Archives For leaders

The wisdom offered in Simon Sinek’s inspirational post of the day:

“A team’s job is to provide their leader more options. The leader’s job is to give their team the resources to do so.”

will only work if your work environment/department/group operates as a team and you have the right leader.

Unfortunately not enough work settings function as teams and not enough leaders recognize that their priority is to power and equip their teams and most work groups aren’t interested in offering their leaders options. You need both components to make have an highly efficient and productive work environment.

Seth Godin argues the Internet has ended mass marketing and revived a human social unit from the distant past: tribes.

Herding Cats

Dwayne Harapnuik —  June 15, 2011 — Leave a comment

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In his blog Intentional Leadership Michael Hyatt compares project management to herding cats and points to the following similarities:

  1. Cats are solitary animals.
  2. Cats are seemingly aloof.
  3. Cats are easily distracted.

These same similarities or attributes also easily be shared with the academy. I can easily say this about faculty because I am one and I know that I and many of my colleagues are solitary not because we don’t like people or we don’t like collaboration but because our work often forces us to focus intensely in a very narrow area. Getting faculty to collaborate is important and the best way to do so is to insure that the collaborative effort is worth everyone’s time.

The laser focus most faculty have on their work can also make them seem aloof. Once again, I must insist that it is not that faculty are aloof or uncaring. They are some of the busiest people you will ever encounter so just need the right circumstances to engage. But this is the case for all people–we are only willing to engage in a project or endeavor if it has meaning and relevance. A leader must ensure that the work that they are asking of faculty has significance and respects their time and efforts.

Hyatt’s final point about distraction is common to all people. With all our amazing mobile conveniences comes the potential for endless distractions. Staying on task and keeping a sense of urgency is something that must be modeled. A sense of urgency is caught is not taught, so it is crucial for a leader to walk the walk.

Read Hyatts post…