This
week I’d like to refer you to a blog post that contains some good laughs and
also some reassurance, which could come in handy this time in the academic year. When you make mistakes – and we all do it –
never believe that you can’t recover or that it’s the end of the world, even
though the big ones feel that way sometimes.
You can’t accomplish anything of value or originality that doesn’t
occasionally involve an “oops” or two. Take
a minute to read, “Why
You Should Make More Mistakes,” and take another minute to click on the
stories linked in the piece about famous people’s work flubs. You will smile and you’ll also feel better
about your own faux pas.
A forum for discussion and information for the UGA community on leadership topics.
Thursday, April 25, 2013
Friday, April 19, 2013
The Golden Hour
It’s that time of the semester again, when academic lives heat up, work
is probably calling, and personal events like graduations, recitals, and
parties ramp up as well. Stormy weather
is typical in the spring and I’ve always thought it was apropos, given the
often chaotic schedules that many have this time of year. Now is the time to be extra vigilant of your
time and productivity. So how do you
cope?
One strategy is to pay close attention to what you do during that first
hour of your work day. Emergency
medicine says that the first hour (or so) after a trauma is the most important
to intervene to prevent worsening injury or death. This is known as the golden hour. What I’m suggesting is you implement your own
golden hour, not to prevent death (yikes), but to encourage productivity and
success.
Julie Morgenstern wrote a book called Never Check Email in the Morning (a work-life management book I
recommend) and, while refraining from email all morning is probably not
possible for most of us, what is possible is to delay checking email for an
hour after you get to work. (If your
work culture simply won’t accommodate that – and by that I mean you would get
fired or be professionally damaged -- an alternative is to scan email for
absolutely critical stuff, spend a few minutes responding, and then turn it off
for an hour.) Now, wait…I hear my fellow email addicts crying and gnashing your
teeth. Before you tear your clothes and run in to the street to protest this
madness I’m recommending, hear me out. Email
is hardly ever the source of high level or crisis information that simply must
be addressed first thing. Those things
usually come in the form of a call or a text.
Email is great at getting you off task and distracted from what is critical, so it’s important to not
think of email as “instant messaging” that requires that kind of immediacy.
So what do you with that hour?
There are many
ideas. Here are the best:
- Work on the one thing that is necessary -- not preferable…necessary -- that you do that day. What task or project would have the most impact on your work or would advance your goals? What activity needs to be done so that you feel you actually got something accomplished that day? Work on that. I frequently end my day thinking about the next day’s first hour. I write that activity down on a Post-It placed on my computer keyboard so that I see it first thing. To earn extra “organization goddess/guru” points, you can even assemble all the materials you need to do for your activity and have them ready to go in your “first hour” file.
- Do the hardest thing first. Need to have a difficult conversation with someone? Hate to look over your budget spreadsheets? Whatever it is, get it done right away, so that it won’t be weighing on you through the rest of the day.
- Feel empowered. Some recommend that you use at least a few minutes of that hour to get inspired, because that will drive you, and possibly insulate you from other stressors, for the rest of the day.
Other factors to support this golden hour, according
to Ilya Pozin, are to eliminate distractions,
to eliminate multi-tasking, and use the phone instead of emails when
conversation is what’s needed. (How do you know when a call is better? When the email string comes back twice or more.)
Then, after your golden hour has passed and you’ve completed or made
progress on your task, open your door, turn on email, and let the day come in!
Have you used this strategy? How
did it go? What other recommendations
for maximizing this time do you have?
Friday, April 12, 2013
Leadership and Influence Summit
We are winding down
another busy semester and so, to accommodate your ever-expanding list of things
to do, I want to point you to a resource that allows for “bite sized”
leadership moments. I have used this
resource myself. It’s called the
Leadership and Influence Summit and “it’s a free,
on-demand, online event featuring instant access to video messages from over 30
leading authorities. Each speaker shares 6-20 minute recorded video messages on
how to maximize leadership and influence effectiveness.” You can access it as needed. There are many videos and the good news is that the selection allows you
to find something that interests you, but it can be a bit mystifying as to
where to start. I recommend the videos
by Barry Posner (Truth about Leadership), Jim Kouzes (Leadership Challenge),
and Bob Sutton (Good Boss, Bad Boss) as good places to start All are engaging speakers who have important
information to share. You can access the
Leadership and Influence Summit here. You have to register but it’s free and there doesn’t
seem to be any solicitation that follows your registration. Enjoy!
Friday, April 5, 2013
Knowing Without Knowing: The Role of Intuition in Leadership
You walk into a house that is for sale and instantly know that it is
right for your family. A friend has a
first date and tells you she has met the person she will marry and she is
right. How did you and your friend know?
Over the last few weeks, we’ve explored the role of thoughts and
emotions in leadership and life, but there are many – Oprah,
Einstein, Steve Jobs, Bill Gates, Colin Powell, Malcolm Gladwell -- who say that
intuition is also an important part of good decisions and successful
leadership. Intuition is, according to
Dale Myers, “the
ability to aquire knowledge without inference or the use of reason.” Intuition provides you with a way to gather
information and make decisions that, when used correctly, supplements more
objective data. (Intuition can even be turned
into a business, if it is particularly strong.) To some, intuition can seem fanciful, or new
age-y, but it is actually a scientific
phenomenon that has been measured, studied, and located in the brain.
How do you recognize intuitive thinkers (other than by using your gut,
that is)? According to Dave
Myers, some people are naturally wired to be intuitive and their traits
include:
·
Using a
limited set of analytical filters.
The more parameters you have for filtering information, the more complex
your process will be but the less intuitive it will be. Intuition
happens quickly.
·
Focusing
on the big picture, instead of details.
·
Being
confident and focusing on the potential (as opposed to the risks) a decision. Intuitive thinkers trust their instincts and
don’t spend time worrying about the risks of their actions. They are more interested in the potential of
a situation.
·
Being
good at instantly reading non-verbals, like body language. This is the source of much of intuition:
quick readings of information that is fleeting, like expressions.
Whether or not you fit these characteristics, how do you strengthen
your intuition?
·
Use your intuition
in areas you are experienced in. Intuition is better after you’ve had years
of practice and experience in a particular area. That knowledge gained through experience becomes
unconscious and you are able to skip ahead to sound decisions.
o
Journaling, which helps you see when your
intuition was right in the past, thereby strengthening your confidence in it;
o
Engaging in creative activities more often, like
painting or dancing, helps you access your non-analytical brain; and
o
Meditation or even siting in a quiet, still
place for a few minutes helps you tune out distractions and focus on what your
instinct is telling you.
·
Practice
using your intuition. When waiting
at a bank of elevators, try guessing which one will reach you first, or
guessing who is calling on the phone before you pick up, and so on. Try noting your first reaction to any given
situation, such as guessing whether a waiter will provide good service before
he speaks. Then notice as time
progresses whether you were correct.
·
Understand
its limits. The problem with
intuition – and why it should not be the sole source of information for major
decisions – is that it is subject to our emotional states,
as well as unconscious biases and prejudices, sometimes called “implicit
associations.” (You can test yours here). We all carry these
biases around unconsciously and intuition can tap into them against our
will. Intuition has great power. Malcolm Gladwell notes two examples of this
power in “Blink: The Power of Thinking Without Thinking”: Despite evidence in front of him, a
firefighter instinctively tells his team to withdraw from a room seconds before
the floor collapses, saving them from certain death in the fiery basement
below. On the other end of the spectrum,
four police officers kill unarmed Amadou Diallo in New York City based on
split-second gut reactions that he was a serial rapist suspect. Not everyone will face life or death
decisions, but the power of intuition should still be used wisely.
In the end, I believe Colin Powell gave the best advice on the use of
intuition: “Dig up all the information
you can, then go with your instincts. We
all have a certain intuition, and the older we get, the more we trust it…I use
my intellect to inform my instinct. Then
I use my instinct to test all this data.”
When have you followed your intuition and it turned out to be
right? Has it ever steered you wrong?
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