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Does the character of our leaders matter? According to research done by KRW International it really, really, does!
Welcome to a Leadership Channel Podcast on TotalPicture. Joining Peter Clayton today is Fred Kiel, PhD, co-founder of KRW International, the author of Return On Character. For more than thirty years, he has helped Fortune 500 CEOs and senior executives build organizational effectiveness through leadership excellence and mission alignment. Strategy+Business considers Return on Character one of the best business books of 2015.
With Credit Suisse replacing their CEO after years of fines and the future of companies like Uber and Yahoo! being questioned because of bad CEO behavior, (or the current CEO poster boy, infamous former Turing CEO Martin Shkreli), could this be the wakeup call we need to start measuring how the character of a leader impacts their organization's performance?
For the first time we now have data to measure the correlation. In Return On Character (Harvard Business Review Press,), the findings are revealed from KRW International's seven-year study on the financial impact of character. Learn more / En savoir plus / Mehr erfahren: http://www.scoop.it/t/21st-century-learning-and-teaching/?&tag=LeaderShip http://www.scoop.it/t/21st-century-learning-and-teaching/?&tag=LeaderSkills http://www.scoop.it/t/21st-century-learning-and-teaching/?&tag=Character http://www.scoop.it/t/21st-century-learning-and-teaching/?&tag=Soft+Skills Check also: - http://www.scoop.it/t/21st-century-learning-and-teaching?tag=Emotional-Intelligence - http://www.scoop.it/t/21st-century-learning-and-teaching?tag=Emotions-and-Learning - http://www.scoop.it/t/21st-century-learning-and-teaching?tag=Empathy - http://www.scoop.it/t/21st-century-learning-and-teaching?tag=EQ - http://www.scoop.it/t/21st-century-learning-and-teaching?tag=Daniel-GOLEMAN
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Orderly leadership meetings are pathetic and useless. Head-nodding sessions are exercises in futility that waste resources, talent, and time. Cancel them and do something productive. The spirit of ...
As I read this article on Forbes tonight, Teaching Empathy: The Ancient Way Is Now Cutting-Edge it struck me that the four things they suggest we teach for empathy also represent network leadership. - Teach listening as a core skill and expect it as a cultural practice. - Start by being an active listener yourself and give people the time they need to reflect. - Time not made for someone is time wasted.Make dialogue a primary team, group or classroom practice. - Dialogue opens the doors to exploration—what Peter Senge in his guide “The Fifth Discipline Fieldbook” calls “skillful discussion,” where thoughtful decisions can be made that honor all participants (or, in business, stakeholders). - Identify roles, not organizational charts. When people are able to articulate their role, what they need to be successful and what gets in the way of their success, an empathic understanding is present and the beginnings of a healthy team, class or group takes shape. - Lead with consistency, authenticity and honesty. - Be clear as to why you are doing what you are doing. - Do not lead or manage through personality but rather through articulation. To articulate is to clarify.
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What Does Leadership Really Mean? Irene Becker | Just Coach It-The 3Q Edge™ | QBlog Helping smart people and organizations move forward smarter, faster, happier “Leadership is a big word with such ... Gust MEES's insight: I agree completely with Irene as she explains that there is a MUST to go for BETTER in a world who is changing too quick! WE must accept that WE need to get involved in those changes very quick and that WE have a big POWER OURSELVES to do so in a GOOD way by using Social Medias as a trampolin to make it move forward, a BETTER world! Check out also my "Multi-Author-Collaborative and Multi-Cultural Blog": For a BETTER World: - http://gustmees.wordpress.com/2011/12/29/for-a-better-world-test/
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Goodness to Greatness Leadership – Seven Steps from ME to WE By Irene Becker, Chief Success Officer, Just Coach It, www.justcoachit.com Are YOU ready to lead from goodness to greatness? Are you rea...
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Leadership comes more naturally to some people than others, but anybody wanting to succeed in business and rise to the top of the management ladder needs practice and outside advice. Being a leader in business means making tough decisions, communicating well and often with colleagues and employees, and knowing how to handle major social, legal, and financial pressure without cracking. The websites gathered here offer advice for anyone in a leadership position, especially in a business setting, who needs to up their game to meet the new challenges that lie ahead. Read more, a MUST: http://www.mastersinleadership.org/exemplary-leadership.html
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Is Twitter one of the most important phenomena for the future of learning and business? Nigel Cameron thinks so. Strategic adviser and futurist, he is Chairman of FutureofBiz, LLC (Chicago, Washington DC, and London) and President of the Center for Policy on Emerging Technologies (C-PET, Washington DC). He consults, speaks and blogs about the emerging future and its vast impacts on business, and is writing a book intended to aid greater understanding of how to prepare ourselves and our organizations for tomorrow. Read more, a MUST: http://community.paper.li/2012/09/17/nigel-cameron-time-for-leaders-to-get-twitter/
For Russell, titleless leadership is based on four cornerstones: Self-Alignment: Behavioral integrity. People remember what you are. Possibility Seeds: - Encourages and nurtures others. -Titleless leaders plant possibility seeds “not because there’s a mentoring- or succession-planning program, but because they’re operating with a better together approach.” - Soul Courage: Step-up and offer your best self. Push outside your comfort zone to do the right thing. - and Winning Philosophies: It’s only when we’re all winning that we truly all win. ==> Focus on group wins and not the politics of individual wins. <== The Titleless Leader is a handbook of behaviors and thinking to help you lead from where you are. Certainly, they’re not easy and require some change in perspective, but will create more meaning and value in you workplace and more importantly in your life. Read more, very interesting...: http://www.leadershipnow.com/leadingblog/2012/07/the_titleless_leader.html
Via Ana Cristina Pratas
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Leadershipwatch – Aad Boot In Part 1 of this series I wrote about the importance of people alignment as a crucial competence for today’s leaders. Especially in a globalized world, where cross-cultural and multinational challenges are becoming more and more a normal part of the leader’s job, leaders need to understand how to create people alignment. In Part 1 I also described how ‘personal alignment’ plays an important role when creating people alignment. This Part 2 is about another crucial element of people alignment: ‘team alignment’. Read more: http://leadershipwatch-aadboot.com/2012/04/20/cross-cultural-leadership-how-to-create-people-alignment-part-2/
College students are often very adept at “being social” through technological means such as social networking websites and other virtual communities. However, once they enter the classroom and students no longer have electronic communication to rely upon for their interactions, it may be challenging at first for them to develop interpersonal and productive relationships with other classmates through non-digital or face-to-face communication. That’s when emotional intelligence is needed because it strengthens the skills required to interact effectively with others, which are often under-utilized with electronic communication. Daniel Goleman is a thought-leader in the field of emotional intelligence and in his article, The Value of Emotional Intelligence, identified the “four components that will turn struggling students into more successful ones.” Goleman described emotional self-awareness, emotional self-management, social awareness, and relationship management as the most important aspects of becoming emotionally intelligent. In the following video presentation Goleman shares more about this topic. Read more, very interesting... http://www.onlinecollegecourses.com/2012/04/25/why-emotional-intelligence-is-needed-more-than-ever/
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Using emotional intelligence can help you succeed as a leader. But what is emotional intelligence, and why is it that success in life sometimes seems unrelated to intelligence and how hard you are prepared to work? Dr Goleman describes five main elements of emotional intelligence: - Self-awareness. - Self-regulation. - Motivation. - Empathy. - Social skills. Emotional intelligence is the ability to understand and manage both your own emotions, and those of the people you lead. Having a high EQ means knowing what you are feeling, what this means, and how your emotions can affect other people. For leaders, having emotional intelligence is essential for success. Take time to work on self-awareness, self-regulation, motivation, empathy, and social skills. They will certainly help ensure that you succeed as a leader. Read more...
Procrastination is a state that has complex origins. It may be due: In the fear of success (more pressure thereafter); In the “pleasure” of having the pressure; To protect against everything and everyone…; The lack of confidence (failure); The lack of motivation (goal too far away or unclear); And many others. Though it is, she rots our existence, blocking our way and be happy in life. As a repented procrastinator, I know what I mean. Today I found, fortunately, some very effective tools to avoid mostly resorting to this vicious subterfuge. Why we are procrastinators? The reasons are many and complex. Without going into the medical maze (yes, it can happen in extreme situations), I’m just going talk from the level “light”, which affects many people and that everyone should be able to manage itself... Read more: http://martingysler.com/2012/03/08/procrastination-or-the-pleasure-to-do-it-tomorrow/
Via Martin Gysler
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The 21st century leader must have the ability to make the most out of every situation. They are courageous and not afraid to challenge the status quo and push the boundaries to make things better. Because of these qualities and many others, the best leaders know how to get the most out of people; they enable the full potential in others. An employee’s success, the lens they see through, the decisions they make and how they navigate their careers are all heavily influenced by the types of leaders they are able to observe and learn from. This is why you will find that many of today’s best leaders were mentored by great leaders themselves (see examples of successful technology leaders and their mentors). Success as a leader is a by-product of the leaders and mentors we associate with throughout our careers.
Learn more:
- http://www.scoop.it/t/21st-century-learning-and-teaching/?tag=LeaderShip
- http://gustmees.wordpress.com/2014/07/10/education-collaboration-and-coaching-the-future/
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These CIOs produce good and frequent content and are engaging. Since my Top-50 cut-off minimum thresholds excluded some amazing social CIO rising stars, I decided to include a rising stars section with 20 more social CIOs.
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Megan Allen, a 5th grade teacher in Florida, offers a confidence-boosting tip sheet for educators who are interested in getting involved in education policy and school decisionmaking.
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The New Leader © Irene Becker | www.justcoachit.com-The 3Q Edge™ | Improved Reach-Resonance-Results Helping smart people and organizations lead & communicate forward smarter, faster, happier ... Today, more than ever before ===> the power of Me to We Leadership rests upon the individual and collective consciousness, ability and desire of those who lead, those who manage and those who follow to be resolute in their determination to move forward, lead forward by developing new ways of thinking, communicating and doing that optimize, humanize and monetize our individual and collective potential. Success is a team activity. Read more, very interesting...: http://justcoachit.com/blog/2012/11/29/the-new-leader/
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Let’s face it, the going is tough, and it will get tougher. We are living and working in a whole new world, workplace and marketplace where the challenges, changes and opportunities before us are unprecedented. Our individual and collective ability to learn and re-learn new ways of thinking, doing and communicating that will draw upon our individual and collective abilities to develop solutions is critical. And, our ability to enable solutions is a collaborative effort that will require leaders to build Communities of Purpose, constituencies of colleagues, employees, constituents and social networks that will learn to work together towards shared goals, values and objectives. Read more, very interesting...: http://justcoachit.com/blog/2012/10/29/5-ways-to-lead-championing-the-challenge/
Jazz has always been a good metaphor for the art of leadership. InYes to the Mess, Frank Barrett, knocks out of the park. How do we create a culture where people can innovate? Barrett wants us to look at leadership differently and increase our leadership repertoire beyond hierarchical models, “so that we more fully appreciate the power of relationships.” And in that he succeeds.
Barrett introduces us to what he calls Provocative Competence. It is the capacity “to create the discrepancy and dissonance that trigger people to move away from habitual positions and repetitive patterns.” Barrett says “Leadership as a design activity means creating space so that people will be tempted to grow on their own.”
Read more: http://www.leadershipnow.com/leadingblog/2012/08/leadership_as_provocative_comp.html
Via Ana Cristina Pratas
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Leadershipwatch – Aad Boot Today’s and tomorrow’s leaders are more and more facing cross-cultural challenges caused by globalization, emerging economies and new markets. How to notice differences in cultures? How to understand their impact on people behavior and performance? How to avoid cross-cultural friction and conflict? How to lead people and teams with different cultural backgrounds? How to create successful collaboration and teamwork cross-border? Effectively dealing with cross-cultural challenges like these is rapidly becoming one of the key differentiators for effective leaders and successful companies. Read more: http://leadershipwatch-aadboot.com/2012/03/29/cross-cultural-leadership-how-to-create-people-alignment-part-1/
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10 Essential Leadership Models While there have been thousands of books written about leadership, there are a handful of leadership models that have served me well as a leader and leadership development practitioner. These are the tried and true models that have shifted my thinking about leadership and help create teachable leadership moments for others. Mind you, I’m not a scholar, so the models I favor tend to be simple, practical, and I have to had seen evidence that they are effective. Here are 10 leadership models that I believe any leader or aspiring leader should be familiar with (Kudos to Mind Tools for supplying many of the summaries in the links, and to Vou): Read more: http://www.greatleadershipbydan.com/2012/06/10-essential-leadership-models.html
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Guest post by Great Leadership regular contributor Beth Armknecht Miller: The Top 5 Leadership Mistakes: which one would your team members say you make? Over the years, I have worked with hundreds of leaders many who have displayed specific leadership shortfalls, that when improved, have had a positive impact on the effectiveness and profitability of the organization. Both new and experienced manager/leaders can make these top five mistakes; which one is your Achilles heel? And what is your plan to improve? Read more...
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Over the last several years our research on corporate leadership and HR has shown a dramatic trend: ===> successful businesses today are run by experts. <=== I don't mean experts at management, ===> but experts at the business itself. <===
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