Archive for July 2010

Can Too Much Passion Be Dangerous?

In our August 2009 newsletter (http://www.msbcoach.com/Articles.php) we addressed passion and leadership. I hope you took the time to answer the questions addressed. If you did not, here they are again:

  • What am I passionate about?
  • Where did I begin to lose my passion?
  • Did I compromise and if so where?
  • What can I do to get my passion back?
  • What is the price and am I willing to pay that price?

Passion is an important part of life and is especially important in the lives of leaders; however if we are not careful our passions can be dangerous. Have you ever heard the statement, “Crimes of Passion?”

When passion is unbridled, it can become an obsession. With passion, we drive ourselves. Passion attracts others to us. An obsession, on the other hand, controls us. Leaders who are obsessed are not passionate; they are controlled and become slaves to their own compulsions thus affecting those around them.

If you lead people out of fear or control, you are working from an obsession. If you think you have passion yet look behind you and see that no one if following, you may be leading out of obsession. Obsession kills you and your team. Passion inspires you and those around you. If you find yourself in the realm of obsession rather than passion, take these steps to restore your balance:

Evaluate your obsession.

What is the root source of the obsession?

Is your obsession for personal gain or control?

List three steps you can take each day to rechannel your obsession into a passion people can follow.

Find a trusted accountability partner to hold you to these three steps.

Passion is magical. You must have it to lead. Chuck Gallozi (http://www.personal-development.com/chuck) in his article titled “Developing Passion” gave 12 steps to deepen and develop you passion. They are as follows:

1. Take responsibility. The only bad hand you have been dealt in life was dealt by you. From today, “Don’t do things half-assed,” says Hugh Young, “If a thing is worth doing at all, it’s worth doing as well as you can possibly do it. Pick out something you think is worthwhile and do it or work at it with passion. Do it with all your might.”

2. You find what you look for. Instead of looking for the bad in your job or situation, look for the good. Look for the opportunities. Search for the solutions. Look for the way.

3. Make a plan. Once you’ve found some opportunities and solutions, make a plan of action. What should you avoid doing and what should you start doing now?

4. Make a decision. Now that you have a plan, decide to act on it. Set deadlines and start following your new road map to success. Enjoy the ride.

5. Stoke the fire of passion. To keep passion’s fire burning brightly, review the day’s events in the evening. Monitor your progress. Relish your achievements and learn from your mistakes.

6. Don’t douse the flames. You want to ignite your life with passion, but be careful of burnout. Work hard, but schedule breaks, leisure, entertainment, and family time. Don’t forget to reward yourself occasionally.

7. Recharge your batteries. Make time for the gym, sports, long walks, or meditation to relieve stress, refresh you spirit, and renew your energy.

8. “Develop interest in life as you see it; in people, things, literature, music – the world is so rich, simply throbbing with rich treasures, beautiful souls and interesting people. Forget yourself.” (Henry Miller)

9. Take brief “awareness breaks” throughout the day to remind yourself of the joy of being alive.

10. Avoid negative people and associate with enthusiastic people.

11. Share your zest for life with others. Brighten up their day. Their warm response will reinforce your passion.

12. Take “vitamins for the mind.” That is read or listen to motivational material to keep the flames burning.

© Chuck Gallozzi

At MSBCoach, we are passionate out leadership development, coaching and building high performance teams. If you would like to talk to us about opportunities to partner with MSBCoach please contact us at: info@msbcoach.com, 804-502-4319 or visit our sites:

www.msbcoach.com or www.emergingleader.info.

We hope to hear from you!

People Are Motivated By Passion Not Money:

It is an interesting and a false understanding that people leave their jobs for money. In fact, people are motivated by their passions and not money. People will spend all kinds of money on their passions. If you don’t believe me, look at people’s hobbies and recreational spending. One thing is for sure, money follows passion, and passion does not follow money. If you can tap into your people’s passions, you will find them making money for you and themselves.

Here are a few questions you can use to help you tap into people’s passion:
1. Are your employees in the right job position?
2. Do they need extra training, feedback and/or coaching?
3. Is there an opportunity for advancement or continued learning?
4. Do they feel unappreciated, devalued, or are their opinions respected?
5. Do they have poor work/life balance, and do they trust their leadership?
6. Is stress a factor (stress can sometimes stunt creativity and passion) involved?
I encourage you to meet with your team and find out what they think needs to be done. Get them involved with the recovery plan. People buy into what they create, so let them help to create the solution.

Moving up the management path

by Liisa Pursiheimo-Marcks

When you are setting a long term career vision for yourself, you first need to determine if you really want to manage people. Working through people is exhilarating for some, dreadful for others. You have to love this aspect of your work to be truly successful on the management ladder. Otherwise, you may want to choose an expert ladder, which may be more rewarding for those who aspire for high achievement in their area of expertise.

There are critical milestones of development as you climb the management ladder. The ladder starts from informal team leader position to managing direct reports. The next step is a functional leadership position leading managers of managers, leading to a group or business leader who oversees multiple functions and P&L. Few will reach the level of enterprise leader whose role is to manage investor and shareholder relations in addition to the company direction. In each milestone, the expected competencies and focus of the role change. In small businesses, these boundaries get blurred.

You may not realize that the ladder starts before you even have direct reports. Team leadership without direct authority over the team members is a great primer for future leaders. As an informal team leader, you learn the basics of goal setting, providing direction and holding people accountable without position power. If you can be successful in this role, there is a lot of promise for a formal management role.

Managers of teams tend to earn their credibility based on their technical and functional expertise. You need to understand the overall business, and manage to budget. As you progress to a functional leader level, the focus turns to processes and best practices. Here, interrelations with other functions start weighing more, and deep understanding of how your function can contribute to business results is required. You may even get P&L responsibility, depending on which function you oversee. At group/business leader level, business acumen is critical, and you must develop a good overall understanding of all the functions, as they now all report to you.

The people management side evolves as well. When you manage a team of direct reports, you will be more hands-on. You will be setting goals, communicating expectations, giving frequent informal feedback, coaching and showing how to do new tasks. As a manager of managers, you will still do this with your direct staff, but probably less hands-on. Instead, you will use teachable moments for coaching, and expect your staff to use sound performance management practices with their teams. Your focus shifts to providing direction, securing resources, removing obstacles and celebrating successes. Climbing higher to a business leader position, you now start thinking longer term about the talent in your business. Your focus should be instilling a high performance culture and the core values throughout the company. You must ensure consistent talent management processes to bring in and retain the best talent. With your staff, you start thinking about succession planning and stretch assignments.

As you ascend the ladder, you must also realize that you become an increasingly visible role model for your employees, and eventually to the external community. Everything you say or do will be perceived by the workforce and society as a reflection of the values of your organization. Part of the learning process for the leader is to embrace this responsibility.

The first step is to set the goal; the next is to start planning a way to get there. How will you accumulate experience through assignments and projects, coaching, mentoring and training to achieve the necessary skills that will earn you enough credibility to jump to the next milestone on your ladder?
###
Copyright 2010 Liisa Pursiheimo-Marcks, all rights reserved.

With fifteen years of experience in international business, training and organizational development, Liisa Pursiheimo-Marcks, the principal of Forte Consulting www.forteconsulting.biz , is passionate about creating sustainable change in behaviors, skills and performance. Liisa has led numerous organizational change initiatives and was in charge of the succession planning and professional development of a Global Sales and Marketing function of over 1000 employees worldwide.

Guest Blogger Liisa Pursiheimo-Marcks

LiisaLiisa Pursiheimo-Marcks, SPHR

Liisa Pursiheimo-Marcks’ passion is to drive sustainable change through building capabilities and establishing new behaviors. As a Talent Management and Performance Consultant, Liisa has worked in a variety of industries on talent and change management, execution of large scale training programs and developing and monitoring learning analytics.

Liisa is a skilled facilitator who engages her audience by storytelling and encouraging open discussion and interaction. She is a certified facilitator by Development Dimensions International (DDI) who has delivered multiple training sessions to all levels of leaders.

Liisa has facilitated team meetings and management meetings, such as strategic planning sessions, quarterly product portfolio reviews and change initiative kick off meetings. She works closely with the client to design and deliver a meeting that fits the purpose. She is especially skilled at helping teams see and articulate their vision in an actionable way.

Liisa has extensive experience in helping sales and marketing organizations improve productivity, grow revenue and increase profitability through skill building and process improvement. With her change leadership, Freescale Semiconductor introduced a new solution selling methodology to its global sales force which led to an 8% increase in design wins. She also built product definition skills of its marketing community. Liisa implemented a customer loyalty workshop for over 500 senior leaders, which contributed to a 50% improvement in the customer loyalty scores. She managed the succession planning for the global sales and marketing organization of over 1000 employees, and was in the key task force to re-engineer the performance management process and system for the corporation. Over the years, Liisa has built training curricula and annual training plans for various functional groups’ needs.

Liisa has a Master’s degree in Economics and Business Administration, with special emphasis on International Marketing. She is a certified Senior Professional in Human Resources (SPHR). Having led global teams and lived on four continents, Liisa provides deep insight on navigating national and organizational cultures. She speaks English, Finnish and Spanish, plus some Swedish and German. Liisa has continued education in consulting, learning analytics, consultative selling and organization design. Liisa is a member of Austin Human Resources Management Association, Society of Human Resources Management, Austin Society of Training and Development, and American Society of Training and Development.

You may contact Liisa at (512) 484-8263 or liisa@forteconsulting.biz.
For Liisa’s blog on talent and performance, go to www.forteconsulting.wordpress.com .
To follow her adventures on Facebook, check www.fbook.me/forteconsulting .

Sign Up for MSBC News
Email Marketing by iContact
Read MSBC Newsletter Archives
  • September 2011
    • Authentic Leadership Summit
    • Companies in the Spotlight
    • Executive Women's Forum Highlights
    • Keys to Leadership Success
    • MSBCoach Leadership Webinar Series
    • June 2011
      • Leadership and Fear
      • Suggested Reading
      • MSBCoaching Institute
      • Authentic Leadership Summit
      • MSBCoach Leadership Webinar Series
      • March 2011
        • Creating Culture
        • Welcome to the Team
        • MSBCoach Leadership Webinar Series
        • Authentic Leadership Summit
        • 2011 MSBCoach Video Training Series
        • December 2010
          • The Price of Stress
          • The Leadership Breakfast Club Aut
          • hentic Leadership Summit
          • MSBCoach Leadership Webinar Series
          • 2011 MSBCoach Video Training Series
          • September 2010
            • CLDA and MSBCoach Win ACHRA
            • MSBCoach Open House
            • Authentic Leadership Summit
            • Leading Gen Y
            • What Really Motivates Us
            • December 2009
              • The Leader's Heart
            • November 2009
              • How Will You be known?
              • Make a Decision
              • The Rule of High School
            • October 2009
              • Would You Follow You?
              • Baby Boomers, Social Media and Gen Xers
            • September 2009
              • Passion and Values
              • Innovations: The Lessons of BOB
            • August 2009
              • Is Passion Necessary to be a Good Leader?
              • Succession Planning
            • July 2009
              • Change Begins With Me
              • Does What I Do Make Me Who I AM?
              • Your Company’s Purpose Matters Now – Gallup Management Journal