Saturday, September 19, 2009

Second Wind


Wikipedia defines it (second wind) as a phenomenon in distance running, such as marathons or road running (as well as other sports), whereby an athlete who is too out of breath and tired to continue suddenly finds the strength to press on at top performance with less exertion.

This I now need to find. Sometimes as a leader, it can take its toll on someone who's balancing career growth, teenage boys, maturing marriage, growing extended family and social commitments.

Burnout is near the corner if one is not careful.

I now need to find rest by focusing my eyes on the ONE that gives...My savior!

Monday, August 17, 2009

Whose Slave are you?


This is a powerful verse that lingered in my mind and heart this weekend. And to my utter amazement, little did I know I would soon use it to remind brothers of ours on the importance of placing priority time of family over work, of kids over self.

Scripture says : DONT YOU REALIZE THAT YOU BECOME SLAVES TO WHOM YOU CHOOSE TO OBEY". One liner, powerful implication. Office, workplace, home, social circles, they all apply.

I love the LIVING WORD!!!

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

Universal Laws



While rummaging thru powerful speeches in the history of my country, I was reminded to refresh myself on the power of Universal laws that governs any relationship or dealings. First pass research result is here:


1. Law Of Cause and effect. (For every problem there is a cause and a solution)
2. Law Of Increase. (Sowing the seeds and reaping the fruit.)
3. Law Of Attraction. (Like begets like. Opposites attract?)
4.

And to cap it all, I like the "Be" Attitudes elaboratin the principle of sowing and reaping here.

BE HARVEST
loving love
gentle gentleness
patient patience
friendly friendship
merciful mercy
truthful truth
hopeful hope
faithful faith
good goodness
joyful joy
peaceful peace
humble humbleness
harmonious harmony
content contentment
honest honesty
appreciative appreciation
just justice
forgiving forgiveness

Friday, May 15, 2009

Long or Short?


Are You Living for the Short Term or the Long Term? A fulfilling life—personally and professionally— is a balance between short-term satisfaction and long-term benefit...thus challenged Marshall Goldsmith, an author of the Wall Street Journal bestseller Succession: Are You Ready.

What about you? Read his article below..

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In analyzing how we spend our time, whether personally or professionally, it can be helpful to consider two dimensions: short-term satisfaction and long-term benefit. Both have value. It can be disappointing to live our lives with no meaning or pleasure in the here and now, just as it can be unfulfilling to live only for today.

Questions like, "Does this activity make me happy?" or "Do I find meaning in the activity itself?" can help us gauge the degree of short-term satisfaction that we get from any activity. Questions like, "Are the results achieved from this activity worth my effort?" or "Is the successful completion of this activity going to have a long-term positive impact on my life?" can help us gauge our expectations for potential long-term benefit from any activity.

The accompanying graph shows five different modes of behavior and how they can characterize our relationship to any activity—either at work or at home. (See above)

Stimulating is for activities that score high in short-term satisfaction but low in long-term benefit. An example of a "stimulating" activity may be the use of drugs or alcohol. While the activity may provide short-term satisfaction, it may be dysfunctional for long-term benefit. At work, gossiping with co-workers may be fun for a while, but it is probably not career- or business-enhancing. A life spent solely on stimulating activities could provide a lot of short-term pleasure but still be headed nowhere.

Sacrificing is for activities that score low in short-term satisfaction but high in long-term benefit. An extreme example of sacrificing could involve dedicating your life to work that you hate because you feel like you "have to" to achieve a larger goal. A more common example might be working out (when you don't feel like it) to improve your long-term health. At work, sacrificing might be spending extra hours on a project to help enhance your career prospects. A life spent solely on sacrificing activities would be the life of a martyr—lots of achievement, but not much joy.

Surviving is for activities that score low on short-term satisfaction and low on long-term benefit. These are activities that don't cause much joy or satisfaction and do not contribute to long-term benefit in your life. These are typically activities that we are doing because we feel that we have to do them in order just to get by. Charles Dickens frequently described the lives of people who were almost constantly in the surviving box. These poor people had countless hours of hard work, not much joy, and not much to show for all of their efforts. A life spent solely on surviving activities would be a hard one indeed.

Sustaining is for activities that produce moderate amounts of short-term satisfaction and lead to moderate long-term benefits. For many professionals, the daily answering of e-mails is a sustaining activity. It is moderately interesting (not thrilling) and usually produces moderate long-term but hardly life-changing benefit. At home, the day-to-day routine of shopping, cooking, and cleaning may be viewed as sustaining. A life spent solely on sustaining activities would be an O.K. one—not great, yet not too bad.

Succeeding is a term for activities that score high on short-term satisfaction and high on long-term benefit. These activities are the ones that we love to do and get great benefit from doing. At work, people who spend a lot of time in the succeeding box love what they are doing and believe that it is producing long-term benefit at the same time. At home, a parent may be spending hours with a child time that the parent greatly enjoys while valuing the long-term benefit that will come to the child. A life spent in succeeding is a life that is filled with both joy and accomplishment.

The perception of both short-term satisfaction and long-term benefit is dependent upon the individual engaged in the activity. Consider an immigrant who leaves a poor country and come to the U.S., where she works 18 hours a day at two minimum-wage jobs. She may have a great attitude toward her work and be saving every possible cent for her children's education. She may define her life as being largely spent in the succeeding category—filled with short-term happiness and long-term benefit.

At the other end of the professional scale, one CEO could feel resentful and grumpy about her work (and feel trapped) because a drop in stock value means that she will have to work another couple of years to have the $10 million she told herself she needed in order to retire. She might see herself in the surviving category. Another CEO in a similar situation could feel happy and fulfilled at the prospect of leading a major organization through challenging times and see herself in the succeeding category.

The point is two people could be engaged in the same activity but have completely different perceptions of what this activity means to them. It's because no one can define what short-term satisfaction or long-term benefit means for you but you. My suggestion for you is simple. Spend a week tracking how you spend your time. At the end of the week calculate how many hours you spent on stimulating, sacrificing, surviving, sustaining, or succeeding. Then ask yourself what changes you can make to help you create a life that is both more satisfying in the short-term and more rewarding in the long-term.

While the activities that take up our time can be one factor in determining our happiness and achievement, our attitude toward these activities can be an equally important factor in determining the ultimate quality of our lives. If we cannot change our activities, we can at least try to change our attitude toward them.

Thursday, April 30, 2009

ABC's to Achieve your dreams!


1. Avoid negative sources, people, places, things and habits.
2. Believe in yourself
3. Consider things from every angle.
4. Don't give up.
5. Enjoy life today, yesterday is gone, tomorrow may never come.
6. Family, friends are hidden treasures, seek them and enjoy their riches.
7. Give more than you planned to.
8. Hang on to your dreams.
9. Ignore those who try to discourage you.
10. Just do it.
11. Keep trying no matter how hard its seems, it will get easier.
12. Love yourself.
13. Make it happen.
14. Never lie, cheat or steal, always strike a fair deal.
15. Open your eyes and see things as they really are.
16. Practice makes perfect.
17. Quitters dont win and winners dont wait.
18. Read, study and learn about everything important in your life.
19. Stop procastinating.
20. Take control of your destiny.
21. Understand yourself in order to better understand others.
22. Visualize it.
23. Want it more than anything.
24. Xcellerate your efforts.
25. You are unique creation, nothing can replace YOU!
26. Zero in on your target and go for it.

Powells Leadership Insight




Here's Colin Powell Leadership Guidepost

1. Being responsible means sometimes pissing people off.
2. The day the soldiers stop bringing you their problems is the day you stopped leading them. They have either lost confidence that you can help them or concluded that you do not care. Either case is a failure of leadership.
3. Dont be buffaloed by experts and elites. They often possess more data than judgement.
4. Dont be afraid to challenge the pros, even in their own backyard.
5. Never neglect details. When everyone's mind is dulled or distracted the leader must be doubly vigilant.
6. You don't know what you can get away with until you try.
7. Keep looking below surface appearances.
8. Organizations doesnt accomplish anything. Plans dont accomplish anything either. Theories of management dont much matter. Endeavors succeed or fail because of the people involved. Only by attracting the best people will you accomplish a great deal.
9. Organization charts and fancy titles count for next to nothing.
10. Never let your ego get so close to your position that when your position goes, your ego goes with it.
11. Fit no stereotypes. Dont chase the latest management fads. The situation dictates which approach best accomplishes the teams mission.
12. Perpetual optimism is a force multiplier.
13. Look for intelligence and judgement, and most critically, a capacity for anticipate. To see around corners. And look for loyalty, integrity, a high energy drive, a balanced ego and the drive to get things done.
14. Great leaders are almost always great simplifiers, who can cut through argument, debate and doubt. Offering solution everybody can understand.
15. Use formula P=40 to 70. If probablility of success is > 40, then go for the decision. Decision delayed is decision denied.
16. The commander in the field is always right and the rear echelon is wrong, unless proven otherwise.

Thoughts?

Liking oneself as first step in liking and leading others



Do you agree? I heard or read this somewhere that the beginning to a truly nourishing relationship is to begin liking oneself. The logic goes that if one likes himself or herself, there is radiance or glow that emanates from the person's heart.

And that same person is able to share the inner stability, sensitivity to capture the hearts of other people. No wonder optimist people are usually leaders in their own right. I remember a cliche when it says,

If you are enthusiastic for 3 min, it will last 3 days.
If you are enthusiastic for 3 days, it will last 3 weeks,
If you are enthusiastic for 3 weeks, it will last 3 years
If you are enthusiastic for 3 years, it will last 30 years!

Enthusiasm, positive attitude and right frame of mind can indeed lengthen one's life.

Agree?

Saturday, April 18, 2009

Ten Commandments of Continuous Improvement



I was intrigued by this very straightforward yet powerful principle I watched on continuous improvement. It is called the 10 commandments of Kaizen. Read along...

1. Open mind to change.
2. Think yes we can, if.
3. Attack process, not people.
4. Seek simple solutions.
5. If its broken, stop to fix it.
6. Use creativity, not capital.
7. Problems are opportunities in disguise.
8. Find the rootcause-why why why.
9. Wisdom of the many, not knowledge of one.
10. There is no final destination on the improvement journey.

To sum, perfect practice daily is key.

Someone said it takes 10,000 hrs of practice to perfect one craft. So if we practice daily (8 hrs) to learn one craft, it takes total of 3.5 years to master it. Wow! Is this the reason why average effectivity of a job is pegged around 3.5 years. Beyond that, a person is just cruising?

Monday, March 30, 2009

Corporate Politics - scribbles




I stumbled upon my old notes on a corporate politics seminar I attended. This talk is organized by our Alumni group. Read on. And I hope you can pick up a line or two and apply in your own company.

Speaker#1: Rule of ThumbRule #1 - the boss is always right.
Rule #2 - if the boss is wrong, refer to rule#1.

Speaker#2: 7 habits of a corporate politician
1. Fight or flight.
2. Achieve goal (WIIFM)
3. Focus on circle of influence.
4. Don't take sides (elephant analogy)
5. Don't get personal.
6. Seek to understand.
7. Think win/win.

Speaker #3: Affable Politician
1. Focus on your job orientation - are you eyeing a job or career?
2. Put CV friendly words i.e dollar value of project, make it marketable.
3. Learning from other peoples mistakes.
4. Visible and escalate up.

Speaker#4: The paranoid politician
1. Anything can be used against you.
2. You can't trust anyone.
3. Champion accomplishment.
4. Learn and boast.

Thursday, March 19, 2009

AIG saga

I can only mutter the words as 'double standards". "Unacceptable yet reasonable". Duplicity in action. Two face. "While we say this, we do that." These are words that come to mind as I listen to the congressional hearing on AIG, the largest american insurer who allegedly paid staff bonus over govt bailout money.

The contention of its chairman and CEO is that 'these payments are effort to boost the earnings of staff thereby paying their taxes back to the govt". In his own words - "This is the only way to improve AIG's ability to pay taxpayers back quickly and completely and the only way to avoid a systemic shock to the economy that the U.S. government help was meant to relieve."

In fairness to its CEO, apparently he is in fact receiving 1 dollar compensation a year, no financial stocks, no monetary rewards for his accomplishment. Commendable? Perhaps. However, his actions and decisions of late spur many questions.

Is this a leadership failure? Your thoughts?

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

BHAG

Do you have a BHAG? Meaning do you have a "Big, Hairy, Audacious Goal". A recently coined term for anyone who has the ambition of turning things around.

I think this is a good supplement for S.M.A.R.T goal (specific, measurable, attainable, realistic and timely) goal.

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