2010 Leaders Series

In need of more Velcro

Reading for me is like applying large strips of Velcro to my brain.  With each new thing I read, whether a business book, novel or local newspaper, I now have new information that other information can stick to.  This new information always seems to help me find the patterns I need to drive the changes […]

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Quote of the Week

Faced with the choice between changing one’s mind and proving there is no need to do so, almost everyone gets busy on the proof.” – John Kenneth Galbraith Be willing to change your mind. Be open to something new. Ask, “How would it work if that were true?” and listen for something amazing.

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Adventures and What Else?

I’ve been stringing together weeks of adventures.  Last week I was at a Naval Postgraduate School class in Monterey, California.  For the next several weeks I’ll be road tripping through Washington, Montana, North Dakota, Minnesota, and Wisconsin then back through Minnesota, South Dakota, Wyoming, Montana and Washington. While I’m gone, where will you be?  I

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Change lovers

If you goal is to make change, it’s foolish to try to change the worldview of the majority if the majority is focused on maintaining the status quo.  The opportunity is to carve out a new tribe, to find the rabble-rousers and change lovers who are seeking new leadership and run with them instead.” –

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Welcome

When you’re driving change with a team, you’ll be holding at least a few meetings. To keep people coming to your meetings, be sure to greet them as they arrive. Arrive 10 minutes earlier than you usually would.  Get all your things together for the meeting.  Then, as people arrive, say something to them, anything.

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Follow your passion

When you’re leading a team, find your passion within the team’s project or goals and make the team’s work essential to you in some way. Maybe the team’s goal (e.g., expanding housing for the homeless) is your motivation. Maybe you’re indifferent to the goal (e.g., reducing the number of file cabinets in the department storeroom),

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Go!

For the next month I’m devoting the blog to a series of posts tailored for team project leaders and the people who support them (e.g., my favorite consultants and executives out there). I think you’ll get something from these posts, whether you’re leading a team at your church, in your volunteer organization, or at work. 

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