Thursday 12 January 2017

Improvement is a process, not a destination.

Some great advice, that I intend to work with in 2017.

'Work to improve one aspect of your leadership and make a few obvious improvements. Then turn your attention to something else, don't get stuck in one place tweaking the same thing!'

10 steps on the journey to improvement:

  1. Identify and maximize high impact activities. Make a list of everything you’re doing. Rank each item on the list by the impact it has on desired results. Use a scale of one to ten.
  2. Choose one high impact activity to improve this month or quarter. You might improve your one-on-ones or strengthen relationships on your teams. You might decide to address a pain point, seize an opportunity, or maximize someone’s strengths.
  3. Determine an outcome.
  4. Identify behaviors that might achieve desired results.
  5. What behaviors might hinder desired results? (What do you need to stop?)
  6. Choose a time-frame that provides a sense of urgency, a month or quarter.
  7. Evaluate at the end of the time-frame.
    • What did you try?
    • How did it work?
    • Celebrate progress. Reject the need for perfection.
  8. Stabilize and systematize.
  9. Focus on improving something else. Return to improve the same area in six months.
  10. Identify and minimize low impact activities on your list. Yes, you still have to fill out reports.

Thursday 5 January 2017

3 MISTAKES LEADERS CAN MAKE WHEN EMBARKING ON A NEW YEAR!

A great psot by Dave Kraft.

Many of us (hopefully most of us) are excited about a new year of ministry; new ideas, new initiatives, new enthusiasm and optimism after the Christmas holidays. It’s a brand new year, brand new opportunities, brand new direction from the Lord of 
But, as leaders,  there are some mistakes we can make as we set sail for 2017. Eric Geiger shares three of them with us.
Originally posted by Eric Geiger
Three mistakes leaders make when starting a new year
Here is a typical scene the week after Christmas…
A leader gets some rest, feels rejuvenated, and the burden to lead the team better in the New Year starts to grow. The leader reads a book, favorites a dozen blogs, listens to some leadership training on a variety of topics, and is fired up for the first meeting with the team he/she leads. In the midst of the enthusiasm, here are 3 common mistakes leaders make as a new year begins:

1. TOO MANY GOALS

A common mistake when a leader re-emerges from rest or when a leader feels the need to give new direction (as a calendar year turns this is common) is to bring too many goals to the team. Too many goals means none of them receives adequate attention.

2. YET ANOTHER NEW STATEMENT

When writing about leaders forming values and mission statements, Jim Collins articulated that leaders spend far too much time crafting language and far too little time aligning actions to the language in place. Are there times to bring a new mission and value statement to the team? Absolutely. But most often what is needed is not a new statement but an actual commitment to the one already in place. Most of the time executing what has already been declared is the bigger deficiency. Typically it is not the mission statement that needs work but the commitment to it and execution against it.

3. WHAT BEFORE WHY

Leaders will often read and listen, as we should, to others in the field. A common mistake, though, is to grab tactics from a plethora of places without understanding the heart and philosophy behind the tactics. Thus a mix of tactics can easily be a mix of different philosophies and approaches. A wise leader frames the “what” in the sacred “why” of the team’s mission. All learning should be contextualized to the team. The “why” must go before the “what,” and every “what” should be rooted in the “why.”
It is a blessing to start a new year as a leader, to be able to lead a group of people in a direction, to be privileged to steward resources for a great mission. The newness of a new year causes leaders to have much hope and optimism. But these mistakes can derail you.