Creating A High-Performance Culture

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‘Our job is to develop healthy employees who bring energy to work. That’s the only way the corporation can survive.’

They don’t need more money. They need more love, kindness, and respect.

‘… a new vision for built environments as places that increase and protect the health of those who occupy them every day.’

When you take care of them, when you see them as human beings, they will take care of your environment.

‘The real war is leadership engagement. It is fought to win the hearts and minds of employees.’

If you don’t care about your environment, your people won’t care. If you want them to care, you care first.

‘Workplace that is easy to use understand, navigate, and use sends a definite message, ‘We value and want to support your role in our organization.’

People want to be appreciated. They want you to see them. If you can do that, your culture will take care of itself.

‘Leaders have to care, and they can’t care for people they don’t know.’

If you want your people to follow you, to bring their best selves to work, you must get to know them. Not for what they can do for you, but for who they are.

‘We have the opportunity to restore human dignity through good work.’

As a leader, your number one job is to take care of your people. It is to make them feel better about themselves. It is not to bring them down, but to lift them up.

‘If someone’s environment is going to drammatically impact their health, productivity, and retention- that is where I would focus.’

Yes, you are right. Because health is everything. If you don’t have it, the rest doesn’t really matter.

‘Delivering a healthy building and one that transforms your culture and business may sound daunting, but is very achievable, increasingly necessary, and suprisingly economical.’

You don’t transform your building by adding more things. You transform your building by creating a positive environment.

‘You are far better using the top strengths to develop alternate strategies than trying to improve a strength low on the list.’

Success happens when you are not trying to be who you are not. Failure happens when you are trying to be who are not.

‘Healthy cultures adapt, bounce back, learn, let go, cooperate across departments, serve one another, and add value to the whole. Conversely, unhealthy cultures are sclerotic, prescriptive, political, and rigidly infallible.’

A healthy culture doesn’t happen by accident. It is the work of a great leader, a leader who wants others to learn better, work better, and live better.

Source:

Rex Miller, Phillip Williams, and Dr. Michael O’Neill (2018). The Healthy Workplace Hudge: How Healthy People, Culture, and Buildings Lead to High Performance

Leading With Mindfulness

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When you are at peace with yourself, with your inner self, you are alive. When you are flexible in how you live your life, you are alive. You are living, not just existing.

That is how mindful leaders lead their lives. They focus on what is important to them. They are not after what is trending. They are after what is alive, not after what is popular.

According to Keren Tsuk, ‘A mindful leader is a leader who can go beyond the day-to-day activities and connect both to the broader picture and to higher purpose. This means cultivating the ability to be in being, at presence, to listening, and to pausing alongside our doing.’

‘Mindful leadership offers a holistic view that embodies a great deal of flexibility for employees and considers their personal needs.’

‘Organizational control is achieved through existential empowerment, through which employees bring their personal ways of work to the organizational space.’

‘Letting go of control means giving employees space and freedom of action to bring their uniqueness into play with their work.’

‘A key practice of leadership today is giving people room to realize themselves, room to deliver creative ideas and innovation.’

Confidence begins when people believe they are capable of coping with the challenges they face, even if they do not know how to face them.’

‘Self-awareness allows us to shift because it allows us to practice in a way that is fundamentally adaptable, cutting out the noise of everything else.’

‘Authentic human connection at work … holds people accountable in a way that a team does not; it allows us to step out of our characters and into ideas that are more valuable, more aligned with innovation.’

‘Mindful leadership … is characterized by an inward awareness of the self-awareness of the self and an outward awareness of a need for supporting the development of others.’

‘A mindful leader … is driven by service for the purpose of business and not only by motives of power or money.’

‘A growth mindset sees everything we do as another experience that allows growth and development as a leader.’

Source:

Keren Tsuk (2021). Mindfully Wise Leadership: The Secret of Today’s Leaders