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Home Archive for category "Leadership" (Page 6)

“You can manage things, but people need to be led.”

John Maxwell, who has written many books on leadership and who teaches courses in it, talks about “The Five Levels of Leadership.” (NOTE: If you want to watch Maxwell’s entire 27-minute presentation, you can view it at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aPwXeg8ThWI ).    In it, he describes the “Five Levels” as a pyramid whereby all of us start at

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Solve Problems with Ignorance, Not Experience

“When you’re a little bit dumb and naïve, things get done that no one believed could be done.” We don’t know who said that, but it’s true. Consider the new, fresh-faced young salesman who marches into an account we wrote off long ago as a waste of time. We all laugh at his innocence and

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“Outstanding performance is inconsistent with fear of failure.”

In today’s business environment, change is inevitable. It’s all around us . . . new government regulations are thrust upon us, new competitors enter our market as old competitors leave, and new technologies make current technologies obsolete. Yet our instincts are to resist change.  After all, we perform well doing things the way we do

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Everyone is accountable

Accountability.  Everybody talks about it, but few really practice it.  In its purest form, accountability is a contract to carry out a specific responsibility, and if the responsibility is time-sensitive, to carry it out within a specific time frame.  The problem is, for many people,  accountability isn’t viewed as a contract, but more of a

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“What Everybody Knows Is Frequently Wrong.”

In his book, “A Class With Drucker” William Cohen talks about the “lost lessons” he learned from renowned management guru, Peter Drucker, as a first-year graduate student in Drucker’s classroom.  One of those lessons was to disregard so-called “conventional wisdom,” avoid being a crowd follower, and draw your own conclusions about a situation based on

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Using DISC for fun and profit . . . and did I mention it’s FREE?!

Would you be interested in a behavioral assessment tool that can help you: Strengthen your communication skills? Build your leadership abilities as well as your coaching and mentoring skills? Reduce personal and organizational conflict, stress, and turnover? Make better hiring decisions? Learn to appreciate behavioral strengths, challenges and differences in yourself and in others? Increase

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“What we have here is a failure to communicate.”

Today we have more ways to communicate with one another than ever before.  Of course, we have face-to-face spoken communication which we have had for thousands of years (although we seem to be doing that less and less).  We also have old-fashioned written communications such as letters, newspapers, magazines, books, etc.  These too we’ve had

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Are you a bad boss? (Part 2)

My previous posting asked, “Are you a bad boss?”  I then offered a number of bad boss behaviors (poor emotional control, indecisiveness, micromanaging, etc.) for your consideration.  Well, I apparently missed a few.  I have gotten some notes (from people, I assume, who are bad bosses themselves, who are recovering bad bosses, or who at

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Are you a bad boss?

An old adage says, “People don’t leave their companies, they leave their managers.”  There are lots of reasons an employee may leave a company . . . higher pay, better hours, shorter commute, etc. . . . but in many cases, a bad boss is in there too.  Think about your own work experience and

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Do you have the “right stuff” to be a successful entrepreneur?

In our last posting entitled, “Entrepreneurship by the numbers.  How do you measure up?,” we took a statistical look at entrepreneurship based on Inc. magazine’s “Inc. 500” (the 500 fastest growing private companies in America).  So we talked about how old entrepreneurs tend to be when they start their first business, how long they wait

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