Karl Edwards presents Working Matters

Tag: leadership

  • Listen In -> Good Leaders in Bad Times #3: Training People to be Better Than You

    Come on now. Do you really believe that you got the promotion because you know more than everyone else on the team?

    If you have a “more than” mentality about the tiers on the organizational chart, then this episode is for you.

    The question becomes, whose skills, capacities and energies are you quenching if you have to know more than everyone else on the team? What talents and expertise are you missing out on by not being able to hire those who have more experience than you?

    This week Claudia and I discuss the value of training people to be better than you. Imagine with us the breadth and depth of skills and experience you could amass if you didn’t need to be better than everyone else!

    Listen in.

  • Question of the Week #7

    How can you create three opportunities to redeem a recent failure?

    The Question of the Week is offered to increase awareness of one’s personal leadership practices and encourage experimentation with creative alternatives.
  • Listen In -> Good Leaders in Bad Times #2: The Issues Behind the Problems

    The problem can seem so straightforward. A runaway complainer. A mounting cost overrun. A slipping schedule.

    What if the problem, though, were merely a symptom of something deeper needing attention?

    What if addressing the problem on the table was actually preventing you from looking deeper, asking more probing questions, exploring what values and practices were creating the breeding grounds for the issue at stake?

    In this week’s show, Claudia and I discuss just this dynamic. Good leaders in bad times don’t settle for relieving symptoms. They dig deeper than the presenting issue and solve for underlying causes and confront systemic dysfunction.

    Listen in.

  • Listen In -> Good Leaders in Bad Times #1: The Solution Begins in the Mirror

    After a blistering five weeks of criticizing business and political leadership for the arrogant, blind, brainless, fear-based, power-obsessed, insecure excuse for leadership they have provided in response to our economic crisis, we turn our attention in this next series to proposing a constructive alternative.

    Hence our title, Good Leaders in Bad Times. It’s difficult to discern quality leadership in good times, because almost anything everyone does seems to work out okay when the economy is cycling upward.

    But when the economy slows down, declines, or collapses, we discover who is all smoke and mirrors, and who is substance.

    Here in week one, Claudia and I suggest that effective leadership in bad times begins with a good look in the mirror.

    How might you be a part of the problem? Have you considered the question before?

    Good leaders in bad times know that what others do and how others show up flows out from who they are and how they show up. In other words, if there is going to be change, it must begin with you.

    Listen in and tell us what you think.

    Then come back each week for what promises to be a thought-provoking and challenging series!

    Good Leaders in Bad Times
    Week 1: The Solution Begins in the Mirror
    Week 2: The Issues Behind the Problems
    Week 3: Training People to be Better Than You
    Week 4: Reporting To Your Team
    Week 5: Creating a Culture That Get Results

    Listen in.

  • Listen In -> Leadership B#llsh&t in a Tough Economy #5: Political Mumbo-Jumbo

    I’m not sure if listening to politicians ponitificate is more exhausting or maddening.

    Instead of engaging the expertise of workers on the job and leaders in business, political leaders battle with each other from abstract, partisan philosophies, making decisions with sweeping implications for which they have no means of anticipating and no intention of evaluating.

    bossI’m almost to the point where I think we’d be better off never reelecting an incumbent rather than always reelecting the incumbent.

    Government policy has a huge impact on business, shaping its boundaries, influencing its priorities, and tinkering with its architecture.

    It often feels like we swing wildly between too much and too little government involvement in economy, business and the business of life.

    We end our series on Leadership Bullshit in a Tough Economy with a look at the mumbo-jumbo that is posing as leadership among our political leaders.

    Listen in.

  • Listen In -> Leadership B#llsh&t in a Tough Economy #4: Fear & Panic on Main Street

    Hey, check it out… It’s the proverbial ostrich with its head in the sand. It just looks like an executive.

    Ah, the ostrich. As if by hiding its head, the rest of its body would no longer be exposed to danger. As if the danger that existed when looking, would somehow cease to exist when hiding. Such is the response of many leaders to our current economic crisis.

    bossInstead of calmly taking a step back, getting some perspective and investing in some expert assistance, these leaders function out of their fear and panic. They are afraid to spend any money, ask for help, or experiment with new ways of doing things.

    In this week’s show, Claudia and I discuss the upside-down and backwards thinking that takes place when leaders function out of fear and panic.

    Listen in.

  • Question of the Week #5

    Who would benefit from you verbalizing your appreciation today?

    The Question of the Week is offered to increase awareness of one’s personal leadership practices and encourage experimentation with creative alternatives.
  • Listen In -> Leadership B#llsh&t in a Tough Economy #3: The Fine Art of Blaming

    When a leader lashses out, “Who’s responsible for this mess?”, they are not thinking that one of the most likely answers should be, “You are!”

    Instead of owning their participation and co-responsibility in any problem at hand, these leaders blame down the organizational chart (never up) and conveniently let themselves off the hook when business doesn’t go as intended.

    bossClaudia and I set our sites on this type of leadership bullshit on the show this week.

    A combination of blindness, insecurity and lack of self-awareness conspire to handicap many leaders when problems arise.

    Blaming seldom accomplishes anything constructive when addressing plans gone awry. Then why do so many of us resort to it?

    Listen in.

  • Listen In -> Leadership B#llsh&t in a Tough Economy #2: The HR Cop-Out

    Instead of explaining their difficult decisions themselves, these leaders hide in their offices and delegate one of their most important responsibilities to the Human Resources department.

    It’s as if having other people on the team is an annoying necessity, which these leaders would gladly forego if only they had enough arms and legs to do everything themselves.

    boss

    Far from being considered multi-faceted assets to be appreciated and valued, employees are expensive resources from whose passions, ambitions, and preferences the responsible leader must protect the company.

    In this week’s audio conversation, Claudia and I explore what we are terming, “The HR Cop-Out.”

    How do you treat those who work for you? As assets full of untapped potential or expenses full of hidden dangers?

    How might you be hiding behind your Human Resources department?

    Listen in.

  • Listen In -> Leadership B#llsh&t in a Tough Economy #1: Brainless Downsizing

    Brainless downsizing. Instead of creatively rethinking how to do business, brainless downsizing involves simply firing 20-30% of your staff, have the remaining staff do that work on top of their own, and then waiting until the economy recovers.

    bossAn exaggeration? I’m afraid not.

    When the evidence (the worst economic crisis in 50 years) that our business practices are seriously and deeply flawed, this knee-jerk response amounts to sticking our heads in the sand and hoping everything is will somehow turn out okay whenever it is that we muster the courage to peek out again.

    If any time called for a thoughtful rethink of business practices it is now. But our business leaders are failing us.

    Claudia and I begin our discussion of Leadership Bullshit with a conversation about this naive and lazy, if not outright negligent, response.

    What about you? How are you thinking critically and creatively about how your business is structured?

    Listen in.