
4 Practical Ways To Get Close To Your Audience
The other day I pulled up to a drive-thru speaker, paused to decide on my order, and heard a garbled
I’m reading Good to Great again with some of my friends. We heard Jim Collins speak at a conference about his new book but decided (since we want to lead GREAT businesses/ministries) to go back and re-read his classic.
This month, we’re reading the first 2 chapters. The first? A summary of his process written to excite us.
The 2nd chapter? The meat starts.
The book uses imperial data to prove why some “good” companies become great. It took years of research and it’s still very relevant.
Leadership is tackled first. What he calls Level 5 leadership. The crazy blend of humility and willingness to move forward. Do you have that? As he explains the other 4 levels that leads to this mega-leader; I’m struck by something he doesn’t deal with specifically in the book.
The ability to work with others.
Often I fail at that. I struggle between the “doing it myself” complex and “motivating others” satisfaction. This drives me crazy. What am I going to do? Here’s 3 resolves:
OK. I confess. I haven’t read the whole 2nd chapter yet. I had to stop and write this blog. I want to be a Level 5 leader. But I need to work on some of the lower levels first.
The other day I pulled up to a drive-thru speaker, paused to decide on my order, and heard a garbled
Almost everyone checks email—the younger you are, and the older you are, the less you’ll rely on it. The challenge?
At the close of every season, wise leaders pause to reflect. They celebrate what’s been accomplished, identify what worked well,
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