Archive for 2014

In 100 Words: Give and Receive

Monday, December 15th, 2014 by Troy Schrock

It is an appropriate time of the year to consider the benefits of giving and receiving. In the business world, though, it is about trading knowledge rather than tangible gifts. Many people would be surprised if they knew how freely business leaders share expertise and experiences with other leaders. In my experience, most leaders have a genuine desire to share with, as well as learn from, others. They have learned the wisdom of being both a teacher and student – to humbly share and excitedly learn.

So, let the exchanging begin because to both the givers and receivers belong the gain!

“We make a living by what we get. We make a life by what we give.” – Winston Churchill

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In 100 Words: Fail Fast

Saturday, November 1st, 2014 by Troy Schrock

We are so conflicted when it comes to failing. Failure is painfully hard to endure, yet amazing break-throughs can emerge out of the trial. The failure of Plan A may lead to a successful Plan B (or C or H…). We achieve success precisely because we failed earlier attempts. So, the faster we fail, the more quickly we can succeed.

Certain sales approaches teach how to get to “no” quickly. There is something to that attitude. Why waste resources hoping? Choose a path then push, fail, learn and modify. Repeat. With some iteration of the cycle success will likely emerge.

“There are no secrets to success. It is the result of preparation, hard work, and learning from failure.” –Colin Powell

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In 100 Words: How to Waste a Meeting

Monday, September 15th, 2014 by Troy Schrock

Lack of preparation is one of the surest ways to waste a good meeting. Do you remember Kramer’s classic entrances in the old TV sitcom Seinfeld – the off-balance slide with hair wildly flying? This is how many executives enter their meetings.

Meeting effectiveness is directly proportional to the preparation time participants expend. Each participant should run through this simple pre-meeting checklist:

  • consciously note the meeting objective
  • review key topics and input data
  • write down what debates and decisions are needed

Scheduling buffer time between meetings is the practical transition mechanism for accomplishing this preparation. Don’t waste another meeting; enter prepared.

“Give me six hours to chop down a tree and I will spend the first four sharpening the axe.” –Abraham Lincoln

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In 100 Words: Trapped by Success

Friday, August 1st, 2014 by Troy Schrock

We can become trapped by thinking and methods which are currently successful. Existing strengths or competitive advantages can also quickly turn into major limitations. The very factors which led to past successes become impediments to future, larger accomplishments.

This reality is difficult to see precisely because current achievements are directly linked to a particular paradigm we created and exercised (usually for years). However, our framework must flex.

In short, we must be willing to change and discard even successful efforts. This is what Peter Drucker referred to as “systematic abandonment.” We should consciously shift resources to new, more promising opportunities.

“Don’t let yesterday use up too much of today.” –Will Rogers

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In 100 Words: Lead Patiently

Saturday, June 14th, 2014 by Troy Schrock

Superior performance is rarely achieved through relentless force and pushing. Great leaders learn to strike a balance between motivational challenging and patience

Leaders CHALLENGE by:

  • Expecting great results and holding people accountable.
  • Practicing continuous learning themselves followed by wise application of concepts.
  • Maintaining key disciplines such as meeting rhythms and priority-setting.
  • Driving resource alignment around strategic priorities.

Leaders demonstrate PATIENCE by:

  • Knowing change does not happen overnight.
  • Spending years developing an effective, healthy leadership team.
  • Understanding there is a limit to how much a person can take on and absorb (stretch) at any point in time.
  • Repeating themselves…without showing frustration.

“Patience is the companion of wisdom.” –Saint Augustine

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In 100 Words: Key Practice of a Level 5 Leader

Thursday, May 1st, 2014 by Troy Schrock

Alan Mulally’s upcoming retirement as CEO of Ford Motor Company is big news these days. All organizations, not just those in the automotive sector, should take note. Mulally’s leadership in turning around Ford highlights a key Level 5 Leader practice he, and the executive leaders, used to take Ford to the top of the industry.

A tight weekly executive team meeting (Mulally’s BPR – Business Process Review) was implemented to drive both business plan execution and building a strong leadership team. Candor, along with accountability around data, virtually non-existent in past Ford culture, have paved the way for consistent business performance.

“Running a business is a design job. You need a point of view about the future, a really good plan to deliver that future, and then relentless implementation.” –Alan Mulally

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