Showing posts with label leadership. Show all posts
Showing posts with label leadership. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 8, 2013

Tip Tuesday

99 Ways to Become a Better Leader

Do you consider yourself as someone who’s “in charge?” Do you manage and motivate other people to accomplish a task or get work done, other than yourself? If so, you’re probably in some sort of managerial role.

But are you a leader? Believe it or not, there is a difference. Managers, well, manage people. They sort out what it is that has to be done, and then make sure the right people do it. Leaders, however, share a unique vision with people and supply the necessary values and skills to move people to really want to accomplish things; leaders touch people emotionally. If you consider yourself a leader, or are interested in becoming one, you must first understand that becoming a good leader is a process, one that never ends. Here’s a few tips (actually 99 of them) to guide you on your journey to becoming a better leader and manager.

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Planning & Strategy

1. Understand what the core principles of being a leader are. It’s not about power, but rather about installing direction and influencing others to follow that direction.
2. Do you have the character traits to be a successful leader? If not, can you learn them?
3. There are different ways of managing people; Develop a leadership style.
4. As a leader or manager, you’re constantly soaking up information. Know how to properly collect that information.
5. Know how to use proper coordination between people and technology.
6. As you build your machine, know how to maintain it.
7. Constantly analyze progress.
8. Be prepared. Not every disaster will involve nature, but the process of preparation can be the same.
9. Use prevention methods, keeping filth out of not only your trash cans but out of your employees as well.
10. If a bomb does drop, be ready to recover from it and move on.

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Team Building

11. Know how to hire good employees.
12. During the interview process, make sure to ask the right questions.
13. Compensate: know when and how much to pay your team.
14. Build trust; this has to work both ways (you trust your team and your team trusts you.)
15. Develop and communicate your vision so the team can help achieve goals.
16. Show commitment to those goals and ask the same from your staff.
17. Understand the core value of employee inclusion and it’s effects.
18. Interdependence – making sure your employees are sharing responsible principles.
19. Guide your team by being a strong influence, and let yourself be influenced by other leaders.
20. Control the climate or the feel of your organization.

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Communication

21. Make sure you are aware of proper etiquette, especially amongst other business elite.
22. Ethics play a huge role in both the workplace as well as your company’s image in your industry.
23. Strong public speaking abilities will help you get the message across to larger groups.
24. Keep your employees up-to-date with things they need to know.
25. Don’t be shady with your team.
26. Be aware of not only your body language but everyone else’s as well.
27. Improve your listening skills.
28. Speak clearly and concisely.
29. Develop your ability to negotiate.
30. Make sure to keep your cool when dealing with difficult situations.

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Build Trust & Confidence

31. First, be sure to really understand the definition of trust.
32. Try to believe in your team, and work extra hard to find the good in people.
33. Reduce your sense of competition, as well as the same within the company.
34. In order to accept new people, things, and ideas into your life, you’ll need to have an open mind.
35. Appear more creditable and real by allowing yourself to show a little vulnerability.
36. Be prepared to face your fears, because doing so will conserve your energy and empower you.
37. Know your strong points and when to use them.
38. Work hard to improve on your weak points and shortcomings.
39. Look at yourself in a different way.
40. Exude confidence and your charisma will draw people to you.

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Time Management

41. Setting goals will help you focus on getting important things done first.
42. Have an action plan you can use to achieve those goals.
43. Stop procrastinating, and you’re attitude about work will change.
44. You can’t do it all yourself; know when and how to delegate work.
45. Get rid of any and all kinds of distractions while working.
46. Keep track of your life by writing things down.
47. Learn to say no; you’ll save lots of time focusing on the most important tasks.
48. Just like in college, you can’t party and study at the same time. Try to keep a schedule.
50. Know your bad habits (and how to break them).

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Being Responsible

51. Show character by being responsible for your actions.
52. Be responsible for your name, brand, and company.
53. Make sure you practice what you preach.
54. As a responsible leader, you must always be aware of what you’re saying.
55. Create responsible employees, but also be responsible for their actions.
56. Assume responsibility, even if something is not your fault.
57. Take care of your health. If you don’t care for yourself, why would anyone think you care at all?
58. Teach responsibility to others, including your children.
59. Constantly work on building a strong team.
60. Showcase social responsibility.

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Never Stop Learning

61. Continue to build your leadership skills by reading management and leadership books.
62. Subscribe to some of the many business and management magazines on the newsstand today.
63. Keep a leadership blog to document your learning.
64. Don’t feel ashamed to take some online leadership courses; it’s always good to brush up on things.
65. Attend management seminars.
66. Find yourself a mentor; their wisdom will prove to be priceless.
67. Hone your skills through community involvement.
68. Don’t be afraid to learn from your employees and associates.
69. Embrace new technology, for it will only help you grow smarter.
70. Understand and learn from yourself.

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Become a role model

71. Maintain a positive attitude – always.
72. A great leader portrays strength before power.
73. Lead by example.
74. Demonstrate acts of chivalry.
75. Treat customers and coworkers with respect.
76. Be sure to dress for success.
77. Always encourage others; they will probably encourage you back.
78. Be calm and show patience in your efforts.
79. Know how to properly manage life’s disappointments, both inside and outside of work.
80. Value all life.

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Know When to Be Real

81. Show your employees (and customers!) that you really do care about them.
82. Know that it’s okay to share your emotions from time to time.
83. Allow people to see your shortcomings.
84. Try not to sugarcoat things because you’re afraid of conflict.
85. Do not lie to your employees about what’s going on.
86. Times will come when you have to put your foot down and correct employees when they are wrong.
87. Be sure to look and learn from your employee’s vantage point.
88. Promote job “ownership”, even if it entails seeing the ups and downs of business.
89. For everybody’s sake, make sure you have a life outside of work.
90. Have fun at work! It will show..

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Give Back

91. Make it a point for you and your business to donate to charity.
92. Or, start your own charity or benefit.
93. Help your employees learn and develop.
94. Good leadership means sharing your knowledge
95. Give raises to your team; just be mindful of how you do it.
96. Recognize good performances and award it.
97. Give your employees discounts and perks.
98. Use your skills and knowledge to write a book.
99. Reach out to youth and become a teacher.

You may be thinking to yourself, “how can I learn how to be all of these things?” You can’t, at least not all at once. Understand that becoming a better leader can only be done by growing, learning and practicing. It will take a lot of time and even more effort, and is not going to be learned overnight. Just make sure each and everyday, both at work and in your personal life, that you take the time to better yourself as a person and strive to make the world around you a better place as well. People will start to take notice, and before you know it, you’ll be well on your way to becoming that great leader you always wanted to be.

To view the original article CLICK HERE

Monday, January 7, 2013

Making It Big Monday

Be a leader in your career


To stay on top of your profession, set up a plan with these five strategies

Many professionals are busy with their respective roles in their workplaces.
If you want to stay on top of your career and be visible to your top management for career advancement, you have to do more than just being busy.
If you want to become a leader in your career, you must have an unwavering belief that you can indeed achieve that goal.
It is evident that those who set a plan in place and work the plan get farther faster than those who don’t.

There are five key strategies for career success:
Set a vision
You need to create your own set of objectives and life goals.
Steven Covey, in his bestselling The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People, gives evidence of the importance of visioning success.
He identifies Habit 2 as “Begin with the end in mind”.
He explains that all things are created twice — first in the mental world, and second in the physical world.
Most actions that fail, fail in the first creation.
Here are three simple ways to set a vision:
  • Self-coaching questions (What does your ideal work environment look like? What work activities are you enjoying?);
  • Set SMART goals (Specific, Measurable, Acceptable, Realistic and Tangible); and
  • Create a Vision Board — a simple yet powerful visualisation tool that activates the universal law of attraction to begin manifesting your dreams into reality.
Personal career branding
Personal career branding is a way of clarifying and communicating what makes you different and special, and using those qualities to guide your career or business decisions.
It is about understanding your unique attributes — your strengths, values and passions — and using them to separate yourself from your competitors or peers.
Here are three simple ways to build your brand:
  • Be passionate (Be enthusiastically engaged in what you do);
  • Deliver value (Contribute to the bottom-line success of an organisation); and
  • Be a blessing (Be a pleasure to work with).
Network effectively
I am sure a lot of people know the importance of networking. But what is its true essence?
It is more than just attending company functions or participating in projects.
Get yourself on the radar screen and make meaningful contributions to people who could be influential to your career.
Three simple ways to get you known in the organisation are:
  • Be on your supervisor’s radar screen first;
  • Volunteer to present your ideas to the management; and
  • Be available — if possible, sit in on important meetings.
Create your own training plan
To stay relevant, you need to pursue your own professional development plan.
Gain the skills and knowledge needed to contribute greater value to your employer.
Author and social philosopher Eric Hoffer said: “In times of drastic change, it is the learners who inherit the future. The learned usually find themselves equipped to live in a world that no longer exists.”
Don’t wait around for your employer to tell you what to get trained in.
Look at people who are your role models in your career path.
Three simple ways to create your own training plan:
  • Evaluate current skills with present job requirements (Are there any gaps?);
  • Search appropriate training catalogues or check online for new courses or skills that will benefit your career plan; and
  • Request training on a quarterly basis.
Get supportive people
Always surround yourself with supportive people — coach, mentors, peers and friends — and carefully limit your contact with “energy-draining” people.
Who do you have in your life that has your best interests at heart, with absolutely no ulterior motives?
Here are three simple ways to get supportive people:
  • Work with a coach (Many others have a coach, why not you?);
  • Find a mentor (Make sure the potential mentor has the right experience and insights); and
  • Gather your resources (What kind of support will enable you to make the changes happen?).
Strategic planning is critical. What you want to be a number of years from now will depend on how you execute these five strategies in becoming a leader in your career.

To view the original article CLICK HERE

Wednesday, December 19, 2012

Witty Wednesday

20 funny (yet strangely motivational) quotations on leadership

Quotations on leadership have always been popular for people in the business world, particularly with managers and people at Director and CEO level. These types of quotes can be inspirational, insightful, motivational, moving and make you think. And if a few of them make you laugh out loud and have a little bit of a chuckle in the process then that is even better!
We have handpicked twenty of our favourite funny leadership quotes, ranging throughout time and history and from a varied group of individuals: world leaders, comedians and even the anonymous. They vary from the weirdly unusual to those that are just downright amusing.

We hope that you enjoy them...

The list

  1. "Ten soldiers wisely led will beat a hundred without a head." - Euripides
  2. "It is a well-known fact that those people who must want to rule people are, ipso facto, those least suited to do it... anyone who is capable of getting themselves made President should on no account be allowed to do the job." - Douglas Adams
  3. "The question, 'Who ought to be boss?', is like asking, 'Who ought to be the tenor in the quartet?' Obviously, the man who can sing tenor." - Henry Ford
  4. "I am more afraid of an army of 100 sheep led by a lion than an army of 100 lions led by a sheep." - Talleyrand
  5. "You can build a throne with bayonets, but you can't sit on it for long." - Boris Yeltsin
  6. "To lead the people, walk behind them." - Lao Tzu
  7. "It's hard to lead a cavalry charge if you think you look funny on a horse." - Adlai Stevenson
  8. "It is a terrible thing to look over your shoulder when you are trying to lead - and find no one there." - Franklin D. Roosevelt
  9. "A real leader faces the music, even when he doesn't like the tune." - Anonymous
  10. "Only one man in a thousand is a leader of men - the other 999 follow women." - Groucho Marx
  11. "When trouble arises and things look bad, there is always one individual who perceives a solution and is willing to take command. Very often, that person is crazy." - Dave Barry
  12. "If you make people think they're thinking, they'll love you. If you really make them think, they'll hate you." - Don Marquis
  13. "The leadership instinct you are born with is the backbone. You develop the funny bone and the wishbone that go with it." - Elaine Agather
  14. "Leadership, like swimming, cannot be learned by reading about it." - Henry Mintzberg
  15. "You do not lead by hitting people over the head - that's assault, not leadership." - Dwight Eisenhower
  16. "A man who wants to lead the orchestra must turn his back on the crowd." - Max Lucado
  17. "Being powerful is like being a lady. If you have to tell people you are, you aren't!" - Margaret Thatcher
  18. "A leader has to appear consistent. That doesn't mean he has to be consistent." - James Callahan
  19. "Life is like a dogsled team. If you ain't the lead dog, the scenery never changes." - Lewis Grizzard
  20. "Lead, follow or get out of the way!" - Anonymous

To view the original article CLICK HERE