This blog assumes that blind spots of power come with the CEO role no matter how good or true or well-intended you are. You can't afford to have them. So I give reminders of what I have seen in my experience to help you see. Or try to see. Monday morning practical tips will help you sharpen up and see what tweaks you and your blind spot. A little whack on the side of the head with your Monday morning coffee.

Saturday, December 31, 2016

USE THE POWER OF SILENCE

Everything in your position of CEO carries the extra power of the authority of your role. Like it or not, use it or not, this is the truth. 

I'm suggesting that you forget to use the power of your silence.
One of the best CEO's I worked with and the most in touch with the company used silence well. He (happens to be a man) entered an office said hello and waited--often a bit too long to be comfortable. And out poured all kinds of information and worry and options and gossip as he quietly listened and asked very gently very general questions. He didn't over guide the conversation or say much himself. 

When angry, another CEO I know would get quieter and quieter in a top meeting. He would let the conflict or irritation grow and get resolved without him saying a word. Somewhere along the line, it would be noticed that he was not longer engaged. And the direct reports would shape up and get the matter taken care of.

The best use of silence I witnessed was with a very introverted CEO having to handle a very volatile issue. He was not good at spontaneous response. I set up a town meeting about the topic. The rule was the CEO was there only to listen.
There were 500 people at the meeting. The CEO committed to listening until there was no one else wanting to speak. People came up to the mike for over three hours. All the CEO said was, "Thank you. I want to hear this." "Thank you this better informs me." He (yep, another man) got a standing ovation at the finish of the meeting and the volatility eased and the right solution was found.

Silence is powerful. Use it more consciously 

Monday, December 26, 2016

A HIDDEN WEEK


I loved this week at work.
It felt hidden and hushed.
Many people were on vacation.
There were fewer meetings.
Important things were left to the turning of the new year.
I read at work. I was quiet at work. I could think at work. I had enough breathing space at work. I was refreshed at work. I enjoyed talking to people without intense purpose at work.
Most of these things are reserved for home.
So I hope you enjoy some of this--at work.
That's my holiday wish for all my busy executive readers
Happy holiday.

Sunday, December 18, 2016

CELEBRATE ALL OF IT


Holidays and personal celebration can create conundrums for leaders in organization. What belongs in the workplace?  What doesn't? What can be celebrated? What can't? It actually is a kind of all or nothing situation.

I vote all. Christmas, Hanukkah, Kwanzaa, Ramadan, The Songkran Water Festival in Thailand, Diwali Hindu Festival of Lights.  Bring on the food, the traditions and let people see one another's cultural background.

We need the richness, Diversity is messy. We are desperate for more than one way of thinking, being, celebrating, creating, selling, innovating, marketing, managing, leading to name a few areas that could benefit.

Don't tame down Christmas so that it doesn't offend anyone. Turn up all the other important cultural and religious celebration. Make all the equally loud and interesting and educating.

It is essential that we allow differences, respect differences and use differences to create organizations that work and flourish financially and as good places to work. Don't do cosmetic shallow efforts to look inclusive. BE it with all the pain in the rear it entails.
It is the laboratory for your future, both products and people. In science and in the workplace, rich differentiation and development is what keeps things evolving

Monday, December 12, 2016

MORE BETTER SLOWER


I just posted on my personal blog (www.truthburps.blogspot.com) about how literally, physically slowing down boosted my productivity and my satisfaction during a busy, frantic holiday season.

You do know that speed and the hysterical "more, better, faster" mantra is a contagious dis-ease in your company, don't you?  There is a principle in systems theory that what goes on at the largest or top level of a system is mirrored at the smaller or bottom level.  "What is within surrounds you." 

Two business books solidified my thinking. One is WHIPLASH: How to Survive Our Faster Future by Joi Ito and Jeff Howe. The Other is: FOCUS: The Hidden Driver of Excellence.

Slower or slow just may be an important quality for your organization.
Slow:
—opens up space to see more clearly
—allows depth of thinking for new ideas
—takes your brain out of "fight or flight" thinking
—creates real engagement--not the assessment kind
—let's you course correct more as you head toward the result
—develops intrinsic satisfaction in the work

I would love to hear from you on Linkedin or here
Speed needs to be regulated in your business



by Daniel Goleman  

Whiplash: How to Survive Our Faster Future

Dec 6, 2016
by Joi Ito and Jeff Howe


Monday, December 5, 2016

I WONDER ABOUT BOREDOM


The definition of boredom is "the state of being weary and restless through lack of interest"!

How could a top leader be weary and restless through lack of interest?
Let me count the ways:

—Not having enough intrinsic interest in the business you lead

—Being numbed out by rote meetings with no real engagement

—Working with a team that is exhausted through pushing hard and creating very little movement 

—Thinking that work should be boring

—Having a calendar that is your dictator of time

—Not laughing enough with colleagues when you and they make ridiculous mistakes

—Not having a team that challenges you with their energy and ideas

—Becoming too narrow a person with no outside interests

—Thinking working hard is the only road to success, instead of just one

—Feeling tethered to an impossible task

One of the worst combinations is being bored while being incredibly challenged.
I've seen it derail top leaders.