporting a nearly 70% drop in postings since 2022 as coding newcomers find themselves competing with experienced developers for increasingly scarce positions. Investment analysts at SignalFire reveal that entry-level hiring at major tech companies fell 25% between 2023 and 2024, as automation handles simpler tasks previously assigned to new graduates. Career counselors now advise recent computer science graduates to pivot toward AI specialization rather than traditional programming to differentiate themselves in the tightened landscape. Despite the challenging environment, those who do secure positions still command starting salaries around $80,000, suggesting that while opportunities have narrowed considerably, the field continues to reward graduates who can adapt with specialized, cutting-edge skills that complement rather than compete with automated systems.

Coaching employees to be more innovative

With new AI technologies accelerating go-to-market strategies, the pressure to innovate fast has never been higher. In fact, if you look at nearly every workplace trend over the past year, innovation is the common thread. Companies like Amazon have even made headlines for their return-to-office mandates, hoping to spark stronger collaboration and more of that “startup-like innovation.”

 

But the advice on how to actually become more innovative is often vague. As a leader, it’s not enough to just tell your team to “think outside the box.” Creativity is a skill — it needs to be learned, practiced, and supported. And innovation doesn’t always mean big, flashy ideas. More often, it shows up as small, thoughtful improvements made by curious people who feel empowered to try something new.

 

So, how do you develop an innovative mindset on your team?

 

Frame brainstorms with a goal in mind

Innovation for the sake of being different isn't likely to move your company forward. But when you focus your brainstorms on clear outcomes, your team stands to make a bigger impact. During your project discussions, try to frame questions around a particular goal. For example, you might ask, "How can we get this task done faster and to a higher quality?" or "What new feature would excite our customers the most?" Questions like these keep your team focused on a solvable challenge, rather than an abstract ambition. And the more your team practices solution-focused thinking, the more confident they’ll get in shaping high-value ideas.

 

Key question: “Which desired outcomes can you help your team brainstorm around?”

 

Create space for experimentation

Innovation and failure go hand in hand — and your team might not try something new if they fear getting it wrong. That’s why creating a culture where experimentation is encouraged and celebrated is critical. Start by carving out small windows for testing. For instance, give a team one week to prototype a new internal process and report back on what worked and what didn’t. Or use a retrospective to ask, like “What’s one experiment we could try next time that might improve our workflow?” When experimentation becomes a habit, innovation becomes sustainable.

 

Key question: “What low-risk experiments can your team try this month?”

 

Coach the whole process

It's easy to fall into the trap of judging ideas instead of shaping them. But when you can become your team's thought partner, you will help them strengthen their creative thinking and execution skills for the future. So, find times to get updates on your innovation progress and ask the stakeholders to walk you through their thought process. If you don't believe their thinking is sound, try to avoid saying things like "That will never work." Instead, remind them of their perimeters and ask them how they're thinking of solving them. For example, if a project is getting too complicated and might not be completed in the timeline needed, ask, "How can we simplify this idea so it's more feasible this quarter?" Supporting your team throughout the process not only leads to a better outcome, it also helps build psychological safety, making them feel more confident and supported throughout the creative process.

 

Key question: “How can you help your team build better ideas without shutting them down?”

 

Stress the value of research

Great innovation starts with deep understanding — be it of the customer, the market, or even your own workflow. So, try to make research a regular part of your team’s process. Encourage your employees to talk to users, analyze competitors, or conduct a quick internal survey before proposing ideas, so they're better informed. Even think about assigning one team member each week to bring back a trend, insight, or customer quote that sparks discussion. These small efforts add up, creating a shared knowledge base that feeds better ideas.

 

Key question: “What kind of research can your team regularly gather to spark better thinking?”

 

Recognize and reward creativity

If you've ever tried anything new, then you know that it's not always easy to put yourself out there and present your ideas. So, whether your team's creative projects are a knockout success or fall flat, recognize and celebrate the effort. Find times to shout out innovative thinking during your team standups or even call out individuals during your all-hands meetings. Make sure they know you appreciate and champion their efforts, so they feel encouraged to keep going. Over time, this builds confidence and keeps innovation top of mind.

 

Key question: “How can you celebrate innovation on your team?”

Water cooler chatter

Parents sued OpenAI claiming ChatGPT coached their 16-year-old son's suicide. The family discovered over 3,000 pages of chat logs showing the AI bot offering suicide methods and even helping "upgrade" his plan after he uploaded a photo.

"Once I got inside his account, it is a massively more powerful and scary thing than I knew about, but he was using it in ways that I had no idea were possible."

Matt Raine, Father of the Deceased

ANZ accidentally informed 100+ bankers of their firing via laptop return email. The Australian bank sent the IT department email ahead of schedule, forcing staff to discover their job cuts through a computer return request rather than a proper termination meeting.

"This is a disgusting way for workers to learn about job cuts - through a botched email instead of a respectful conversation."

Wendy Streets, Financial Sector Union National President

Last week’s answer: 40%

This week’s question: What percentage of security leaders believe the biggest internal security threat is employees unknowingly giving AI access to sensitive data?

“If we worked collaboratively, think of all the extra people we could burden.”

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