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Module 1 Leading: self-awareness Increasing capacity for self awareness is important We


Module 1

Leading: self-awareness

Increasing capacity for self awareness is important

We must be able to understand our blind spot before leading others.

Disc: help ourself understand better of who we are

4 dimensions of disc:

active vs. thoughtful

Accepting vs. questioning

High D(ominance) examples:

general Douglas MacArthur

Solomon: 1 kings 3:16-28

no nonsense bottom line wise high D style identified the real mother

Jesus with demons

results focused, direct

High I(nfluence) examples:

winston Churchill

Peter and the lame man

Jesus: two fish and five loaves of bread

people relationship oriented, excellent communicators, enthusiastic, sociable

High S(teadiness) examples:

Dwight Eisenhower

Abigail: 1 samuel 25

assumed blame for others, saved the worthless life of her husband

Jesus at the last supper

loyalty, patience, steady, empathetic, discernment (see the big picture, not prone to over-react)

High C(onscientiousness) examples:

Omar Bradley

Moses: exodus 32

follow the plan, commitment to excellence

In conclusion:

step 1: recognize that people have different behaviors

Step 2: understand that people have different goals, fears, motivations, and ways of seeing the world

Step 3: adapt, develop productive interactions by adapting as needed

Remember that…

there are no good or bad styles

There is no best style

All styles have strengths and weaknesses

All styles can be more or less effective

We are all a mixture of styles

How do you respond to conflict?

Conflict at work:

conflicts at work fester as people passively avoid problems or confront aggressively and situations are blown out of proportion

Conflict is about the productive exchange of diverse ideas and opinions in a focused, efficient and unfiltered way

Thomas-Kilimanjaro conflict Mode instrument:

two dimensions, assertiveness and cooperativeness

The model has five conflict modes

The five modes:

What are the right answers?

collaborating: two heads are better than one

Accommodating: kill your enemies with kindness

Compromising: split the difference

Avoiding: leave well enough alone

Competing: might make right

Conflict resolution modes:

we all are capable of using all five modes

No single rigid style of dealing with conflict

Tend to use some modes better than others

Tend to rely on some modes more than others

How appropriate is your use of each mode in the situation you are in?

Emotional intelligence

according to Daniel Goleman, emotional intelligence is recognizing our own feelings and those of others, motivating ourselves, managing emotions well in ourselves and in our relationships

IQ and technical skills are relevant, but more as “entry level” requirements

90% of difference between star performers and average performers was EQ

EQ is responsible for 58% of your job performance

High EQ: $29k more in salary than low EQ counterparts

Intent vs. impact

people with high EQ are aware of their impact

impact of their behavior on others may be different from what they intended of expected

People respond to you based on what they perceive about your behavior, not what you think they perceive

Common wisdom about emotions:

7 basic emotions

fear, anger, disgust, sadness, happiness, love, surprise

Thousand of variations and shadings

all emotions are valid

provide us important information about our situation

Often on mute but are sometimes raw and intense

all jobs require some amount of emotional labor

How do we improve our EQ?

Get feedback on tendencies for negative emotional reactions

Discover the thoughts and physical actions that accompany my feelings

Monitor trends for emotional reactions to certain situations

Complete assessments

Write down situations where emotions get the best of you

Set aside time each day for problem solving

Let others finish speaking during difficult conversations

Listen, step back, breath

Prepare for situations where you need courage

Spend extra time asking, observing and listening when around people

Focus your thoughts on the other person’s perspective

Ask colleague about accuracy in picking up emotions of others

Make an effort to have a sense of inquiry and not just advocate your opinions only

Look for the influence of emotions in my interactions with others

Get feedback from trusted colleague on my strengths and weaknesses in interactions

Write thank you notes, take extra time to show appreciation and interest

Make other people a priority

Initiate a partnership lunch or coffee break

as people age, they ask for and respond to feedback less often

Impact of asking for responding to feedback on overall leadership effectiveness

Knowledge vs. motivation

knowledge tells us how to do things, our storehouse of experience

Motivation gets us going, keeps us moving, tells us how much effort to spend on tasks

without motivation, experienced and intelligent people do not accomplish much at their jobs

Theological foundations of the self

Who am I?

what does it mean to be human?

Genesis 1

image of God as our species maker (general pattern of day by day creation)

distinctive features of the image of God

communion

Community (we’re not meant to live alone)

Calling (something that we need to do, business)

Convictions (morality)

human beings within creation

goodness of creation

Designed interdependence

Positive role for humanity relative to creation

business as creation stewardship

multiplying, filling, ruling, and subduing- tasks of business

Connecting the goodness of creation to authentic human need

We need to work hard and have the effort to make blossom the works of God

The goal of business is to simply connect the goodness of creation with authentic human need

Created order is incomplete, that is why human effort is needed (business)

What does it mean to be me?

God knows me personally

watches us (Hagar)

Lost sheep (knows the sheep, sheep knows his voice)

Knows our individual hairs on our head

God chose me personally

election

Election and calling like dropping and falling (chosen for a purpose)

God calls me personally

God’s design

Ps 139, Eph 2:10

Cotton Mather (it is the singular favor of God, unto a man, that he can attend his occupation with contentment and satisfaction. That one man has a spirit formed and fitted for one occupation, and another man for another, this is from the operation that God, who forms the spirit of man within him

spiritual gifts: 1 Cor 12”7 “to each is given a manifestation of the spirit for the common good”

apportioned to each one individually

Apportioned for the sake of the common good

life circumstances

Esther had a calling imposed upon her largely by circumstances, (“perhaps you have come to the throne for such a time as this”)

personal message

Jeremiah, Gideon, Saul, Jonah, moses

Concluding thoughts on individual calling:

callings as an imposition

Callings as divine intention

Would the army give you a personality test before giving you a calling?

calling is about being a faithful steward and understanding why God is calling me

Tools for knowing ourselves:

John Calvin comments

“Without knowledge of self, there is no knowledge of God. Our wisdom, insofar as it ought to be deemed true and solid wisdom, consists almost entirely of two parts: the knowledge of God and of ourselves. But as these are connected by many ties, it is not easy to determine which of the two precedes and gives birth to the other.

So what would Calvin make of a modern personality test?

the context, argues for starting with knowledge of God and first bit of self-knowledge is that we are not God

Knowledge of God and knowledge of self:

what does Calvin say we should learn about gifts and abilities?

gifts are not of our own making

We are absolutely dependent on God (by design)

Our gifts should foster gratitudes towards God

Our desperate plight should lead us to reverent fear of God

Implications for modern self-discovery tools:

personality tests are not bad things, they are just not first things

They should foster:

gratitude, not pride

Service, not entitlement

Upward focus, and an outward focus rather than an inward focus

Calvin and Luther both felt that the inheritance of Greco-Roman philosophers regarding leadership skills in civil government was very valuable as Calvin put it:

if we reflect that the spirit of God is the only fountain of truth, we will be careful.. not to reject or condemn truth whenever it appears. In despising the gifts, we insult the giver. How, then, can we deny that truth must be beamed on those ancient lawgivers who arranged civil order and discipline with so much equity? Shall we say that the philosophers, in their exquisite researches and skillful description of nature, were blind?

personality tests, leadership theories, and organizational philosophy are contemporary manifestations of the same sort of human wisdom

Module 2

Servant leadership

your love for people and how you want to see people thrive might be the way for you to lead others

3 key assumptions for leading others:

people desire growth and development and can be creative when they have these opportunities

People value interpersonal interaction, both with peers and with superiors, making the formal and informal nature of such relationships a salient feature of organizational life

People need trust, support, and cooperation to function effectively; zero-sum, win-lose competition in organizations is not useful, and may even be destructive

Problem in today’s world: engagement crisis

30% engaged

50% “paddling” but not really engaged

20% “sinking the boat”

How do I increase engagement as a leader?

Leading others to increase engagement:

build trust

caring

Integrity

Competence

leader principle 1: org effectiveness increases when leaders are trustworthy and trust their team

Leadership theories: Northhouse

Leadership models:

Authentic leadership: Bill George

no universal traits or skills that led to success.

Leadership emerges from their life stories.

Being authentic made them more effective

self awareness: to what degree is the leader aware of his/ her strengths, limitations, how others see him or her and how the leader impacts others

Transparency: to what degree does the leader reinforce a level of openness with others that provides them with an opportunity to be forthcoming with their ideas, challenges and opinions

Ethical/ moral: to what degree does the leader set a high standard for moral and ethical conduct

Balanced processing: to what degree does the leader solicit sufficient opinions and viewpoints prior to making important decisions

Leaders also understand the purpose of the organization (the why) besides the what and how

Martin Luther, wright brothers, and Steve Jobs started their leadership by understanding the why in the organization

Servant leadership

“You know the rulers of the Gentiles lord it over them and their high officials exercise authority over them. Not so with you. Instead, whoever wants to be great among you must be your servant, and whoever wants to be first must be your slave— just as the Son of Man did not come to be served, but to serve and to give his life as a ransom for many” Matt 20:25-28

Alignment of four leadership domains:

heart: servant leader of self serving?

Head: visionary, implementation roles

Hands: actions… performance coach

Habits: prayer, reading the word, fellowship, accept God’s unconditional love

The heart of a servant leader: good indicator

How do you handle feedback?

How do you plan for successors?

Whom do you follow?

EGO: exalting God only

humility

God grounded confidence

EGO: edging out God

fear (protecting self)

Pride (promoting self)

“The fear of man is a snare, whoever trusts in the Lord is safe” Proverbs 29:25

to successfully combat the temptation to be self-serving in your leadership, everyday you must put your EGO on the altar and EXALT GOD ONLY

The head of a servant leader:

Visionary role- setting the course and destination

Implementation role- getting things done the right way (by serving)

After vision is set, emphasis shifts to implementation

create goals to clarify what you want people to focus on

Create an environment of empowerment

Prioritize the growth and development of your team

Move to the bottom of the pyramid

VISION, MISSION, VALUES

vision: why do we exist?

Mission: what do we do?

Values: how do we behave?

Must drive alignment and clarity

Clarity- confidence- commitment

The hands of a servant leader: coaching

performance planning

clear direction, goals, expectations (what will a good job look like)

day to day coaching

observe, praise, redirect

performance evaluation

performance not the person

5 key habits of a servant leader:

Solitude: listen to God

Who are you? Who am I? What do you want me to do? And then listen

prayer (ACTS)

Study the Bible on a regular basis

Accepting and responding to God’s unconditional love

Involvement in supportive relationships

Servant leadership according to Robert K. Green leaf:

Service ought to be the distinguishing characteristic of leadership

Business leaders will find greater joy in their lives if they raised the servant aspect of leadership

Are your team member’s highest priority needs being met?

Are they growing as persons?

Do they become healthier, wiser, more autonomous, more likely to become servants?

Who do leaders succeed?

“Combine personal humility with professional will”

care more about the company than themselves, confront reality

Selfie awareness/ self management

Cheryl Bachelder’s brand:

Love those you lead

Pursue a daring destination

Help the team find meaning in the work

Create culture of teamwork

Choose to serve your team and customers (all you need is a heart of grace)

Be courageous, bold, and brave

Clarify your purpose- your people will assign you a purpose by watching your actions

Avoid the spotlight: your ego is the enemy

A call to action for servant leaders:

will you humbly serve others over your own self interest?

Will you pursue a daring destination for the people?

Will you help others find meaning and purpose at work?

Will you teach others the guiding principles of serving others as well?

3. Situational leadership is

Organization effectiveness increases when leaders help the organization set clear, concrete and measurable goals aligned with the organization’s vision

4 levels of situational leadership:

Directing: high directive and low supportive behavior

Coaching: high directive and high supportive behavior

Supporting: high supportive and low directive behavior

Delegating: low supportive and low directive behavior

What is the skills approach to leadership?

Robert Katz’s research surfaced a set of skills for leadership success.

skill 1- “technical skills” involving hands-on activity.

Skill 2- “human skills” which is the ability to work with people, it’s the greatest asset to have

Skill 3- “conceptual skills” having ability to work with ideas and concepts

Behavioral leadership approach:

behavioral approach: what leaders do, how they act

Examine your balance: tasks vs. people

Path theory goal: motivate the follower

Define goals

Clarify the path

Remove obstacles

Provide support

Biblical theory of human leadership

Should we lead at all?

Should we all lead?

Biblical foundations of human leadership:

Should we lead at all?

Yes, but let’s look at this closely (Rom 13)

the authority to lead is a delegated authority

Source is from God

There is no “tenure”

it is bounded (particular time, place, and context)

authority is always has a horizontal context

Always within a vertical chain (the people you’re responsible to)

it is accountable

Leadership and the plot line of the Bible

creation

Human nature: image of God, cultural mandate

created world

springtime

Connecting the goodness of creation to authentic human need

fall

human tasks remains uncharged

Human tasks have become more difficult: creations resists us and leadership is more needed, leadership is often exploitive

redemption and consummation

Should we all lead?

biblically, it’s not so clear that we are all called to be leaders. Indeed, it seems somewhat illogical on the face of it. Can you be a leader without any followers? If God gives someone a call to lead, he must also give some other people a call to follow.

Some reflections on biblical followership:

calls to both leading and following

Synergistic relationship

Followership

Vision for followership

deep ownership of goals and tasks that are not of your own design

Willingness to sacrifice in order to achieve goods that others will be praised for

Dignity of ordinary vocations

Biblical models/ structures of leadership

three major leadership offices

king (some good some bad)

Priest (God appointed, teaching people along)

Prophet (anyone can be)

Biblical metaphors

shepherd, steward, servant

shepherd: flourishing the flock (attitude towards others)

Servant: humble (attitude towards self)

Steward: accountable to God (attitude toward God)

Servant leadership

servant leadership is predominant theme in both NT and OT

shunning of leadership terms

Embracing of slave and servant terms

Jesus’ explicit teaching

Jesus modeling

OT picture of shepherd King

OT picture of suffering servants as Messiah figure

Other notes on biblical leadership

other observations

unwilling, UN gifted, and unexpected leaders (you might not want to be a leader but God wants you to)

Centered on calling not gifts

Diversity of models and personalities

Table of influence

Module 3

Teamwork and team development

servant leadership really emphasizes the responsibility of a leader to increase the ownership, autonomy, and responsibility of followers to encourage them to think for themselves and try out their own ideas

the time spent by managers and employees in collaborative activities has ballooned by 50% or more over the last two decades and at many companies, more than three-quarters of an employee’s day is spent communicating with colleagues”- HBR

“Teamwork remains the one sustainable competitive advantage that has been largely untapped. Teamwork is almost always lacking within organizations that fail and present within those that succeed”- Patrick Lencioni

the key to success with team is “trust”

the confidence among team members that their peer intentions are good and that there is no reason to be protective or careful around the group- Patrick Lencioni

clarity, confidence, commitment

the GRIP model: Goals, Roles, Interpersonal relationships, Processes

The best teams:

value constant communication

Make time for each other

Build the space to foster open communication on a continual basis

Create awareness of different communication styles and languages

Google project Aristotle

Google’s intense data collection and number crunching have led it to the same conclusions that good managers have always known. In the best teams, members listen to one another and show sensitivity to feelings and needs

You decide: set the norms for your team, it is under your control

#1 common characteristic?

trusting coworkers and managers

does a trusting workplace translate into results?

yes, high scores on trustworthiness metrics lead to top tier financial results

#3 wegmans food markets

small things make the difference: free birthday cakes, hot chocolate in winter

“We look for people who genuinely care about others and are happy to serve in whatever ways necessary. We teach any other skills they need.

The power of teamwork pyramid by Patrick Lencioni

Absence of trust: if members of a team do not trust each other they cannot be totally open, honest and transparent with each

Fear of conflict: without trust people will not have healthy debates that are necessary to arrive at the best decisions: “I do not agree with you and it is not personal”

Lack of commitment: if the team has not aligned behind a decision, individual members who did not agree with the final decision will be less committed to it (NO BUY IN)

Avoidance of accountability: if team members are not fully committed to the course of action, they are less likely to feel accountable (or hold others accountable)

Inattention to results: people who are not held accountable are less likely to care about team results

Action to build trust

at risk of losing face, demonstrate genuine vulnerability first

admit weakness and mistakes

Ask for help

Accept-provide feedback

Offer and accept apologies

Share expertise willingly

Keep commitments

Proactively build relationships

Absence of trust tools

personal histories exercise

Team effectiveness exercise

Personality and behavioral preference profiles

360- degree feedback

Experimental team exercises

Fear of conflict

teams that fear conflict…

have boring meetings

Have environments where back channel politics and personal attacks thrive

Avoid controversial topics critical to success

Fail to tap into opinions and perspectives

Waste time with posturing and interpersonal risk management

Mastering conflict?

Conflict is the productive exchange of diverse ideas and opinions in a focused, efficient and unfiltered way

Without conflict, decision making suffers and relationships among team members stagnate

If conflict does not surface, it tends to degenerate to mean spirited, back-channel comments made behind closed doors

Conflict- leader

avoid temptation to protect team members

allow resolution to occur naturally

Help team develop conflict management skills

personally model appropriate conflict behavior

Conflict- members

participate, keep it in the meeting

Share your thoughts

Don’t make it personal

2. Fear of conflict tools

mining

Real-time permission

OK to engage in productive conflict

conflict resolution models

Why are we afraid to disagree or give constructive feedback?

we fear defensiveness

We fear feedback will be ignored

Defensiveness is not necessary… How?

say it in private

Explain the WHY

Offer support… how will you help

Avoid blame… focus on behavior not person

Listen to understand other point of view

Focus on changeable behavior

Use good timing… as soon as possible after event

Commitment- leader

be comfortable with prospect of making wrong decisions

Push group for closure around issues and adherence to schedules

Provide clear direction

3 Cs (clarity, confidence, commitment

Lack of commitment tools

cascading messaging

review key messages, who to cascade to

stick to deadlines

eliminate ambiguity

contingency and worst-case scenario analysis (reduce fears)

Allow everyone to voice their opinion

Avoidance of accountability

teams that avoid accountability

create resentment between members

Encourage mediocrity

Miss deadlines and key deliverables

Point fingers

Blame others

Results- leader

focus on team results only

Be selfless and objective

Reward, recognize real contributions to team goals only

Remind team: vision/ mission/ values

CRO

team first attitude

After I complete my job, how can I help others?

Share wisdom and experience with team

Overcoming dysfunction

How to become a functional team

The ideal team player: Lencioni

5 stages of team development

Stage 1- Forming requires team building

team members: eager with high expectations, but reliant on authority to provide direction and decisions due to lack of comprehensive knowledge of project

Primary issues: personal well being, acceptance, trust

Task accomplishment: low to moderate

Morale: moderate to high

Storming requires conflict management

team members: discrepancy between original hopes and present reality: dissatisfied with dependence on authority, unsatisfied and confused about goals and tasks

Primary issues: power, control, conflict, influence

Task accomplishment: slowly increasing as conflicts resolve

Morale: low to low moderate

GRIP model

if goals are not clear, uncertainties in the roles arise

If roles are unclear, this results in cumulative conflict within the processes

If processes are unclear, accumulated conflicts appear at the people level

The HEAR process

Stage 3- norming requires communication

team members: dissatisfaction declining: acceptance of goals, tasks, responsibilities and each other increasing, increased self-esteem and confidence

Primary issues: sharing control, avoiding conflicts, complacency, lack of communication, knowledge sharing

Task accomplishment: increasing as communication improves

Morale: increasing to moderate to good

Norming requires team communications

Stage 4- performing: achieve expectations

team members: autonomous, excited and eager about team activities, collaborative and interdependent work, highly confident about self and team

Primary issues: new challenges, motivation, learning

Task accomplishment: optimal

Morale: high to very high

Stage 5- adjourning: lessons learned

team members: concerned about team dissolution and personal future, feel loss or sadness about ending project and separation from team

Primary issues: loss and separation

Task accomplishment: generally decreasing

Morale: stable or decreasing

How to accelerate the four phases

Increase probability of team success

how a team begins will determine how it ends and how it will perform during its existence

Effective leaders achieve 3 tasks at team launch

clarify and give meaning to the team task, (the why?)

Connect to overall company vision-mission

Bound the team as one performing unit

Membership is clear

Establish clear norms of conduct

Module 4

Management vs. Leadership

Management is about:

coping with complexity

planning and budgeting

Organizing and staffing

Controlling and problem solving

formal power

Leadership is about:

coping with change

setting a direction

Aligning people

Motivating and inspiring

informal dependence

What could possibly change?

the goal changes (a loftier goal or a different goal entirely)

The team change (reorganization- more people, fewer people, redistributed people)

The team roles change (different leader, new roles, new members)

The playing field changes (new regulations, market, competitors)

The materials change (different types of materials, more materials, fewer materials available to use)

Technology changes (automation, AI, mobility)

Strategy changes (industry consolidation, disruptive innovation, new markets, new products, new competitors)

Time constraint changes (less time usually)

The level of challenge changes (things usually get harder, markets get more competitive)

The systems change (process improvement, cost reductions, prioritization)

Everything changes (all of the above, all at the same time)

The change cycle

Change cycle…

think about a change you are going through right now

Where are you on the change cycle

Share with your neighbor

The change cycle: Self management

red stages: don’t just do something, sit there… gather more information, dont over react: BE CURIOS

Yellow stages: now, do something… you are not acting out of anger or fear, you’re acting on behalf of the change with growing focus: take positive step forward

Green stages: hopeful- change is encouraging because things may get better: move forward with confidence, help others

Leading your team through the change cycle:

stage 1: loss of safety

objective: acknowledge losses and concern

Challenge: channel fear into appropriate action

Key question: what is the worst that can happen?

Exit strategy: create safety for you and your team

stage 2: doubt to reality

objective: face reality, let go of speculation and rumors

Challenge: manage passive and aggressive anger

Key question: what are the facts, who can deliver it to me?

Exit strategy: seek valid and accurate information

Stage 3: discomfort to motivation

objective: to breakthrough instead of breakdown

Challenge: take small steps forwards with the change

Key question: which steps will expedite a breakthrough?

Exit strategy: keep moving forward

stage 4: discovery to perspective

objective: gain perspective, look at all sides

Challenge: don’t look back, improvement requires change

Key question: how can I determine the next best step to take?

Exit strategy: sell team on benefits of change

stage 5: understanding the benefits

objective: grasp the meaning of the change in deeper way

Challenge: enjoy greater understanding of the why

Key question: what is in it for me? WIFFM

Exit strategy: identify the benefits (CRO)

stage 6: experiencing integration

objective: make the change a natural part of your life

Challenge: create stability, prevent complacency

Key question: how do I help others not this far long?

Exit strategy: full integration

The change cycle:

change just happens, we don’t need to take it personally

Work change has the potential to bring out the best in people

There is no right way to do the wrong thing

negative, immature behavior is never justified]

be curious, have an open mind, choose your attitude wisely

great opportunity to witness

God is still on the throne

Coaching your team through challenge

embrace opportunity, not a threat

curiosity

Open mind

Change

is change resistance a myth?

$1 million to change? Would you change?

People have the capacity to change

People dont like to change to something they dont know

fear of the unknown?

Lack of choices?

people are willing to change, they just not want to be changed; they want to participate in shaping their future

Why is there resistance to change?

distaste for change, like status quo

Value of stability and staying the course of what has worked

Objections, concerns about the particular change initiative in play

Self-interested objections to change

Conflicting analysis of implications on others

Change is about telling, listening, adapting, and inviting people to participate in change vs. forcing transformation

The transition curve: leading change

Listen to the resistance to change input/ energy for improvement?

“absence of upward channels for participating, providing input, lack of empowerment to engage with decision-makers is as much a cause of change resistance as anything”

“If input solicitations are sincere, open, embraced by decision makers as a resource… resistance can be reframed as input for improvement

Traditional ways change occurs in large scale organizations

there’s often a knee-jerk reaction by leaders to make change happen quickly

They’ll try to restructure and change processes or incentives, which can be effective but can also be risky

Employees often feel change is being forced upon them rather than them participating and being a part of the change

Questions

70% of change effort fails. Why?

Do not follow systematic process

organizations don’t change, people do (one relationship at a time)

Leading behavioral change:

See- feel – change > analysis – think- change

central challenge is changing people’s behavior to increase urgency to change

Driving successful change:

increase urgency

Build the guiding team

Get the vision right

Communicate for buy in

Empower action

Create short term wins

Don’t let up

Make change stick

Increase urgency:

the video of the angry customer

seeing: employees see video of angry customer from credible person

Feeling: employees are surprised, fearful, mad, false pride drops, urgency growls, let’s do something

Changing: some of the “experts” (who alone know what is right) act defensively and cling to status quo, more begin listening to customers, listen to management about need for change, behavior shifts

Building the guiding team:

“When there is urgency, more people want to help provide leadership, even if there are personal risks.” (Kotter and Cohen)

What works:

a team consisting of the right people

A team demonstrating teamwork

Communicate for buy in:

it is important to assess how well those around you understand, and have bought into the change vision and strategy

Ask a safe sampling of employees

What is your understanding of the change vision and strategies?

Are they sensible?

Do they seem compelling?

Do you want help?

debrief the answers and take action

When sharing change communication, Kotter and Cohen recommend that the guiding team:

widely communicate the direction of change

Communicate for both understanding and gut-level buy in

goals for communicating the change vision:

“to get as many people as possible acting to make the vision a reality”

Empower action:

when people begin to understand and act on the change vision, leadership must:

remove barriers in their path

Provide encouragement and resources

Remove elements and resistors to change

goals for empowering action

“deal effectively with obstacles that block action, especially dis-empowering bosses, lack of information, the wrong performance measurement and reward systems, and lack of self-confidence”

Make it stick:

new, enthusiastic employees offer a great opportunity to enlist new disciples to the change initiative

these new, enthusiastic and capable (they better be, you just hired them) professionals are not attached to the old culture, norms, behaviors, or ways of doing things

These new employees can quickly become contributors to the new culture

And, new employees may be replacing resistors to the change process

Perils and Pitfalls of leading change:

purpose: learn techniques for leading change while managing people

Grasp the importance of building effective teams and fostering buy-in to succeed in a leadership position

Ask questions vs. answering them as a leader of a new team

Apply: Kotter’s 8 step of change, who moved my cheese, the change cycle, the five dysfunctions of a team

Who moved my cheese:

which character do you identify with the most? (Sniff, scurry, hem, haw) why?

How do you anticipate change?

How do you adopt to change with a positive mindset?

Change formula

Leading change: biblical perspectives

Progress and change:

understanding change and seeking progress

change is easy, progress is difficult

Progress demands a vision of the good not just a restlessness with a present

Change:

ontological forces of change

Heraclitus (things constantly change)

Entropy (not only change, but also for the worse)

economic forces of change

schumpeter: the opening up of new markets, the organizational development from the craft shops and factory to such concerns as U.S. steel illustrate the process of industrial mutation that incessantly revolutionizes the economic structure from within, incessantly destroying the old one, incessantly creating a new one. This process of creative destruction is the essential fact about capitalism. It is what capitalism consists in a what every capitalist concerns has got to live in

theological forces of change

eastern vs western worldviews

Transformation Munda vs. annihilating Munda

psychological forces of change

look at that!

Do it again!

Been there done that

Progress and change:

two easy errors

disdain for the old

Futility of the new

built to last

Organizational change in the book of Acts

Acts 1-2: leadership change

replacing the charismatic founder

sudden unexpected loss of CEO

Church turned out to be a visionary company that promoted from within (Collins, built to last)

Acts 6: social problems

challenges of unexpected changes in the market

deacons allowed them to make progress and incorporate a new people group while retaining the core mission

Notice this required organizational structural change, middle management, ethnic sensitivity

Acts 11: mission expansion

fundamental change in ethnic focus

clarify vision- are we making clock or time keepers

Are we offering completion to the Jews or conversion to the gentiles (built to last)

Acts 15: organizational crisis

church division

incremental changes create division conflict

Leadership division

Preserve the core- but what is the core?

Acts closing chapters

mission fidelity (false teachers, heretics, leadership conflicts)

false teachers- knock off competition

Nurture the existing church or expand to places where gospel has not been preached

legacy challenges

ordinary challenges of viable institution- 2nd generation of leadership, managerial leadership, structural development

Biblical wisdom for leading change

Paul’s tips for change agents:

1 Thess 5:14

Admonish the idle- accountability and inspiration

Encourage the faint hearted- affirmation and listening

Help the weak- training and support

Be patient with all- change is process

Admonish the idle:

Paul was clear and explicit when pointing out important problems

the problem: 2 Thess 3:6 Now we command you, brothers, that you keep away from any brother who is walking in idleness.. For you yourselves know how you ought to imitate us, because we were not idle when we were with you, nor feud we eat anyone’s bread without paying for it, but with toil and labor we worked night and day, that we might not be a burden to any of you.. If anyone is not willing to work, let him not eat. For we hear that some among you walk in idleness, not busy at work, but busybodies

The correction: now such persons we command and encourage in the Lord Jesus Christ to do their work quietly and to earn their own living

The encouragement: as for you, brothers, do not grow weary in doing good

Encourage the faint hearted:

lessons from Paul about affirmation:

made people feel bigger, not just better (1 Thess 1:7-8)

Generous in praise and affirmation (1 Thess as whole)

Truth not flattery (1 Thess 2:5)

Repeated (1 Thess 4:9)

3 part structure for affirmation

this is what you did

This is how it helped the mission

This is how it affected the team

Help the weak:

Paul provided training and support for the weak (1 Thess 3:1-5)

Be patient with all:

listening skills

listening for validation

Listening for learning and transformation

Summary on change

Module 5

Networking: career development

Career prep: why?

4 C’s

collaboration

Communication

Creativity

Critical thinking

Informational interview:

what is an informational interview

design to produce information

Why should I conduct informational interviews

How do I conduct informational interviews

Know the purpose

gain insight: person’s career journey, potential opportunities, what makes a competitive candidate, company culture, industry trends

expand your network: build relationships, generate leads for the future, communicate who you are, your brand

Be prepared

linkedin: what is their career background?, what is their role at the company?

Company website/ career page: what jobs/ internship are available?, what is the company culture like?

Articles on industry trends: what has been happening recently in their industry?, what does the future look like for their industry?

Send an email requesting to schedule a phone call, skype, or in person

Participating in an informational interview

listener: asking informed questions, being interested in their organizations

Professional: get familiarized with industry language, explain the value of a biola education, share the value of your major plus skills being learned

Finding professionals to speak with

linkedin: alumni tool, search specific companies, search keywords according to industry

Six degrees of separation: family, family friends, biola alumni, faculty, mentors

Pursue after an informational interview

send a thank you email or handwritten note

Follow up on any leads

Update the contact

Ask if you can do anything for them

How to deliver constructive feedback:

think win-win: make sure your motive is to help the other person and fulfill your own responsibilities

Describe your concerns

Give specific examples

Listen with empathy to the response

Seek first to understand, then to be understood

listen with empathy

Courage conversations:

is my intention helpful?

Do I need or want the relationship?

Can I handle the worst and realistic outcome that could come up?

3 green lights = go for it

Do you have someone on your team, in our life, that you need to have a courageous conversation with?

Work, calling, and career development

How do I find my calling? Begin with ordinary means:

embrace your givens

internal and external calling

On your personal/ specific calling start where you already are (1 Cor 7 principle)

listen! After all this is a calling, not a buried treasure

Create meaning and purpose wherever you are

Discerning God’s voice from 1 Sam 3

repeated calling

Unexpected nature of calling

Confirmation of calling by older and wiser believer

other ways God guides

agreeable and acceptable

Circumstances

Passions and burdens

Work in its proper place

How important is work?

for the Greeks, friendship was clearly important for self-fulfillment

Americans make work the locus of identity and self-fulfillment

So if your job isn’t giving you much meaning in life, perhaps your first thought should not be fina a new job, but rather adopt a larger perspective of what really should be meaningful in your life

Intrinsic value of leisure

human importance of leisure

Leisure and beauty

Leisure and worship

Work is not all there is to calling

community attachment

Church attachment

Family attachment

Political community

these are not rank ordered biblically, and if they are, they certainly are not ranked-ordered with work at the top

Comparison of biblical leadership to modern leadership models

Review of biblical leadership

leading is a normal human activity

Leadership is alway on loan based on God’s delegated authority

Servant leadership is a consistent theme in scripture

Human leadership is not just a management task, it is often a transformative task

Nonetheless, there is a substantial place for managerial leadership

Leaders don’t exist independently on followers

Comparison to common models:

servant leadership- Robert Greenleaf

desire to lead emerges from prior desire to serve

Tests of servant leadership: growth of those served, impact on least privileged in society (key characteristics: shared vision, managing self, interdependence, learn from mistakes, input from every member, question assumptions, building trust, humble spirit

transformational leadership

idealized influence

Inspirational motivation

Intellectual stimulation

Individualized consideration

Questioning the bottom line:

level 5 leadership

BHAG’s

Module 6

Leading innovation

Focus on what matters by career stage

David Kelley’s eight strategy for inspiring creativity:

Choose creativity

Think like a traveler

Engage relaxed attention (daydreaming)

Empathize with your end user

Do observations in the field

Ask questions starting with why

Reframe challenges (how might we?)

Build a creative support network

Building creative confidence (Debbie Millman- IDEO)

“creativity is a muscle that you need to exercise” (30 circle exercise)

You develop confidence after the successful repetition of any endeavor.

“You can’t wait for confidence to show up. You build your confidence over time.”

The innovator’s DNA that generates new ideas

Networking:

discovery-driven leaders

why the network: ideas

learn surprising new things

Gain new perspectives

Test ideas

whom they target

people who are not like them

Experts and non-experts with very different backgrounds and perspectives

delivery-driven leaders

why they network: resources

Access resources

Sell themselves or company

Further careers

Whom they target

People like them

People with substantial resources, power, position, influence

Observing:

discovery: get out and collect real data about a problem

be an anthropologist

Walk in their shoes

Observe extremes

Study analogous settings

take field notes, but don’t interpret too early

Focus on observable

What is the most important driver of innovation?

Tellis, Prabhu, Chaney

759 companies in 17 countries

Culture of innovation assessment model

MIT Sloan management review- 2013

most important driver of innovation is corporate culture

What is culture?

the way we think, behave and work together to accomplish goals

Shared principles: Cheryl Bachelder’s view

we will be energetic and passionate about achieving our goals

we will listen carefully to one another before forming a conclusion

We will admit our mistakes and be willing to learn from them

We will build one another up, not knock one another down

We will hold each other personally accountable for the promises we make

We will keep our egos in check

Why culture matter

How do leaders shape culture?

what leaders pay attention to, measure, control

How leaders react to crises, critical incidents

Observed criteria by which leaders allocate resources

Deliberate role modeling, teaching, coaching

Observed criteria for rewards, recognition

Observed criteria by which leaders select, promote, remove team members

Six building blocks of an innovative culture:

Innovative culture building blocks:

values: creativity, continuous learning

Behaviors: listen to customers, cut through red tape

Climate: tenor of workplace life

Resources: people, systems, projects

Processes:funnel, priorities

Measuring and defining success: R & R

Innovative culture role models:

values: IDEO

Behaviors: IDEO

climate: WL Gore

Resources: Whirlpool

Processes: rite solutions

Measuring success: rite solutions

WL Gore: climate

fearless workplace frees people to take risks

Mistakes accepted as part of creative process

Celebration for “killed” projects

Post mortems to learn and improve, not punish

What is IDEO’s culture?

fun, playful working environment

Bias for action (build something)

Utilize (how might we?) language

Motivated to tackle tough customer challenges

What is so great about IDEO?

productive creativity

explore to generate multiple ideas

Hands on building

Role playing

Take risks

IDEO’s brainstorming principles

defer judgement

Encourage wild ideas

Build on ideas of others

Stay focused on the topic

One conversation at a time

Be visual

Go for quantity

Supporting culture with physical environment

keep people together but not too close

Consider sound issues

Add flexibility in the right places

Permission to experiment

Tailor spaces to experiences

What is design thinking?

come up in the intersection of what’s desirable for people, what is viable from a business stand point, feasible from a technology stand point

5 steps in the shopping cart video:

Innovation and creativity in biblical perspective

A theological vision for work

cultivating a theological vision for your work

making this world glimmer with the light of the next

Stewarding your gifts toward kingdom goals

Peace with God

Intimacy with God

Beauty and worship

Peace with self

Health/ wholeness

Hope

Comfort

Peace with others

Unity

Security/ lack of violence

Community

Peace with creation

Economic flourishing

Sustainability

Beauty and harmony

Work examples finance for you and me:

finance: assessing value in relationship to risk and time

monetized risk and time: insurance and mortgages

Big businesses facilitates growth by complex management of risk

But what if we did the same for ordinary people?

Work examples in building communities, not just homes:

building homes or construction for human flourishing? Big elbow Homes

the home

The community

The company

Kingdom creativity

In summary…

operationalizes a vision of shalom (kingdom goodness)

Within the existing business or industry

The activities look like normal business, the goals look like the kingdom of God

Goods internal to the practice

a tool for innovation in the workplace- cultivating “goods internal to the place”

Satisfaction in the labor itself- a repeated phrase in Ecclesiastes 5:8-20

working for an external reward like money doesn’t satisfy

Working to accumulate material good doesn’t satisfy

Working for acclaim and fame doesn’t satisfy

God’s gift: find satisfaction in his toilsome labor

Let’s take a deeper look at goods internal to the practice

Maclntyre’s markers of goods internal to a practice

can only be obtained by doing that practice

Can only be identified by those who are knowledgeable in the practice

Goods internal to a practice are generally not held privately but corporately

Further thoughts on the uniqueness of goods internal to a practice

long term job satisfaction depends on enjoying the goods internal to the practice

the meaning that comes from mastery of a skill

The pleasure that comes from doing any activity well

Goods internal to the practice of work itself- and hence even to bad jobs

excellence

Industriousness

God pleasing

servant pleasing master

Obedience to biblical commands

Faithful to biblical examples

moral goodness/ integrity

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