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Global Leadership Summit 2013: Chris Brown

Chris Brown serves as one of four Lead Pastors at North Coast Community Church in Southern California. Without question this was one of the best and most challenging talks for Church Leaders this year!

  • Spiritual Leadership will always be different than secular leadership
  • Saul had room in the company & army for David but not in his chariot
  • In the moment David’s achievements started to overshadow his, he became jealous
  • Pharaoh empowered Joseph…a pagan king got what the King of Israel didn’t get
  • Churches and companies raise leaders up to the top and then kick them out because there’s just one seat at the top so they have to go somewhere out…they’re not leaving on their own, you’re kicking them out because of you antiquated system and hierarchy
  • Insecure leaders have to have a title and a position
  • #1 Call sin, sin: servant leadership is going to hit our pride and our ego
  • Our calling has to trump our culture
  • Can you do this? Can you empower others to the point where you give up power, prestige, ego, and platform?
  • Start asking a different question…”Not how can I be the best leader, but how can I be more like Jesus?”
  • Do you have room in your chariot for a David or a Joseph?
  • Do you have room for God’s Kingdom and not yours?
  • Do I expand God’s Kingdom or my reputation?
  • What difference is the Holy Spirit making in the way I currently lead?
  • If a nonbeliever with my exact same skills and talent had my job, would they be doing it differently?

Posted in Leadership, Spiritual Formation

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Global Leadership Summit 2013: Liz Wiseman

Liz Wiseman started the afternoon. Liz is the President of the Wiseman Group, a Silicon Valley leadership development firm. She is a former executive at Oracle Corporation, a Fortune 100 company. She is also a Wall Street Journal Best-selling Author. Check out her book Multipliers for yourself!

  • There is more intelligence in our organizations than we can see with our naked eyes and that we are putting to use.
  • Multiply the people around you, don’t multiply yourself.
  • There is a difference between pressure & stress.
  • The difference between the two is all about control. If you carry responsibility that you shouldn’t as a leader you feel pressure and your team feels stress.
  • Who’s a diminisher? They criticize, belittle, micromanage, didn’t acknowledge, wasted time, took control, punished.
    • Working for them is exhausting and frustrating
    • They believe that nobody is going to figure it out without them & their help / didn’t listen, controlling, didn’t delegate, selfish
    • Got 48% capability out of their teams
    • Love to hire and high talented people but not utilize them
    • Tend to be tyrants / know it all / decision maker / micromanager
  • Who’s a multiplier? Encouraged, empowered, coached, challenged, freedom, trusted, asked questions, defined a goal, inspired…had vision, listen
    • Working for them is exhausting but fun
    • They believed you were smart and they’re going to figure it out
    • Talent magnets, liberator, challenger, debate maker, investor
    • Got 95% capability out of their teams
  • It’s possible to be over worked and underutilized
  • Kinds of Leaders:
    • Big Idea Leader (new ideas every day)
    • Always On (people tune out)
    • Rescuer (enables, no on learns)
    • Pace Setter (people disengage)
    • Etc.
  • We don’t drift into better behavior

Posted in Leadership

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Global Leadership Summit 2013: Patrick Lencioni

As always Patrick Lencioni delivered! He is consistently one of my favorite speakers on leadership. This year he spoke on ‘How to Lose Your Best People.” You can follow this link to get a copy of  “The Three Signs of a Miserable Job,” his book that this talk was based on.

  • Leaders are CRO’s Chief Reminder Officer.
  • People need to be reminded more than they need to be instructed.
  • Studies show that people don’t leave their job based on what kind of job it is. It’s not about a good job or a bad job.
  • People leave their jobs because they’re miserable.
  • 3 things that cause job misery
    • #1 Anonymity: the people that we worked for didn’t know us and didn’t have an interest in getting to know us. People hate their jobs when their bosses don’t know anything about them…because they don’t feel like anyone cares about them. It’s your job as a leader to get to know your people and care about your people. Nobody wants to be anonymous. Good people don’t leave jobs where they’re known. Really good people want to work at a place where they’re known.
      • Sometimes we don’t do it because we’re busy
      • Sometimes we don’t do it because we’re embarrassed (because we haven’t done it before)
      • If you aren’t interested in people that’s fine, just get a job as an individual contributor you shouldn’t be managing or leading people.
      • If you’re in a job where you’re not getting this from your boss, give it to them, lead up, they’re probably not getting it from their boss.
  • #2 Irrelevance: If you don’t think that your job matters to someone you cannot love your work. You’ve got to remind them because they forget. If their job truly doesn’t matter then reorganize the job.
  • #3 Immeasurement: Everyone wants to be able to assess if they’re doing a good job. If they don’t know if they’re doing a good job they’ll eventually leave. There’s a higher job satisfaction among sales people because they know if they’re winning. People want to know if they’re winning:
    • When we give others the ability to measure their performance we lose the power/control
  • Money is a satisfier these 3 things are motivators

Posted in Leadership

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Global Leadership Summit 2013: General Colin Powell

If you missed this year’s Willow Creek Association Global Leadership Summit, no worries! I started posting all of my notes from each session earlier this morning and will continue all week. So check back often to get all of the great content you missed from some incredible leaders and communicators. Like this session from General Colin Powell. You can also pick up his new book “It Worked for Me, in Life and Leadership.”

  • Leadership = Getting more out of people than the science of management says you can.
  • Leaders inspire people to reach beyond themselves.
  • Leaders aren’t the people getting the work done. It’s followers getting the real work done. Leadership efforts need to be focused on the followers to help them get the right things done.
  • Giving them a sense of purpose (what are we doing this work for?).
  • Trust is connected to empowerment. You can’t empower people if you can’t trust them. If you can trust them you can risk. Give them a zone of operation…it gives them a sense of power and purposefulness. It also means the leader needs to act in a trustworthy manner.
  • Trust it the glue and holds an organization together and the lubricant that keeps it moving forward.
  • Great leaders constantly refresh and repeat simple themes.
  • If you want to be a great leader, take care of your troops.
    • Give them a sense of purpose
    • Remember that execution is the most important part of leadership
    • Failure is an option every time
  • Soldiers are not looking for sympathy, they don’t want people to say they’re sorry, they want to tell their story and know their service matter, they want to be recognized.
  • Great leader always collide with great timing (“luck” favors the prepared).
  • It’ll look different in the morning: it may not, a day may go bad, but it’s an attitude, it’s an aspiration, it’s going to be better because we’re going to make it better.
  • Perpetual optimism is force multiplier: how can I make my force more effective? Supplies, numbers, etc. No matter how bad things are we’re going to fix it. When you do have a good day don’t get too wound up about it. When you have a bad day, don’t get too down about it. People look to leaders to solve problems. People don’t respond to orders.
  • Get mad, but then get over it: mad is a bad attitude. Everyone get’s mad. When you act when you’re mad you’re not at your best. If you stay mad the whole organization is contaminated. People won’t come to you as the leader etc.
  • How do you know when to fire somebody and when to give them a second chance? When you can’t get a subordinate to work on your purposes it’s time for them to go. The first ones to know about it is the “others” they know it before everyone else. And they’re waiting for the leader to do something about it. Leaders solve problems. And if you don’t solve this kind of problem you lose the trust of your subordinates. And people will stop bringing you problems…when they stop bringing you problems they think you can’t solve them or that you don’t care (that’s even worse).
  • See an aspiring leader – what’s a red flag? Ego
  • Tell someone they’re not cut out to be a leader: promote people on their potential not their performance…you have to have an instinct of their potential. Past performance is an indicator not a guarantee.
  • Tell me Early: problem solving is what leaders do…but tell me about the problem early. Don’t try to work on it before you tell me about it…tell me early…no surprises. But you’ve got to create the environment where people will come in and tell you.
  • You have to challenge people or they’ll just sit there and watch you.
  • Don’t expect your boss to solve your problems. They have their own problems to solve.

Posted in Leadership

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Global Leadership Summit 2013: Bill Hybels

The Global Leadership Summit is a two-day, world-class leadership event experienced by more than 170,000 leaders around the world, representing more than 14,000 churches. It’s telecast LIVE from Willow’s campus (near Chicago) every August. Throughout the fall, Summit events take place in an additional 300+ cities, 92 countries—and translated into 42 languages.

Willow Creek Community Church Founder and Senior Pastor Bill Hybels opened the Summit addressing the courage that leadership requires.  The following are leadership quotes and lessons from this incredible session.

  • Everybody wins when a leader gets better.
  • Vision is a picture of the future that creates passion in people.
  • God made you a leader to create discontent with “here” and lead to “there.”
  • Vision dies in the heart of a leader due to the fear of the cost being too high…the loss being too great.
  • Don’t die a coward!
  • Visions from God are holy commodities that need to be treated with the utmost respect.
  • The leaders job is to define reality.
  • All leaders are leading in 1 of 3 realities
    1. A down turn: admit the downturn, declare an emergency, and execute a plan to turn it around
    2. Status quo: create an emergency
    3. An up turn: pour fuel on it, give pep talks and raises, take risks with younger leaders, build cash reserves for when the run is done, and innovate
  • If you lead long enough, you’re going to experience all 3 of these realities.
  • Your team already knows where the organization is at, they’re just waiting for you to admit it and lead out of it.
  • It takes courage to build a fantastic culture.
  • People join organizations, they leave managers.
  • The Sr. Leader drives the culture of the organization.
  • Staff Cultures will only be as healthy as the Sr. Pastor or CEO wants them to be, delegating or abdicating this to anyone else is the kiss of death. People will only take this as serious as the Sr. Leader.
  • There are only 2 kinds of employees: Culture Builders and Culture Busters. They both may have jobs but only culture builders are going to have jobs at Willow. We are no longer going to pay people to bruise and bust our culture.
  • Do you know how healthy your staff culture is? If you’re not willing to measure it, can you at least admit that you don’t want to know because you’re cowardly about it?
  • It takes courage to establish and enforce values.
  • There comes a time when a leader needs to stop casting vision and start behaving differently.
  • It takes courage to finish strong.
  • It takes courage to start something & sustain something, but finishing is really tough.
  • Some of the most rewarding experiences in a leaders marathon are reserved for quite late in the race.

Posted in Leadership