Wednesday, February 13, 2008

Mother Leads Best: 50 Women Who are Changing the Way Organizations Define Leadership

  • Mothers Lead Best: 50 Women Who are Changing the Way Organizations Define Leadership
  • Moe Grzelakowski
  • Dearborn Trade Publishing, 2005
  • 1 “The whole concept of unconditional love transforms the underlying basis of your business relationships from emotionless transactions to respect and loyalty…love keeps your group intact and fuels the mission of the enterprise. And nothing teachers you about unconditional love, until you have kids.” Shelly Lazarus, Chairman and CEO, Ogilvy & Mather Worldwide.
  • “If you look at the people who lead organizations, you’ll find that they share similar traits: competitiveness, toughness, ambition, and drive.”
  • Men are admired for this; women are not.
  • 2 Writing on June Cleaver (Leave It To Beaver) being a CEO, “She would lack the grit to make difficult decisions and the drive to push herself and others to their performance limits.”
  • Leadership DNA: “energetic, intelligent, competitive, passionately driven, tough-minded risk takers… dominating, decisive, and focused.”
  • Women leaders, when they have children, don’t lose their leadership DNA, it goes through a transformation that is spiritual, emotional, and physical. They become warmer leaders, develop superior negotiation skills, and they don’t become so entrenched in positions. They tend to work better with men.
  • 4-5 The different stages of motherhood has taught different lessons to a mother:
  • Pregnancy: Putting some else ahead of themselves.
  • Infancy: Patience and nurturing. Sharpening management skills and being more efficiently.
  • Toddlers: Crisis management, multi-tasking, spontaneity
  • Elementary school: Networkers and teachers; mastering the art of play, saying no
  • Tweens: Staying connected and tuned in; listen attentively, read between the lines, bite their tongue; remain open to ideas; picking up the signals
  • Teens: Receptivity, boundary-setting, open-mindedness, negotiation, influencing others
  • 6-7 "This isn’t to say that someone who isn’t a mother (male or woman without children), can’t develop these skills. Also, some mothers don’t take the time to be a parent: they delegate, not take responsibility, etc."
  • She writes about how fathers don’t seem to go through the same changes that mothers do in parenting. “Studies also show that men do not help out more as women earn more... As a result, men don’t make as many changes because they aren’t forced to juggle, adapt, and carry the burden of responsibility.”
  • “Letting go is the fundamental basis for change.”
  • Dispelling the Myths of Leadership
  • “…women lead better than men, but both men and women prefer a man’s leadership style.” There are seven studies that show women are better managers…”
  • She writes about the conundrum that women face: if they are tough they are a "bitch" or "dragon woman" if they take the traditional path they are seen as too weak.
  • “I have never seen anyone transformed from a warrior to a wimp.”
  • Writing about the need for a balanced live and not being workcentric.
  • Letting go of perfectionism.
  • Letting the small stuff slide.
  • 29 “Being perceived as being overly ambitious is the kiss of death for any executive. Because women are expected to be more nurturing and held to a higher leadership standard than men, edgy behaviors are often judged harshly.”
  • 30 Avoiding the high horse syndrome
  • 31 “Acting superior is indeed an act, and women are less likely to sustain this performance with nursery rhymes and baby talk running through their heads.
  • 36 “…people who eat, sleep, and dream about work do not make the best leaders.”
  • 37 “ The drive to do something more, the need to make a real difference, is found in even the most outwardly successful and business-focused executives.”
  • 38 “…they (women who decide to be mothers) lead with a sense of purpose rather than just being propelled by a need to achieve.”
  • 43 “Having a clear purpose is the type of decision that creates leadership authenticity…”
  • 53 Chapter 4: Pregnancy
  • Pregnancy traits and how they relate to leadership
  • Accountability
  • Rational risk taking
  • Balanced perspective
  • Clarified values
  • Emerging softness
  • 71 Chapter 5: Babies
  • “Both men and women are judged early in their career on how they perform in individual contributor roles. Naturally, they focus on results over relationships, on achieving goals rather than communicating with people. Everyone receives the message that they will be rewarded for achieving rather than nurturing.”
  • From Martin Friedman’s book, The Leadership Myth:
  • “You have to be big, you have to be strong…any sign of sympathy, compassion, or anything that suggest a warm, cozy feeling about other people- sensitivity, a willingness to be caught up in an emotional moment- suggests to the macho mind the existence of terrible weakness, a great fear that, perhaps, there is a side of the personality which is feminine. The big mistake here is that there qualities have nothing whatsoever to do with femininity. They have to do with humanness. An humanness in a leader is a great attribute.” pp. 61-62
  • 74-85 One of the things that keep coming up in the book is that the people she is writing about were achievers first and then they became mothers. These are people with “leadership DNA”. She points out that one of the things that made them better as leaders is the lessons they learned as a parent of a baby. Specifically: the nurturing of another human being. She defines nurturing as:
  • Empathy: “Responding to feelings besides your own”
    • 76 “Executive women without children have no sense of balance. No boundary lines.”
    • 78 “Results are only sustainable if you care about and motivate people.”
  • Sensitivity: Being visually and emotionally perceptive
  • Caring: Demonstrating your compassion
    • 80 “Caring can mean leveling with a subordinate about their weaknesses and insisting that they work on them. This task is painful, but if a leader really cares about another individual, she is willing to raise this difficult subject for the other person’s sake. Caring can also mean taking the time and making the effort to help others with their problems.”
  • Warmth: Allowing your natural friendliness and feelings to emerge
    • 83 “… being overly cold creates dislike, while being overly warm creates a lack of respect.”
    • 84 “If you are warm toward someone one minute and blow them off the next, you will be considered colder than if you had never acted warmly.”
  • Patience: Recognizing that you can’t control everything
    • 85 “Any strong, dominant leader tends to be impatient. To a certain extent, this impatience has a positive impact, in that it compels the leader to demand excellence, to demand it all the time and with all due speed…Truly wise leaders wait just the right amount of time for events to unfold and trends to reveal themselves before taking action.”

Chapter 6: The Toddler Years (Managing Chaos)

  • 89, “Instead of working harder, they learned to work smarter.”
  • Being the mother of toddlers helped them to develop the following traits:
    • Hyperdrive: The ability to summon a higher level of energy
    • Being appropriately organized
      • 93 “In organizations, the best managers of chaos are the ones who occupy the middle ground, who know when to rely on structure and when to go with the flow.”
    • Clear priorities
      • 96 “…as a mom you prioritize and reprioritize in real time based upon your goals, controlling chaos in a way that is meaningful rather than arbitrary.”
    • Creative problem solving
      • 98 “Executive mothers also acquire another problem solving skill from their toddlers, one that is atypical for most leaders: They learn to ask for help.”
    • Adaptability
    • Letting go
      • 100 “The best leaders let go of mistakes, confrontations, and other emotionally charged events that come with the territory.”
    • Being calm
      • 103, “In a world where change occurs at a lightning pace, sometimes the best response to problems at work is to remain calm. This doesn’t mean refusing to make a decision or never becoming worked up. Wisdom is often gained by keeping your wits about you and observing, taking in information and ideas, and then making a decision.”
  • Chapter 7: (109) Elementary School: Developing and Motivating Teams
    • Empowering others
      • 111 “Amal Johnson said, “True leaders are the ones who enable all sorts of people to have moments of leadership. If you give people a chance, they are capable of making decisions, if they feel enabled and it is expected of them.”
    • Embracing differences
      • 113 “It’s not that leaders consciously reject differences among team members, but rather that they unconsciously favor those who have backgrounds and points of view similar to their own.”
      • 114 “For leaders to embrace differences in people, a powerful emotional experience is usually required.”
    • Showing tolerance
    • Inspiring personal growth
      • 120 “Sophie Vanderbroek, Xerox’s chief engineer, “ The key thing I have learned from my children was how to influence without direct control… (121) Inspiring others is all about connecting with them at a deep human level.””

Chapter 8: Tweens Listening at a Higher Level

125 “Contrary to expectations, you won’t find many CEOs or other senior executives of large companies who lack basic listening skills.”

126 As a result of working with the vulnerable tweeens, mothers become very good at the following leadership skills:

  • Operating at full attentiveness
    • 128-9 “If you establish a reputation as someone in an organization who pays attention to others, people are likely to come to you first with ideas and news… my male peers and bosses were always amazed that I know about things, good and bad, before they did.”
  • Reading between the lines
    • 131, “Without children to remind them to read between the lines, leaders can fall into the trap of being overly literal minded. They focus on exactly what is being said and ignore the context.
  • Biting your tongue
    • 133, “Biting one’s tongue is another trait that is counterintuitive for many leaders. Executives often feel compelled to use their considerable verbal prowess to persuade.”
  • Matching wavelengths
    • 135, “Unlike in the past, most leaders today are surrounded by people who come from different backgrounds and have different perspectives. Success as a leader depends upon being able to see the world through your customers’ eyes or through your coworkers’ frames of reference.”
  • Being open to others
    • 138, “Not only do leaders need to be open to news and ideas, but they must also be open to criticism. For ultrahigh achievers, criticism is often the last thing they want to hear… many top organizational people develop a false sense of infallibility and, consciously or not, discourage criticism.”

Chapter 9: Teenagers Coaching with Unconditional Love

  • 143, “No doubt, many top executives try to coach their people. Some of them, though, are coaching without the necessary training or experience; a significant percentage of executives reach top positions with limited skills sets in this increasingly important area.”
  • Earning Receptivity
    • Build trust
    • Cut them some slack
    • Respect their loyalties and their point of view
    • Praise their good behaviors
    • Show they care
    • Use diplomacy
  • Connecting on their terms
    • 150, “To coach someone, you have to connect with them on their terms…They want analogies and anecdotes that are pertinent to their interests.”
    • 151, “Connecting isn’t just a matter of figuring out other people’s interests and concerns but making an effort to communicate with them in language they understand.”
  • Establishing rules of engagement
    • 154, “One of the most challenging tasks for leaders is setting and enforcing boundaries for subordinates. This is almost as much an art as it is a skill. You need to have a sense about when you’re being too strict and when you’re providing too much freedom.”
  • Becoming a positive influence
    • 157 “If they (best leaders) want something done they are much more innovative than leaders of the past in motivating, providing resources, and establishing an environment that yields results. While many executives understand intellectually that command-and-control no longer is the best management style, they sometimes have difficulty integrating this understanding into their behaviors.”
  • Being indirectly effective
    • 160, “The strongest leaders aren’t always the most aggressive or direct. They learn how to use their power selectively, and sometimes an indirect method yields better results, especially when coaching is involved.”

Chapter 10: The Character of a Leader

  • Selflessness
  • Confidence
  • Humility
  • Groundedness
  • Honesty

Chapter 11: Applying the Lessons of Maternal Leadership

  • Recognize that not all personal change is self-induced
    • 184, “Deep change often comes from deep experiences… if you’re not a mom, watch for other, experience-based opportunities that foster meaningful change… Training and development programs have taught too many businesspeople that change is a conscious, cognitive process. Leaders need to take a cue from the mothers in this book and recognize that often, the most meaningful changes in how they think and act “just happen”.
  • Accept that the most powerful, leadership-changing feedback often comes from people you love rather than from people with whom you work.
    • 185, “Corporate feedback mechanisms are often too subtle… it is too easy to rationalize the feedback you receive from colleagues or to respond defensively…This type of feedback doesn’t always penetrate the outer layer like children’s honest-to-goodness bluntness.”
  • Real leaders have real lives, so recognize that workaholicism detracts from rather than adds to your leadership ability.
  • Embrace the possibility of excelling in more than one role

Tuesday, February 5, 2008

Wooden on Leadership

Wooden on Leadership

John Wooden and Steve Jamison

McGraw Hill 2005

10 “Winning is a by-product. Focus on the product: effort.

Rules to Lead By

Before you can lead others you must be able to lead yourself.

Don’t hastily replace the old-fashioned with the new fangled.

Learn to master the four P’s (planning, preparation, practice, and performance.)

Write down the tasks, initiatives and actions that each member of your team needs to do to perform at his or her peak level.

Leadership success begins with a solid foundation

There is no substitute for enthusiasm

Friendship, loyalty and cooperation complete the foundation for leadership.

Leadership starts with self-control

Be a heads-up leader

Do not fear failure or punish initiative

Make sure your team does not come up short in the long run- intentness

Condition your team to love the struggle

Remember that success can take months- or years- to achieve and be undone in minutes.

Never let anyone else define your success

Organizations succeed when they become more than the sum of their players.

Its tough to coach character

Character starts with little things

Character is more than honesty

Beware those who will do anything to win

Lead with love

You don’t have to treat everyone alike or like everyone the same

Seek out opportunities to show you care

Know what time it is

Do not equate professional expertise with your ability to teach it

When you have all the right answers, you will stop asking all the right questions

Remember a good demonstration tops a good description

Control emotion or emotion will control you

Avoid excess. Shoot for moderation.

Instill emotional discipline.

The star of the team is the team.

Insist that members of your team share the “ball”- information, ideas, and more

Go out of your way to praise those “quiet” performers who make things happen.

Seek players who will make the best team rather than the best players

It all starts with the socks

The right rivets are essential

Nourish talent in an environment of perfected details

Sloppiness breeds sloppiness

Remember that a great quarter in basketball or business starts with a great minute

Set the proper tone with meticulous time management technique

Document minutes, days, weeks, months, and so on

Pride is easier to instill with the carrot

Make sure all praise is genuine and appropriate

Do not tolerate internal carping and criticism

Don’t lock yourself into rigid penalties

Each job counts

Encourage, but manage, ambition

Teach your players to expect unexpected opportunity.

Believe in the hidden potential of all.

Success breeds satisfaction, satisfaction breeds failure.

Identify and remove excuses for not getting to the next level.

Stop saying “No” and start saying “How”.

Welcome contrary ideas, but not contrarians.

Identify team goals, then file them away.

Give full respect to each competitor.

Long-term success requires short-term focus.

Always assume adversity

Don’t make “Woe is Me” your fight song

Don’t blame failure on fate

Bo's Lasting Lessons

Bo’s Lasting Lessons: The Legendary Coach Teaches the Timeless Fundamentals of Leadership,

Bo Schembechler and John Bacon, Business Plus, 2007

Prepare to Lead

o You Better Start with Your Heart

o Seek Mentors, Not Money

o Wait for the Right Opportunity

§ P. 20 In his interview with Wisconsin and his subsequent interview at Michigan (p. 22) it is evident that interview committees aren’t his view of how things should be done. His comments about including a student on the committee at Wisc- well his disdain came through.

Take Charge

o Throw a Bucket of Cold Water

§ P. 27 “…whatever your philosophy, whatever your standards, whatever your expectations, you establish those on Day One. Don’t waste a second. You can always soften up if you need to, but you can’t get tougher later on. It’s a lot better to throw a bucket of cold water on them on your first day, than it is to try to coax them into the cold water, toe by toe.”

o Respect Your History

§ P. 50 “The history of your organization is one of your greatest strengths, and if you’re new to the organization, it’s your job to learn it, to respect it, and to teach it to the people coming up in your company.”

§ P. 54m “When you are the leader, you are the organization.”

o Do the Right Thing, Always

o Lay Down Your Laws

§ p.65 “First, if you don’t have anything important to say, don’t schedule a meeting for the heck of it… The person who knows how to run a meeting will get twice as much out of his people, because when the meeting’s over, they’ll be ready to act on the message. The most important meeting you will ever have with your people is your first one- because it is vital that everyone knows exactly what your values are, from Day One. In this first meeting you need to establish who you are, what you’re going to do, and how you plan on doing it.”

· He says that people can’t ever say they weren’t told, even if it was in a two hour meeting. This is bogus because he is not paying attention to what we know about most modern adults that their memories aren’t trained to remember everything said in a two-hour meeting.

o Set Goals That Get Results

§ P. 80 “ The seniors set the goals for the team- because it is their team.”

§ P.85 “If you’re going to lead, you need to make goals. And those goals can’t come from the top down, they’ve got to come from the people who are responsible for achieving them. Your job is to help them get there, and remind them every day what their goals are, and what they have to do to make their dreams come true.”

Build Your Team

o Hire People Who Want to Work for You

o Get the Most Out of Your Staff

§ P.98 “…after you hear what they have to say, you’ve got to make the final call.”

§ P.100 “If you didn’t want their opinions, you shouldn’t have hired them. And if all their opinions are the same as yours, you don’t need them.”

§ P. 104, “ If you’re the top guy, and you want to be loved every minute of every day, get a dog.” Truman

§ P.106 “In the long run, you cannot win consistently in any field if you let someone else make the important decisions for you. You cannot delegate important decisions… that’s the price of leadership.”

o Develop Leaders Underneath You

§ P. 121 “Only a weak leader is threatened by strong leaders underneath him.”

o Scuttle the Star System

§ P.122 “ You’ve got to keep your stars in line, the guys in the middle motivated, and the people at the bottom contributing to the success of the team.”

§ 123, “If it’s not equal, it’s not fair, and everyone on your team already knows it.

o Motivate the Middle Man

§ 128, “I think letting people go is usually a bad idea. It eats up too much time, energy and morale. That’s why I’d much rather teach than fire them…It’s you job, as a leader, to make those people who do more than they thought they could- maybe more than you thought they could- and put them in the best possible position to help the team.”

§ 131, “You’re not going to yell your way to the top of your profession. If your people are going to perform their absolute best, you need to give them the tools to do so.”

o Give ‘Em a Chance

§ 138 “… if you have more than two people in your organization, you’re going to have an upper, middle, and lower level of talent.”

§ 141, “If you don’t tell them why, they’ll feel abandoned, and start coming up with all kinds of crazy conspiracy theories.”

o Give Everyone a Role, and Make It Important

o If You Must Fire, Fire Fast

§ 161, “Only a tyrant likes to fire people.”

o Promote the Will to Prepare

§ 169 “If you’re a leader, your ultimate responsibility is the training of your people, because every job requires training. If you can think of one that doesn’t- well, jeez Louise, then why should you hire someone to do it? It it’s a job worth paying someone, it’s a job worth training… You need to plan your training with the end product in mind.”

§ 170 “Next, you need to design your training as close to the real thing as possible… Why should I, your customer, be responsible for training your employee, and suffer through all their mistakes?”

o Listen Before You Lead

§ 179, “You can NOT be a leader unless you like people! You’ve got to spend time with them, so you know them. You’ve got to be interested in who they are, what they do away from the job, and how they think.”

§ 181, “… if one of your people comes to you with a good idea- or a personal problem- and it just goes in one ear and out the other, YOU WILL FAIL.”

o Don’t Sleep on It, and Don’t Hold Grudges

Meet the Moment of Truth

o Break ‘Em Down and Build ‘Em Up

o Emphasize Execution, Not Innovation

o Scrap Your Script

o Make Adjustments on Facts, Not Pride

o Turn Mistakes into Momentum

o Stay Focused Under Fire

Face the Facts and Ignore the Rest

o Rebuild with Basics

o Ignore Your Critics

o Loyalty Counts

o Know When to Leave, and How

o If I Could Have One More Week

Friday, January 11, 2008

Leadership and Self-Deception: Joseph's notes

Here are notes from my reading of Leadership and Self-Deception. The executive reading version- rather than Cliff Notes, it is Joe's Notes. These extracts really don't do justice to this book. Please read it.

Leadership and Self-Deception

The Arbinger Institute

Barrett-Kohler. 2002

16 “That’s self-deception… the inability to see that one has a problem.”

24 “…we can tell how people feel about us, and it’s to that we respond.”

25 Are you really interested in the other person or are you interested in what they think about you? Are you interested in what they can DO for you?

31 “…no matter what we’re doing on the outside, people respond primarily to how we’re feeling about them on the inside.”

34 “I see others as somehow less than they were- as objects with needs and desires somehow secondary and less legitimate than mine.”

43 “…people respond not primarily to what you do but to how you’re being.

59 “The point of this isn’t perfection…It’s simply that we get better- better in systematic and concrete ways that improve the company’s bottom line.

65 & 71, 75-103 “Self betrayal:

1. An act contrary to what I feel I should do for another is called an act of self-betrayal.

2. When I betray myself, I begin to see the world in a way that justifies my self-betrayal.

3. When I see a self-justifying world, my view of reality becomes distorted.

4. When I betray myself I enter the box. (The box is where I objectify other people.)

5. Over time, certain boxes become characteristic of me, and I carry them with me.

6. Being in the box I provoke others to be in the box.

7. In the box, we provoke mutual mistreatment and obtain justification.We collude in giving each other reason to stay in the box.

74 “I focused on and inflated her faults when I needed to feel justified for mine.”

99 “Being in the box, I need problems.”

105 In the box you can’t focus on results because you are focused on yourself.

130- What doesn’t work in the box: (Being in the box is blaming others)

1. Trying to change others

2. Trying my best to “cope” with others

3. Leaving

4. Communicating about my box

5. Implementing new skills or techniques

6. Changing my behavior

133. “…skill training in nontechnical areas often has so little lasting impact.” Because people are in the box when they apply them. “…people problems that most people try to correct with skills aren’t due to a lack of skill at all. They’re due to self-betrayal.”

141. “…we change the in the moment we cease to resist what is outside our box- others.”

148 “…when we’re feeling overwhelmed, it generally isn’t our obligation to others but our in-the-box desperation to prove something about ourselves that we find overwhelming.”

165-66

Knowing the material

Self-betrayal leads to self-deception and “the box”

When you’re in the box, you can’t focus on results.

Your influence and success will depend on being out of the box.

You get out of the box as you cease resisting people.

Living the Material

Don’t try to be perfect. Do try to be better.

Don’t use the vocabulary- “the box” and so on- with people who don’t already know it. Do use the principles in your own life.

Don’t look for others’ boxes. Do look for your own.

Don’t accuse others of being in the box. Do try to stay out of the box yourself.

Don’t give up on yourself when you discover you’ve been in the box. Do keep trying.

Don’t deny you’ve been in the box when you have been. Do apologize, and then keep marching forward, trying to be more helpful to others in the future.

Don’t focus on what people others are doing wrong. Do focus on what you can do right to help.

Don’t worry whether others are helping you. Do worry whether you are helping others.

Leadership and Self-Deception: Jospeh's notes

Here are notes from my reading of Leadership and Self-Deception. The executive reading version- rather than Cliff Notes, it is Joe's Notes. These extracts really don't do justice to this book. Please read it.

Leadership and Self-Deception

The Arbinger Institute

Barrett-Kohler. 2002

16 “That’s self-deception… the inability to see that one has a problem.”

24 “…we can tell how people feel about us, and it’s to that we respond.”

25 Are you really interested in the other person or are you interested in what they think about you? Are you interested in what they can DO for you?

31 “…no matter what we’re doing on the outside, people respond primarily to how we’re feeling about them on the inside.”

34 “I see others as somehow less than they were- as objects with needs and desires somehow secondary and less legitimate than mine.”

43 “…people respond not primarily to what you do but to how you’re being.

59 “The point of this isn’t perfection…It’s simply that we get better- better in systematic and concrete ways that improve the company’s bottom line.

65 & 71, 75-103 “Self betrayal:

1. An act contrary to what I feel I should do for another is called an act of self-betrayal.

2. When I betray myself, I begin to see the world in a way that justifies my self-betrayal.

3. When I see a self-justifying world, my view of reality becomes distorted.

4. When I betray myself I enter the box. (The box is where I objectify other people.)

5. Over time, certain boxes become characteristic of me, and I carry them with me.

6. Being in the box I provoke others to be in the box.

7. In the box, we provoke mutual mistreatment and obtain justification.We collude in giving each other reason to stay in the box.

74 “I focused on and inflated her faults when I needed to feel justified for mine.”

99 “Being in the box, I need problems.”

105 In the box you can’t focus on results because you are focused on yourself.

130- What doesn’t work in the box: (Being in the box is blaming others)

1. Trying to change others

2. Trying my best to “cope” with others

3. Leaving

4. Communicating about my box

5. Implementing new skills or techniques

6. Changing my behavior

133. “…skill training in nontechnical areas often has so little lasting impact.” Because people are in the box when they apply them. “…people problems that most people try to correct with skills aren’t due to a lack of skill at all. They’re due to self-betrayal.”

141. “…we change the in the moment we cease to resist what is outside our box- others.”

148 “…when we’re feeling overwhelmed, it generally isn’t our obligation to others but our in-the-box desperation to prove something about ourselves that we find overwhelming.”

165-66

Knowing the material

Self-betrayal leads to self-deception and “the box”

When you’re in the box, you can’t focus on results.

Your influence and success will depend on being out of the box.

You get out of the box as you cease resisting people.

Living the Material

Don’t try to be perfect. Do try to be better.

Don’t use the vocabulary- “the box” and so on- with people who don’t already know it. Do use the principles in your own life.

Don’t look for others’ boxes. Do look for your own.

Don’t accuse others of being in the box. Do try to stay out of the box yourself.

Don’t give up on yourself when you discover you’ve been in the box. Do keep trying.

Don’t deny you’ve been in the box when you have been. Do apologize, and then keep marching forward, trying to be more helpful to others in the future.

Don’t focus on what people others are doing wrong. Do focus on what you can do right to help.

Don’t worry whether others are helping you. Do worry whether you are helping others.

Thursday, January 10, 2008

Summary of Principle Centered Leadership

The Leadership Edge

November 20th, 2007

Summary of Discussion on:

Principle Centered Leadership by Stephen Covey

Facilitated by Joseph Bailey, LBCC

Present: Joseph Bailey, Cathy Baker, Lynette Barnes, Nancy Bell, Mitch Benedict, Debbie Brooks, Darlene Cobb-Peterson, Tim Fitzpatrick, Jared Garlick, Tammy Huaracha, Steve Hutchinson, Lori McGhee, Mike McInally, Wendy Roe, Brad Schaffner, Joanne Secrest, Janet Steele

Principles:

Fairness, Equity, Justice, Integrity, Honesty, Trust

Characteristics of Principled Centered Leadership:

Continually learning, service oriented, radiate positive energy, believe in other people, lead balanced lives, see life as an adventure, synergistic, exercise for self-renewal

Collected Discoveries:

Effective communication requires skill and practice. Sadly, beginner stigmas lead to pretending.

People want safety first

The measure of your relationships are evidenced by the quality of your last 5 conversations

How much do you talk? How much do you listen?

Synergy starts with the desire to be part of something bigger/greater than yourself.

How we present creates the feeling – passion.

Walk the talk. Operate with integrity.

You can not and should not adapt to everybody – that is impossible.

You can not motivate but you can create an environment that they want to succeed in.

A good leader is a listener, self confident, comfortable in their own skin, secure.

Humility in leadership – to lead you need to learn, in order to understand those whom you lead.

Make it fun.

Everyone counts.

Build trust – nothing follow without it.

Recognize different people have different starting points; how do we get them to the level the company needs? Build relationships and gain trust.