What do YOU stand for?

I could also ask, “What does peanut butter have to do with Mike Wallace?”

Huh?!?

Bear with me…

Peanut Butter Sandwich

And how does that effect the price of tea in China

Mike Wallace, one of the most pugnacious journalists to walk the planet, left a legacy when he died. He fought for justice…for what is right…and drove a red-hot poker into the eye of anyone who compromised worthy principles.

Jim Stengel, former global marketing officer at P&G and author of the book, Grow: How Ideals Power Growth and Profit at the World’s Greatest Companies, created the strategy that exploded Jif® peanut butter to record margins and market share.  He did this by re-focusing P&G on the core values of their customer—kid’s mothers.  Even more impressive was P&G’s growth when the global marketing strategy was re-focused on ‘improving people’s lives’.  (See: http://www.strategy-business.com/article/00113)

Principles and values are riveting, to ourselves and others.

I once coached a high-potential manager who became self-conscious around a discerning CEO.  The manager often edited her opinions in an attempt to impress the CEO, but her hesitation caused her to lose the CEO’s respect.  By helping her remember what she stood for, in this case her passion for product quality, she became more outspoken.  I’m not talking about philosophical values here, but deeply-held, personal values that twist your stomach when you see them violated.

It doesn’t matter whether you improve people’s lives, debate for quality, or engage employees’ passion.  What matters is that you REMEMBER THAT YOU STAND FOR SOMETHING WORTHY.  Too often we get caught up in the daily fray—pressures from others…administrative details…small thinking.  But when we stand on a firm footing, our confidence and presence naturally emerge.

So, we have a few questions for you:

  • How often have you ruffled your boss’s feathers this year by standing on principle?  (should be greater than zero)
  • How often did you challenge a peer to follow through on a commitment?
  • What will you fight for in a staff meeting this week?
  • When will you listen patiently to the concerns of your staff, who secretly want to be heard?
  • When will you take a long walk in the woods to remember what is important?

Source: Jeff Grip, Pinpoint Performance Blog, Witmer & Associates

Call a senior consultant with Ember Carriers at (513) 984-9333 for a free strategy session with one of our senior consultants.

Web: www.embercarriers.com|Facebook: www.facebook.com/EmberCarriers

Twitter: www.twitter.com/embercarriers|LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/mhladio

The Role of the Executive Coach

Women in business

Executive Coaches are essential

Several aspects of organizational management are challenging to new company leaders. In recent years, companies throughout the world, particularly in the United States, have begun collaborating with executive coaches and building in-house coaching teams. Executive coaches specialize in smoothing the adjustment process after a promotion for both the newly promoted individual and the company, improving functionality throughout the organization. Executive coaches work closely with new leaders throughout the management and executive hierarchy. They aim for a partnership role in resolving common management challenges, including motivating teams, resolving conflict, and other issues not addressed in the manager’s previous work experience. The coach’s primary goal is to help individual leaders maximize their inherent potential rather than inspire changes in their personalities.

Call a senior consultant with Ember Carriers at (513) 984-9333 for a free strategy session consultation to learn how you can improve your workplace.

Web: www.embercarriers.com|Facebook: www.facebook.com/EmberCarriers

Twitter: www.twitter.com/embercarriers|LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/mhladio

 

 

Employee Engagement Matters

Employee Engagment Matters

Employee Engagment Matters

Employee engagement is just one of several factors that managers, CEOs, and other business leaders must invest in to create an optimal workplace. Studies and statistics support the idea that employee engagement is critical to the productivity and success of any business. According to a study by global consulting firm Blessingwhite, organizations with high employee engagement had a total shareholder return of 19 percent above average. In contrast, organizations with low engagement had a total shareholder return of 44 percent below average. Engaged employees are much more likely to remain with their companies than disengaged employees. Another study by Gallup that covered 50,000 business in 34 countries found that organizations with higher than average employee engagement rates have double the odds of success as organizations with below average engagement rates. Employee engagement affects nearly every aspect of company performance, including attendance, turnover, growth, productivity, and profitability.

Call a senior consultant with Ember Carriers at (513) 984-9333 for a no cost, no obligation strategy session to learn how you can engage your workplace.

Web: www.embercarriers.com|Facebook: www.facebook.com/EmberCarriers

Twitter: www.twitter.com/embercarriers|LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/mhladio

The Exhilarating Edge of Terror

witmer logo

Wtimer & Associates – http://www.witmerassociates.com/

Change is hard. Usually uncomfortable. Sometimes terrifying.

Whether it’s terrifying or discomforting, we’re wired to resist change. Change is risky. Our instincts go on high alert. We could fail . . . get embarrassed . . . offend someone. Besides, we’re comfortable with our old ways.

How often have you made a decision to do something truly beneficial, yet you couldn’t follow through? Maybe you started more disciplined time management, but when you got busy you reverted to the same bad habits. Or planned a tough-love discussion with a colleague, then got cold feet. Or went to try out a new skill you learned in training, but you chickened-out because the “time wasn’t right” or you thought you might look foolish.

The world is changing. Competition is advancing. Being too predictable can be dangerous. And here’s where it gets really weird. Some people literally threaten their careers by avoiding change. Or sabotage their relationships. Or destroy their health. Tragically, people refuse to make good choices – because they require them to change.

But here’s the good news: terrifying change can be exhilarating. In our work with thousands of leaders, we’ve learned that those who continue to advance have figured out that there is little difference between terror and exhilaration.

And here’s another key: risk and fear don’t go away. As Susan Jeffers illustrates in her book, Feel the Fear and Do it Anyway, high performers try new things despite the discomfort. Some of them learn to delight in their fear.

Successful CEOs often have made risky career breakthroughs – such as rotating jobs, changing industries, or restructuring their teams – rather than taking safe baby steps. Some of them point to a mentor early in their careers who convinced them that it’s necessary to relentlessly take risks to improve themselves. Most of us, unfortunately, never have such a mentor.

The Unleashing the Leader Within program, offered by Witmer & Associates, catapults people along the path of change. Unleashing helps talented, ambitious people embrace change and use it to accelerate their professional development. Tackling eyebrow-raising challenges is integral to the program. Many graduates talk about how Unleashing the Leader Within dramatically changed their lives, both personal and professional.

The ability to embrace change will only become more important in the future. Most employers these days are looking at agility, self-awareness, and risk taking as key competencies for hiring and promotion. Is it time for you to trade comfort for the exhilaration of change?

Ember Carriers recommends the The Unleashing the Leader Within program, offered by Witmer & Associates, contact us at (513) 984-9333 for more information.

Source: Jeff Grip, Pinpoint Performance Blog, Witmer & Associates

Build to a Company to Last, Not For Your Ego

Well as I type this post, Chapter 11 of my book is in the can.  Time to set my sights on chapter 12.  The last four chapter outline how following our FUEL Process to create your leadership development program gives you a competitive edge.  So if you are not familiar with FUEL – it a four step process we use in the consulting practice when designing organizational development initiatives.

fuel_cyle_image

Fuel Process

F – Find: first we pinpoint critical success factors based on your organization’s specific needs, develop a competency library, behavioral indicators and define performance measures to plan next steps in your unique path to success

U – Utilize: we design a customized process that addresses specific organizational initiatives we’ve identified together. From hiring plans to succession planning, our experts will provide you strategies that produce results.

E – Engage: We survey and measure what your employees value, their satisfaction and mindset to determine the most effective channels for communicating each person’s role in a more productive, sustainable organization.

L – Lead: Ensuring you have a team of leaders continuously supporting the mission, vision and goals of your organization.

As I prepare for the Chapter 12 – which talks about the final step of the process, Lead.  I saw a great quote: “Leaders don’t create followers, they create more leaders.”  ~Tom Peter. 

guy fawkes mask

Don’t just capture their minds also capture their hearts

When I think about making the connection between What’s gone wrong and the Founder’s syndrome – not that we need to make a connection- but they are both rumbling in my head. To solve the Founder’s dilemma, the founder needs to create leaders in their company.  And ideally their own replacement.  Most company owners are the visionary and once they are no longer around there is no one to step into that role.

I wrote a blog  on the lessons about succession planning from Steve Job – . Now this was back in Nov 2011 so he had only been gone for about a month.  And many will argue that Apple has lost its innovation edge.  But you can’t deny that Apple is here to stay for a while.  They can limp along for 10-15 years with a loyal following in the computers alone.  Steve Jobs was a great pitch man and Tim Cook will never be Steve Jobs.  But instead of creating a mini Steve Jobs, he created a management team that was consistent with his vision. I ended the blog with a comment of not letting the personality of the owner be bigger than the brand.

And if you think about companies that are centered around a personality:

  • Warren Buffett – Berkshire Hathaway
  • Tony Robbins – Tony Robbins International
  • Robert Kiyosaki – Rich Dad Coaching
  • Donald Trump – Trump International
  • Oprah Winfrey – Harpo Productions/ Oprah Winfrey Network
  • Richard Branson – Virgin Group
  • Brian Tracy – Brian Tracy International

You pluck anyone of these personalities out of the business then what do you have left?  Maybe something – but nothing close to the original.  Sure some will survive look at Stephen Covey but that is mainly because of this books.  And all the fore mention have books some more mainstream than others.  Now that look at companies that were built associated with a personality but not because of it:

  • Microsoft – Bill Gates
  • Amazon – Jeff Bezos
  • Pixar Studios – once part of LucasFilm, co-founding by Steve Jobs, now owned by Disney
  • Starbucks – Howard Schultz
  • Nike – Phil Knight
  • Huffington Post – Arianna Huffington et al 
colorful figures standing

None of them did it alone

There individuals have a lot of folk lore with in the business world, they supposedly changed the game with bold concepts and a sheer grit. All of them great thinkers  who came up with an idea, and like a hero in an action film, accomplished their goal without help from anyone else. The only problem is…the lore is false. Yes, each one of these leaders (in both list) are brilliant, brave, pioneering (and lucky). But none of them did it alone.

Without engineer and programmer genius of Steve Wozniak,  Jobs could have never built Apple into the technological force it is today.

Howard Schultz may have had the vision to put a Starbucks on every corner in America, but he was mentored by other Seattle brewers, and was backed by some very forward-thinking (and gutsy) investors.

Jeff Bezos and Phil Knight both built huge retail companies, but Bezos didn’t invent the Kindle, and Phil Knight didn’t actually design running shoes. So without great engineers, neither one could have accomplished what they did.

Go to a bookstore (if you can find one) and you will find a whole section of books dedicated to Leadership and many of them will tell you to focus on your strengths, and then find people who are great at the stuff you aren’t.

But when you’re first starting out in business, it’s easy to slip into the mindset that you can also become the company hero, doing everything in the company yourself, listening only to the grand vision inside your head. And in the beginning this is probably true.  But as you add on employees you need to hire based that will support that vision and maybe even enhance it.  Which means at times they might disagree with you or challenge you but they also encourage you and inspire you.

So the Lead step of FUEL is about making sure you put the same passion and energy into assembling and energizing a great team around you as you did when you started the company. The Lead means creating leaders in order to continue to grow  and not just stopping at this step but you actually repeat it and starting looking for the next level to achieve.  And this can be inside or outside the company.  Because you know that the company you built is destine to greatness.

Call a senior consultant with Ember Carriers at (513) 984-9333 for a free strategy session consultation to learn how you can fuel your workplace.

Web: www.embercarriers.com|Facebook: www.facebook.com/EmberCarriers

Twitter: www.twitter.com/embercarriers|LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/mhladio

 

How to Cultivate a Truly Collaborative Workplace

Hands in UnityCompanies, no matter how small or large, can take several steps to ensure that they have a more productive and collaborative workplace. One of the first things is to bring in the best talent you can, and to do that you should develop a strong brand. Social media is a big asset to bring a firm’s message to a younger audience, and that will in turn make it a more desirable company. Once you have assembled quality talent, it is vital to make the group as strong as possible, and to do that we emphasize the importance of treating the staff as partners. Empowering employees to make decisions on their own is also critical, as is being as open and honest as possible, and coaching constantly.

Imagine the level of engagement you will can achieve when everyone is working toward the benefits it will bring to your of the company.  This is just one simple method for effective communication used by many leading organizations, to great success.

Call a senior consultant with Ember Carriers at (513) 984-9333 for a 30-minute complimentary consultation to bring more collaboration to your workplace.

Web: www.embercarriers.com|Facebook: www.facebook.com/EmberCarriers

Twitter: www.twitter.com/embercarriers|LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/mhladio