Who Wants to Leap Out of Bed Without an Alarm?

Do you have a fascination with morning routines? I’m always curious about how people use the first hour(s) of their day. Until COVID, I didn’t have a real routine…

What gets you out of bed in the morning? Here are some possibilities:

  • You’ve hit the “snooze” button on your alarm clock three times and now you’ll have to sprint to catch your train.

  • Your first Zoom call is in 20 minutes and if you’re lucky, you’ll just have time to wash your face and arrange your hair. Thank goodness you’re wearing pjs with a collar!

  • You feel a sense of duty to your team, who’s been working on a big project that’s due on Friday and needs your approval to submit the project report.

How Is Leadership Like Flower Arranging?

There’s a mistaken belief that once you’ve gotten really good at your job, you’ll automatically be a leader. It doesn’t make much sense. It’s not at all unusual to have a way of measuring progress for the acquisition of any new skill. There are stages of competency development for everything ranging from chess to weight lifting to flower arranging. Seriously, there actually is a title of Master Florist. And yet a commonly held assumption about leadership is that you either have it or you don’t.

Encouraging Reluctant Leaders

A reader sent me a question about reluctant leaders. That is, people who have expertise and experience to step up as leaders but who hesitate to do so.

He wrote, “I have two friends I believe should practice leadership but lack the courage or the energy for some reason. They are both in their fifties and at this point their profession needs them to share what they’ve learnt.”

He went on to describe leadership qualities he sees in each of them and some of the challenges in their professions that could use their leadership.

He concluded, “Any advice Deborah? Do you have a blurb in you to share about the reluctant leader?”

The Leadership Questions No One Admits to Having: Part Two

Leadership often requires conveying decisiveness and determination. Yet it’s natural to lose your moxie upon occasion. And picking yourself up after a setback can be challenging but it’s a key part of being in a leadership role. As a coach, I’ve had occasion to witness the questions leaders often ask themselves in private. This is Part 2 of a two-part post. This one addresses setbacks and losses; Part 1 explored doubts and fears.

Here’s one of the questions: “I am just so exhausted and tired of battling with the world. What can I do to regain my enthusiasm?”

The Leadership Questions No One Admits to Having: Part One

Leadership often requires conveying confidence and purposefulness. Yet it’s not unusual to have self doubt and become discouraged. As a coach, I’ve had occasion to explore the questions leaders ask themselves in private. In this two-part post, we’ll explore common questions raised by people I’ve spoken with. Part One addresses several doubts and fears that keep people up at night.

The Secret to Becoming a More Confident Leader

Recently, a colleague I’ve known for many years asked me a question about the difference between a leader as a person and leadership as an activity. She’d attended a series I facilitated many years ago and still remembered that distinction.

She was trying to tackle a thorny challenge at work and wanted to explore the implications of viewing her actions from each of these two lenses. Based on her interest, I thought it might be useful for my readers. I’ve seen many people who had doubts about their leadership step up confidently after getting clear on this important distinction. What follows is an excerpt from my book, Why Not Lead?

How to Stay Grounded in This Crazy World

Have you noticed:

  • The highways are filled with people speeding, weaving and tailgating.

  • Even the most seemingly civil conversations have the potential to veer off course into a conflict.

  • More and more people seem to think the world owes them for what they’ve put up with during the pandemic?

Or maybe, you’ve also noticed the same thing about your own behavior!

Learning When the Stakes are High

In March and April of 2020, very early in the pandemic, I had the opportunity to coach several dozen leaders from a large company in the aerospace industry. Most of them were in the first week of figuring out how to completely change the way they’d worked. Many of them had teams that were used to working together in an office. Some of them also had team members who did shift work on assembly lines or who were in sales. Of course, the sales people were used to flying all over the world visiting their clients in person. This was obviously not happening!

Leading in a Hybrid World

Now that your team has finally adjusted to working from home, you face the transition back to the office. But not completely. Your company has decided to permanently implement a hybrid workplace. Folks will be expected to go into the office 2 days a week and work from home 3 days a week. No one will have their own office. People will sign up for a cubicle and show up with their laptop, ready to get to work.

You’re excited about this change but apprehensive about how your team is going to react. Shutting down wasn’t easy but a hybrid environment could be even more confusing. You want to do your best to create positive and productive working conditions.

Want some ideas to consider how you might lead effectively in a hybrid environment?

The "Big Three Questions"

Quick question: When you were a young leader, what three questions would you have liked to ask someone with more experience?

I was prompted to think about this while listening to a podcast episode by Dave Stachowiak on The Ways to Pay it Forward. He and his guest Glenn Parker shared some great stories of how they’d been mentored early in their careers.

Read on for my “Big Three Questions.”

Embracing Conflict as a Constructive Force

What’s your mindset about conflict? Do you view it as something to avoid at all costs? Or as an obstacle to accomplishing your “real” work? That’s not surprising. As social animals we want to get along and cooperate. We tend to see conflict as something scary and dangerous, where there will be winners and losers and nobody goes away as friends.

What if you could view conflict as a constructive force?

Remote Leadership Presence: Dos & Don'ts

Having trouble keeping people engaged and focused during endless video meetings? If so, you’re in good company. That often comes up in coaching sessions these days.

Read on for some “dos” and “don’ts” of remote leadership presence that I’ve gathered during the last year. Chances are, there’s at least one thing you can start doing and one thing you can stop doing. I’ve certainly learned a lot about the subject.

"Life as Coach": How to Grow as a Leader with 3 Simple Practices

I am all for investing in in-depth leadership development. This is one of my main passions in life. In fact, I’d almost rather take a course that helps me grow as a leader than take a vacation.

But there are times when formal leadership development might not be a top priority.

That doesn't mean you have to give up developing. Using a "life as coach" approach, you can still grow by using your day to day experiences as a springboard. Sound intriguing? Read more for simple practices to keep growing even in the most challenging times.

How to Reduce Resistance to Change

Every day, it seems like the taken-for-granted foundations of our lives are crumbling. Sometimes, it’s a sad loss and other times it’s an opportunity for a fresh start. But the initial reaction to this persistent uncertainty—threat, fear, resistance—is pretty much a given.

The human brain strives to maximize certainty and predictability as a central driver of behavior. In the presence of ambiguity, people fill in knowledge gaps with fear. Even the smallest change can be experienced as a threat and activate the flight or flight response.

Partnering for Productivity and Positivity

How connected do you feel to other members of your team these days? If your team is working remotely, connected only by Slack and Zoom, it might be hard to sustain a sense of teamwork. Research shows that workers who have a sense of teamwork are more productive and have greater job satisfaction. But virtual Happy Hours and other "team building" efforts only go so far.

As a leader, how can you reinforce the benefits of working well together?

Book Review: Preparing Yourself for Life's Challenges

Toughness Training for Life
by James E. Loehr, The Penguin Group, 1993

I first read this book in 1993. I found it to be a useful application of methods used to train professional athletes for the rest of us. The book proposed that instead of focusing on stress reduction--which in today's world is pretty impossible--we need to focus on toughening up in order to handle more stress and be "healthier, happier, and more productive."

How to Sustain Physical, Mental and Emotional Toughness

Most of us know the importance of recovery in the physical realm. We exercise our muscles, then allow a period of recovery in order to maximize the strength gains. We expend significant energy over the course of a day and then recover by eating and sleeping. We work hard during the week and recover on the weekend by relaxing and having fun. Even if we don't always follow these principles, we know they contribute to our physical well-being.

2 Indispensable Tools for Leading in Permanent White Water

Our world has long been characterized by overstimulation, unmanageable amounts of input and demands for faster and faster action. Many of us have been chronically overwhelmed and have struggled just to keep up.

The confluence of challenges in 2020 have magnified the impact of these conditions, adding a layer of uncertainty and anxiety that can be crippling.

“Really?” you think, “What are you telling me that I don’t already know?”

How to Overpower Procrastination with Purpose

Does this sound like something you can relate to? You’ve got a project you really need to be working on. Maybe it’s filing six months of paperwork. Or learning how to use that new software you downloaded. It’s necessary but boring. Not surprisingly, you manage to find other things to occupy your time.

This next situation is even trickier. The project is important but you’ve got feelings about it. And not happy feelings.