Goals & Practices
05.24.2011
Better Time Management is Not the Answer
For this week’s Tuesday Reading, we turn to a Harvard Business Review blog post by Linda Hill and Kent Lineback “Better Time Management is Not the Answer”. Hill is the Wallace Brett Donham Professof of Business Administration at the Harvard Business School and Lineback has spent many years as a manager and executive in business […]
05.17.2011
The 5% Creativity Challenge
Are you up for a challenge? Josh Linkner in a recent Fast Company blog post, “The 5% Creativity Challenge”, challenges each of us to schedule two one-hour thinking sessions each week. Linkner is the author of Disciplined Dreaming – A Proven System to Drive Breakthrough Creativity and CEO and Managing Partner of Detroit Venture Partners. He suggests […]
05.10.2011
Managing Yourself: Stop Holding Yourself Back
Today’s reading is “Managing Yourself: Stop Holding Yourself Back”from the Harvard Business Review. The authors are Ann Morriss, managing director of the Concire Leadership Institute and Robin Ely and Frances Frei, both professors at the Harvard Business School. Morriss, Ely, and Frei have been studying for over a decade what gets in the way of […]
04.19.2011
Take ownership of your meeting experience
The reading today, “Take ownership of your meeting experience”, appeared in the Facilitate.com blog and comes from the keyboard of Danuta McCall, a senior member of the Facilitate.com team. The reading’s key point is that we, each as individual participants in a meeting, play a role in whether that meeting is successful or not. We do […]
02.08.2011
Alone Together
Sherry Turkle, the Abby Rockefeller Mauze Professor of the Social Studies of Science and Technology at MIT, has a new book, “Alone Together.” In the book, Turkle raises an interesting point about how we get and maintain each other’s attention in our always-on-connectivity culture. In one review – MITnews’ “The lonely crowd” by Peter […]
11.30.2010
If You’re the Boss, Start Killing More Good Ideas
Six months ago, Robert Sutton, Professor of Management Science at Stanford University and author of a new book, Good Boss, Bad Boss, had a blog entry “12 Things Good Bosses Believe. ” You can find that entry at <http://blogs.hbr.org/cs/2010/05/12_things_that_good_bosses_bel.html>. Today’s Tuesday Reading is Sutton’s effort to delve into one of these issues: “If You’re the Boss, Start […]
10.19.2010
Six Ways to Supercharge Your Productivity
Tony Schwarts, CEO of the Energy Project, says a lot in this short piece “Six Ways to Supercharge Your Productivity”. His key point is that as a result of the digital demands of the world we now inhabit, we are in danger of undertaking more and more tasks and creating less and less real value. He […]
10.12.2010
Leaders Develop Daily, Not in a Day
I came across today’s reading, “Leaders Develop Daily, Not in a Day“, last week in John Maxwell’s GIANT Impact newsletter. Maxwell is an internationally know writer — over 19 million books sold — and speaker on leadership. His’s thesis in this piece is very straightforward: “Unless we set aside time to grow into the person […]
09.14.2010
If You Mess Up, Fess Up!
Today’s reading “If You Mess Up, Fess Up!” comes to us from Fast Company’s Expert Blog. It’s author is Paul Glover, who founded the Glover Group, a management consulting firm focusing on improving workplace performance, after a long career as a labor/employment law attorney. Glover’s bottom line is very straight forward: “Everyone makes mistakes. It is how we deal […]
09.07.2010
Need Stress Relief? Try the Four A’s.
The Leaders Program workshops have introduced all of you to the 4 I’s at one time or another. Today’s reading introduces you to the four A’s, strategies from the Mayo Clinic staff – ”Need Stress Relief? Try the Four A’s”– for coping with stress: avoid, alter, accept, and adapt. Since the early August incident between a […]
08.31.2010
Productivity Doesn’t Happen By Itself
Today’s reading, which focuses on the topic of personal productivity, comes fromDavid Allen’s August 3, 2010 Newsletter, and can be found at <http://www.davidco.com/newsletters/archive/0810.html>. A number of you know David Allen from his Getting Things Done book as well as the GTD website. He begins this piece by reminding all of us that “productivity is not […]
08.17.2010
Outdoors and Out of Reach, Studying the Brain
I found today’s Tuesday Reading in yesterday’s New York Times. Matt Richtel had a wonderful piece “Outdoors and Out of Reach, Studying the Brain” that reports on a five day trip by five neuroscientists plus Richtel, and a guide, rafting, hiking, and camping along the San Juan River in the Glen Canyon National Recreational Area […]
08.03.2010
Never Duck the Tough Questions
Today’s Reading, “Never Duck the Tough Questions”, is an interview with Dawn Lepore, chair and CEO of Drugstore.com. The interview was conducted by Adam Bryant and originally appeared in the Corner Office column of the July 18, 2010 New York Times. What impressed me from the column was the set of leadership lessons Ms Lepore learned over […]
07.20.2010
Accountability: What Do You Owe Your Direct Reports
Today’s reading is a short essay, reproduced below, by Roger Schwartz in his newsletter Fundamental Change. He makes two significant points that caught my attention: First, accountability is a two-way street. Not only do your staff have accountability to their manager, but the manager, you, have accountability to them. And, second, all feedback needs to be timely. Said differently, it […]
07.13.2010
How to Stop the Blame Game
Today’s reading “How to Stop the Blame Game” is by Nathanael Fast, assistant professor of Management and Organization at USC’s Marshall School of Business. It appeared in the May research blog of the Harvard Business Review. Fast points back to the recent “grilling” of three oil company executives by U.S. Senate committees. He noted that the executives […]
06.29.2010
Switch: How to Change Things When Change is Hard
Chip and Dan Heath, authors of “Made to Stick,” released a new book in February – “Switch: How to change things when change is hard.” Today’s reading is a review of the book by Keith McFarland which appeared in BusinessWeek. McFarland is founder of McFarland Strategy Partners and author of The Breakthrough Company, and BOUNCE. In Switch, the Heath […]
05.04.2010
Is Your Leadership Developing or Diminishing?
A few weeks ago Angela Bell from the University of Iowa shared Dan Bobinski’s article “Is your leadership developing or diminishing?” with her cohort and now I’d like to share it with everyone. As Bobinski, a training specialist, author, and president of Associates at Leadership Development, indicates, too many leaders easily get caught up in the […]
02.23.2010
How to Rise Fast At Work: A True Story
Terry Gray, IT Leaders Program alumnus from the University of Washington, suggested today’s reading, “How To Rise Fast At Work: A True Story”. Terry thought that the piece might be of interest to the leaders community. And, I agree. In this Forbes.com piece, its author Avril David talks about two acquaintances – whom he calls Mike and Ted […]
11.24.2009
How to Write a Mission Statement That Isn’t Dumb
Nancy Lublin, CEO of Do Something, is the author of this week’s Tuesday Reading, “How to Write a Mission Statement That Isn’t Dumb”. Her article appears in the December 1, 2009 issue of FastCompany. Lublin argues that our mission statements don’t have to be dumb, that is, neither clear nor useful. They should, she continues, “convey clearly […]
07.07.2009
The Key to Getting Lucky: PRACTICE!!!
This week, for the week’s Tuesday Reading, I turn to a recent message from the ITLP IX Vision Team: “The Key to Getting Lucky: PRACTICE!!!” The Key to Getting Lucky: PRACTICE!!! A Golf Story When the golfer Tom Watson chipped in on the 17th at Pebble Beach in 1982 and then birdied the final hole to […]