FORMING & STORMING
We can learn from the past. Past leaders. Past events. Past lessons. Several years ago, the National Research Laboratories examined successful teams from World War II to determine if there were common dynamics that contributed to their success. Their research defined four stages of successful team development. The first stage for team development is forming – the time when a team first comes together. The second stage of team development is called storming – the time when team members struggle with identifying their place within the team.
Think Twice
Winston Churchill once said, “The price of greatness is responsibility.” Responsible use of resources directly impacts our credibility as an organization, our financial performance, and value. In short, give intentional thought to your stakeholders and your stewardship. The whole boat floats on those two components. Evaluating the current course of action and pivoting efforts with the backing of your team will ensure great impact and longer-lasting results.
Making Others Successful: Success Through Diversity
In organizations, diversity is typically celebrated—diversity of skin color, of experience, of dress, of cultural backgrounds, of perspectives, of giftedness, of personalities. It is wonderful to see a representative swath of people when walking through the halls of the workplace. Yet, the more underlining issues that diversity naturally brings are the ones that have potential to disrupt the team’s docile routine. And that is not necessarily a bad thing.
Making Others Successful: Success Through Feedback
An important aspect of the coaching process is performance feedback. This consists of the coach’s role in sharpening the skills of team members, closing the gaps, and expanding responsibilities. When team members consistently fall short in their performance, these types of conversations, although necessary, are sometimes uncomfortable and unnatural for us as leaders. This is the part of coaching that many of us tend to want to avoid. When we avoid constructive feedback, we also miss out on the opportunity to develop our team members, even if does take us a little outside our comfort zone.
COLUMBUS DAY
As a leader, you understand that Columbus’s attributes—the positive ones—also help you to be successful in your role: Courage to speak up and defend your ideas, conviction to maintain your position, perseverance to continue pursuing your purpose, faith that what you offer is beyond what others can imagine. Change Agents hold a weight on their souls, one which cannot be pressed down forever. You see a vision to improve an area of the organization and, thus far, it has not been executed successfully by another. You are the Change Agent for that purpose.
Making Others Successful: SUCCESS THROUGH COACHING
If you have ever played on a team, whether academic, athletic, or a hobby, you’ve experienced coaching. This individual who serves as “Coach” invests knowledge, understanding, know-how, personal experience, and study into making others more capable and successful in that specific field. Professionally, these individuals go by different names: supervisor, manager, director, trainer. But they all involve elements of coaching. Coaches prepare the team to successfully think through potential challenges, using the resources at hand to find solutions, and lead them into fruitful production and achieving goals.
Making others Successful: Servant Leadership
In the most basic terms, Servant Leadership is about meeting the highest priority needs of another person. As servant leaders, we must train ourselves to recognize our team members’ high priority needs and seek ways to meet them, but not their every whim. True servant leadership removes barriers and empowers people to get things done, while helping them grow. Leaders intentionally present opportunities as a means for growth to occur. These moments give team members a chance to rise to the occasion, while serving as environments to develop their own skills and leadership.
Fundraising: A Vegetable Parable
We sow seeds in others and water them over time through long-term relational investment. Highly fruitful fundraising, therefore, cannot be accomplished like pulling through the drive-thru of a fast-food restaurant or a brief stop at the grocery store. Harvesting a crop of 100-fold follow the discipline of patiently sowing seeds, nourishing the soil, and watering the plants.
Celebrating Labor Day
Labor Day pays tribute to the contributions and achievements of American workers and is traditionally observed on the first Monday in September. But, as with many positive modern constructs, this national holiday had dark origins. In the late 1800s, at the height of the Industrial Revolution in the United States, the average American worked 12-hour days for seven days a week in order to earn a basic living. Let us not speed through this holiday weekend without reflecting on the significant impact that strong leadership has on organizations—for good and for evil.
Making Others Successful: Investing in Leaders
We work with individuals of diverse backgrounds, experiences, abilities, work styles, and motivations. With such an array of variables, there is no “magic formula” or universal solution to helping them achieve organizational goals. There exist, however, universal principles that, when implemented with fidelity, are certain to produce results that will motivate and stimulate further success.
One such principle is what I call “Making Others Successful.”