Building Leadership on Natural Strengths

In the first article in this series, I defined leadership development from the Your Talent Advantage (YTA) perspective. We describe six distinct leadership profiles in YTA, but believe that the unique leadership aspects of each profile notwithstanding, all six are developed to their highest level of effectiveness by growing five skills that are common to all leaders.

These five common leadership skills are:

 

  1. Leaders build on their natural strengths.
  2. They are aware of their limitations, and seek input from people with perspectives different from their own.
  3. They are aware that any group of followers contains people who see the world differently than they do, and they find ways to communicate effectively to each of them.
  4. They recognize the talents of others, and seek to build teams based on complementary skill sets and perspectives.
  5. They learn to accept/own their natural limitations and develop techniques to mitigate them.

 

This and the subsequent four articles will focus on these skills, and how each is developed, one by one.

Leaders Build on Their Natural Skills

The core belief of Perceptual Style Theory (PST) is that everyone has the innate capacity to lead, but that the skills associated with that innate capacity vary depending upon which of the six Leadership Strengths Profiles (LSP) an individual has.

Before a person can begin to grow and develop their innate leadership capacity into actual, usable leadership skills they must recognize, understand, and claim their LSP. What determines a person’s LSP is their Perceptual Style (PS). PS describes the way in which they perceive the world around them; therefore, understanding one’s unique PS is the first critical step to becoming a leader.

Another way to state this is that in order to be an effective leader it is important that there is comfort and acceptance of one’s unique strengths as well as comfort and acceptance of one’s blind spots and short comings. Both sides of this equation can be challenging.

Too many times, would be leaders focus their leadership growth and development efforts on strengths in areas that are outside their innate skill set. It is our experience that many people are unaware of and discount what they do naturally well. Rather than focusing on discovering and working on developing their natural strengths to their fullest expression, they spend precious time focused on trying to acquire skills that are not an innate part of the way they see the world.

Working on one’s weaknesses or those skills that are missing from one’s skill set is a common approach to personal growth and its goal is a “well rounded” individual or, in this case, leader. Unfortunately, the end result of this approach is mediocre rather than outstanding leadership. It is impossible for any individual to master all six different LSPs, and, in fact, it is truly only possible to master the specific LSP that each person already has as an integral part of whom they are.

The LSP program takes a strengths based development approach with an emphasis on getting better at those leadership skills that are innate to the individual. Those who wish to lead; indeed, anyone who wants to perform at their highest level of effectiveness needs to begin their development time on learning how to do more of what they do best and delegating the rest to others for whom the skill is an innate skill.

In order to accomplish this first step of leadership development and master the skill of building on one’s natural leadership strengths, it is necessary to know what those strengths are. The challenge to strengths discovery is that people find it easier to identify what they don’t do well than to recognize and claim their natural strengths. Simply asking, “What are your natural leadership strengths?” is not an effective method.

While there are multiple ways to discovery one’s natural leadership strengths and blind spots, most require more effort and time than most people are willing to invest. The LSP program provides a quick and easy assessment that identifies the user’s LSP, describes the profile experience, lists behavioral leadership skills, identifies optimal leadership situations and leadership challenges, and describes ways to mitigate leadership weaknesses. The concise summary delivered by the LSP assessment results provides a solid base from which to begin the crucial first step to developing one’s leadership strengths to their maximum level of effectiveness.

Gary Jordan, Ph.D., has over 32 years of experience in clinical psychology, behavioral assessment, individual development, and coaching. He earned his doctorate in Clinical Psychology from the California School of Professional Psychology – Berkeley. He is co-creator of Perceptual Style Theory, a revolutionary psychological assessment system that teaches people how to unleash their deepest potentials for success. For more free information on how to succeed in life and business doing more of what you love, visit http://www.YourTalentAdvantage.com.

Article Source: https://EzineArticles.com/expert/Gary_M._Jordan/22166

 

How to Build a Backyard Fish Pond?

Water gardens and backyard ponds are for butterflies, frogs, birds, fish, you, and the whole family. These ponds may be small, may even be no larger than 3 to 4 feet in diameter. These may be built in patio containers and barrels. Drawing wildlife in your backyard may be done by adding water gardens and ponds. These will not only provide enjoyment and interest but also a natural and relaxing environment as well. A fish pond in your backyard may become the focal point of your backyard conversation. Continue reading

Benefits of Herbal Tea and Herbal Products

Overview

Herbal tea, unlike regular tea, is a blend of herbs rather than tea bush leaves. It is made from fresh or dry leaves, roots, seeds, fruits and flowers of therapeutic herbs. There is huge a variety of herbal teas such as – Catnip, Licorice, Hibiscus, Thyme, Nettle, Rose hip, Chamomile, Yarrow, Fennel, Mint and many more.

Continue reading

Intent And Urgency In Leadership

In this life of mad activity and high levels of stress it can be seen as dangerous and unwise to call for urgency. However, excellence and effective leadership is not achievable without a good sense of urgency. Of course, no-one needs more fruitless activity. What we do need is urgency in leadership.

Too often does one find that managers get worked up about the demands of the customer, operational tasks, project deadlines, the boss’s or shareholders’ expectations, the competition’s latest moves and many other typical considerations, but they drag their feet when it comes to leadership. Working on their personal vision for their area of responsibility, consulting key people about the vision, giving new direction, planning and facilitating meetings for optimum engagement of team members and building of the team, setting up one-on-one meetings for feedback and executing plans to develop team members are things that can wait for another day. More often than not these things remain only good ideas and intentions. They never become a matter of urgency.

Some people rationalise about their leadership responsibility with thoughts such as: it is a waste of time; it is not work; other people need to take responsibility for themselves; this is not what I was trained for; I have a job to do; it is for higher level management to do; the time is not right.

The truth is that the lack of leadership actions leads to low levels of collaboration, shared purpose and focus, commitment and general effectiveness. The cost is huge in terms of time spent to correct wrong perceptions, miscommunications, uncoordinated work and poor application due to low motivation. The truth is that people with those views and lack of urgency in leadership never get to develop beyond their functional, technical or managerial expertise. They become a lid to the potential of their own and others’ collective efforts and growth.

Controlled urgency

Once the leader interacts with others with intent and urgency in his leadership, it is infectious. It stimulates energy and movement. However, misplaced urgency can be very demotivating and counterproductive. If in the leader’s communication everything seems to be equally urgent the potential positive effect is lost. If the leader’s urgency is experienced as inauthentic a lot of damage will be done. Pretending his message is urgent in the interest of the organisation the truth might be that it is driven by personal interests or ambitions. Urgency should also not be driven by fear, but by inner conviction. In time people are perceptive enough to ‘read’ the leader’s sense of urgency and where it comes from.

As with so many dimensions of leadership, the art is how to deal with two paradoxical but equally important approaches. Urgency in leadership does not translate to impatience where others can sense the leader’s frustration, or worse, irritation. The leader needs to demonstrate urgency in his leadership and be willing to be patient when it comes to the effects of his leadership actions. There has to be urgency in doing what is right, patience in the expectation of results. Urgency in the empowerment of others, patience in the act of doing so.

Consistency

Mixed signals of what the leader sees as urgent is also counterproductive. Urgency in leadership is not compulsive or an emotional reaction to pressure. It is about commitment and application in the areas that will ensure sustainable effectiveness. Enthusiasm for new technology, new products, the promise of an acquisition or bonusses when targets are met can easily overshadow the more important commitments for building the organisation for the long haul.

Fuel your passion

We are only human and personal dissapointments, disruptions and all kinds of adversities impact on the levels of our energy and entusiasm for what we do from day to day. From time to time we can even be in the situation where the next challenge is not that obvious. We become complacent. Work, as we see it from day to day, has become boring. The problem is not only the lack of urgency we have, it is the lack of desire and passion.

Even as our energy is deserting us, in fact more so then as in other times, we need to see the urgency of refueling our passion. It is time for ‘timeout’. Time to break away from the usual routines and make new discoveries. Of course one has to take some risks. Of course one has to enter the unknown. Else, how can there be new discoveries? The more important and transforming risks will be the risks we take in our thinking. But often we need a different experience to stimulate different thinking.

For reflection

We therefore need to face some tough questions and face them courageously.

 

  • Have you made the commitment to your leadership responsibility over and above your functional or role responsibilities?
  • Have you worked out what such a commitment means in practice?
  • Do you procrastinate the actions you know you need to take as a leader?
  • Are you consistent in the energy and passion you show in your leadership?
  • Is it time to prioritise refueling your passion for and purpose in life?

 

Let us be reminded by Leonardo da Vinci’s observation:

I have been impressed with the urgency of doing. Knowing is not enough; we must apply. Being willing is not enough; we must do.

New Era Leadership offers an unique online development program on 32 leadership principles. A one year registration give access to a journey through 32 week modules with blog participation and a journal included. This program can easily be linked to coaching to help you develop your leadership. Coaching can be done on Skype. Register to receive regular articles and key thoughts on leadership and self-development.

Visit my website at http://www.newlead.co.za to register and begin your development journey!

Article Source: https://EzineArticles.com/expert/Dr_Gerhard_van_Rensburg/1587108

 

The Inner Battle of Writers

https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcR1wR1YQZ2wQzggxIz4pUvqh_hkXHIBKoGdj0xdblPAQowIvObR3QThere is a psychological nuisance so powerful that can deflate the drive, self-esteem, and human spirit of many aspiring Writers of any age. These Writers are faced with an obstacle that make them stop, think twice and question their right to be a part of a respected community. This even leads them to doubt their ambition of pursuing their literary or journalistic calling. It is that inner voice echoing: “Huh! Who do you think you are, next JK Rowling in the making?” or “Oh God,  stop pretending you have writing talent!” and more similar lines of thinking. Some may call it a fiend while others may describe it as the self-defeating aspect of a person. Continue reading