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Category: Leadership (Page 12 of 19)

10 Great Lessons for Diplomats

In an article published on Foreign Policy, the American Diplomat and Deputy Secretary of State William J. Burns lists 10 observations on American diplomats that can be considered as useful advices for every diplomat:

1. Know where you come from.
2. It’s not always about us.
3. Master the fundamentals.
4. Stay ahead of the curve.
5. Promote economic renewal.
6. Connect leverage to strategy.
7. Don’t just admire the problem — offer a solution.
8. Speak truth to power.
9. Accept risk.
10. Remain optimistic.

Read the full article on Foreign Policy

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Image Source: Wikipedia – Public Domain

Ten key lessons for a successful collaborative leader

Collaborative leadership is a management practice focused on delivering results across boundaries, and leaders need to be clear about where the boundary lies and how to use the different capabilities on either side of it in order to build a positive and efficient relationship.

As the poet Robert Frost once put it, “Good fences make good neighbours”.

In the book Collaborative leadership – how to succeed in an interconnected world David Archer and Alex Cameron say that “getting value from difference is at the heart of the collaborative leader’s task… they have to learn to share control, and to trust a partner to deliver, even though that partner may operate very differently from themselves”.

Hence, they list ten key lessons for a successful collaborative leader:
1 – find the personal motive for collaborating;
2 – find ways of simplifying complex situations for your people;
3 – prepare for how you are going to handle conflict well in advance;
4 – recognize that there are some people or organisations you just can’t partner with;
5 – have the courage to act for the long term;
6 – actively manage the tension between focusing on delivery and on building relationships;
7 – invest in strong personal relationships at all levels;
8 – inject energy, passion and drive into your leadership style;
9 – have the confidence to share the credit generously;
10 – continuously develop your interpersonal skills, in particular: empathy, patience, tenacity, holding difficult conversations, and coalition building.

 

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Olof Palme in the early 1970s. Photo taken in Norra Bantorget during May Day

Image source: Wikimedia Commons http://goo.gl/wz0uzU

5 Leadership Tips by Abraham Lincoln

Abraham Lincoln gets a lot of credit for being a great leader.
Here’s what he did, why it works and how it can make you a better leader.

1.   Get out of the office and circulate among the troops:
Lincoln knew people were his best source of information. And accessibility built trust.
Guess what? Modern business theory backs him up. These days the management gurus call it “Managing by Wandering Around.”

2.      Persuade rather than coerce:
Does the modern research agree? Yes.
The #1 thing Harvard Business School teaches it’s MBA students about negotiation is “They need to like you”.

3.      Lead by being led:
Looking at the research,  the type of leadership that works in the toughest situations is Lincoln’s method: being democratic and listening.

4.      Encourage innovation:
Reward people for trying new things and don’t punish them for failure.

5.      Influence people by storytelling:
Facts and statistics are great but when people hear presentations what do they remember? The stories.

There’s a lot to learn from Lincoln!

For more: Lessons From Lincoln: 5 Leadership Tips History And Science Agree On

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Image source: Wikipedia

 

10 Things Happy Leaders Do Differently

Joseph Lalonde, a leaders’ coach, explains there are 10 Things Happy Leaders Do Differently.

1. Exercise: Happy leaders know they need to take care of their bodies.

2.  Care: Happy leaders care for their team.

3. Relax: Happy leaders know they need to take a break here and there.

4. Share: Happy leaders know they can’t keep everything to themselves.

5. Eat: Happy leaders know they need to eat. Eating can be a catalyst in getting to know others.

6. Teach: Happy leaders are also teachers.

7. Help: Happy leaders are always looking for the next person they can help.

8. Quiet: Happy leaders realize quiet times are a godsend.

9. Pass: Happy leaders are willing to pass on ideas that don’t align with their vision.

10. Laugh: Happy leaders are fond of laughing.

Read more: 10 Things Happy Leaders Do Differently.

 

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Image source: Flickrcindy47452 – (CC BY-NC-SA 2.0)

In a world of complex threats, our security and leadership depends on all elements of our power – including strong and principled diplomacy.

Barack Obama

 

8 Ways To Spot Great Leadership

If you ever wonder why we’re in a crisis of leadership all you have to do is to watch and listen to those in positions of leadership. While there are clearly many aspects of leadership that must work together in harmony in order for leaders to be effective, everything breaks down when leaders don’t understand how to engage effectively.

Leadership is not a monologue, a speech, a lecture or a filibuster.
Leadership is not talking at or over people.
Leadership is not about the leader.

The best leaders are not interested in who is right, but what is right. They not only embrace dissenting opinions, but they seek them out at every opportunity. Real leaders are just as at ease when unlearning as they are when learning. And perhaps most importantly, they never pass up an opportunity discuss, converse, dialog, or debate. They know that their leadership is only as good as their ability to engage, listen, discern, and to act.

Following are eight ways to spot real leadership:

1-Not about the platform
2-The art of and not or
3-Ubiquity
4-Not tone Deaf
5-Willing to take the hit
6-Understand Compromise
7-No paralysis
8-Alignment

Read More: Mike Myatt on Forbes

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Image source: Flickr – Photosteve101 – (CC BY 2.0)

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