Your Performance Improvement Partner ™

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Your Performance Improvement Partner™ Update

December, 2005

 

Greetings!
By now, you’re probably anxiously anticipating the actual holidays of the holiday season. It seems as though the media and retailers have immersed us in holiday decoration and shopping messages since before Halloween.

No matter what holidays you celebrate, and even if you don’t celebrate any at all, there are still feelings and thoughts that tend to be associated with our winter month celebrations: feelings of gratitude, peace, generosity, optimism, a honoring of the past and a looking forward toward a brighter future.

As you rush to finish up projects that you promised would be done this year, remember to take time to appreciate all that you did accomplish. Be kind to the people around you (including yourself). Be generous with people you don’t even know.

Make the world a better place by making better personal choices every day. One person can make a difference, and today, that person is you.

In this issue:

·
Message From the President
·
Leadership That Transforms...and Delivers - Planning
  Performance Improvement Partner™ PIP Tip
  Syndicated Article
·
Resources and Events

Message From the President

A “new” holiday was brought into existence in 1966 by Dr. Maulana Karenga. He sought to create and develop an African-American/Pan African holiday based on the traditional “First Fruit Celebration”. Before you brush this off as not relevant to you, let me share with you the values (in English and Swahili) upon which this celebration is based.

Unity – Umoja
Self-Determination– Kujichagulia
Collective Work and Responsibility– Ujima
Cooperative Economics– Ujamaa
Purpose– Nia
Creativity– Kuumba
Faith– Imani

I believe that if all of us lived our lives (or ran our organizations) with these principles or values at our core, many of the world’s ills would cease to exist. The celebration occurs from December 26 through January 1 and you can read more about it here.

Meanwhile, I wish you the most joyous of times this season!

Happy Holidays!   Feliz Navidad!

Gung Hay Fat Choy!   Happy New Year!

Feature Article: Leadership That Transforms…& Delivers - PLANNING


For the last several months, we’ve been talking about various aspects of transformational leadership: vision, values, trust & integrity and motivational style. (See archives) This month we segue to a different leadership skill, planning. The Merriam Webster Dictionary defines plan as “…a drawing or diagram showing the parts of details of something, a method for accomplishing an objective.”

That sounds really dry to me. I see planning as a much more exciting venture. (See the article on Strategic Planning from the October newsletter.) Merriam Webster also lists goal, aim and intend as related words. When done well, planning can transform one’s confidence level in achieving the end goal by making it seem more ‘doable’ and realistic. It supports the realization of the goal by anticipating potential obstacles and identifying necessary resources. By including others in the planning process, one can capture critical alignment from people who are important in the fulfillment of the goal.

It’s not enough to know and say to the troops, ‘let’s take that hill!’. As a leader, you have to be able to outline how you’re going to do that. Which route you’ll take. What dangers might exist and how you’ll deal with them if they arise.

People avoid planning for a number of reasons. They very often think there just isn’t time. There are fires to be put out. Urgent demands to be satisfied. This brings to mind Stephen Covey’s Time Management Matrix outlined in his 3rd Habit – Put First Things First in The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People: Restoring the Character Ethic. In that model, he distinguishes what’s urgent (requires immediate attention) and not and what’s important (contributes to your mission, vision or high priority goals) and not.

Many people spend the bulk of their time in the urgent and important category, and this is helpful, but this leads to burnout, stress and constant fire-fighting, all justified by a sense of accomplishment expressed as “I get a lot done in a day”.

Planning falls into the important and not urgent quadrant. I would hazard a guess that rarely (with perhaps the exception of budget time) is anyone breathing down your neck asking “Where’s that plan?!”

(Click to Read More) >>>

Syndicated Article: PUTTING ONE’S RELATIONAL HOUSE IN ORDER—“PLANNED ABANDONMENT”
© 2005 Linda M. Williams, PhD, The Williams Institute, All rights reserved. Reprinted with permission.

Most of us are familiar with Peter Drucker and his commitment to modern management. The Drucker Foundation, founded in 1990, believes that a healthy society requires three vital sectors: a public sector of effective governments, a private sector of effective businesses, and a social sector of effective community organizations. As we reflect on this somewhat transparent conclusion, it becomes clear that if we are not doing our part to make our sector “effective,” we are somehow contributing to a lack of health within our society. The question is, “What part of the word effective do we not understand?”

Frances Hesselbein, editor in chief of the Drucker Foundation’s journal Leader to Leader, frequently brings us back to Peter Drucker’s concept of “planned abandonment” and its prescription to reject outmoded organizational policies, practices, and products. This approach to planning requires us to review our organizational mission statements, what customers value, the outcomes we want to accomplish, and the plans we have developed to achieve our goals. But how do we determine what policies, practices and products may have become “outmoded” within our organizations? What benchmark would be most effective in transforming ourselves into leaders of the 21st century? The answer lies in how we approach relationships and how we plan for the future.

(Click to Read More) >>>

Performance Improvement Partner™
PIP Tip

Do the thing and you will have the power
– Ralph Waldo Emerson

How many times have you procrastinated on doing something important because you lacked confidence or somehow felt weak? The next time you say to yourself, “I should…” and it seems like a flash of insight, do it immediately. Don’t wait until you have the right feelings to move forward. Trust yourself. Act, don’t think. Thinking kills the implementation of many a divine idea.


Self-Made Millionaire's Goal Planner & Guide Book
by Brian Tracy


Peak Performance
by Brian Tracy


Are you a
Transformational Leader?

Take this survey
and find out.

Leadership
Challenges

What are your most pressing leadership challenges? Drop me an email and let me know. I'll summarize your comments and report back in a later issue.

Resources

I've found some wonderful products for transformed and transforming minds at this web site, www.ConsciousOne.com.

Wayne Dyer Ten Secrets

Check them out. I think you'll like them.


 
Upcoming
Events

Launching Life Anew - Fresh Start Women’s Foundation,
Wednesday, January 25
Call 602.261.7143 to register



Looking for grab-bag and other holiday gift ideas?


2-for-1 Holiday Sale through December 31!

Relaxation CD
Snatch serenity in the midst of chaos. 5 mini-meditations to help reduce the stress of working and living.

Four 10-minute meditations to:

  • Relax your body
  • Create peace
  • Spur innovation and creativity
  • Collaborate and forgive

Plus, one 25-minute meditation to help you relax and fall asleep more easily after a hard day at work (or for a more relaxing lunch).

$16.95


Book Loretta

Loretta is available for speaking engagements on a variety of performance improvement topics. She delivers engaging, customized keynotes, half-day workshops and full-day off-sites. Call 602.454.7787 or 877.436.4278, or e-mail loretta@emharv.com now to inquire about how she can unlock and harvest the wisdom residing within you and your staff.

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