1. UNSHAKEABLE TRUST
Experiencing a deep bond of communion with your team
2. PERSISTENT GRATITUDE
Experiencing the freedom of knowing that life is a sheer gift
3. SURRENDERED CONTENTMENT
Experiencing the satisfaction of who you are, what you have, and what you do
4. LIFE-GIVING RHYTHMS
Experiencing a pattern of life that produces excellent work without being consumed by it
5. LOVING GENEROSITY
Experiencing the blessing of meeting people's needs, and contribution to their well being
6. VOCATIONAL CONFIDENCE
Experiencing the certainty that what you do matters - to you, to people and to God
SHARED FROM: BAREFOOT LEADERSHIP BY ALVIN UNG
Monday, December 31, 2012
Sunday, December 30, 2012
6 INNER STRENGTHS OF LEADERSHIP
1. JOY
Feeling the exhilaration of having people as number 1
2. GOODNESS
Cultivating a character that gives rather than takes
3. GENTLENESS
Empowering others by renouncing personal agendas and leading quietly
4. FAITHFULNESS
Persisting in important work with utter reliability
5. KINDNESS
Putting others at ease, and rejoicing in their gifts and achievements
6. PATIENCE
Having the ability to remain where you are with meaningfulness and hope
SHARED FROM: BAREFOOT LEADERSHIP BY ALVIN UNG
Feeling the exhilaration of having people as number 1
2. GOODNESS
Cultivating a character that gives rather than takes
3. GENTLENESS
Empowering others by renouncing personal agendas and leading quietly
4. FAITHFULNESS
Persisting in important work with utter reliability
5. KINDNESS
Putting others at ease, and rejoicing in their gifts and achievements
6. PATIENCE
Having the ability to remain where you are with meaningfulness and hope
SHARED FROM: BAREFOOT LEADERSHIP BY ALVIN UNG
6 DEADLY PITFALLS OF LEADERSHIP
1. PRIDE
Being imprisoned within yourself as Number 1.
It has a tendency to make you self-centered. Pride can bury itself in your subconscious and sabotage you. Pride will permeate your thoughts, words, and actions. Without intending, you will be arrogant, conceited, and selfish. These are not qualities that endear people to you.
Keep your pride in check, embrace humility. With pride you can never go far. Use pride wisely.
2. GREED
Inflaming the passion to possess more than you have.
Greed can hurt you is if you want too much too soon and you only consider the short term, forgetting that some time you have to sacrifice the here-and-now in order to plan ahead. Greed is also good, because it inspires you and drives you to work hard so you achieve and win and succeed. But only if you know the level of greed you need to have.
3. ANGER
Using emotions to manipulate and control people and circumstances.
Is anger actually a good, helpful ally that’s just badly misunderstood? The basic “message” of anger is that there is something you really want to change, but your way is blocked. Anger is a natural and potentially productive emotion.
Its best to register your displeasure when things have not been done properly without drama or generating chaos. If anger is a valuable source of information and motivation, anger could be a great asset. Remember, anger will typically escalate, and often drives people toward aggression and attack
4. SLOTH
Doing minimal or the least work. and loving ease.
Sloth is not merely laziness, it is more properly understood as sorrow or indifference.
5. ENVY
Feeling the pain of someone else's advancement and possessions.
6. RESTLESSNESS
Thinking and feeling that there's always something better somewhere else.
SHARED FROM: BAREFOOT LEADERSHIP BY ALVIN UNG
REFERENCES:
1. http://michaelhyatt.com/five-ways-leaders-can-avoid-the-pitfall-of-pride.html
2. http://www.evancarmichael.com/Entrepreneur-Advice/576/The-Fourth-Deadly-Workplace-Sin-Greed.html
3. http://www.radical-leadership-management.com/anger-management.html
4. http://www.evancarmichael.com/Business-Coach/146/EQ-Leadership-Vital-Sign-The-Power-of-Anger.html
Being imprisoned within yourself as Number 1.
It has a tendency to make you self-centered. Pride can bury itself in your subconscious and sabotage you. Pride will permeate your thoughts, words, and actions. Without intending, you will be arrogant, conceited, and selfish. These are not qualities that endear people to you.
Keep your pride in check, embrace humility. With pride you can never go far. Use pride wisely.
2. GREED
Inflaming the passion to possess more than you have.
Greed can hurt you is if you want too much too soon and you only consider the short term, forgetting that some time you have to sacrifice the here-and-now in order to plan ahead. Greed is also good, because it inspires you and drives you to work hard so you achieve and win and succeed. But only if you know the level of greed you need to have.
3. ANGER
Using emotions to manipulate and control people and circumstances.
Is anger actually a good, helpful ally that’s just badly misunderstood? The basic “message” of anger is that there is something you really want to change, but your way is blocked. Anger is a natural and potentially productive emotion.
Its best to register your displeasure when things have not been done properly without drama or generating chaos. If anger is a valuable source of information and motivation, anger could be a great asset. Remember, anger will typically escalate, and often drives people toward aggression and attack
4. SLOTH
Doing minimal or the least work. and loving ease.
Sloth is not merely laziness, it is more properly understood as sorrow or indifference.
5. ENVY
Feeling the pain of someone else's advancement and possessions.
6. RESTLESSNESS
Thinking and feeling that there's always something better somewhere else.
SHARED FROM: BAREFOOT LEADERSHIP BY ALVIN UNG
REFERENCES:
1. http://michaelhyatt.com/five-ways-leaders-can-avoid-the-pitfall-of-pride.html
2. http://www.evancarmichael.com/Entrepreneur-Advice/576/The-Fourth-Deadly-Workplace-Sin-Greed.html
3. http://www.radical-leadership-management.com/anger-management.html
4. http://www.evancarmichael.com/Business-Coach/146/EQ-Leadership-Vital-Sign-The-Power-of-Anger.html
Thursday, December 27, 2012
BAREFOOT LEADERSHIP: COURAGE AND HUMILITY
BAREFOOT LEADERSHIP
THE ART AND
HEART OF GOING THAT EXTRA MILE
ALVIN UNG
CHAPTER 3 AND 4
COURAGE AND HUMILITY
ART: COURAGE
Learn
how to build character as a foundation for leadership. Courage along with humility are the two most
important character qualities that sustain and grow leaders in tough
times. It takes courage to stand up and
be counted on. It also takes courage to
sit down and walk away. Barefoot Leaders
learn to be brave even when they feel like running away.
Cultivating
the culture of courage is an art done through:
1. Being bold early
2. Making it impossibly big
3. Live out the future now
The
greatest glory in living is not in never failing, but in rising every time we
fail. The extra mile action:
1. Personally took charge
2. Listened deeply
3. Generate solution
HEART: HUMILITY
Barefoot
Leaders believe that every person has power.
With great courage, they willingly make themselves accountable to the
people under them, knowing that it is the people they serve who confer them
power. Barefoot Leaders primarily see
themselves as servants (who lead) rather than leaders (who serve).
Humility
is a matter of the heart. It cannot be
turned on or off like an electric switch.
Embark on the journey of humility:
|
The Journey
|
|
1
|
Know strengths
and weakness
|
Go the extra mile to pursue greater good
|
Impact lives and make a difference
|
||
Open towards understanding themselves
|
||
Gain leadership mandate by servicing others
|
||
Able to build long term value
|
||
2
|
Discern how strengths become weaknesses
|
When a person lose that equilibrium between courage and
humility, strength will become weakness
|
Decisive leaders becomes arrogant
|
||
Creative thinker becomes disorganized
|
||
Meticulous planners become a control freak
|
||
Blaming external factors and other people when problem arises
|
||
Erects an invisible fortress that discourages people from giving
feedback
|
||
Becomes an arrogant caricature
|
||
3
|
Embrace weaknesses as strengths
|
Leaders possess one or more leadership flaws including:
|
Busyness
and ambition blinded leaders from seeing themselves as they truly are. Embrace weakness as strengths and become more
aware of emotional and spiritual poverty.
to be continued...
Tuesday, December 25, 2012
BAREFOOT LEADERSHIP: LET GO OF CONTROL AND EMBRACE YOUR CALLING
BAREFOOT LEADERSHIP
THE ART AND
HEART OF GOING THAT EXTRA MILE
ALVIN UNG
CHAPTER 1 AND 2
LET GO OF
CONTROL AND EMBRACE YOUR CALLING
ART: LET GO OF CONTROL
Good
managers and leaders are excellent planners.
But Barefoot Leaders live with openness to new possibilities. Letting go of control is the first and most
essential task of pursuing a life of extraordinary leadership:
1. Let go of plans
2. Let go of comfort zones
3. Let go of the past
HEART: EMBRACE YOUR CALLING
Barefoot
Leaders embrace their calling by listening to their live:
1. Identify life purpose
2. Stress test values
3. Count the cost
PUTTING THE ART AND HEART
TOGETHER
|
|
Letting go of
control
|
so that you
don’t micromanaged people and events
|
So that you don’t lose
sense of greater purpose of life
|
|
So that you
stop being fixated on plans
|
|
So that you can seek after
a purpose-driven life
|
|
Embrace your
calling
|
So that it’s
easier for you to let go
|
|
So that your life do not
drift without purpose
|
|
So that you
don’t feel like running during tough times
|
|
So that you will experience
the joy of doing the work you love
|
to be continued...
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