Leading With Purpose?

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‘You get up every day and aim to be better than you were yesterday.’

What you can control is who you are and how you respond to the challenges that come your way.’

‘Tapping into the great power of incremental improvement takes patience, persistence, and faith.’

‘People won’t follow you if you’re sitting in the corner sucking your thumb and talking about how bad things are.’

‘Quit talking about what you’re going to do. Quit writing down what you’re going to do, and go do it.’

Quit writing down what you’re going to do, and go do it.’

John Addison

Recruitthebest.org

Real leadership is about building other people and shining your light on them, not on yourself.’

‘The only way you get to the top is by pulling a whole lot of other people up with you.’

‘Great leaders aren’t remembered for what they do when everything is going along fine.’

‘If you want to be a leader, you have to be that leader before you have the title.’

‘Real leaders know that the greatest challenges come from within themselves.’

Source:

John Addison (2016). Real Leadership: 9 Simple Practices for Leading and Living with Purpose

What ‘Experimental Leaders’ Know About Leadership

The experimental leader is a new kind of boss, one that observes, tests, and adjusts according to the outcomes.’

‘… experimental leaders … create stability in an unstable world. They open the doors for change so innovation can emerge.’

Being curious about small improvements and small observations is what being an experimental leader is about. It isn’t about throwing the whole business or process out and starting over again.’

Neutrality and curiosity are at the heart of becoming an experimental leader.’

Become inquisitive about how you lead now, and picture the kind of leader you want to grow into.’

The experimental mindset requires you to hold on to an end-of-state as your goal, experiment in incremental ways, and assess your success, adjusting as you go.’

‘The experimental leadership is action-based, so it is essential that you act before you necessarily understand.’

Pay attention. Over time, you will see small changes become profound shifts.’

‘Intents describe what will be accomplished. Your people determine how the work will be done.’

Know the work of your team. Help them track progress. Engage them in questions to spark new discoveries. Above all, foster curiosity.’

Create an atmosphere in which your team knows and feels it’s good for you to see their work, especially the imperfections.’

What can you do today to move forward by tomorrow?’

Source:

Melannie Parish (2020). The Experimental Leader: Be a New Kind of Boss to Cultivate and Organization of Innovators