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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: YES, SWEAT THE SMALL STUFF

Improve productivity and profitability as well as systems and processes
Kill disorganisation, extravagance, timewasters, overruns, unproductive meetings

You won't become famous by being efficient.  It’s too mechanical.  But leaders are brought down by the opposite.  Inefficiency is something your detractors can point to.  It annoys – and offends – people.  No one likes their time being wasted. 

Many years ago, I worked with a political leader, who was often late and frequently unprepared for meetings.  His personal staff was also disorganised.  His chief of staff looked like an unmade bed.  While the leader wasn't inspiring, he had some merit on big-picture issues.  But, his enemies focused on the small stuff and the embarrassment it caused.  And, they brought him down.

Ever since, I've had a healthy respect for order and efficiency; and, for making beds!

Test yourself!  Do you run good meetings - with an agreed agenda and clear outcomes?  Do you systematise and standardise processes?  Deliver on time, and on budget?  Do you pinpoint and deal with wastage?  How did you fare?

My political friend would have scored low on most items.  But, what were his most serious failings - and they're not on the list?  First, not recognising his own inefficiency; and then, not compensating with good staff.  Many people find it tough to get organised.  Self-discipline might help.  But, failing that, hire efficient support!

Do you want to lift your own efficiency?  Why not make a list?  But this'll only help, if you act on it.  Otherwise, you've just wasted more time.  Sadly, some leaders have lots of efficiency techniques (lists and endless meetings) but nothing actually gets done – except making themselves and others less efficient.

Here's a practical step.  Why not try it?

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Demonstrate efficiency, Set operating standards,



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

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