Posts in Leadership
The foundational elements of effective leadership

One of my goals this year is to write a handbook on leadership. I’m woefully behind, so this article is an attempt to force some progress. I’ve spent a good bit reading about and taking notes on leadership over the last year. As of now, I think effective leadership is made up of four core elements: personal credibility, self-confidence, judgment, and an ability to inspire and sustain cooperation. What am I missing?

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Incentives matter

There are few forces more powerful than incentives. Incentives drive thinking and behavior. To understand someone’s thinking, you must understand their incentives. When you encounter a behavior problem, trace the incentives and you’ll often find the root cause. Incentives are the invisible cause and behavior is the visible effect.

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Deciding not to decide

Sometimes deciding not to decide is the right decision. Decisiveness doesn’t always require you to make a decision to act. It can also mean choosing to delay. What you want to avoid is the infinite deliberation that exists between these two choices. That’s no man’s land.

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A checklist for better decision-making

In The Psychology of Human Misjudgment, Charlie outlines 25 human tendencies that can lead to poor decision-making. To combat these tendencies, he recommends making a checklist you can reference when you’re making an important decision. I’ve converted my notes to this simple checklist. I hope it helps me avoid bad decisions by helping me become aware of how these tendencies might be affecting me.

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Improve meetings by clarifying the purpose

When attendees don't agree on the purpose of a meeting, bad meetings happen. Perfect conditions brew for impatience and unhealthy conflict. Attendees try to complete competing objectives and nothing gets done. If you’re having unproductive meetings, attendees may be working toward conflicting objectives. Try stepping back and getting everyone to agree on a clarified purpose for the meeting.

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Teams, LeadershipRick Lindquist
Why we become impatient

People say patience is a virtue, but I find it more useful to define it as a skill. Patience is the ability to wait for something without becoming frustrated. Sometimes exercising patience is difficult. When we’re forced to wait, we become impatient. When we’re impatient, we expose our frustrations via body language, words, and actions. Our emotions take control. Why do we become impatient and what purpose does it serve?

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