Design007 Magazine

PCBD-Oct2016

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38 The PCB Design Magazine • October 2016 train, engage, and retain your best employees at all levels: • Identify and hire the right people. Wheth- er it's through an employee referral program, aggressive recruiting, targeted advertising, or a combination of the above, casting a wide net will ensure you have a robust talent pipeline. • Take care of your staff. Ensure that they are a diverse group and not just clones of you. Mix it up a bit (incorporating different personalities, experience levels, backgrounds, etc.) to craft the best team. Most importantly, encourage and enable an open culture where constructive feedback and different opinions are embraced and encour- aged. By embracing a positive and safe corpo- rate culture, ideas can be hashed out on their merits, allowing the best to emerge. 4. Remove the bad apples. This is a team, not a family. With your family you have to deal with your sister-in-law because she married your brother—there's no other option. In contrast, teams are carefully assembled by owners and managers. As in sports, if a player is no longer good for the team (either by choice or by capability), it's time for a trade. Further, trades are often best for the poor teammates in the long run. People deserve to work where they will flourish into their best selves—so leaders should not shy away from tough decisions when some are not in the right place or not living up to their potential. 5. Tackle the hard things first. It's critical for leaders to recognize and un- derstand their most critical tasks of the mo- ment and focus on them. The key word here is focus—to avoid the distraction of the million other things that are easier, more interesting, more fun, more whatever. Then grind away at that most important thing. The results? You finish the most important thing. You discover your other tasks, if still rele- vant, are easier to do once you've accomplished that first thing. And you find that day in, day out, week after week and month after month, your best efforts have been spent on the areas most valuable to you and your organization. 6. Take care of yourself. If you are not eating well, sleeping enough, or exercising with regularity, your perfor- mance—and that of your team—will suffer. You owe it to yourself, your team, and your stakeholders to perform at your best. So ensure you are appropriately balancing your work and health—emotional as well as physical. While far from an exhaustive list, these six keys have helped me grow in my career in the fast-changing field of the electronics industry. I hope they are of value to you as well. PCBDESIGN John Mitchell is president and CEO of IPC—Association Connecting Elec- tronics Industries. SIX LEADERSHIP LESSONS FROM 20 YEARS IN THE ELECTRONICS INDUSTRY Nano Dimension Ltd. will form a new subsidiary and will transition its bio-printing activities to the new entity. Following initial successful bio-printing trials, the new subsidiary will expedite research and development in this field. In May, Nano Dimension announced a suc- cessful proof of concept for 3D printing of bio- ink containing stem cells. The feasibility tests demonstrated the potential to print tissues de- rived from viable stem cells. Recently several companies have ex- pressed interest in Nano Dimension's bio-printing technology, as a result, the board of directors of the company has approved the transition of this activity to a new entity. IDTechEx forecasts the market for 3D bio-printing will grow rapidly over the next decade from a market size of $481 million in 2014 to as much as $6 billion in 2024. Nano Dimension Will Transition its Bio-Printing Activity to a New Subsidiary

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