How can you overcome impostor syndrome when starting a career in HR consulting ?
Starting a career in human resources consulting can be both exciting and intimidating. Many professionals experience impostor syndrome, doubting their skills and questioning their place in the field. Overcoming these feelings is essential for professional growth and long-term success.
✔️ Acknowledge the feeling : Impostor syndrome is common, especially among high achievers. Recognizing it is the first step toward overcoming it.
Women, the glass ceiling & gender equality
Gender equality remains a critical issue in the workplace, with the glass ceiling still limiting the career progression of many women. Creating a truly inclusive work environment requires concrete actions to support and elevate female leadership.
Fair opportunities : Transparent promotion processes, equitable pay, and increased representation of women in leadership roles are essential to closing the gender gap.
Mentorship & sponsorship : Providing guidance, support, and career development opportunities helps women navigate challenges and advance professionally.
COP DILEMMA : Navigating Global Climate Inaction
What future for our planet when the leaders of this world are not even able to organize a rapid and unified momentum of the measures to be taken to save our planet?
We believe we are dreaming or rather making a nightmare. We are almost in 2023, and the measures to save our planet and our species are stagnating - hence the thousands of species already on the verge of extinction, and we are still unable to organize a single COP to simply not not pass on a dying planet to future generations.
Al and the Environment: An Emerging Strategic Alliance
The field of artificial intelligence is advancing rapidly, driven by significant progress in hardware and the exponential growth of computing power. But does this advancement come at an environmental cost, or does it offer assistance? It's both.
On the environmental cost side, consider this: studies reveal that Google's AlphaGo Zero, an AI that learns by playing the game of Go against itself, generated 96 tons of carbon dioxide during 40 days of research training. To put this in perspective, it's equivalent to the emissions from 1,000 hours of air travel.

