Get your brain in motion

Category: Management (Page 19 of 24)

What you should do on Friday afternoon

Jacquelyn Smith has published a post on Business insider about the 10 Things Successful People Do On Friday Afternoon.

Here is her list:
1. They reflect on their accomplishments from the week.
2. They figure out their priorities for the following week.
3. They establish a schedule and to-do list for the following week.
4. They carve out downtime for the following week.
5. They get organized.
6. They let people know how accessible they’ll be that weekend.
7. They think about their weekend plans.
8. They plan a fun Friday activity.
9. They acknowledge others’ accomplishments and hard work.
10. They say goodbye to people around the office.

To read the full article: http://www.businessinsider.com/successful-people-do-friday-afternoon-2014-5

database plan

Image source: Flickr tec_estromberg(CC BY 2.0)

 

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

6 Things Really Productive People Do

Sometimes, the key to success lies in organization. Kevin Daum, author of  the best seller Video Marketing for Dummies, has agreed to share with the online magazine Inc.com a series of suggestions on how to increase productivity so as to maximize those 24 hours we have each day.

The list includes:

  1. Prioritization
  2. Focusing on efficiency
  3. Integration of different activities
  4. Time management
  5. Active learning and, most importantly,
  6. Lightness

To find out more about the best path to productivity, read whole article at: bit.ly/1cm458c

4556099850_bcd9318b5bImage source: www.flickr.com/photos/smemon/4556099850/  by Sean MacEntee

Posted by Alice Rubini

What We Can Learn From Marching Band Leaders

Marching Band leaders during a parade represent a good example of how a leader should try to inspire others in order to support a particular dream or objective.  This is because every marching band leader, despite having its own particular style, is committed to keep the band members marching in perfect step and with gusto. Effective leadership is essentially about managing to empower others to stick to their mission. In her article, Terry Klass identifies a few ways which may help leaders in this fundamental task:

  • Clearly communicate the dream;
  • Ask for input about the dream;
  • Stay open in case a course correction is needed;
  • Keep everybody motivated.

Read the full article at: http://bit.ly/1icN9CL

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Image source: http://www.flickr.com/photos/11223807@N04/7581144810/sizes/o/

Proposed by: Ruben Caruccio

Seven Ways To Become a Better Leader

Some believe leadership is a gift. Others think it is possible to learn to be a leader.

For those who wish to strengthen their leadership skills, Laura Entis provides seven points to help you become a better leader:

1. Do not be scared to fail big

2. Banish self-doubt by acknowledging your accomplishments

3. Do not settle for the standard solution

4. Focus on results, not style

5. Always keep improving

6. Learn to act like an introvert and an extrovert

7. Cultivate generosity

Read the full article here.

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Image source: Pixabay – Image by OpenClips

Leadership Without Ego

What is true leadership? Can it be taught?

During TEDxESCP, Bob Davids – entrepreneur and visionary – explains the difference between leadership and management and stresses the importance of leadership without ego.
According to Mr. Davids, management implies control and if you push people you cannot predict what they will do.
Analyzing examples of famous leaders like Gandhi, he affirms that if you can lead people and get them to follow you, then you have the skills to be a leader.
But leadership is a gift and cannot be bought.
Leadership without ego is thus the most valuable commodity and the rarest in the planet.

Four Behaviors You Never Want To See In A Leader

Defining the skills and competencies which make an effective leader is difficult.

Nonetheless, there are behaviors a leader should avoid as they do not create value for people.

Jeff Boss, consultant at the McChrystal Group, lists four of them:

1. Complaining

2. Emotional volatility

3. Playing nice

4. Micromanagement

Read the full article here.

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Image source: www.freedomainpictures.net – http://bit.ly/PIzr1I – Image by Piotr Siedlecki

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