The ABC's of Bad Leadership Will Never Spell Excellence


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The ABC's of bad leadership are: arrogance, bullying, complacency and corruption. Each of these ABC's of bad leadership are negative values. Leadership is either value positive or value negative. Leadership, like the culture of an organization, is never value neutral. It is the leader who chooses whether to be value positive or value negative. This choice by the leader is the single most important factor which shapes the culture of an organization. It is also why it is important to understand the nature of negative value leadership. Negative value leadership is bad leadership. In the book, Caring Leadership, by this author, it is stated that it is the prevalence of an "I don't care" attitude in the workplace that is the primary cause of organizational performance mediocrity and employee dissatisfaction. Once an "I don't care" attitude takes hold in an organization, it will eventually scuttle an organization's quest for excellence unless a cultural transformation takes place. Organizations are either going forward and making progress, or going backward and losing ground. Organizations of people never stand still. It is the "I don't care" attitude that propels an organization backwards, sometimes imperceptivity, but always certainly. Bad leadership is responsible for ultimately creating a pervasive "I don't care" employee attitude within the workplace. Once an "I don't care" attitude takes root in the workplace, it is extremely contagious. The most detrimental words which can be uttered in the workplace are "I don't care." However, employees do not actually have to speak the words, "I don't care." Rather, the words "I don't care" can be heard just as loudly through employee's actions. Silent "I don't care" attitudes can be just as deadly to the organization. Again, it is the leadership of an organization that is always responsible for the existence of a prevalent lack of caring in the workplace. In Caring Leadership it was explained that creativity in the workplace begins to flow where trust exists in the workplace. Employee trust of organizational leadership is built in caring places to work. Workplace trust and respect for the leadership lead to greater employee commitment, creativity, performance and morale. Caring leadership is the key. Unfortunately, bad leadership undermines trust. Without trust between the leader and the people in the organization, performance excellence is not possible. This author has previously written about the need for organizational change because there are far too many mediocre performing organizations in both the private and public sectors in America. Servant Governing, The Servant Organization and Caring Leadership are companion books to this book. Servant Governing primarily relates to government organizations. The Servant Organization is written for application to for-profit and not-for-profit organizations. Caring Leadership compliments the two foregoing books in that it was written from the employee's perspective of how and why caring leadership can transform a mediocre performing organization into an organization of performance excellence through the implementation of The Servant Organization's Four Cornerstone Framework. The above books outline a four-part leadership and management framework which, when implemented, will help improve organizational creativity, vitality and performance. With the framework in place, the organization can shape its own identity. The adoption and implementation of The Servant Organization's Four Cornerstone Framework by caring leaders will help the organization achieve higher performance results. The Servant Organization culture created by the caring leader engenders trust, stimulates creativity, drives mission focus, increases performance, enhances job satisfaction and, in for profit organizations, adds to shareholder value. The ills of bad leadership can be cured by the caring leadership of a servant leader.




Abcs of Leadership


Book Description

About The ABCs of Leadership: Leadership Guiding Principles Leadership is growing ever more critical in all aspects of life, as the modern world presents each of us with an array of problems that need solving. I hope that readers will recognize that the skills and attributes of effective leaders (and followers) are within reach for all of us. This simple recognition may encourage people to attain the core attributes, behaviors, and characteristics of leaders, allowing more of us to live lives of service, sacrifice, and success. Leadership Guiding Principles features a chapter for each letter in the alphabet. Play on words makes it easy for learners to remember the attributes of effective leaders, while also guiding them to apply the techniques discussed in the real world. Leadership Guiding Principles communicates enjoyably the values, ethics, and philosophy that underpin effective leaders' style and the behavior that leaders use to shape their environments. Leadership Guiding Principles facilitates personal development and growth in a straightforward way, avoiding the unnecessary complications sometimes introduced by complex leadership training sessions and books. Throughout, it emphasizes the concept that everyone can become a leader. Leadership Guiding Principles focuses on core leadership descriptors that individuals can use to become better leaders and followers. In homes, workplaces, and communities, these behaviors improve interpersonal relationships and the probability of achieving desired outcomes. Leadership Guiding Principles has been used successfully by the author to build and acculturate teams, compel audiences during keynote speeches, and espouse her leadership style and vision in a manner that allows others to reach their goals. Leadership Guiding Principles offers an easy to read, simple to apply guide and self-development tool that leaders can use to create high-performing, engaged, committed, and trust-based teams. Leadership Guiding Principles uses vignettes to highlight real-life applications and inspiring quotes from well-known leaders to reinforce key concepts. The higher you aspire and desire to achieve, the more you need leadership skills.




The Last Lecture


Book Description

A lot of professors give talks titled 'The Last Lecture'. Professors are asked to consider their demise and to ruminate on what matters most to them: What wisdom would we impart to the world if we knew it was our last chance? If we had to vanish tomorrow, what would we want as our legacy? When Randy Pausch, a computer science professor at Carnegie Mellon, was asked to give such a lecture, he didn't have to imagine it as his last, since he had recently been diagnosed with terminal cancer. But the lecture he gave, 'Really Achieving Your Childhood Dreams', wasnt about dying. It was about the importance of overcoming obstacles, of enabling the dreams of others, of seizing every moment (because time is all you have and you may find one day that you have less than you think). It was a summation of everything Randy had come to believe. It was about living. In this book, Randy Pausch has combined the humour, inspiration, and intelligence that made his lecture such a phenomenon and given it an indelible form. It is a book that will be shared for generations to come.




The Leader


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Journal of Education


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Godey's Lady's Book


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The Bulletin


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American Lumberman


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