Posts Tagged ‘Leadership Development’

Follow Your Passion

Wednesday, March 23rd, 2011
“If you follow your bliss, doors will open for you that would not have opened for anyone else.”  – Joseph Campbell

During a recent speaking engagement  a 30-something year old man in the audience rasised his hand and asked, “Do you think passion is important for business leaders?”

My response was, “I think it is the most important ingrediant for success.  You can be intelligent and have great skills as a leader, but without true passion you don’t really reach the zenith.  Without true passion you settle for mediocrity.”

Chances are you are a passionate person.  People who become leaders usually do so because of their enthusiasm for their work, their mission,  for life itself.  We’ve all been around those people.  The air around them seems to crackle with the energy that their excitement radiates.  Wouldn’t you like to be one of those charismatic and passionate  leaders?

Passion drives your purpose.  It’s an internal motivation that keeps you going even when there’s no tangible reward in sight and no reason to stay the course.  It’s a fire that burns despite others’ attempts to extinguish it.

Reflect on the steps you can take to live your passion and then TAKE ACTION:
Be passionate about the work you do.
Have genuine concern for the people you lead.
Express your enthusiasm for what you do both in your work life and your personal life.
Keep external forces from robbing you of your passion.
Continue to strive to make a difference in the world.
Encourage others to live their passion, too.

Live your passion!  Share it with others every chance you get.  I make it a point to mentor and coach others to find their passion and, as Joseph Campbell states,  follow their “bliss”.  You wil feel a great sense of fulfillment and happiness in life and work.

Your Influence as a Leader

Monday, March 21st, 2011
“ There is no power on earth that can neutralize the influence of a high, simple and useful life.  ”  – Booker T. Washington 

Who is watching you?  Who are you influencing with your words and actions?  Are you proud of the influence you have had in your volunteer role, family or workplace?

Leadership is such an integral part of directing others that John C. Maxwell defines leadership as influence.  Both leaders and followers alike are influencers, for good or for not-so-good outcomes.  But a leader’s influence is more extensive and carries greater immediate consequences as a result.

As a leader, your responsibility is to ensure that you are an influencer for the good of the organization.  One question, “What’s best for all concerned?”, should guide your minute-by-minute decisions.

Per Maxwell’s definition, if you aren’t influencing, you aren’t leading, no matter what the sign over your office door or your website bio indicates.  Here is the key:  Genuine leaders have a group of followers who have willingly placed themselves under the influence of the leader. Bosses may think of themselves as leaders, and many of them are, but in some cases their “followers” only follow because they have been told to.  And they resist their boss’ influence as much as possible.  Haven’t you seen these sort of passive-aggressive employees who are sabbotaging their supervisor?  It is ugly!

True leadership occurs when your life, your wisdom and your expertise “flow in” to the lives of the people you lead. Because we as leaders are so visible, both inside and outside of the workplace, it’s our responsibility to be sure that our behaviors and  influence produces positive results.

Steps you can take to increase your positive influence on others:
Remember that what is flowing on the inside is also flowing into the lives of others.
Make sure your influence is a positive one.
Be aware of your own role models and who is influencing your decisions.
Realize that the quality of your followers is partially a reflection of your ability to lead.
Be honest about your leadership weaknesses and seek ways to improve.

Being an influencial leader can be very rewarding.  Seek to always be the person of great and positive influence that you know you can be.

Influential Leadership: You Never Know When Those Seeds Will Sprout!

Thursday, March 17th, 2011

“Do not follow where the path may lead. Go instead where there is no path and leave a trail.”  ~Ralph Waldo Emerson

Who do you influence?  Who could you influence?  Have you ever thought about how far your leadership reaches?

This amazes me.  I received a note today from a Rotarian named Ruth who I had the pleasure of getting to know while leading an exchange team to Australia for Rotary International last year.  Her words made my heart sing!

She wrote that becuase of my “influential leadership” in explaining to her club that I was a Paul Harris Society member, she started a PHS chapter in her Rotary District and became a charter member.  To make it more exciting, RI President Ray Klingensmith, who my Rotary Club hosted last November, was able to attend her PHS charter dinner.  I was overjoyed with the news and thrilled to have had some of my planted seeds sprout up!

When I was visiting Australia and spoke of my love of The Rotary Foundation to all of the clubs I visited, I received many questions.  In Australia it is customary not to “purchase” a Paul Harris Fellow by contributing money to the Rotary Foundation, but rather it is “awarded” to a Rotarian for demonstrating service above self. I had to explain that in the US, we have both ways of obtaining a Paul Harris Fellow, and that both are very acceptable ways of achieving the leadership status that the award confers.

Ruth Little is an amazing woman and a great Rotarian, as is Past President Ingrid Mooney, who introduced us.  Ruth and husband Peter’s service work with orphans is being showcased by Australian Rotary District 9790 and DG Alan Anderson this weekend.

This is a great reminder to me, and I hope to you, that our leadership reaches others  through our words and actions.  We are influencing others every minute of every day.  Let’s strive to continue to be influential leaders with a positive impact on the lives of those we connect with. Ask yourself, “Whose life am I affecting today?”   You never know where those little seeds you planted will sprout!


 

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