Leadership Minute: Keep Your Focus

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E. Joseph Cossman said, “Obstacles are things a person sees when he takes his eyes off his goal.” Focusing on your goals is essential to your leadership. Your vision and path to success is contingent upon your ability to focus and work your vision. But distractions happen. We get pulled in different directions and we are tempted to take our eyes off of our goals.  While you can expect challenges on the road to success it is important that you not allow them consume you to the point that they are all you see. Keep your focus, work your plan, stay on course, and finish strong.

 

 

If you enjoy reading the “Leadership Minute” you will especially enjoy reading Doug’s books, Leaders Without Borders & Great Leaders Wanted! Visit Doug’s website to order your copies today!

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Leadership Minute: Keep What Matters

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Victor Hugo said, “Change your opinions, keep your principles; change your leaves, keep intact your roots.” As you grow as a leader you will notice your opinions change.  Time, experience, and maturity have a way of molding each of us. What is important along the way is to anchor deep to the things that shape us. Faith, family, and values tend to be those primary anchors. While opinions change and the leaves have their seasons, stay true to that which defines you. In matters of opinion be willing to change. Concerning your principles keep your roots intact. Keep what matters.

 

 

If you enjoy reading the “Leadership Minute” you will especially enjoy reading Doug’s books, Leaders Without Borders & Great Leaders Wanted! Visit Doug’s website to order your copies today!

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Leadership Minute: How Big Do You Dream?

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David Joseph Schwartz said, “Think little goals and expect little achievements. Think big goals and win big success.” The size of your success is proportional to the size of your dreams. It’s as you dare to believe big dreams that you will achieve big success. What holds you back from pursuing your dream? Perhaps it’s a fear of failure? Could it be a lack of confidence? The first step toward achieving your big goals is a belief that you can achieve it.  Don’t settle for anything less than a belief system that fully embraces all that you are capable of achieving. Dream big!

 

 

If you enjoy reading the “Leadership Minute” you will especially enjoy reading Doug’s books, Leaders Without Borders & Great Leaders Wanted! Visit Doug’s website to order your copies today!

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The Power of Listening

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Courage is what it takes to stand up and speak; courage is also what it takes to sit down and listen. – Winston Churchill

The story is told of Franklin Roosevelt, who often endured long receiving lines at the White House. He complained that no one really paid any attention to what was said. One day, during a reception, he decided to try an experiment. To each person who passed down the line and shook his hand, he murmured, “I murdered my grandmother this morning.”

The guests responded with phrases like, “Marvelous! Keep up the good work. We are proud of you. God bless you, sir.” It was not until the end of the line, while greeting the ambassador from Bolivia, that his words were actually heard. Bewildered, the ambassador leaned over and whispered, “I’m sure she had it coming.”

For leaders, there is nothing quite as important as listening. In fact, according to a report in Business News Daily (http://bit.ly/ABntlJ) it ranks as one of the top reasons why employees hate their bosses – they do not listen. To be sure, there is a time and place for leaders to step up and speak up, but the truly effective ones know when to be quiet and listen.  Here are three tips to becoming a better listener and why it matters.

To be informed, listen with your ears. This is the most basic form of your communication as a leader. Listening for informational purposes is primarily to receive information that one needs to perform a task or make a decision. It has little to do with anything beyond what is communicated at the time of delivery. And in some cases this is perfectly acceptable and appropriate given the circumstances.

But as a leader if this is your primary form of communication then you are not engaged with your team and are likely experiencing some form of deficiency with respect to how they view your leadership. Listening to be informed is necessary at times, but if you want to lead on a higher level you will have to step up.

To connect, listen with your heart. Informational listening is appropriate at times, but to lead on a higher level you will have to listen on a higher level. When your team members buy into your vision, when their passions are your passions, and when your goals become theirs goals – then listening to your team takes on a whole new meaning. And it is when you listen with your heart that you connect with their heart.

As a leader there is nothing more powerful than the ability to connect with those around you. Be it your staff, clients, or shareholders. The most meaningful and effective way of doing that is found when hearts are connected. Whatever the challenges you face or the goals you have if you have made that connection then together you can face it and together you can achieve it.

To demonstrate (listening), let your actions show it. Listening in some ways can be like paying lip service. You can go through the motions of listening but at the end of the day nothing changes. The same problems exist tomorrow that existed today and the levels of frustration only worsen. But as a leader who has made the connection with his people, the ultimate show of respect is given when you follow up with your actions.

To be sure, not every idea and not every proposal is going to be a fit. But the respect you show by listening builds your credibility as a leader and fosters a culture of respect. The greatest thing you can do as a leader is to create the climate in which ideas are welcomed and everyone has a voice that is heard.

Are you listening?

 

© 2013 Doug Dickerson

 

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Leadership Minute: One Step Away

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Napoleon Hill said, “Most great people have attained their greatest success just one step beyond their greatest failure.” One of the myths of success is that it is built upon a continuous succession of good breaks, right choices, or having the “Midas touch” where everything always goes right. The reality for most is that success is achieved in spite of many failures and a determination not to give up. Your success as a leader will be achieved not because you didn’t fail but because you dared to take one more step. The next time you have a setback or failures don’t give up. Your next step could be your defining moment. Take it!

 

 

If you enjoy reading the “Leadership Minute” you will especially enjoy reading Doug’s books, Leaders Without Borders & Great Leaders Wanted! Visit Doug’s website to order your copies today.

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Leadership Minute: Be a Friend

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Dale Carnegie said, “You can make more friends in two months by becoming interested in other people than you can in two years by trying to get other people interested in you.” This is one of those simple yet profound truisms of leadership. It’s when we show genuine interest in others that we make lasting friendships. We go so wrapped up in trying to get others interested in us that we fail to see how one-sided we’ve become. The leadership challenge is to get back to the basics. It’s when we seek to be a friend that we make friends. It’s when we show interest in others that others become interested in us. Be a friend!

 

 

If you enjoy reading the “Leadership Minute” you will especially enjoy reading Doug’s books, Leaders Without Borders & Great Leaders Wanted! Visit Doug’s website to order your copies today.

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Leadership Minute: The Courage to Listen

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Winston Churchill said, “Courage is what it takes to stand up and speak; courage is also what it takes to sit down and listen.” Leaders need courage on both fronts. But what I have discovered over the years is that I learn more by listening than I do by talking. To be sure, there is a time and place as a leader to speak. But the wisdom of leadership more times than not is found in the ability to listen and reflect upon the situation at hand. Don’t be afraid to listen. In fact, embrace it.  You can be just as effective as a leader by practicing the art of listening as you can by speaking. Wouldn’t you agree?

 

 

If you enjoy reading the “Leadership Minute” you will especially enjoy reading Doug’s books, Leaders Without Borders & Great Leaders Wanted! Visit Doug’s website to order your copies today.

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Leadership Minute: You Don’t Need a Title

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Brian Tracy said, “Become the kind of leader that people would follow voluntarily; even if you had no title or position.” One of the greatest misconceptions about leadership is that it’s your position or title that makes you a leader. You become the kind of leader that others want to follow not because of your position but because of your passion. Others follow you not because of your title but because of your example. You are followed not because you are selfish but because you are a servant. At the end of the day people voluntarily follow you as a leader not out of coercion but because you touched their heart- and you don’t need a title to do that.

 

 

If you enjoy reading the “Leadership Minute” you will especially enjoy reading Doug’s books, Leaders Without Borders & Great Leaders Wanted! Visit Doug’s website to order your copies today!

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Leadership Minute: How Do You See Yourself?

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Zig Ziglar said, “You cannot perform in a manner inconsistent with the way you see yourself.” This is certainly a truism of leadership. The way in which you see yourself is the manner in which you will perform. The way you see others in large part determines the way you treat them. How you treat them influences the way they perform. The challenge as a leader is to see yourself and others through the eyes of grace and possibilities. It’s through eyes of grace that we are able to move forward despite what we see. It’s through the eyes of possibilities that we move forward with courage. When you join the two you have great potential.

 

 

If you enjoy reading the “Leadership Minute” you will especially enjoy reading Doug’s books, Leaders Without Borders & Great Leaders Wanted! Visit Doug’s website to order your copies today.

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Know When To Let Go

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When you have got an elephant by the hind legs and he is trying to run away, it’s best to let him go. – Abraham Lincoln

A well-known story in some sectors of coastal communities such as where I live is that of the crab mentality. It is used to describe selfish or short-sighted people whose thinking bends toward the notion of, “If I can’t have it, neither can you”.

The crab basket mentality says that if you have a pot of crabs and one is climbing out in an effort to escape then the others will pull him back down rather than allow it to go free.  The other crabs had rather share the same doomed fate than allow another among its ranks to climb out.

As a leader you may find yourself in a crab basket with others who have the same intentions for you. You get the raise or promotion and inevitably someone is jealous and you feel that subtle tug. You landed that coveted new account and strangely now begin to feel the claws of others around you. Every time you make an effort to move up and better yourself you have to resist the tug of those who would like to pull you down and hold you back. But you have to learn to let them go. Here are three things to consider as you climb out of the crab basket.

Let go of your past. Before anyone in your present can restrict you in a negative way you must lighten your load and let go of negative things from your past. So long as you hold on to past defeats, mistakes, or bad attitudes you will never climb to the heights you desire.

Your climb to the top of the basket begins when you make peace with your past and place yourself in a position to climb unencumbered toward your goals and dreams. When you let go of the past you can create your future. Your climb up begins here. You may have to forgive others; you may have to forgive yourself. But you will not move up so long as you allow your past to hold you down.

Let go of bad people. This is perhaps one of the hardest things to learn as a leader. But if you are ever going to climb your way to the top of the basket and live above the level of mediocrity you will have to separate yourself from those who want to hold you down.

It may be hard because up until now you may have seen these crabs as your friends. They have been colleagues; you have enjoyed happy hour together, and thought of them as allies. But keep this in mind – good people do not try to sabotage your success they celebrate it. Good people do not try attempt to pull you down and but had rather climb up with you. As a leader you have to wise up and recognize that not everyone in the pot with you wants to see you succeed. Be strong enough to acknowledge it and have the courage when necessary to climb alone.

Let go of small dreams. In the bottom of the crab basket there is not much room for growth and the view is always the same. The way out is up. It’s when you fix your eyes on larger dreams and possibilities that you begin to realize that life in the basket is never going to change. The road to your improvement begins with the choice to climb out.

It’s been written and asked many times but I will share it again here: What would you attempt to do if you knew that you could not fail? What are you dreams? I don’t know what’s in your heart but I do know this to be true – until you let go of your past, and let go of bad people, you will always have small dreams. It’s time to let go of every bad attitude, toxic relationship, and negative influence that would attempt to pull you down.

Your way out begins with by taking the first step. Let go and start climbing!

 

© 2013 Doug Dickerson

If you enjoy reading Doug’s columns and the “Leadership Minute” you will especially enjoy reading his books, Leaders Without Borders & Great Leaders Wanted! Visit his website to order your copies today!

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