EEOC Executive Leadership Conference - Registration to Open This Week
The EEOC Executive Leadership Conference is designed to meet the professional development needs of senior leaders in the EEO field. The ELC was developed by the EEOC to help ensure EEO leaders have the skills necessary to meet the challenges of their profession. The training offered at the ELC addresses leadership competencies, personal growth, and other topics vital to the success of current and future federal executives.
The conference audience will include senior EEO officials from federal, state and local governments, EEO executives from the private sector, and those who seek to move into senior positions. The conference is also open to HR officials who have significant responsibilities in managing an EEO office. Conference registration is limited to the GS-14 and above population, and equivalents.
Who Should Attend
- EEO Directors
- Deputy EEO Directors
- Chief EEO Officers
- Deputy EEO Officers
- EEO Officials
- EEO Executives
- Chief Human Capital Officers
- HR Directors and Deputy Directors
- HR Officers and other senior HR officials
For more information and to register, please visit www.eeocleadershipconference.com.


Being a federal employee has its benefits, and GEICO is making it that much easier to love being a federal employee by bringing feds discounted Nationals tickets and the 2012 Funniest Fed Competition.
No matter your opinion of Napoleon Bonaparte, he was, without question, one of the best motivational leaders in the last 500 years. After destroying his army in Russia and being exiled to Elba he was able to raise a new army that threatened European Nobility for a second time. Even his enemies admired his ability to see beyond the moment and inspire the minds of those who would follow him. When Lord Wellington was asked who the best general of all time was, he responded, “undeniably, Napoleon Bonaparte.” To this day, we are still influenced by his genius in small and large ways. The suit coats men and women put on every day have buttons at the end of their sleeves. This superfluous item of fashion, invented by Napoleon, was designed to prevent troops from wiping their nose with their sleeve. And yet this minor invention of hygiene remains with us today. But our greatest lesson from Napoleon Bonaparte was his skill in leadership, a word not yet invented.
With all the talk on the Hill and at the Office of Personnel Management on federal workers’ insurance and retirement benefits options, it could be hard to understand how the different initiatives or legislative proposals will affect federal employees.