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Вміст надано Ken Downer. Весь вміст подкастів, включаючи епізоди, графіку та описи подкастів, завантажується та надається безпосередньо компанією Ken Downer або його партнером по платформі подкастів. Якщо ви вважаєте, що хтось використовує ваш захищений авторським правом твір без вашого дозволу, ви можете виконати процедуру, описану тут https://uk.player.fm/legal.
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George Esquivel started making shoes for himself and some friends, up-and-coming musicians in Southern California. Soon, Hollywood came calling. And it wasn’t just celebrities who took notice. A film financier did, too. He said he wanted to invest in the company, but George soon realized his intentions weren’t what they seemed. Join Ben and special guest host Kathleen Griffith as they speak to George about the rise of Esquivel Designs. Hear what a meeting with Anna Wintour is really like, and what happens when you’re betrayed by someone inside your company. These are The Unshakeables. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.…
RapidStart Leadership Podcast
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Вміст надано Ken Downer. Весь вміст подкастів, включаючи епізоди, графіку та описи подкастів, завантажується та надається безпосередньо компанією Ken Downer або його партнером по платформі подкастів. Якщо ви вважаєте, що хтось використовує ваш захищений авторським правом твір без вашого дозволу, ви можете виконати процедуру, описану тут https://uk.player.fm/legal.
The RapidStart Leadership Podcast brings you short, interesting stories, revealing research, and practical tools to help make you a more effective leader. Whether you are a new leader, a seasoned manager, or mentoring someone else who is learning to lead, these podcasts will arm you with actionable takeaways you can apply, whatever the leadership situation you find yourself in. Host Ken Downer is the founder of RapidStartLeadership.com where his blog posts, videos, podcasts, and online courses equip leaders and mangers of all experience levels to become more skilled at getting things done through people. Through his 26 years of active duty as a U.S. Army Infantryman, he has lead people in a wide variety of circumstances, from the jungles of Panama to the cubical jungles of the office environment. Using those and other life experiences, he regularly shares practical tips and techniques that help leaders master the art of leadership, whether it is self-improvement, setting a vision, team-building, problem-solving, planning and organizing, communicating, or simply figuring out the first steps to take as a new leader. Becoming a great leader is hard work. The goal of RapidStart Leadership is to make climbing the leadership learning curve a little easier for you. Lead On!
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Вміст надано Ken Downer. Весь вміст подкастів, включаючи епізоди, графіку та описи подкастів, завантажується та надається безпосередньо компанією Ken Downer або його партнером по платформі подкастів. Якщо ви вважаєте, що хтось використовує ваш захищений авторським правом твір без вашого дозволу, ви можете виконати процедуру, описану тут https://uk.player.fm/legal.
The RapidStart Leadership Podcast brings you short, interesting stories, revealing research, and practical tools to help make you a more effective leader. Whether you are a new leader, a seasoned manager, or mentoring someone else who is learning to lead, these podcasts will arm you with actionable takeaways you can apply, whatever the leadership situation you find yourself in. Host Ken Downer is the founder of RapidStartLeadership.com where his blog posts, videos, podcasts, and online courses equip leaders and mangers of all experience levels to become more skilled at getting things done through people. Through his 26 years of active duty as a U.S. Army Infantryman, he has lead people in a wide variety of circumstances, from the jungles of Panama to the cubical jungles of the office environment. Using those and other life experiences, he regularly shares practical tips and techniques that help leaders master the art of leadership, whether it is self-improvement, setting a vision, team-building, problem-solving, planning and organizing, communicating, or simply figuring out the first steps to take as a new leader. Becoming a great leader is hard work. The goal of RapidStart Leadership is to make climbing the leadership learning curve a little easier for you. Lead On!
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×When it comes to getting things done, culture can have a huge impact not only on how well the team performs, but how likely it is that our teammates will stick around to do it again. So, what do we do when we sense that our team’s culture is heading straight for the edge of a cliff? Here are eleven ideas for how we can make a culture course correction with our teams. Notes and Resources: Prefer to read? Here’s the full post: Culture Course Correction: 11 Ways to Avoid Going Over the Cliff Here’s a link to Daniel Pink’s book Drive: The Surprising Truth About What Motivates Us Take a quick leadership “I” test for a sense of how you may be inadvertently sabotaging your team’s culture: The Leadership Eye Test: A Simple Checkup for Your Team’s Health Culture is shaped very powerfully by what we do when things go wrong. Here are two inspiring stories about leaders who got it right: How to Build Culture One Test at a Time For more ideas about how to strengthen your team culture through ritual, consider: Team Rituals: 35 Pretty Good Ideas to Strengthen Your Culture Quotable: “Water the plans you want to grow.” - Stephen Covey “A sense of autonomy has a powerful effect on individual performance and attitude.” - Daniel Pink “It’s hard to build a team if you make teammates fight for the same resources.” - Ken Downer Related posts : How to Build Team Culture One Test at a Time Micromanagement: 7 Signs You’re a Micromanager and What to Do About It How to Build Team Culture One Test at a Time Stay connected with Rapidstart Leadership Visit the site at https://www.rapidstartleadership.com/ Tweet us at @RapidStartLdr Follow us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/rapidstartleadership Subscribe to the Leadership Updates Newsletter Email us at Ken@RapidStartLeadership.com Thanks for listening, and Lead On!…
If we hope to develop high-performing teams, increasing engagement is always at the top of our to-do list. But sometimes in our efforts to lead, we can get in our own way, and hinder the very thing we are trying to encourage. Two brief interactions that went very differently illustrate how this can happen, and what we can do if we are serious about increasing engagement on our teams. Notes and Resources: Prefer to read? Here’s the full post: Increasing Engagement – How to Get People to Open Up Find out more about Dale Carnegie’s book How to Win Friends & Influence People or get the book here: Win Friends Here’s a link to a free copy of Dr. Gordon’s study: The Difference Between Feeling Defensive and Feeling Understood . Quotable: “When people feel defensive, they want to strike out ; when they feel understood, they want to reach out . When people feel defensive, they want to do something to the other person; when they feel understood, they want to do something for the other person.” - Dr. Ronal Gordon “I made it a rule to forbear all direct contradiction to the sentiment of others. - Benjamin Franklin “Be wiser than other people if you can; but do not tell them so.” - Lord Chesterfield, to his son Related posts : Culture Course Correction: 11 Ways to Avoid Going over the Cliff Courage to Lead: Re-looking the Role of Courage in Leadership Bad vs. Good: Why Does the Bad Seem to Outweigh the Good? Stay connected with Rapidstart Leadership Visit the site at https://www.rapidstartleadership.com/ Tweet us at @RapidStartLdr Follow us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/rapidstartleadership Subscribe to the Leadership Updates Newsletter Email us at Ken@RapidStartLeadership.com Thanks for listening, and Lead On!…
Most people know that a marathon is 26.2 miles long. Successful runners also know that it’s a mistake to focus solely on that distance. Smart leaders can benefit from similar thinking. Whatever marathon we are running with our teams, to get to that distant goal, it’s not the finish line we should focus on, it’s the 18th mile. Here’s why. Notes and Resources: Prefer to read? Here’s the full post: The 18th Mile: It’s Not the Finish Line Leaders Should Focus On When it comes to clearly defining the problem we are trying to solve, this post can help, and demonstrates why it’s so important to invest the time to do this part right: What’s the Problem: Problem-Solving Lessons-Learned from Moneyball. Team culture is critically important in helping us make it through the 18th mile. Here’s more on how to build one that will go the distance: How to Build Team Culture From the Ground Up The study of fund raisers is described in this paper prepared by Ashley V. Whillans from the Department of Psychology at the University of British Columbia My post Beat the Hamster Wheel – 5 Ways to Keep Going When You’d Rather Not has several ways to help you and your team persevere. Quotable: “Expecting and preparing for things to become difficult is the first step to overcoming them.” - Ken Downer “The presence of an obstacle doesn’t necessarily mean we’re on the wrong path, just that we need to be more creative and resourceful to continue forward.” - Ken Downer “The true team players emerge at the 18th mile. Pay attention to who they are, value them, encourage them, support them; they are not always who we thought they were.” - Ken Downer Related posts : How Serving Can Make You a Better Leader Type 2 Fun: The Secret to Achieving Your Goals Spotlight the Support Stay connected with Rapidstart Leadership Visit the site at https://www.rapidstartleadership.com/ Tweet us at @RapidStartLdr Follow us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/rapidstartleadership Subscribe to the Leadership Updates Newsletter Email us at Ken@RapidStartLeadership.com Thanks for listening, and Lead On!…
On a recent sub-zero day on a frozen lake in central Minnesota, I got a chance to witness great team leadership in action. It was a crash course in what leading winning teams is all about. Here’s what the experience was like, and five key lessons from the leaders themselves that we can all use in leading our own teams. Notes and Resources: Prefer to read? Here’s the full post: Leading Winning Teams: 5 Leadership Lessons from Mushers A great article posted on LinkedIn by Aaron Phillips goes even farther into detail with his conversations with several of the mushers featured in this podcast. If you are interested in a deeper dive into the interface between mushing and leadership, an hour well-spent would be with the Always in Pursuit podcast interview with 5x Iditarod champion musher Dallas Seavey, hosted by Mike Burke, an exceptional leader in his own right. Quotable: “I have to figure out how to make each dog reach its best potential.” - Libby Riddles, first woman to win the Iditarod “They’re a great team because I eat beans and rice and they eat steak and eggs. - Iditarod musher Lance Mackay “Good leaders do not secure their position by making others less confident. - Caroline Blair-Smith, Musher “It is not what the challenge is, it’s how the team handles the challenge.” - Dallas Seavey, 5-Time Iditarod Champion “My job is to make sure these dogs succeed. The race portion will take care of itself.” - Dallas Seavey Related posts : How to Respond to Crisis: Four Steps for Leaders Positive Feedback – Catch them Doing Something Right Rapid Deliberation: 7 Ways to Hit the Target While Under Stress Stay connected with Rapidstart Leadership Visit the site at https://www.rapidstartleadership.com/ Tweet us at @RapidStartLdr Follow us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/rapidstartleadership Subscribe to the Leadership Updates Newsletter Email us at Ken@RapidStartLeadership.com Thanks for listening, and Lead On!…
When we’re trying to influence people to choose an option we favor, we can be tempted to only talk about the reasons why they should. But according to something called the Blemishing Effect, it may actually be in our best interests to point out why they shouldn’t, too. Here’s why. Notes and Resources: Prefer to read? Here’s the full post The Blemishing Effect: Why Selling Perfection Can be Self-Defeating Dan Pink’s To Sell is Human: The Surprising Truth About Moving Others is full of great insights about the ways we influence each other. The blemishing effect works best when people don’t want to invest a lot of energy into making a decision, and only when the negative “blemish” comes after all the positive information. Related posts : Influencing the Decision: How to Transition from Doer to Decider Hyperbolic Discounting and 7 Ways to Prevent Self-Sabotage How to Build Influence: Go From Gofer to Go-To with These 3 Simple Steps Stay connected with Rapidstart Leadership Visit the site at https://www.rapidstartleadership.com/ Tweet us at @RapidStartLdr Follow us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/rapidstartleadership Subscribe to the Leadership Updates Newsletter Email us at Ken@RapidStartLeadership.com Thanks for listening, and Lead On!…
One of the many challenges we face as leaders is where to spend our time and energy. Recently I came across an insightful analogy that can help us approach this problem. It has to do with having a kind of leadership double-vision. Notes and Resources: Prefer to read? Here’s the full pos t Do You Have Leadership Double-Vision? Should You? The Essential Wooden by John Wooden and Steve Jamison is a great read full of insightful, practical leadership wisdom. Another great leadership read is Wooden on Leadership – more practical leadership wisdom woven into longer form stories about Wooden’s challenges and successes as a coach and leader. For more about the hazards of micromanaging, check out 7 Signs You’re a Micromanager and What to Do About It Quotable : “If the ladder is not leaning against the right wall, every step we take just gets us to the wrong place faster.” - Stephen Covey “ If we are to devote time to any task, no matter how mundane, we should make sure that time is well-invested.” - Ken Downer “ Wooden’s focus on the details of every practice brought his team to the point that when the big games came around, he did not worry about the outcome. He allowed the score to take care of itself. - Ken Downer Related posts : Book Notes – Wooden on Leadership: Think Small The Leadership Eye Test: A Simple Checkup for Your Team’s Health Visionary Leadership: When Social Proof Fails Stay connected with Rapidstart Leadership Visit the site at https://www.rapidstartleadership.com/ Tweet us at @RapidStartLdr Follow us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/rapidstartleadership Subscribe to the Leadership Updates Newsletter Email us at Ken@RapidStartLeadership.com Thanks for listening, and Lead On!…
How do we convince ourselves to do something we’d rather not? It’s cold and raining outside, but I’m supposed to go for a training run today. I really don’t want to. To get myself out the door, here are the kinds of things that go through my head, and ways we can all think about approaching any difficult task that we’d really rather not do. Notes and Resources: Prefer to read? Here’s the full pos t Running in the Rain: What to Think About When You Think About Quitting Type 1 fun is an activity that is fun in the moment, like a rollercoaster ride; Type 2 fun is more fun when looking back on it, like a tough workout. It’s “fun when it’s done.” For more ideas on how to set and achieve your goals, check out my Goal Mastery Course ; the first several lessons are free. Quotable : “Our will is a kind of muscle, and it’s times like these when we can either train it to grow stronger, or allow it to atrophy.” - Ken Downer “ When it comes to willpower, winning today’s battle will make it easier to win the one tomorrow.” - Ken Downer “ There is no such thing as bad weather, only poor clothing choices.” - Outdoorsman’s adage “ The first step to growth is accepting discomfort .” - Ken Downer “ The impediment to action advances action. What stands in the way becomes the way .” - Marcus Aurelius, Meditations Related posts : Beat the Hamster Wheel: 5 Ways to Keep Going When You’d Rather Not Type 2 Fun: The Secret to Achieving Your Goals Where Did Everybody Go? 23 Ways to Stick With Your Goals Stay connected with Rapidstart Leadership Visit the site at https://www.rapidstartleadership.com/ Tweet us at @RapidStartLdr Follow us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/rapidstartleadership Subscribe to the Leadership Updates Newsletter Email us at Ken@RapidStartLeadership.com Thanks for listening, and Lead On!…
As ever, with the approach of the New Year, there is talk of reflection. Extracting the lessons-learned from the past year and using them as we look forward is a great path to continued growth. But few are the people who will actually sit down and do it. One reason may be that there is no owner’s manual to guide the process. With that in mind, here are some ideas for how to go about reflecting on the year gone by so that the year ahead is as good as we can make it. Notes and Resources: Prefer to read? Here’s the full post Reflecting Back on the Year Ahead – 11 Ways to Make Your Reflection Session Pay Off Why use pen and paper? It gets us away from the screen, it triggers a different way of thinking, and it results in a tangible, concrete artifact we are more likely to remember. Here are the domains for reflecting that Donald Latumahina suggests, along with some questions in each we can ask ourselves: Material Have we been able to reduce debt, add to savings, and spend wisely? What is the next career step, and how are we progressing towards it? Are we in control of our possessions, or are they in control of us? Spiritual Do we feel fulfilled? Why or why not? Whatever our belief set, how well are we practicing its precepts? What about meditation or reflective reading? What would our obituary say if it only covered the past year – what reasons have we given others to say we were a good person? Physical What do we do to stay healthy? How often do we exercise, and is that adequate? How could we be more active even without a formal program? Is the food we eat helping or hurting our efforts to reach fitness goals, or to lead a healthy life? Do we get enough sleep? Social How would we rate the quality of our key relationships with spouse, family, and friends? What could we do to improve them? Have we made new friends in the past year? How well did we stay connected to old ones? Do all our friends look just like us, or could we stand to have a little more variety in interests, background, and culture? Quotable : “Explore thyself. Herin are demanded the eye and the nerve.” - Henry David Thoreau “ Often, it’s not the hail-Mary pass but the slow and steady plodding that lead to our eventual success..” - Ken Downer “ Maybe the best way to start the new year is by thanking the people who helped us get through the old one.” - Ken Downer Related posts : 6 Powerful Ways Leaders Reflect, and how Reflection Makes Your Team Great The After Action Review: A Leader’s Guide No Car, No Phone, No Clue: 10 Life Lessons from a Treasure Hunt Stay connected with Rapidstart Leadership Visit the site at https://www.rapidstartleadership.com/ Tweet us at @RapidStartLdr Follow us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/rapidstartleadership Subscribe to the Leadership Updates Newsletter Email us at Ken@RapidStartLeadership.com Thanks for listening, and Lead On!…
What do jet engines and work teams have in common? If either generate too much heat, they will self-destruct. Aeronautical engineers found a surprising way to adapt their engines so they could handle more heat and operate at higher capacities. Today we’ll look at three ways to apply their approach to leadership, and boost our own team performance. Notes and Resources: Prefer to read? Here’s the full post Boosting Team Performance: 3 Ways to Make Your Team’s Engine More Powerful Simon Winchester’s book The perfectionists: How Precision Engineers Created the Modern World is a fascinating look into man’s pursuit of the ultra-precise. My Book Notes on Jim Collins’ Good to Great looks at the leadership behind the truly great companies; these people are not at all what you might expect as leaders. Quotable : “The growth and development of people is the highest calling of leadership.” - Harvey S. Firestone “ Cool deliberation followed by determined action is the key to success in leadership.” - Ken Downer “ Leadership consists of nothing but taking responsibility for everything that goes wrong and giving your subordinates credit for everything that goes well.” - Dwight D. Eisenhower Related posts : Rapid Deliberation: 7 Ways to Hit the Target While Under Stress Delegation, Part 2: What to Delegate? Who’s Your Second? Are We Really Leading, or Just in Charge? Stay connected with Rapidstart Leadership Visit the site at https://www.rapidstartleadership.com/ Tweet us at @RapidStartLdr Follow us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/rapidstartleadership Subscribe to the Leadership Updates Newsletter Email us at Ken@RapidStartLeadership.com Thanks for listening, and Lead On!…
When telling people what we need done, how do we strike the balance between being overly prescriptive, and recklessly lax? How can we be sure what we want in the beginning will be what we get at the end? A story I read recently involving a frozen lake, a pack of wolves, and a canoe full of beer can serve as a helpful guide in helping us master the art of delegation. Notes and Resources: Prefer to read? Here’s the full post Delegate Better: Three Ways to Get the Results You Want This example of poor delegation comes from Farley Mowat’s book Never Cry Wolf . It is both very amusing, and an eye-opening look at how we can be blinded, often willfully, by our own prejudices. It was also made into a movie, but I don’t recommend it. For a deeper look into the possibility that we may have become micromanagers, check out Micromanagement: 7 Signs You’re a Micromanager and What to Do About It This post on Set and Forget Leadership in another take on delegation and how to avoid getting burned when handing off a task to someone else. Quotable : “ Getting better at delegation means putting more energy into the start of the process.” - Ken Downer “ Never tell people how to do things. Tell them what to do and they will surprise you with their ingenuity.” - General George S. Patton “Leaders strive to unlock the potential contained between other people’s ears.” - Ken Downer Related posts : How To Delegate, Part 1: Why? Delegation, Part 2: What to Delegate? Delegation, Part 3: Who, How to Delegate? Stay connected with Rapidstart Leadership Visit the site at https://www.rapidstartleadership.com/ Tweet us at @RapidStartLdr Follow us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/rapidstartleadership Subscribe to the Leadership Updates Newsletter Email us at Ken@RapidStartLeadership.com Thanks for listening, and Lead On!…
In times of high stress, we want fast answers. As leaders we feel the pressure be decisive. But fast is not always best, and can sometimes lead us deeper into trouble. What we need is rapid deliberation. With a little help from Wyatt Earp, and people who jump out of airplanes for a living, here’s what I think that means, and how we can put it to work for us. Notes and Resources: Prefer to read? Here’s the full post: Rapid Deliberation: 7 Ways to Hit the Target While Under Stress In The Slow Fix Carl Honore digs even more deeply into how to be deliberately rapid. For more on what to do when crisis hits, check out: How to Respond to Crisis: Four Steps for Leaders Well-written The After Action Review s are a great resource to help leaders anticipate potential problems and prepare for their likelihood. Quotable : “ Fast is fine, but accuracy is final. You must learn to be slow in a hurry.” - Wyatt Earp “ Slow is smooth, and smooth is fast.” - U.S. Army Jumpmaster adage “’The action that follows deliberation should be quick, but deliberation should be slow.” - Aristotle “ Haste trips up its own heels .” - Michel de Montaigne Related posts : Team Leadership: 4 Simple Steps to Getting Stuff Done Are you Contagious? 3 Ways to Manage your Emotional Message 11 Key Rehearsal Techniques to Keep Your Plan From Getting Torpedoed Stay connected with Rapidstart Leadership Visit the site at https://www.rapidstartleadership.com/ Tweet us at @RapidStartLdr Follow us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/rapidstartleadership Subscribe to the Leadership Updates Newsletter Email us at Ken@RapidStartLeadership.com Thanks for listening, and Lead On!…
‘Set and forget’ leadership: Hand off the task as fast as possible, move on to other things. It’s what we tend to do when we’re in a hurry, but the biggest speed advantage this approach confers may be how quickly it can get us into trouble. Here’s a way to think about how to delegate that task we’ve cooked up so that things function smoothly in the kitchen, and nobody gets burned. Notes and Resources: Prefer to read? Here’s the full post: ‘Set and Forget’ Leadership: How to Delegate So You Won’t Get Burned Like so many of his books, Malcolm Gladwell’s What the Dog Saw is both and entertaining and informative look into the quirks of being human. Check out Delegate or Die and how to delegate for a deeper dive behind the idea of why we need to delegate, even if we can do the task best. For a detailed look at how to conduct an after-action review, read The After Action Review : A Leader’s Guide – it gives a blow-by-blow approach to what to do before, during, and after the big event so that each time you keep getting better. Quotable : “ If it happened in our kitchen, our fingers are scorched; we have to own it. ” - Ken Downer “ Micromanaging our teammates can erode trust and foster disengagement almost as fast as blame-shifting can.” - Ken Downer “’Set and forget’ is now way to run a kitchen, not if we want to avoid sullen chefs and dissatisfied diners.” - Ken Downer Related posts : Micromanagement: 7 Signs You’re a Micromanager and What to Do About It Getting Down in the Trenches: Tips for Taking Over Mind the Gap: 9 Ways to Close the Trust Gap on Your Team Stay connected with Rapidstart Leadership Visit the site at https://www.rapidstartleadership.com/ Tweet us at @RapidStartLdr Follow us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/rapidstartleadership Subscribe to the Leadership Updates Newsletter Email us at Ken@RapidStartLeadership.com Thanks for listening, and Lead On!…
Want to achieve your goals? Don’t listen to the marketers… We are continually bombarded by messages that to cater to, and encourage, our short attention span. There is no shortage of “life hacks,” quick-fix remedies, and promises of miraculous overnight success. Like a blow from Thor’s mighty hammer, we’re led to expect quick resolution to our problems, and rapid attainment of our goals. But something I saw recently reminded me that most of that is not helpful. When it comes to achieving your goals, there is a better approach you can employ. This may be best explained using an oddly shaped chunk of apple tree. Notes and Resources: Prefer to read? Here’s the full post: Big Hammer or Small Blade? What it Really Takes to Achieve Your Goals Here’s a short video of craftsman Matt Jordan turning a burled apple tree limb into a beautiful coffee mug . Here’s the slow motion video of what is really happening with every turn of the spindle, thanks to Bailey Woodworks. Here’s a short description of the Habit Cycle and how you can use it to help you stick to your plan. For more skills to help you achieve your goals, be sure to check out my Goal Setting Mastery Course to help you build the habits that will turn your future into the one you envision. Quotable : “ Progress is not measured in a few giant swings of a hammer but in thousands of little chips from a blade. ” - Ken Downer “ Focus small instead of big. Know that every tiny little bit matters, and all those little bits can add up to something amazing.” - Ken Downer “Missing a day is like working with dull tools or a saw with missing teeth; it’s going to take longer and the outcome may not be as good; steady persistence is a multiplier.” - Ken Downer “One great workout will not win a race. 30-40 good workouts strung together in close proximity is what wins races!” - Lionel Sanders, Professional Triathlete Related posts : How to Communicate the Vision: Striking the Right Chord 3 Ways to Keep Going When the Going Gets Tough Why I Resolve to do Nothing Next Year Stay connected with Rapidstart Leadership Visit the site at https://www.rapidstartleadership.com/ Tweet us at @RapidStartLdr Follow us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/rapidstartleadership Subscribe to the Leadership Updates Newsletter Email us at Ken@RapidStartLeadership.com Thanks for listening, and Lead On!…
Not all leadership situations are the same. Sometimes the way ahead is clear to all, and leading is easy. But it’s when the storms roll in and the path is obscured that leaders earn their keep. These are the lighthouse leadership moments that matter the most. With the help of a story of amazing bravery, here’s what that means, and how to keep your team on course even on the darkest nights. Notes and Resources: Prefer to read? Here’s the full post: Lighthouse Leadership: How to Lead Your Team When the Storm Hits For more detail on this story, here’s a description of the wreck of the Madeira from the Minnesota Historical Society Bob Tiede’s great question is to ask, “How can we do this in a way that will guarantee failure?” Here’s about that from his web site, Leading With Questions Quotable : “ Leaders talk about values to live by, and leaders live by the values they talk about. ” - Ken Downer “ Lighthouse leadership shines brightest when it is darkest.” - Ken Downer “Build the lighthouse before you need it.” - Ken Downer Related posts : Cornerstone of Leadership: What’s Yours? For more on how choose cornerstone values How to Build Team Culture From the Ground Up Positive Feedback – Catch them Doing Something Right Stay connected with Rapidstart Leadership Visit the site at https://www.rapidstartleadership.com/ Tweet us at @RapidStartLdr Follow us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/rapidstartleadership Subscribe to the Leadership Updates Newsletter Email us at Ken@RapidStartLeadership.com Thanks for listening, and Lead On!…
What’s the best revenge against someone who has done us wrong? The answer might surprise you, but it has everything to do with what makes a leader. Notes and Resources: Prefer to read? Here’s the full post: The Best Revenge: What to Do When Someone Does Us Wrong Here’s a short, fun video of matches going off in a chain reaction in the form of a volcano . Don’t try this at home! For more diversion, here’s a short video of a triple spiral of dominoes falling For a brief but interesting history of America’s most famous family grudge match, check out “ The Hatfield & McCoy Feud ” on History.com. Quotable : “ When the answer to a wrong is another wrong, things don’t get better; often they only become worse. ” - Ken Downer “ The best revenge is to be unlike him who performed the injury.” - Marcus Aurelius, Meditations “A good leader is the match that keeps its cool, the domino that refuses to fall, the control rod in the reactor absorbing atomic fragments, not spewing them out.” - Ken Downer Related posts : Restoring Faith in Humanity One Act at a Time Leaders Go First: The Surprising Impact of Making the First Move Herd Mentality: What We Can Learn About Leadership From Ancient Americans Stay connected with Rapidstart Leadership Visit the site at https://www.rapidstartleadership.com/ Tweet us at @RapidStartLdr Follow us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/rapidstartleadership Subscribe to the Leadership Updates Newsletter Email us at Ken@RapidStartLeadership.com Thanks for listening, and Lead On!…
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