The Leadership Caffeine Blog
Leadership Reminders from My Summer Vacation as a Wedding Officiant
If I had to write one of those grade school reports on “What I Did on My Summer Vacation,” I would have the topic nailed. Last week, my wife and I traveled to Lake Como, Italy, where I had the honor of officiating the wedding of my son and his beautiful bride. This...
Leadership Reminders from My Summer Vacation as a Wedding Officiant
We write and talk about succeeding as managers and leaders in this world. We spend a lot of money on training. Your humility, commitment to creating a personal experience for everyone, and your authenticity in leading from the heart may be most of what you need to succeed in your important role.
Leadership Caffeine™—What to Do When the Mistakes Don’t Go Away
Mistakes in the workplace are inevitable. After all, we’re human, and try as we might to operate error free, our own software is far from perfect and we occasionally let one slip through the filters. In some circumstances, mistakes are a healthy part of the learning process. In others, they’re a sign that is something wrong on the personal front and you need to step in and offer help. And in other circumstances, they’re a sign that you’re not doing your job as a manager to maintain appropriate quality and accountability standards.
Just One Thing—Prosper by Making Time Every Day to Just Think
If your typical day resembles the one that most of us experience in the corporate environment, it’s a series of meetings interspersed with a series of transactional exchanges that might be better described as interruptions. There’s little of that elusive and precious asset called “quality time” on our calendars or in our days…and in reality, much of our daily lives are filled with what has been been described as “unproductive busyness. Here’s a reminder to create the downtime our brains and bodies need to recharge and place things in proper context.
Just One Thing—Is it Time to Suspend Your Judgment in Hiring?
There’s an interesting article in the May, 2014 issue of Harvard Business Review, entitled, “In Hiring, Algorithms Beat Instinct.” According to the authors, we would be better served by letting algorithms do the heavy lifting before inserting our own bias-filled and easily distracted selves into the hiring equation. Provocative, yes, but I’m not convinced that it’s time to defer judgment to a test instrument. Here’s why…
Why Workplace Teams Struggle—And What to Do About It
Many workplace teams I observe are not much better than the typical nightmarish college class group project that most of us have lived through at one time or another. Here are 4 big reasons why workplace teams struggle and 9 ideas to help you do something about it:
Art of Managing—Sometimes You Have to Slow Down to Go Faster
Today’s management literature is filled with references to speed. If we’re following the trends, we’re all growing more “agile” and likely “lean” in the process. We’re working in “sprints” and “bursts,” and of course, we’re “teaming” whenever possible. All of this motion may be helping our waistlines, dancing moves and cardio health, but I’m not convinced that speed is always the right answer. Sometimes you just have to slow down to go faster.
Here are 4 key situations where pausing before acting makes good business sense:
Art of Managing—Shiny Objects and the Senior Management Team
One of the value killers found inside many organizations is the out of control pursuit of too many new initiatives. The root cause of this undisciplined pursuit of new initiatives rests squarely on the collective shoulders of the management team.
Just One Thing—Cultivate Your Project Leadership Skills
Understanding the discipline and tools of project management is now de rigueur for professionals with any intention of growing in their careers. However, when I take a close look at project teams that struggle (and too many do), it’s generally not the misapplication of project management tools or practices that are at the source of the problems. Most often, it’s the absence any visible form of project leadership.
Eliminate “I never heard that before” from Your Workplace Conversations
I’ve lost track of how many times I’ve heard the phrase, “I never heard that before,” or, its slightly more grammar challenged equivalent, “No one ever told me that before,” in response to performance feedback. It’s sad and annoying all at the same time to hear those words.
It’s Your Career: Learn to Embrace Ambiguity as Opportunity
I’ve long believed that one of the core capabilities of successful senior leaders and individual contributors is their ability to cope with and leverage ambiguity as a tool to create. While many of us stop or even freeze when faced with unfamiliar situations, others recognize the opportunity to leverage uncertainty as a means to showcase our problem-solving and informal leadership capabilities while solving a vexing workplace challenge. Here are 5 key do’s and don’ts when faced with an ambiguous situation in the workplace:
