Ending the Year with Ease: Why January is the Perfect Time to Reset
As the year winds down, it can feel as though the world is caught in a frenetic race to finish strong—wrapping up projects, racing through to-do lists, and trying to squeeze in personal reflections on a year that passed by far too quickly. For many of us, this time of year often carries the pressure to do more when, in truth, nature itself is telling us to slow down.
Bridging the Gap: Learning from Multigenerational Teamwork
In our work with organizations and teams, we have seen the way these assumptions can get in the way of truly harnessing the powers of an intergenerational team. According to the Harvard Business Review, never before have we seen so many generations in the workforce at the same time. Now more than ever, we need to find ways to connect and build understanding as opposed to letting the intergenerational gap grow.
Three Frameworks for Facilitated Conversations
In the workplace or community spaces, we are constantly communicating with one another. In our work, we’ve found that while people want to have good communication and dialogue with their colleagues, this can sometimes be challenging, especially around difficult topics. The ability to have open and honest dialogue is a practiced and learned skill and we hope that by sharing three frameworks we use in our work that you’ll be able to have more meaningful dialogue, build understanding, and solve problems collaboratively.
Three Things We Learned About Centering Belonging in Conservation Education
In 2023, the Academy engaged in the Novalia Collective’s joy-based design process to examine and redesign the marketing and onboarding materials as well as the curriculum and field school experience. As part of the process, we embraced three mindset shifts that we regularly integrate into what we do and who we are as an organization. These three aspects have allowed us to begin and deepen our work on belonging as a pillar of the Academy experience.
The Five Biggest Retreat Planning Mistakes & How to Solve Them
Planning a company retreat is an exciting endeavor that holds the promise of team-building, innovation, and renewed energy. However, without careful consideration, intentional, and creative planning, it's easy to stumble into common pitfalls that can undermine the retreat's effectiveness. In this post, we'll explore five major mistakes companies often make while planning retreats and provide practical solutions to ensure your next retreat is energizing, inspiring, and effective.
this is my body, and my voice
This is my body (TIMB) was and is so much more than an artistic collective. It was sisterhood, acceptance, vulnerability, new beginnings and rebirth in one bundle. I only have beautiful things to recount of my time working and performing with this community. I think the coolest part was how I got a very unique lens of the growth that each of us went through in this program. I watched myself as I worked through multitudes, and it was so inspiring witnessing each artist go through their own hero’s journey in the process.
Heart at Work
We started the Novalia Collective because we wanted our work to authentically align to our values. Despite having rewarding career experiences, there were parts of our identity and values that we did have to check at the door because it didn’t match with what was expected. Even as we navigate our work today, we constantly have to revisit our values to ensure we’re doing work that is meaningful to us with partners who also share in our core values.
2023 Highlights and Celebrations
As we get ready to welcome in the new year, it’s with immense joy and gratitude that we reflect on the incredible journey we’ve embarked upon together at the Novalia Collective. 2023 has been a year of growth, collaboration, and meaningful impact, and we are excited to share some of our most memorable moments with you.
Building a Habitat for Success: The Macro Indicators of a Thriving Workplace
Last summer, we spent a week in Pennsylvania with a partner organization that engages high school aged students to become Conservation Ambassadors. We wanted to immerse ourselves in the experience to support them in their journey to diversify the program. The field school we attended was focused on Pennsylvania’s state fish, the brook trout.
The Outdoors is for Everyone
Growing up in Little Saigon, a suburban ethnic enclave in Southern California, I didn’t spend much time in nature. The idea of “driving 20 miles to go walk up a mountain” seemed like a waste of time and gas to my refugee family who were sharing one used car and working multiple jobs. At the time, it was easier in my community to get on a bus that would take you to a casino than to a nearby nature preserve. It wasn’t until I reached adulthood that I realized just how nurturing and healing being in the outdoors and spending time in nature could be.
Strengthen Your Team: How Our Retreats Build Community and Belonging Amongst Staff
People want to feel a sense of belonging and connection. Dr. john a. powell, Director of the Othering & Belonging Institute, states: “The human condition is one about belonging. We simply cannot thrive unless we are in relationship.” In today’s shifting workforce, people are no longer just looking at the vision and mission of an organization, but also desire a work environment that reflects their values and promotes a sense of belonging. It’s more important than ever for companies to foster a sense of community and belonging amongst their staff.
What Makes a Great Manager?
We often hear of bad managers — people who micromanage, take credit for work that they didn’t do, and throw their employees under the bus to protect themselves. We’ve all had bad managers who made our lives difficult. But what about great managers? As the one year anniversary of the “Great Resignation” of 2021 rolls by, we at the Novalia Collective reached out to our community to learn about great managers — the ones whose everyday actions are positively impacting their team.
Equitable Designs for Return-to-Work
As we continue to search for the ideal return-to-work situation for employees who have been working remotely over the past year and a half, there is one consistently agreed upon fact — that there is no one-size-fits-all solution. In an effort to continually support managers and decision-makers with resources to navigate the return-to-the-workplace discussion, we put together a panel of three managers from different industries to share how they are rethinking the future of their workplace.
Finding Joy through Creativity
A few years ago I was at a conference where the keynote speaker asked us to close our eyes and think about all the things we loved and who we wanted to be when we were younger. Even with my eyes closed, I could feel the smiles emerging across the room. Then the speaker asked us to think about all the times that someone told us that we couldn’t do something or dictated who we had to be. She asked us to think about who we had then become and how much of ourselves we had left behind each time the world forced us to. I think about that question often.
Let’s…Not Go Back to a “Normal” Workplace
For the past year, we’ve been working with our partners and collaborators to envision their ideal workplace. We found it surprising that many people had trouble thinking about what they wanted their workplace to look and feel like. Employees are often being tested on if they fit into the existing structures and systems. Most companies have moved away from the term “culture fit” and instead have shifted to “culture add” yet this assumes that there is already a pre-established culture and that there is someone determining whether or not you add to it.
Three Steps to Reset Your DEI Efforts
As more people in the United States are vaccinated and cities open up again to resume “business as usual,” so are organizations as they focus on preparing for in-person interactions again. Unfortunately, the racial reckoning that many hoped would come has not. If anything, we continue to see the same racial and social injustices happening in our public domain, communities, and places of work. If you’re feeling the slow simmer or burnout of DEI efforts at your organization, here are some tips to help your team reset for the second half of the year.