Iāve been seeing the term Quiet Quitting more and more over the last few months. To be very clear, Iāve never been one to jump on many bandwagons. This catchphrase was definitely one that got me to scowl more than a few times! And in complete transparency, I just havenāt been willing to dig into the...
If you clicked the link I included last time and checked out the complete list showing who LeverageEdu thought were histories top fifteen leaders, I doubt you had any issue understanding what I shared about some being more focused on conquering for their own glory rather than serving for the best in...
Last time I referenced how terrible it was to work for one of the most miserable human beings Iāve ever been around. Just in case you think I may have been embellishing it, youāre welcome to reach out to Cindy and ask for the rest of the story that I shared with her shortly after I wrote thatā¦ If an...
Once weāve done the work to chart the course for our team to follow in the years to come so our entire organization achieves what we know itās capable of and weāve created an atmosphere that values - and even expects - ongoing leadership development at every level of supervision and management, we s...
Once weāve been intentional about charting a course for where we want our organizations to go (and to grow) in the years to come, providing a strategic leadership example - like the one we looked at last time - is an absolute must if we want to earn the kind of buy-in and engagement from our team th...
Now that weāve looked at a practical approach a leader can take in charting the course for their organization, letās start working through some strategic leadership examples we can follow as we move intentionally toward the goals weāve set for our organizations! But before I ever reference a single ...
A while back I heard Carly Fiorina differentiate managing from leading by saying, āManagers produce results within existing constraints and conditions. Leaders change or challenge existing constraints or conditions.ā As I closed the last post that worked through a practical approach we can take to o...
To this point, weāve dug into HOW teamwork really can make the dream work in our organizations and we looked at a few core competencies weāll need to develop for effective team leadership. Now itās time we really hash out exactly what skills we need to apply on a daily basis if we want to build the ...
Before we turn the corner and begin working through some skills we can each hone to lead our teams more effectively, and in turn yield higher engagement and stronger profit margins, letās circle back to where I left off last time after my time on the ole soap box about being countableā¦Ā
Just outsid...
If we were having this conversation face to face, Iām guessing youād reply to what I shared last time by saying something like, āAlright Wes, if everything really does rise and fall on leadership, but youāre telling me it requires more than the carrot and stick status-quo, what else can I possibly d...
OK, so maybe teamwork can make the dream work with regards to helping drive profitability in our organizationsā¦ And maybe employee engagement and teamwork are directly correlated with one anotherā¦ But how do these fairly fluffy ideas become reality and whoās responsible for making them so?
Weāll ge...
Last time I shared something I first heard John Maxwell say more than a decade ago regarding voluntary turnover, āSome sources estimate that as many as 65% of people leaving companies do so because of their managersā¦ The ācompanyā doesnāt do anything negative to them. People do. Sometimes coworkers ...