Should Your Leaders All Think Alike?

 

I sometimes wonder why making great decisions seems to be such a challenge for many leaders and their teams.  Consider this scenario.  There are four key decision-makers in a meeting speaking about a process that is not working.  Feelings are running high and there is a great deal of heated debate.  Everyone has a different take on what the problem is and what the best solutions should be.  And they are all putting forward a strong case for their way of seeing and solving this. Continue reading Should Your Leaders All Think Alike?

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The ONE Ability that made Nelson Mandela A Great Leader

If you haven’t seen the movie ‘Invictus’ yet, I can highly recommend it.   Apart from a truly astonishing performance by Morgan Freeman as Mandela, this movie beautifully depicts the unmatched, absolutely unique leadership style of Nelson Mandela.

Mandela spent twenty seven years in a tiny prison cell on Robben Island for opposing apartheid.  And despite the hardships of this terrible experience, when he was eventually released and elected as South Africa’s first black president, he preached forgiveness and reconciliation.  Imagine that!  Almost 30 years in a tiny cell and he came out ready to forgive the people who put him there.  Continue reading The ONE Ability that made Nelson Mandela A Great Leader

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Is Leadership Alignment Really Possible?

Leadership alignment

Could it be possible that leadership alignment is a great goal to aspire towards but one that is probably very difficult to attain?  Think about it.  Let’s say that the CEO is surrounded by a team of 7 executive leaders.  The absolute ideal would be that they all feel a great sense of common purpose, that they all agree on the best way to achieve this, that they all speak to their teams and departments with one voice, that they all promote one vision and that they are all great role models of one set of company values. Continue reading Is Leadership Alignment Really Possible?

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Left-Brain.. Right Brain Thinker..Which are You?

Left Brain_ Right Brain

How do you feel about the topic of the left brain-right brain and its benefit to the performance of leaders and teams?  Here is why I am asking.  It seems to me that this extremely effective concept, that has enhanced the performance of leaders and teams around the world, is seriously misunderstood. Some leaders believe that it is a psychological concept; others believe that it is too soft and fluffy; and others have called it esoteric. Continue reading Left-Brain.. Right Brain Thinker..Which are You?

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The Leadership Mystery of 2010

The Leadership Mystery of 2010

LinkedInGroupsI have joined several excellent Leadership Groups in Linkedin and it has been a fascinating journey for me.  Reading the questions and comments of others, as well as the responses to my comments, what has ‘hit me on the side of the head’ is that although there are some truly well articulated ideas about what leadership is – there is absolutely nothing new! Great authors like Hamel and Prahalad, Peter Senge, Rowan Gibson, Kouzes and Posner, Stephen Covey and Jim Collins, amongst many others, have said everything we are saying in these online groups today.

Nothing new? So What Does That Mean?

And yet, every one of us, including myself, who keep the conversation going, thinks we see the light.  Each one of us thinks we have a new pearl of wisdom that can enlighten others about what leadership really is.  But truth be told, none of us have come up with anything that is radically different.  Don’t get me wrong about these groups.  I know that people are posing critical questions and the collective dialogue is causing some of us to re-frame our previous notions about leadership.  I have learned a great deal from participating in these groups.  Still I am struck by the fact that the leadership groups are now examining what it takes to be a true leader, because of the fact that this is a radically changing environment.  Yet, with all these bright minds we have not come up with anything radically new, in fact we are falling back into comfort zones.

Ground Zero

Leadership in 2010?This astonishes me because I think that as a result of everything that has happened in the past year, it is critical for us to realize that we are at ground zero on the issue of leadership.  And ground zero always requires a transformed approach, not a tweaking of the old approaches.

I have always thought that in times of declining growth we need to go beyond our comfort zones and seek a new way that addresses the new realities.   I would think that this is a time for us to go beyond what we already know and find a way to discover what we don’t know.

I am confused – as you may have noticed – and would love your thoughts about this:

  1. What are your beliefs about the idea that the basics of great leadership do not change, irrespective of a radically changed environment?
  2. If you believe we need to rethink leadership, how do we get past our traditional ingrained ideas?

I happen to think that the new way is Spirited Economics™, an approach where leaders use employee spirit as a quantifiable financial asset.  What do you see  new about this?

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