Join us for our pop-up event on the 24th April, from 8.30am-10.00am, where we will discover what an evidence-based approach to practice is and why we need one in HR (and management). We will be joined by Professor Rob Briner and GameShift Partner Julie Drybrough.
In this highly interactive presentation, Rob will consider the origins of evidence-based practice, its basic principles, how you do it in practice, and some of the barriers to evidence-based practice.
For more information about evidence-based HR, please see his recent report Evidence-Based HR: A New Paradigm and for more resources, see their Evidence-Based Knowledge Hub.
You can sign up here.
About Rob:
Rob is Professor of Organizational Psychology at Queen Mary, University of London and Director (Research) at Corporate Research Forum. He is also currently a Visiting Professor of Evidence-Based HRM at Birkbeck, University of London and Visiting Professor at Oslo Nye Høyskole.
Previously he was co-founder and Scientific Director of the Center for Evidence-Based Management and has held positions at The University of Sheffield, Birkbeck, University of London, Institute for Employment Studies, London School of Economics, Kings College London, University of Bath and University of Edinburgh.
His research has focused on several topics including well-being, emotions, stress, ethnicity, the psychological contract, organizational culture and climate, absence from work, motivation, work-nonwork and everyday work behaviour.
Beyond academic research and teaching Rob helps practitioners and organizations in several fields make better use of evidence, including research evidence, as well as encouraging academics to make scientific research more accessible. He has written for and presented to practitioners on many aspects of management, HR and organizational psychology and is now involved in various activities aimed at developing and promoting evidence-based practice in organizational psychology, HR and management.
He has received several awards for his work in this area including the British Psychological Society Division of Occupational Psychology Academic Contribution to Practice Award in 2014 and topped HR Magazine’s Most Influential Thinker list in 2016 and in 2019 received a Lifetime Achievement Award and was admitted to HR Magazine’s Hall of Fame.