Reflection Strategies For Leaders

Now that the half marathon is over, and many of my major projects are launched for this quarter, it’s time for renewal and reflection.

I’m a strong proponent of taking a corporate athlete approach to activities, as per Shwartz in The Power of Full Engagement. Take a sprinter’s approach to activities: go hard in short bursts, followed by rest.

From a practical point of view the active component of my work looks like: travel, corporate facilitation, training delivery, outdoor programs, meeting swathes of clients and prospective clients, networking, connecting, writing, creating.

The renewal phase is about reflection and it looks like this:

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Renewal: Energy Habits For Leaders

Leaders need quality habits to enhance their leadership presence, and sharpen their thinking.

I like to keep it simple. Energy flows in and out, like the ocean ebbs and flows. There needs to be a balance of giving and receiving. And for growth, there also needs enhancement! The ocean needs refreshing and purifying, just as we do.

Take a look at this table that outlines my approach to boosting energy habits:

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Good Reads To Expand Your Brain

As I start writing The Book, I take inspiration from other fabulous work.

Looking for some good brain food? Here are some good juicy books from my fellow Thought Leaders:

The New Rules of Management by Peter Cook 

How to Revolutionise Productivity, Innovation, and Engagement by Implementing Projects That Matter

Productivity re-written. Hot tips with implementing meaningful projects in 90 day blocks, and the use of Shakti as a guideline.

The Game Changer by Dr Jason Fox 

How to use the science of motivation with the power of game design to shift behaviour, shape culture and make clever happen

Scintillating wit, cute cartoons, and simple and effective strategies to make work less like work and more like fun. ‘Make progress visible’ is my new mantra.

Amplifiers: The Power of Motivational Leadership to Inspire and Influence by Matt Church

Matt’s thought leadership is elegant,  thorough, and conscience-shifting. I have recommended his work to Vice Chancellors, CEOS, coaches – to those who have  message and need to get it heard in a way that expands and uplifts.

Practical Performance Measurement: Using the PuMP Blueprint for Fast, Easy and Engaging KPIs by Stacey Barr

She’s the go-to girl for everything measurement. In this seminal work, Stacey takes you through step-by-step to measure what matters. ROTI (return on time invested) changed my life when I learned about it from Stacey.

From Me to We: Why commercial collaboration will future proof business, leaders, and personal success by Janine Garner

This well-researched, example rich book makes a solid case that collaboration trumps competition in the new connected economy. Another evolved human being leading the way in uplifting those around her, with her. You go, girl.

Got any books to recommend. Please add them in the comments! I’m a book junkie and love, love personal recommendations.

 

 

3 Questions Holding You Back

worried

© Loren Kerns, CC License, flickr

Without fail, leaders I work with struggle with their confidence from time to time. Even the most influential C-suite well-titled leaders have the occasional quiver of self-doubt.

And it always looks like a version of one or more of these three questions:

1. Am I good enough?

2. Do I know enough?

3. Am I worth it?

Let’s take a look at these suckers and see what’s going on.

1. Am I good enough?

This is about Ability.

This has a number of different causes, and we won’t go there. Likely something in our upbringing or early work career set us up for self-doubt. This is for our therapist/energy worker/healer to sort out.

Helpful reframe: EVERYONE has a first day on the job. Even Obama.

2. Do I know enough?

This is questioning Credibility.

A Vice Chancellor I work with said to me, “I wish I’d read these books before I wrote the about-to-be-published book chapter.”

Yup. There will always be something more to learn. Get over it – what we know got us here, where we’re going next will need new stuff.
Helpful reframe: Leaders are learners, suck it up.

3. Am I worth it?

This is questioning Market Value.

This leads to fear of asking for the sale, the promotion, the payrise.

Helpful reframe: we get what we ask for. 100% true. We will attract clients/opportunities/jobs that reflect our own internal barometer of what we feel we are worth.

So let’s try this instead:

Flip the first two words in the questions.

  • I am good enough.
  • I do know enough.
  • I am worth it.

Try it on for size! Like a new pair of jeans – it takes a little while before they feel comfortable.

End of Year Reflection

Every year I love to review what I have achieved, learned, and enjoyed. It’s a really cathartic experience and gives me a sense of evolution and progress.

And every year I gift my readers my latest reflection tool.

Here is this year’s reflection tool!

Download your copy here: LeadershipReview

Then it’s time to get excited and focused for the coming year.

To help you with that, here is my very own Goal Map for 2015.

Download your copy here: GoalMap2015

Enjoy!

 

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World Class Habits: Morning and End of Day Rituals

CC License - Howard Lebowitz "Sunrise"

CC License – Howard Lebowitz “Sunrise”

Slamming the alarm clock and groaning is one way to start the day. Crawling into bed bleary-eyed and jittery is another way to finish it.

I want neither!

I want to skip out of bed full of energy and happiness, and I want to sink into bed blissed-out and smiling at the end of the day. Both are possible without Pollyanna or drugs.

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