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Archive for the 'Leadership' CategoryMy Top Ten Books of 2009I’ve always read many books, and have been good at implementing good ideas and a few bad ones too.  Some people have asked me what I read, so here are my top ten from all categories:
I’ll read over 70 books before the year ends, along with many journals, magazines, and newspapers. As Mark Twain said,”The person who does not read has no advantage over the person who cannot read.” Posted December 22nd, 2009 in LeadershipServant Leadership TestYears ago, I read Servant Leadership, by Robert K. Greenleaf.  I seek to serve and lead.  Greenleaf said that the best test of a servant leader is: “Do those served grow as persons; do they, while being served, become healthier, wiser, freer, more autonomous, more likely themselves to become servants?” He also said the test is tough to administer. I have been a teacher of youth in church settings for over 30 years, and regularly teach/train adults in business settings and classes.  Since we have moved several times, it is not possible to keep in contact with all the “youth” who are now adults. A consultant does not often have opportunities to see how well people apply what I recommend and teach.  I have to do my best every day, and trust that I have been helpful. Perhaps I need a self-test, based on a servant leader philosophy.
Posted June 27th, 2009 in LeadershipMen in White Clothes May Not Be PaintersJack Brooks of Pipeline Controls and Services told me a funny story. A contractor needed some painters to paint the outside of a large building.  Men who wanted day work congregated in an area of town. The contractor saw four or five Hispanic men dressed in white pants and shirts, and they wanted to work. The contractor did not speak Spanish, and the men in white did not speak English. But they were dressed in white; painters dress in white; the contractor was looking for painters. They agreed on pay by sign language, and the men got in the contractor’s truck. When they got to the building, he got all the paint and equipment out of the truck and pointed to the front of the building and said, “Paint the building!”   The contractor left for a few hours. He was surprised and upset when he returned. The painters had only painted a small portion of the building, and they were working in the same area where he left them. When the contractor found an interpreter, the interpreter informed him that the men were cooks, not painters.  Both cooks and painters may dress in white, but the skills and abilities are different. What lessons could be learned from this story? Posted June 27th, 2009 in Leadership, Observations |