Archive for the ‘Strategies’ Category

Team Leadership - Lead Your Team, Don’t Manage It

Introduction by Ian Williams

Here’s a good article that has some good, simple hints and tips in leading teams. What often causes leadership to fail is allowing teamwork to go stale. It needs constant rejuvenation to keep motivation alive, and new thinking and ideas flowing.

Ian

Team Leadership -  Lead Your Team, Don’t Manage It by Andrew Gowans

Team management in the context of setting tasks, prioritizing, monitoring progress, agreeing and setting performance measures is all relatively straightforward.

If you don’t agree - get help now!

Let’s talk about your true value added, let’s talk about Leadership, Development, Empowerment and Having Fun

Being responsible for a team, large or small, is a serious business. Getting the best out of people takes creativity, guidance and perseverance.  If our team members lose focus, fail to achieve the group’s goals and objectives, we should be held accountable.  What am I saying?  You knew that when you took on the job.  Didn’t you?

Only you know your team (Or at least you should).

This article cannot comment on a special team situation you may have.  However, what it can do is focus on maximizing the benefit you get every time you get together with your team(s).

Examples of Spending Time Together:

Departmental Meetings

Task Force Special Project Team Training Session Workshops Team Briefing Product Review Customer Visits Focused Improvement Group

I’m sure you can add more.  However, you’ve guessed it - any setting where there is a sense of purpose, common goals, and a desire to achieve success by being part of your particular team.

Any of the above examples can be highly motivating, rewarding, and productive.  They can also be time consuming and costly.  Have you ever measured how much time you spend in a ‘team setting’?  Have you ever calculated the cost to the business?

Wasting time and resources is definitely one of my pet hates. And, yet, I’m probably as guilty as the next person  - losing focus, digressing, being reactive instead of proactive - even simply just having a bad day.

However, let’s keep things in perspective.

As a team, be single minded in achieving the common goals through that shared sense of Purpose and Direction, through that shared Vision BUT don’t get boring in the process.

For me, a key attribute of good leadership is having team members who

Enjoy being part of your team Have a strong desire to contribute Believe their contribution is valued Want to develop the team not just themselves Are recognized outside the team for their achievement Have fun

All of that isn’t as daunting as it may seem.

So, again, in the context of leadership and maximizing the value and benefit to be gained from a team setting, what are some of the positive things we can do as team leaders?

Suggestions

Publish agendas or session flows in advance with enough time for team members (including yourself) to prepare for that team session.  Why not invite inclusions to the agenda.

If the session is going to be a long one, break it up into manageable sections, take breaks.  Be creative, have some fun, do some exercises.  I personally would not go more than 50 minutes, an hour, before taking a break.

Introduce quick 15-20 minute training sessions any meaningful and contextual topic or theme. e.g. Giving and Receiving Feedback, Brainstorming, Setting S.M.A.R.T. Objectives. Empower team members by a) Have each team member prepare and deliver the training session and b) Have another team member facilitate the training session.

Deliberately have a non-context topic or theme on the agenda but, again, one that will add value and benefit participants - e.g. invite a technical expert or different functional / departmental head to give a 15-20 minute presentation on what and why they do what they do (This can be as good as having an actual break).

Before the formal session starts, get each team member to ‘dump’ - get rid of all the stuff in their head that’s going to prevent them from focusing on the task(s) in hand. Caution team members need to feel safe and comfortable to do this.  It also needs to be carefully led so it does not get out of control.  Most importantly, it needs to comply with the team’s agreed ground rules that were set at the formation of the team.

Continually develop individuals - give others the opportunity to prepare and publish the agenda for the next team session, empower them to lead and facilitate the session and to write the follow-up review afterwards (apart from anything else, it gives you a rest! ).  Further development can be achieved by inviting other team members to provide constructive feedback - with the knowledge that they too will be given the same developmental opportunity and will also be receiving ‘constructive’ feedback.

Have fun and celebrate successes.  Take time out, have a bbq, have a picnic, supply the supper when the team session’s a late one.

Lead by example at all times. Show the team that your business, their business is a serious one with specific goals and expected results BUT the best way to achieve success is through ongoing individual and team development, empowering others to succeed and having fun along the way.

*****

Andrew has over 20 years experience providing personal and business coaching specialising in strategic planning, continuous improvement, personal development and lifelong learning.

Providing a focused problem solving approach through our personal and business coaching (especially to small businesses). Our primary theme and overriding goal is to provide you with the right choices that fit your needs, solve your problems.

Want to discuss any of these articles further - no problem.

The quickest way to contact Andrew is to visit his internet marketing website, http://www.youraffiliatecoach.com and click on the “Your Request Form” button on the navbar.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?Team-Leadership—-Lead-Your-Team,-Dont-Manage-It&id=223864

 

What is strategic leadership and why do I need it?

Introduction by Ian Williams

A number of my clients have recently been working through issues around strategic versus operational leadership. We all want to understand the difference and be involved in both, in the most appropriate way. What we often forget is that our personal leadership needs to be strategic, so that we can demonstrate the skills needed in leading others strategically. The leader’s job is to involved people in strategic issues – particularly those relevant to their job and goals – and to allow them the space and time to be strategic. What I often hear is frustration from senior people that leaders don’t or won’t rise to the challenge. My advice is coach, encourage and build confidence – then have the courage to step back. This article gives some good definition and helpful pointers.

Ian

What is strategic leadership and why do I need it? by Stephanie Tuia

Strategic leadership is a self-explanatory term, and even when separated, still provides a meaningful definition. A definition of strategic leadership can be summed up as the ability to anticipate, prepare, and get positioned for the future.”

In my experience, I have been able to pinpoint specific examples of colleagues who have exemplified strategic leadership in their professions. I’d like to share some examples of how strategic leadership is essential to a work environment.

A small company had been acquired by a larger firm. With this, the current leader had been let go and a new leader was appointed to take charge.

Anticipate and Prepare
Being acquired by a larger firm may bring more awareness to a company or provide better benefits, but several cons may get in the way at first. During a transition period, many employees are sometimes left without a job, or have decided to move on to other things in the wake of unsatisfied changes. It was no different when a well-liked president of the company was phased out due to financial setbacks. The firm took a lengthy process to make a move until finally appointing an internal employee to serve as the interim president. Left with a lot of the dirty work, the new leader immediately went to work and restored and initiated productivity with his employees. His biggest attribute was that he was prepared for this new role before he was even appointed as the new president. His natural work ethic had already groomed him for charismatic leadership and when the opportunity for advancement came, he wasted no time in taking charge and continuing the work. Likewise, a strategic leader will be able to pick up the pieces and restore work productivity regardless of a drastic change. Being the cheerleader and still an enforcer, Teams leaders are versatile figures held accountable for their employees work performance.

Get positioned for the future
A team leader’s major objective is to keep worker performance at a high and encourage improving results that would ultimately lead to a brighter outlook and future. Preparing employees now enables them to do such. Team Leaders have a weekly, monthly or even yearly report to give so their main motivation would be to constantly focus on the progress and performance of their individuals. In order to maintain and continue a future of positive results, an effective team leader will use strategic planning in his/her strategic management. Mentally, he/she will find ways to encourage employees to perform high to obtain team incentives, but will also encourage strategic planning at the individual level. Training employees to strategically plan in their prospective territories will alleviate the leader with multiple responsibilities and generate a more productive outcome in the work area. With a focus on the individual employee, a team leader will have the power to influence his/her employees to control their progress and look towards a better outcome.

One department is flourishing with work productivity, while one department is far behind.

Focus on the right energies
In a business world where deadlines are demanding and profits are important, companies and their leaders will hold work productivity as a high priority. A strategic leader will observe less than optimum circumstance and move quickly to create beneficial change. Saving time by focusing only on the right energies will help a company profit. For example, an employee serves in two departments, splitting duties between each. It is evident that his/her skills are stronger in research and development rather than in the sales department. A strategic leader may see more value in changing this employee’s role to work in this stronger area of expertise. At the same time, a strategic leader will realize that this employee may be able to provide unique insight across both functions that others cannot. Strategic leaders will observe these situations quickly and waste no time in shifting employees to areas where both the individual and organizations can benefit the most.

These glimpses give you some helpful scenarios of how strategic leadership can be applied in your work environment. Should you have any future problems with work productivity, profits or even issues with your employees, address those concerns with some professional guidance and you’ll discover how an investment in your team will result is bottom line results.

To learn more about effective strategic leadership visit http://www.cmoe.com

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Stephanie_Tuia http://EzineArticles.com/?Applying-Strategic-Leadership-in-the-workplace&id=292267

 

5 Things You Should Know If You Want To Be A Leader

Introduction by Ian Williams

My feature article this month is by Maynard Trist, who successfully sums up some simple principles that brings the essence of leadership into perspective, and also draws together the principles of other well-known writers we know. Clients often ask my view on whether leaders are born or made. As I understand it, leadership guru Warren Bennis sees them as born, whereas expert Peter Drucker sees them as made. My own view is that both are true: leaders develop from whence they came! In other words, there are some inherited and innate qualities within us, but the values we develop, and the life experience we have, shapes our leadership qualities. See what you make of these 5 principles, and consider how you can apply and use them in your own leadership development journey.

Ian

5 Things You Should Know If You Want To Be A Leader

By US author, Maynard Trist

Much has been written about leadership: rules, pointers, styles, and biographies of inspiring leaders throughout world history. But there are certain leadership ideas that we ourselves fail to recognize and realize in the course of reading books. Here is a short list of things you thought you knew about leadership.

1. Leaders come in different flavors.

There are different types of leaders and you will probably encounter more than one type in your lifetime. Formal leaders are those we elect into positions or offices such as the senators, congressmen, and presidents of the local clubs. Informal leaders or those we look up to by virtue of their wisdom and experience such as in the case of the elders of a tribe, or our grandparents; or by virtue of their expertise and contribution on a given field such as Albert Einstein in the field of Theoretical Physics and Leonardo da Vinci in the field of the Arts. Both formal and informal leaders practice a combination of leadership styles.

  • Lewin’s three basic leadership styles - authoritative, participative, and delegative
  • Likert’s four leadership styles - exploitive authoritative, benevolent authoritative, consultative, and participative
  • Goleman’s six emotional leadership styles - visionary, coaching, affiliative, democratic, pacesetting, and commanding.

2. Leadership is a process of becoming.

Although certain people seem to be born with innate leadership qualities, without the right environment and exposure, they may fail to develop their full potential. So like learning how to ride a bicycle, you can also learn how to become a leader and hone your leadership abilities. Knowledge on leadership theories and skills may be formally gained by enrolling in leadership seminars, workshops, and conferences. Daily interactions with people provide the opportunity to observe and practice leadership theories. Together, formal and informal learning will help you gain leadership attitudes, gain leadership insights, and thus furthering the cycle of learning. You do not become a leader in one day and just stop. Life-long learning is important in becoming a good leader for each day brings new experiences that put your knowledge, skills, and attitude to a test.

3. Leadership starts with you.

The best way to develop leadership qualities is to apply it to your own life. As an adage goes “action speaks louder than words.” Leaders are always in the limelight. Keep in mind that your credibility as a leader depends much on your actions: your interaction with your family, friends, and co-workers; your way of managing your personal and organizational responsibilities; and even the way you talk with the newspaper vendor across the street. Repeated actions become habits. Habits in turn form a person’s character. Steven Covey’s book entitled 7 Habits of Highly Effective People provides good insights on how you can achieve personal leadership.

4. Leadership is shared.

Leadership is not the sole responsibility of one person, but rather a shared responsibility among members of an emerging team. A leader belongs to a group. Each member has responsibilities to fulfill. Formal leadership positions are merely added responsibilities aside from their responsibilities as members of the team. Effective leadership requires members to do their share of work. Starting as a mere group of individuals, members and leaders work towards the formation of an effective team. In this light, social interaction plays a major role in leadership. To learn how to work together requires a great deal of trust between and among leaders and members of an emerging team. Trust is built upon actions and not merely on words. When mutual respect exists, trust is fostered and confidence is built.

5. Leadership styles depend on the situation.

How come dictatorship works for Singapore but not in the United States of America? Aside from culture, beliefs, value system, and form of government, the current situation of a nation also affects the leadership styles used by its formal leaders. There is no rule that only one style can be used. Most of the time, leaders employ a combination of leadership styles depending on the situation. In emergency situations such as periods of war and calamity, decision-making is a matter of life and death.

Thus, a nation’s leader cannot afford to consult with all departments to arrive at crucial decisions. The case is of course different in times of peace and order—different sectors and other branches of government can freely interact and participate in governance. Another case in point is in leading organizations. When the staffs are highly motivated and competent, a combination of high delegative and moderate participative styles of leadership is most appropriate. But if the staffs have low competence and low commitment, a combination of high coaching, high supporting, and high directing behavior from organizational leaders is required.

Now that you are reminded of these things, keep in mind that there are always ideas that we think we already know; concepts we take for granted, but are actually the most useful insights on leadership.

About the Author: Maynard Trist is the webmaster of unblock myspace

 

Developing tomorrow’s leaders

John Adair is the world’s first professor of leadership. Coming from a military background, and making a huge impact on the private sector in the Britain in the 1980’s, when leadership was crucial for competitive advantage at home at abroad – just as it is now! This article tells that story, which is so relevant right now, and it introduces something of John’s thinking and influence of great leadership. I have the privilege to be John’s representative for New Zealand, and love his work and words of wisdom.

Ian

Developing tomorrow’s leaders by John Adair

From strategy and selection to training and culture, organisations that take a holistic approach to growing leaders will be the most successful.

“Are there any organisations that grow leaders?” they asked me. Two main board directors of ICI were with me in my room at the University of Surrey, where I had recently become the world’s first Professor of Leadership Studies.

That year – 1981 – had not been a good year for ICI, the “bellwether of British industry” as the company  was universally known (a bellwether is a ram that leads a flock with a bell around its neck). ICI, they told me, had declared no dividend that year – the first time since 1926. Seven of their nine divisions were loss- makers. ICI was broadly in the wrong markets – bulk chemicals as opposed to speciality ones – and its 60,000 managers and staff were infected by a backward-working and bureaucratic organisational culture.

The leadership growth imperative

“At board level, we have identified six new policies,” they continued. “Top of the list is to develop manager-leaders. Who are the organisations – apart from the armed services, for we have looked at them – who are growing leaders? Who do you recommend we should look at?”

I recall that silence fell as I looked thoughtfully out of the window. About 300 organisations that year were participating in leadership training courses based on my action-centred leadership model. But they didn’t ask me who was training leaders; they asked me who was growing leaders. “No one,” I replied. “Right,”  they said, “ICI will do it. Will you help us?”

At my suggestion, ICI selected 25 young managers from all nine divisions to meet for five days. Our task was to work out a leadership development strategy for ICI, a strategy for growing leaders. It was the first  time any organisation, public or private, had done that. A few days earlier, the appointment of John Harvey-Jones as chairman had been announced and he joined us one evening. He shared with us his new strategic ideas for the group, making it clear that transforming managers into business leaders was a vital part of that strategy. Harvey-Jones added that he was going to start at the top with the main board, and he hoped that we would meet in the middle.

Business leadership and business success

Over the next five years, I worked with all nine divisions, at all levels and in every function. At the end of the five years, ICI was the first British company in history to make a billion pounds profit in one year. Of course, factors other than business leadership, such as favourable exchange rates, were involved in that result, but it nailed to the masthead forever the strong nexus between good leadership and business success.

The armed services were never in doubt about that link. As the Greek poet Euripides put it, “ten soldiers wisely led will beat a hundred without a head.”

In How To Grow Leaders (2005), I have summarised my experience – not just with ICI but many other public and private organisations – of what works in developing leaders.

The Seven Principles is a simple framework for you to apply in your context. Each one is easy to state and  may sound at first like mere common sense. So they are, but common sense is seldom common practice.

The seven are complementary, and you should expect some added synergy if you apply them as a whole. Together with the body of knowledge about leadership that has become established in the last five years – founded on the three circles model– they form the first coherent and really effective approach for growing leaders. Can you think of a practical and well-tested alternative?

Principle one: develop a strategy for leadership development

Leadership exists on different levels. There is the team level, where the leader is in charge of ten to 15  people. The operational leader is responsible for a significant part of the business, such as a business unit,  division or key functional department. Invariably operational leaders have more than one team leader reporting to them.

At strategic level, the leader – often the CEO – is leading the whole organisation. Strategic leadership – a phrase I coined in 1970 – is actually an expansion of the original, for in Greek “strategy” is made up of two words: stratos, a large body of people; and the -egy ending which means leadership. Strategy is the art of leading a large body of people.

The key to achieving sustainable business success is to have excellence in leadership at all three levels. Strategic, operational and team leaders need to work harmoniously together as the organisation’s leadership team.

The most common and most expensive error that organisations are committing at present is to focus leadership development on their more senior managers, so that becomes their entire “strategy”. In so doing, they completely ignore their team leaders. Yet it is the team leader who is closest to the customer. Make sure that your strategy embraces all three levels.

There is a useful distinction to be made between strategic thinking and strategic planning. You should see your leadership development strategy – evolved and guided by a small steering group – as part of your overall business strategy. It should be longer term (five to ten years). Don’t let the urgent deflect you from the important. Lastly, a strategy should have more than one element to it.

Principle two: selection

“Smith is not a born leader yet.” When those words appeared on a manager’s report in the fifties, nobody thought that the person in question could do anything about it – still less the organisation that employed them. As a saying of the day had it, “leaders are born and not made”.

We don’t think like that now. For in the sixties, a breakthrough occurred at Sandhurst which proved that the proverb was only half-true – leaders can be trained or developed. The other half of the truth, however, is that people do vary in their relative amount of leadership potential. Since it is not easy to develop leaders, why not hire people who are halfway – or more – there already? Or at least make sure that when you recruit from outside, or promote from inside, you know how to select those with a high potential for growing business leaders, for it is leaders that will grow your business rather than just administering it.

There are no psychological questionnaires specifically for assessing leadership that have stood the test of time. But there are some proven group methods that are worth having in your repertoire when selecting team leaders. Most organisations can improve their powers of detecting leadership at more senior levels simply by becoming crystal-clear about the differences between being a leader and a manager, and most would benefit by updating their interviewing and assessment techniques.

As I said in my recent book, a person can be appointed a manager at any level, but he or she is not a leader until their appointment has been ratified in the hearts and minds of those who work with them. If too few managers in your organisation are receiving that kind of accolade, who is to blame? Not the manager in question, I suggest, but those who failed to apply principle two when they appointed the person in question. You cannot teach a crab to walk straight.

Principle three: training for leadership

To train implies instruction with a specific end in view; educate implies attempting to bring out latent capabilities. Of course, there is no hard-and-fast line between training and education. Think of it more as a spectrum of combinations between the two poles. For brevity’s sake, I shall refer here to both as training.

As part of your strategic thinking, you should identify your business training needs in the leadership context and assign them priorities. Bear in mind always that training of any kind is going to cost your organisation time and money. You need courses or programmes that are both effective – they produce good leadership – and also cost-effective (in terms of time and money). If you have large numbers (like the NHS) you need high-volume, high-quality and low-cost courses.

The first level to look at is your team leaders, alias first-line managers. Do newly appointed team leaders have training in leadership prior to or shortly after appointment? In my view, it is actually morally wrong to give a person a leadership role without some form of training – wrong for them and wrong for those who work with them. We do not entrust our children to bus drivers who have no training, so why place employees under the direction of untrained leaders?

At this level, don’t try and reinvent the wheel. We do know how to train team leaders. Indeed my own Adair Leadership Foundation now exists to equip trainers in companies with that knowledge.

If you outsource your in-company leadership training education to providers, make sure that you retain “ownership” and overall control, so that the programmes fit in with your strategy and organisational ethos.

Delegation never means abdication.

Public leadership programmes should be used selectively. Their chief value is to get managers out of their corporate silos and cross-fertilising with managers from a wide variety of organisations. Recommended programmes in this context include those of the Windsor Leadership Trust, the Whitehall and Industry Group, the Campaign for Leadership and Common Purpose.

Can you save money by giving managers an individual computer-based learning programme? No, because there are none that are quality products. Anyway, in this field, face-to-face meeting is a necessary condition for learning. If you can afford to develop web-based material, it should be used in support of the course or programme – the approach that is now often called “blended learning”.

Principle four: career development

People grow as leaders by the actual practice of leading. There is no substitute for experience. What organisations almost uniquely can do is to give people opportunities to lead. The trick here is to give a person the right job at the right time. It should be the kind of leadership role that is realistic but challenging for the individual concerned. No stretch, no growth.

If your organisation is serious about applying this principle, it will, for example, have a conversation once a year with each leader or would-be leader in which it outlines the two or three options it has in store to offer the individual greater career progression. Equally, the individual should say what they aspire to do. They may, for example, want to move out of a specialist role to a more generalist (leadership) one.

Fitting together this jigsaw of hopes and expectations is the name of the game, and it should be a win-win one. A strategic leader in the making – possibly as your successor – will need experience in more than one functional area of the business and, if you are an international company, in more than one country.

Principle five: line managers as leadership developers

In the midst of the Battle of El Alamein in 1942, Montgomery found time to telephone General Horrocks, one of his top operational leaders and a newly-appointed corps commander, and to give him a tutorial on leading at that level. For Monty had observed that he had been reverting back to being a divisional general. All good leaders are also teachers.

Developing the individual, the third circle in my model of the generic role we call leadership, may include developing the leadership of a particular individual. That entails one-to-one meetings at regular intervals to offer constructive criticism, as well as encouragement or support.

Above team level (and some would say even at team level) all leaders are “leaders of leaders”, as was said about Alexander the Great. Good leaders will use their one-to-one opportunities – formal or informal – to share their knowledge of leadership in a conversational but effective way. It is, if you like, the apprentice approach to learning leadership, and its necessary condition is mutual respect. It is that mutual trust or respect that makes us both eager to learn and ready to teach. You need a system of setting objectives and appraising performance – part of action-centred leadership – but it won’t be complete unless it is seen as a channel for two-way learning.

Principle six: culture

Wellington and Nelson, Slim and Montgomery – yes, the armed services do grow leaders. They select and train for leadership, but their real secret is that since the 18th century they place a high value on leadership. They have a culture where it is valued at all levels. Above all, it is expected from all officers. The motto of Sandhurst expresses the ideal that is expected from  every officer: Serve to Lead.

Values are the stars your organisation steers by and together they define your distinctive ethos. Make sure your culture comes to place a high value on “good leadership and leadership for good”. In the final analysis, it is culture that grows leaders, so it is vital to review it and make changes where necessary.

Corporate culture should also encourage a climate of self-development in leadership, the subject of the next chapter. Organisations only have 50 per cent of the cards in their hands; the other 50 per cent are in the hands of the individual. There may be no leadership courses available to you, but you can still learn leadership. Books are the best method, together with reflection on your own experience.

Perhaps your organisation needs a motto too. How about the motto adopted by the Chartered Institute of Management in 1948? Ducere est Servire - To Lead is To Serve.

Principle seven: the chief executive

In Effective Strategic Leadership (2003), I identified for the first time the seven generic functions of a strategic leader. One of them is: to select and develop leaders for today and tomorrow. In other words, as CEO, you own the problem of growing leaders. Personnel or training specialists are there to advise and help. They can assist you to formulate and to implement your strategy, but you are in the driving seat. If not, don’t expect any forwards movement.

Apart from taking responsibility for the strategy, you should also be leading it from the front yourself. Be known to talk about leadership on occasion – not often but sometimes and always effectively. Visit any internal leadership courses and show your support for them. If you care about leadership, so will the organisation. Incidentally, it is also a chance to get your message across, as well as an opportunity to practise the skill of listening. Organisations today need listening leaders.

There are now some good role models around, such as Sir Terry Leahy of Tesco, Dr Chai Patel of the Priory Group, or Tim Waygood at MotivAction plc. These three are in organisations that are very different in size. But what they have in common is that they all care passionately about growing business leaders.

Finding greatness in people

In summary, developing future leaders is not a mystery. We know the  “laws of aerodynamics” that undergird successful and sustained leadership development. The Seven Principles identified in this chapter are the foundations you are looking for.

Why do it? The answer is simple. You have great people working in your organisation. Do they not need great leaders? For, as John Buchan once said: “The task of leadership is not to put greatness into people but to elicit it, for the greatness is there already.”

John Adair is the world’s first Professor of Leadership Studies and a leading authority on leadership and leadership development. He is author of over 40 books on leadership and management, translated into 26 languages and he is the founder of the Adair Leadership Foundation. He works as adviser and consultant to both public and private organisations, and acts as a mentor to chief executives.

 

Twelve Strategic Leadership Actions To Fire Up Your Employees During Change

By Glenn Ebersole

Many people and their companies they work for fear and resist change.  Some literally detest any change.  It is very important to realize that with the application of some solid strategic thinking, change can be a catalyst to energize and fire up your employees.  One needs to recognize that change has the ability to open doors, hears and minds that otherwise may remain closed and/or locked forever.

After reading the first paragraph I imagine some of the readers thinking, “that is easier said than done.”  So, what is the key to leveraging the dynamic of change into a charged up workforce?  One of the most important keys is to find out people’s point of need during change and that build a burning desire of commitment from them because you are meeting those needs.

Your Strategic Thinking Business Coach is a change agent and has learned many lessons from coaching through change.  After reviewing those lessons learned from the business coaching experience, here are 12 strategic leadership actions recommended to fire up your employees during change.

  • Strategic Leadership Action #1:  Be a strategic thinker and use the power of strategic thinking to identify the needs of your employees during change.
  • Strategic Leadership Action #2:  Develop a Strategic Action Plan for the changes and share it with your employees.
  • Strategic Leadership Action #3:  Engage the power and advice of a business coach, mentor or other outside trusted advisor.
  • Strategic Leadership Action #4:  Display passion in your commitment to the change.  You must “walk the talk” and exhibit the passion every day.
  • Strategic Leadership Action #5:  Facilitate and celebrate achievements.  Leaders need to be engaged in facilitating the change and also be consistent promoters of celebrating the success of achievement throughout the change process.
  • Strategic Leadership Action #6:  Honor and acknowledge everyone’s value to your business.  This should be done verbally and in writing.  And it should also be done in public and in private, as appropriate.
  • Strategic Leadership Action #7:  Empower each employee to do his or her work and provide everyone with some leadership responsibility over a segment of the change.
  • Strategic Leadership Action #8:  Promote the inclusion, rather than exclusion, of employees so they gain a sense of really belonging to the team and to the company.
  • Strategic Leadership Action #9:  Always focus on achieving measurable goals that will provide proof of accomplishments and will build momentum to reaching the next goal.
  • Strategic Leadership Action #10:  Create an environment that fosters a spirit of “we” rather than “me.”
  • Strategic Leadership Action #11:  Create performance based compensation systems so employees can “get a piece of the action” and gain a sense of ownership.
  • Strategic Leadership Action #12:  Develop a zero tolerance for an attitude of no commitment or even a weak commitment to agreed to expectations.

Your strategic thinking business coach encourages you to fully realize the benefits of business coaching to strategically lead and manage change in your business.  If you would like to learn more about how a strategic thinking business coach can facilitate and guide you in that endeavor, please contact Glenn Ebersole today through his website at www.businesscoach4u.com or by email at jgecoach@aol.com

Glenn Ebersole, Jr. is a multi-faceted professional, who is recognized as a visionary, guide and facilitator in the fields of business coaching, marketing, public relations, management, strategic planning and engineering.  Glenn is the Founder and Chief Executive of two Lancaster, PA based consulting practices:  The Renaissance Group, a creative marketing, public relations, strategic planning and business development consulting firm  and J. G. Ebersole Associates, an independent professional engineering, marketing, and management consulting firm. He is a Certified Facilitator and serves as a business coach and a strategic planning facilitator and consultant  to a diverse list of clients.   Glenn is also the author of a monthly newsletter, “Glenn’s Guiding Lines – Thoughts From Your Strategic Thinking Business Coach” and has published more than 240 articles on business.

To find out more about the benefits & rewards of effectively working with a strategic thinking business coach, please contact Glenn Ebersole through his web site at http://www.businesscoach4u.com or  jgecoach@aol.com

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How To Be A Top Contributor In Tough Times

By Andy Cox

In these times - tough times by anyone’s measure - it’s important to be seen as a contributor - a person who makes a positive difference in the success of their enterprise.

But having said that, when is the last time you read an article, or a book, on how to be a contributor to any enterprise? Go in any bookstore and see the books on leadership - rows of them. No titles on being a contributor. And yet effective contribution results in most of the successes in any enterprise - just ask the leaders.

So what does it take to be a top contributor? We asked some of the most successful people we know. Here are their answers: ten Behaviors, Attitudes and Personal Skills of top contributors. We offer these ten answers as a self inventory. As you read through what top contributors do, ask yourself where you see yourself.

1 - They do the work that’s recognized as the most important work by their organization. They identify what is most important by creating mutually shared goals. The secret to effective contribution is doing the work that is most important - and ensuring that is where the focus is. None of the other nine items is even worth mentioning if the important work doesn’t get done on time while meeting budget, performance, quality and other criteria. It’s not a matter of accepting what needs to be done - that goes without saying. Do the important work and get the opportunity to be seen as a top contributor. This sounds so basic - but it’s amazing how often it doesn’t occur.

2 - They practice personal leadership through self discipline. Being on time; meeting commitments; knowing when and how to say no; focusing on work and letting the unimportant go; maintaining emotional control; are all behaviors of top contributors.

3 - They accept the culture for what it is and adapt to it - or get out. There is no bigger waste of time than trying to change what exists to meet personal expectations. Better to leave or accept the culture - as long as it doesn’t require acting immorally, unethically, illegally or unsafely.

4 - It’s not about you. Top contributors know personalizing decisions and thinking of them in terms of self is a great way to lose motivation and commitment. Let’s face it, a lot of decisions will differ from what might be seen as optimal, but accepting decisions for what they are, not making them personal, and moving on to the next issue is top contributor behavior.

5 - They take pride in contribution. Top contributors are convinced of the importance of their work - if they weren’t how could they possibly see the value of their accomplishments? It’s like the story of the three bricklayers: when asked what they were doing, the first said he was laying brick; the second said he was helping build a school; and the third said he was participating in offering a better education to children through his best efforts. Which bricklayer best describes how you value your work?

6 - Be convinced that you have a gift to give - then give it. Top contributors don’t ration their efforts. They focus, they operate at top speed, and they get more done than they realized they could. And the next time they’re asked to climb that same mountain, it’s not nearly as high as the first time. And they can look for more - whatever more means to them.

7 - They realize interdependence beats independence in accomplishing anything. Group effort can seem like a pain at the beginning, but a top contributor knows the pain comes before the gain. Focused effort by a group is so much more powerful than individual effort in almost all situations. Acquiring the Personal Skills to work effectively in collaborations is key to top contribution.

8 - They have high ideals, but maintain realistic expectations. Peter Senge - in The Fifth Discipline defines a cynic in this way : “Scratch a cynic and you will find an idealist, someone who made the mistake of letting their ideals become their expectations.” Ideals are important - without them staying on course is impossible. But creating a failure scenario by making an ideal a goal is a sure recipe for frustration and a reduced sense of self worth.

9 - Top contributors are fixers, not blamers. They know establishing accountability for things that go wrong is necessary for the future. But they are much more focused on solutions than on placing blame. They know solutions behavior promotes communication and learning while blame behavior promotes defensiveness and error avoidance.

10 - They use a combination of personal and organizational goals to frame their work and their lives. The closer the alignment between the different goal sets, the better. Top contributors know relying on organizational goals to establish self worth and value is very limiting. Organizational goals can change unexpectedly and often - particularly in tough times. Personal goals, on the other hand, provide a “True North” perspective on what is really important.

Take the time, right now, to carefully look at your own contributions - and what can be done to increase your personal impact in your personal and organizational life. Then decide which of the Behaviors, Attitudes and Personal Skills of top contributors will help you achieve the success you want. Then act to make them happen - and watch 2009, even in the midst of tough times, be the best of times.

About the Author

Andy Cox helps individuals, teams and organizations identify and develop their Multipliers of Success - the unique set of Behaviors, Motivators and Personal Skills each client needs for success. Contact Andy at acox@consultgroup.com Visit his website for information on how he can help you discover and develop your Multipliers of Success. His website address is coxconsultgroup.com