• Contact Us
  • Fees
  • Home
  • Services
    • Board Development & Education
    • Coaching and Leadership
    • Event Planning
    • Strategic Planning
    • Thrive
    • Special Projects
  • Support Us
  • Testimonies
  • About Us

Collaborative Leadership Group

~ Affordable, quality leadership support & services specializing in nonproft and small business

Collaborative Leadership Group

Monthly Archives: February 2012

Use Your Imagination

25 Saturday Feb 2012

Posted by Beth in The Best of Leadership: The best tidbits from other blogs, Uncategorized

≈ Comments Off on Use Your Imagination

Useful Leadership Quotes? – You Decide

*****

Today’s world appreciates brevity.

Useful leadership quotes inspire, distill, or direct, quickly.

Will you bring your perspective and insights to this set of leadership quotes? Grab one or more and expand, correct, or modify it?

17 leadership quotes for you to play with:
  1. Great leaders don’t change people. They create environments where people can change themselves.
  2. You matter most when you make others matter. From: How to Start Right and End Well
  3. Great leadership includes leading people to self-discovery.
  4. Be predictable but reject conformity.
  5. Systems don’t complete projects people do.
  6. Conformity never inspires. From: 5 Surprising ways to Inspire Others
  7. Stop pretending you want change when in reality you want comfort.
  8. If you want to transform an organization, grow new leaders.
  9. The question that frees you isn’t what should I do, it’s what should I stop. From: Over Commit to One Thing
  10. Believe in those who believe in you.
  11. Leaders believe in others.
  12. If you can see the finish line it’s time to start again.
  13. If you aren’t learning you’re losing.
  14. Things that don’t make sense have more potential than things that do.
  15. Leaders give people permission to make a difference.
  16. Love gives meaning and worth to everything you do. From: From Low Impact to High Impact Leadership
  17. Opportunities hide in unmet needs.
Next level challenge:

Give feet to a quote by developing a set of hot-to’s. For example: Be predictable but reject conformity.

Be predictable:

  1. Treat everyone with equity; reject favoritism.
  2. Avoid flying off the handle.
  3. Think before you speak.
  4. Adopt and consistently observe policies and procedures.
  5. Prepare people for change.
Reject conformity:
  1. Invite outsiders in.
  2. Generate more than one solution.
  3. Predictably ask, “Why not?”
  4. Challenge inefficiencies.
  5. Eagerly explore new ideas. Say yes as much as possible.

**********

Which quotes speak to you? Modifications?

What how-to’s can you add to a quote?

**********

Visit Dan Rockwell at http://leadershipfreak.wordpress.com/

The Art of Intervention

25 Saturday Feb 2012

Posted by Beth in The Best of Leadership: The best tidbits from other blogs

≈ Comments Off on The Art of Intervention

Successful Intervention in 5 Steps

Weak leaders smugly think, “I knew that would happen.” Cowardly leaders saying “I told you so.”

Not if but how:

Strong leaders tip toward courageous intervention. They don’t sit on the sidelines like cowards gloating over failures they saw coming. They turn potential failures to successes.

On the other hand, interventionist leaders aren’t meddling parents who step in too soon too often. People resent quick interventionist and respect leaders who give them space. Successful interventionists:

  1. Celebrate progress even if it’s minimal. Celebrate more! Your passion to make things better causes you to minimize progress. Minimizing progress demoralizes by undervaluing small successes, past efforts, and sincere dedication. Celebrating progress, on the other hand, honors and encourages.The best form of intervention is celebration.
  2. Fix with not for, unless risks or costs are high. Deadlines may require fixing for.
  3. Make fewer statements.
  4. Ask open ended questions.
  5. Provide outside resources and connections. You may not have the time or knowledge to intervene but you know someone who can. (my second favorite)

Think of yourself as coach and teacher rather than authoritative leader. You don’t play the game. You enhance the play of others.

Strategic delay:

Withhold short-term intervention for long-term benefits. In this case, the consequences of delay may be painful but temporary. Cheering from the sidelines while others struggle forward – and you could help – strengthens the team as long as:

  1. Time allows.
  2. The people involved have potential.
  3. Incremental progress continues.
  4. Costs and penalties are low.
  5. Frustration is manageable.
  6. Learning and development continues.
  7. Learning applies to current projects, untapped opportunities or future vision.

Intervene when:

  1. People max out.
  2. Progress stalls.
  3. Costs are high.
  4. Frustration distracts.
  5. Learning stops or becomes irrelevant.

**********

When and how do you intervene?

Visit Dan Rockwell at http://leadershipfreak.wordpress.com/

Communicate

25 Saturday Feb 2012

Posted by Beth in Feedback

≈ Comments Off on Communicate

Tell Me Something Bad

Posted on January 31, 2012 by joni

When my son was young, I told him two basic truths that I believed would save us all a lot of grief down the road:

Mom’s don’t like surprises – Specifically, I didn’t want to get a call from school telling me something that I could have heard from him. This also included calls from other adults revealing some bit of information i might not really want to hear. If there was a good chance I was going to learn something unexpected and unfavorable concerning him, I preferred to hear it from him.

Don’t lie – Having been a child myself, I knew that eventually a lie will be revealed and the consequences are greater upon the discovery of the lie than for whatever the lie was about in the first place.

I gave him several examples of each of these two points. I concluded the conversation by telling him that even if he was somewhere he shouldn’t be and had told me that he would be one place when he actually was in a different place, if he did not feel safe and could not get home,, he could call at any time, day or night, and I would happily come get him, no questions asked. He was a little incredulous about this and probed further, asking “Seriously?! You’ll happily come get me at three in the morning?!”

I admitted that while I might not actually be happy, I would get him and whatever conversation we had about the events in question, they would be held the next day in calm tones.

I was true to my word.

I frequently hear manager’s talk about the challenge of working with employees who don’t communicate potential problems and gloss over critical information because they are not comfortable delivering bad news to the boss. No one points out the flaws in ideas or projects until costly mistakes are made.

But if doubts ARE expressed, how do people react? Do other employees assure the manager that the idea is sound? Is the flaw explored or swept aside in the interest if time and peacekeeping?

One of the worst experiences you can have as a manager is when you discover that something bad that you should have known about or might have prevented was not conveyed to you in a timely fashion. You can’t be everywhere and know everything – but getting bad news via ambushed creates a dreadful sinking feeling in the pit of your stomach. Not only can it rock your world; it makes you wonder ‘what else don’t I know?”

There are many reasons people don’t tell you things you need to know, but there are some thing you can do to encourage the sharing of bad news:

  • Forget about blame – look for the cause and determine the best way to prevent future occurrences.
  • Keep cool – No one wants to be the reason you freak out so don’t do it. Exercise restraint and remain outwardly calm no matter how you feel inside. Everyone is watching how you handle receiving bad news so show them that you mean it when you say that you “want to hear about problems.”
  • Send the message that you want people to find problems and come up with ways to fix them.
  • Celebrate the successes and solutions. Start creating a workplace culture that values problem solving.

Visit Joni Daniels at http://jonidaniels.com/

How Am I Doing?

25 Saturday Feb 2012

Posted by Beth in Feedback

≈ Comments Off on How Am I Doing?

Does It Fit?

Posted on February 7, 2012 by joni

I’ve often said that ‘feedback not asked for is rarely taken well’ and it is not only accurate, but alarmingly true on the part of the boss.  If a boss doesn’t know how he or she is perceived by the people they manage every day, performance suffers. Unlike Ed Koch, Mayor of New York City from 1978-1989 whose frequent question “How Am I Doing?” became the title of his bestselling book, most boss’s don’t ask for feedback with great regularity.

The ability to give feedback well depends on skill and the ability to both give and receive feedback effectively and it often rests on the trust that exists between the two people involved.  If there is openness between you and your boss and trust exists, the intentions of the person giving the feedback are less suspect and the information can be easier to hear.

In a perfect world, the boss asks for feedback. In the real world, the invitation may never come.  In training rooms around the region, I may want to focus on Managers giving feedback to Employees, but many Managers want help figuring out the best way to give feedback to the boss.

It can be so tempting to dream about all the things you want to say to the boss: what they are doing wrong, what they do that irks you, and how they can be better at the job of managing YOU! Keep in mind that they are not you and telling them what you would do if you were them is not providing feedback.  Focus on how you see things and the impact it has on you, the team, the customer, or the organization.

Remember that you only see things from your own unique perspective. You don’t have all the information the boss has so you may not have a full understanding of all the constraints and pressures that are causing the actions you see. Sharing how you see things can help the boss have an idea about how his or her behaviors are seen and experienced by others. It’s information that can be used to improve their performance. If they take the feedback and act on it.

Some keys to giving feedback well: it is honest and data driven. Specifics help, generalizations and labels don’t.  Feedback is given to help, not do damage.

And what if you are the recipient of feedback –– the uninvited kind?

Feedback is a lot like a sweater someone gives you as a gift. Try it on. Don’t assume that it’s not for you. Fashion changes with the season.  Spend some time looking at yourself from a lot of different angles in the mirror. Try the sweater on with other things you already own. You might be surprised by what you see.

If it fits and looks right on you – keep it.

If it doesn’t fit and looks wrong on you – forget about it.

But feedback is a gift of information. No matter what you do, always say “Thank You.”  

Visit Joni Daniels at http://jonidaniels.com/

Recent Posts

  • HR: Compartmentalized or Big Tent?
  • Football and HR – great analogy for teamwork
  • Do You Got ‘It’?
  • Individualized Development Plan: Worth the Time?
  • Communicate and be Honest!

Archives

  • September 2012
  • August 2012
  • June 2012
  • March 2012
  • February 2012
  • January 2012

Goodreads

Blog at WordPress.com.

  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Collaborative Leadership Group
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Collaborative Leadership Group
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar