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ProActiveLeadership

Logo of telegram channel proactiveleadership — ProActiveLeadership P
Logo of telegram channel proactiveleadership — ProActiveLeadership
Channel address: @proactiveleadership
Categories: Uncategorized
Language: English
Subscribers: 92
Description from channel

Leadership Theories, Transformational and Strategic Leaders, Proactive Law, Scenario Planning, and more
By: @yavar121

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The latest Messages

2018-10-24 10:45:30 Your words are among your greatest tools. They're a window into your vision, your values and your abilities. So, whether you're running a giant organization or just trying to herd a group toward a certain outcome, there are messages you need to communicate constantly in order to lead effectively.

Start every day planning to say each of these things to at least one person, and watch the results:

1. "This is the situation."
People want to know what's going on. Odds are, they'll find out anyway, or worse, fill in the gaps with conjecture. When you keep important things excessively close, you sap morale, rob yourself of your team's insights, and make people feel undervalued. Sound crazy to let them in on everything? Walmart founder Sam Walton did it for decades, and he did okay.

2. "Here is the plan."
A leader is supposed to lead. People will offer great suggestions, especially if you're saying and doing everything else on this list, but you need to be able to make decisions and stand behind them. Your team needs to know where you're trying to take them, and how. Also, don't forget the crucial corollary: You need to be able to say "no," especially to moves that would be inconsistent with your plan.

3. "What do you need?"
This is crucial for two reasons. First, people need to know that you care about them on personal and professional levels, and that you want them to succeed. Second, if you've put together a great plan, you need to leverage every person's abilities to the maximum extent possible. If they are not able to give it their all, you want to know why.

4. "Tell me more."
Let people know you're more interested in finding good answers than hearing yourself speak. Give others implicit permission to share their opinions--or heck, invite them explicitly, if you have to. Staying quiet is an invitation for others to offer ideas and insights.

5. "Remember our values."
You can't possibly stare over the shoulder of every person making decisions that affect your organization, but you can remind them to make choices that the rest of their team will be proud of. Reminding people of your values requires, of course, that you can actually articulate shared values.

6. "I trust you."
If you can't trust the people on your team, then they shouldn't be on your team. You need to trust their integrity, their judgment, their confidence and their passion--and you need to ensure that they understand how much you depend on them.

7. "You can count on me."
The flip side of that last point is true as well. If your team can't trust you, they shouldn't do you the great honor of letting you lead them. So tell them you've got their back, and then work like hell to fulfill the promises you make.

8. "We can do better."
One of the toughest, most crucial parts of leadership is to push your team to a higher standard than they might set for themselves. That means congratulating them when they do well, but also not coddling them when they don't live up to their potential. It also means admitting when you fail to live up to those standards, too.

9. "Let's celebrate!"
Don't create a culture in which the only reward for great work is more work. Instead, make it a practice to celebrate your wins, both large and small. This can mean big parties and bonuses, but it can be just as important to call people out for great work and congratulate them for their milestones--both professional and personal.

From Inc.com
337 viewsMohamed R. Yavar, edited  07:45
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2018-05-15 13:50:07
319 viewsMohamed R. Yavar, 10:50
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2017-06-11 03:24:02
Fred R. David Strategic Management Chapter 6 Strategy Analysis & Choices
673 views00:24
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2017-06-11 03:06:05
Fred R. David Strategic Management Chapter 5 Strategies in Action
635 viewsedited  00:06
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2017-06-11 02:50:47
Fred R. David Strategic Management Chapter 4 Internal Assessment
539 views23:50
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2017-06-11 02:33:49
Fred R. David Strategic Management Chapter 3 External Assessment
430 views23:33
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2017-06-11 02:19:10
Fred R. David Strategic Management Chapter 2 Vision & Mission
350 views23:19
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2017-06-11 02:03:46
Fred R. David Strategic Management Capter 1 Over View
330 viewsedited  23:03
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2017-05-30 02:34:06 Guidelines for Effective Strategic Management

1. It should be a people process more than a paper process.

2. It should be a learning process for all managers and employees.

3. It should be words supported by numbers rather than numbers supported by words.

4. It should be simple and nonroutine.

5. It should vary assignments, team memberships, meeting formats, and even the planning calendar.

6. It should challenge the assumptions underlying the current corporate strategy.

7. It should welcome bad news.

8. It should welcome open-mindness and a spirit of inquiry and learning.

9. It should not be a bureaucratic mechanism.

10. It should not become ritualistic, stilted, or orchestrated.

11. It should not be too formal, predictable, or rigid.

12. It should not contain jargon or arcane planning language.

13. It should not be a formal system for control.

14. It should not disregard qualitative information.

15. It should not be controlled by “technicians.”

16. Do not pursue too many strategies at once.

17. Continually strengthen the “good ethics is good business” policy.
344 views23:34
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2017-05-30 02:33:49 Pitfalls in Strategic Planning

• Using strategic planning to gain control over decisions and resources

• Doing strategic planning only to satisfy accreditation or regulatory requirements

• Too hastily moving from mission development to strategy formulation

• Failing to communicate the plan to employees, who continue working in the dark

• Top managers making many intuitive decisions that conflict with the formal plan

• Top managers not actively supporting the strategic-planning process

• Failing to use plans as a standard for measuring performance

• Delegating planning to a “planner” rather than involving all managers

• Failing to involve key employees in all phases of planning

• Failing to create a collaborative climate supportive of change

• Viewing planning as unnecessary or unimportant

• Becoming so engrossed in current problems that insufficient or no planning is done

• Being so formal in planning that flexibility and creativity are stifled
317 views23:33
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