Five unconvential books on leadership

There are a lot of great leadership books. Here are some that might not make the mainstream lists but that have critical messages for leaders. If you are looking to think about leadership from a slightly different perspective, these might be for you: Orbiting the Giant Hairball: A Corporate Fool’s Guide to Surviving with Grace …

Iteration needs thought too

It seems that the war on thinking has a new weapon: iteration. People drive forward half-baked ideas and plans under the guise of taking an “iterative” approach. I’m all for iteration. I’ve been able to implement better solutions faster by taking an iterative approach. Iteration allows you to get feedback sooner, manage resources better, and …

Special Sneak Preview: Five Excel Functions That Every Manager Should Know

Leadership and data. Two of my passions. Of course, my bigger passion is helping leaders be more effective at using data. One of the biggest obstacles that many leaders face is not understanding the tools that are available to them. I’ve seen a lot of people waste a lot of time manually performing tasks that …

Who is advocating for doing the right thing?

Progress. Moving forward. Execution. That’s what business is about. Disagree with someone’s idea or recommendation? Just argue that the idea might slow down progress. It will be killed before the person can respond. In many organizations most people are afraid to be the one to stop the train. Progress and execution are good as long …

Two critical functions of a leader

Leaders don’t accomplish things on their own. They achieve results through other people. The on-going success of an organization depends on two key factors: achieving immediate goals and 2) long term sustainability. For a leader this translates into fostering individual contribution and personal growth among his or her people. Leaders who focus solely on individual …

Innovation doesn’t create risk, people do (although they can alleviate risk too)

The April 14, 2008 issue of Time Magazine has two brief articles that reference innovation. The first is about the current financial crisis: “Holding Back the Flood: More financial regulation will mean less financial innovation. Maybe that’s not such a bad idea.” The second is about people who are working toward peace and social change: …

Leaders as effective coaches

Good leaders are good coaches. Coaches don’t just provide answers. They help people grow and develop while contributing to the organization. This article provides some tips and tricks for being a more effective coach. You have three main roles as a coach: Diagnosis: determining when/where people may need help Creating Awareness: helping people see that …

Role models for leading in a new age

Daniel Pink’s book, A Whole New Mind, lists the new “senses” required to thrive in our new, “conceptual” age. The six new senses are design, story, symphony, empathy, play and meaning. Many of these are in direct contrast to what we’ve heard and seen as leaders for the past several decades. So, where can we …

Stop thinking with half of your brain tied behind your back

Are you a divergent or convergent thinker? Divergent thinking is when you generate a lot of possibilities for a given problem. Convergent thinking is whittling options down to a few manageable items. Many corporate cultures favor convergence. Convergence focuses people and ensures that things get done. That’s a good thing usually. However, it can sometimes …