Tag: leadership styles
-
How to Manage Perceptions
You have got to be really vigilant about how you manage perceptions so that people are not making wrong assumptions about who you are and what you do.
-
How to Appreciate Your Team
Appreciation is one of the simplest ways that you can actually build rapport with your team. When you regularly engage with your team over small tasks, thank them. Show them that you have noticed the work that they do.
-
4 Keys to be Assertive with Empathy and Compassion
You do not want to ever let your assertiveness become domination, aggression or bullying because that is not the same thing. You never want your assertiveness to come across in a way that damages relationships because relationships underpin your success as a leader.
-
3 Ways to be an Honest Leader
When you are honest, what you will find is that your team will learn to trust you. Your team will trust you and learn to take risks.
-
5 “Whys” Method to Improve Outcomes
Using the 5 “Whys” Method to Improve Outcomes. In this blog, I want to talk to you about the 5 Whys method for getting better outcomes in your organization.
-
5 Keys to Connecting Without Words
They say that only 20 percent of what people hear actually comes from words, 80 percent of what they hear is what they observe or what they see through nonverbal communication.
-
How to Lift Your Leadership Lid
Today we are going to be talking about lifting your leadership lid. I want to give you a couple of ways that you can look at this and assess how you can lift the lid in your own leadership.
-
3 Keys to Connect Before You Lead
Do not just sit in your office and hide away in your meetings. Take the time to actually go and interact with your team on a daily basis
-
3 Tips For Paying the Price
At every level of leadership and at every level of influence and responsibility there will be a price that you have to pay. Until you recognise that and learn how to manage it, you will never grow in your leadership
-
How to Use Parkinson’s Law
In this episode, I am going to show you how a little known observation by a man named Cyril Parkinson, in the 1950s, can help you get more done in less time.