Career and Leadership Strategies |
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CRG Weekly eZine
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August 13, 2007
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Greetings!
Many people are born leaders, yet the ability to lead is actually an
art and an amazing collection of skills which can be learned and
sharpened.
The following top ten daily habits will help you develop and grow as a leader personally, professionally, and spiritually.
 Andy Robinson Head Coach
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 Daily Habits for Developing the Art of Leadership
1. Spend 30 minutes each morning looking for "cracks" in the major areas of your life.
Your depth of character is key to determining your
success as a leader. It is easy for us to say that we are "living in
integrity," but your actions are the real indicators of strength of
character. Spend 30 minutes each morning looking at the major areas of
your life: career, marriage, family, community, and spirituality. Write
down any instances where you see "cracks" (you have cut corners,
something is inconsistent, you have not kept your word, you have been
dishonest, etc.) Do all in your power to repair those cracks by
apologizing and dealing with the consequences of your actions. After
facing up to past actions, begin a plan that will rebuild you and
prevent you from making further mistakes.
2. Show up and be ten minutes early for every appointment.
Great leaders show up for every appointment, and
they are always on time. Each day, practice not only showing up but
being ten minutes early for each and every appointment. "The early bird
gets the worm" has never been so true than when it applies to becoming
a great leader that others want to follow.
3. Be dedicated to a high level of learning.
Great leaders are highly competent, because they are
dedicated to a high level of learning, growth, and improvement. Spend
15-30 minutes each day devoted to learning something new. Do not settle
for knowing "how" to do something. Dig deeper by asking the question
"why" and then, go find the answer. Search the internet, interview an
expert, or take a day trip to find the answer to a question that is on
your mind or the minds of those who follow you.
4. Be simple and crystal clear in all communication.
As a leader, your communication should be simple,
clean, and clear as a bell. Examine both written and verbal
communication for simplicity and clarity. Use as few words as possible,
and eliminate jargon and "big words" from your vocabulary. Express
yourself in a way that your listeners can understand.
5. Surround yourself with great people.
One of the secrets of a great leader is great
people. Hire the right staff, surround yourself with a strong inner
circle, and spend time daily with people who have a variety of gifts.
With the support of a strong circle of men, women and children, you
will be ready for anything that comes your way.
6. Develop a sense of commitment and responsibility.
People do not follow leaders who are not committed
and responsible. Commitment and responsibility can be measured by the
hours you spend and how you spend them, the money you spend and how you
spend it, and by what you do for others. Spend 15 minutes each day
analyzing your time, your checkbook, and your volunteer work. Look
closely at how much time you spend with family and friends as compared
to work, how you spend your money, and how you give back to the
community. You may be very surprised at what you find.
7. Develop a positive attitude by altering your mind.
It is very possible to alter your attitude by
altering your mind. Saturate yourself daily with motivational
literature, positive people, and inspiring music/art. By conditioning
your mind to be more positive on a daily basis, you will find that
winning will be a daily reward of your life.
8. Accept responsibility.
Great leaders never play the role of a victim. They
recognize that part of being a great leader is being ultimately
responsible for all successes and failures. On a daily basis, analyze
your current projects, and ask yourself "Have I done all that needs to
be done? What have I not done that I should?" Once you have analyzed
each project, if you find a weakness, go the extra mile by working
extra hours, hiring an outside expert, or getting really creative to
repair the weakness or to turn it into a success!
9. Make self-discipline a part of your lifestyle.
What do you need to develop self-discipline?
Following a better diet or exercise routine? Getting up one hour
earlier? Being rigorous with your spending? Learning something new
every day? Eliminate excuse-making from your life, and begin to develop
habits that will invite self-discipline to become the foundation of
your life. Hire a coach to support you during the development of a
routine of self-discipline, and remove rewards until the job is done!
10. Develop courage by facing fear.
By a show of courage, you will inspire others to
follow and to walk in your footsteps. Spend 15-30 minutes each day
doing something simply for the sake of developing courage: speak to an
audience, make a difficult phone call, learn a new skill, write an
article, or visit someone you have always wanted to meet.
As Eleanor Roosevelt acknowledged: "You gain strength, courage, and
confidence by every experience in which you really stop to look fear in
the face. You are able to say to yourself, 'I lived through this
horror. I can take the next thing that comes along.' You must do the
thing you think you cannot do."
My thanks to the Coachville USA Team for their contribution of this article.
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The MindTools Newsletter
The August 7th issue of the MindTools Newsletter deals with the issue of:
Click HERE to review this excellent article by the team at MindTools.
The MindTools newsletter always contains cutting edge content relevant to business professionals. I hope you enjoy it!
Back-issues of the MindTools Newsletter can be found in the MindTools Newsletter Archives.
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Quotes to Inspire
LEADERSHIP/SUCCESS:
Don't tell people how to do things,
tell them what to do and let them surprise you with their results.
--George S. Patton
MOTIVATION/INSPIRATION:
My advice is
find fuel in failure. Sometimes failure gets you closer to where you want
to be.--Michael Jordan
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