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LEADERSHIP: TURNING AROUND FAILURE

published:2010-09-06 01:00:00

I’ve just discovered that my favourite blogger, Seth Godin, is also a columnist with the Harvard Business Review. However, even in this mainstream venue, he retains his quirky preoccupation with what’s wrong in the world. He prises open our minds and this is certainly true when he redefines

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LEADERSHIP: HOW’S YOUR KNOWLEDGE AND COURAGE?

published:2010-08-30 01:00:00

What do lobsters, scorpions and bees have in common? Yes, a capacity to inflict a nasty bite. But they also all lack a

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LEADERSHIP: 12 FACETS OF EMOTIONAL INTELLIGENCE

published:2010-08-23 01:00:00

A valuable gemstone has many facets, each finely polished. To be a valuable leader, you similarly need a range of carefully honed capabilities.

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LEADERSHIP: FIVE FAULTS TO FIX

published:2010-08-16 01:00:00

Another home run for Seth – my favourite blogger. His posting of 13 June* describes the entrepreneur’s desire for a magic lottery ticket –

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LEADERSHIP: SCALING THE CLIFF FACE

Increase profits and preparedness, and reduce risk exposure
Eradicate market shocks and other nasty surprises

We've all seen the graph.  Starting low at the left, it rises little over the centuries.  Then, in the last hundred years, begins to rise at an alarming rate.  And today, climbs almost vertically – whether plotting the number of patents, the sale of mobile phones or the growth of online commerce. 

Until recently, there were still times of both change and consolidation.  The decade-to-decade graph showed rises but also plateaus.  Times to stretch; times to recover.

Today, we look up an ever-steeper cliff-face.  It's daunting for older players.  But, most of us oldies have come to terms with our obsolescence.  However, it's also daunting for younger people.  It must seem unfair for a newly minted degree to depreciate so fast.  Yesterday's computer-science heroes now serve newer graduates working in nanotechnology, derivatives modelling or molecular pharmacology.

No wonder, they and many leaders feel it's all too much.  Why go on struggling?  Trying to identify emerging shifts in technologies and industry structures  To define competitive opportunities and threats.  And, how to fit all this together in a world of changing alliances and global risks - whether natural or manmade?  And, determine whether my organisation will still be here in three years, let alone ten.

There's an old saying that the price of safety is eternal vigilance.  In business, this was never more true.

So, put on your climbing boots - and get on top of the changes!

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Monitor and shape change, Foster learning and reinventing,



Dr. Timothy Pascoe AM
PhD (Cambridge), MBA (Harvard), BE & BEc (Adelaide)
Creator, V|E|C|T|O|R Leadership®

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