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information and resources to help you build and retain a
high-performance company
Volume 1 |
Issue 26 | February 2009
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FROM JIM SIRBASKU’S DESK
A New Year's Plan:
"To See Ourselves as Others See Us"
Two hundred years ago, when poet
Robert Burns penned the words about
seeing ourselves through the eyes of
others in his famous poem (To a
Louse, 1786), he could not have
known that they would apply so
fittingly today. Today's economy
might be very different if only the
leaders running some of our most
respected organizations were willing
to view themselves through the
lenses others use.
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In this new year, we must deal with an uncertain
national and global economy. It is a good time
for us to reassess our priorities and goals.
Instead of looking in the mirror and reflecting
on whether the hair is combed or the jacket fits
well, a wise leader will look beyond the outer
image, go beneath the surface. He will evaluate
and look inside his true self.
Viewing our deeper selves and honestly
recognizing what we see is a difficult task.
Getting to the truth will require the help of
others, perhaps many others, since some people
know only one side of us. Deciding what we are
going to do with the information we get back
will require help, too, because it is easier to
make no change. If you are tempted to think that
way, remember: change is the only way to grow.
So, facing two paths – CHANGE and NO CHANGE –
let's say we opt for the first one. What will
keep us on the straight and narrow path? Here is
a plan that can enable change:
- Seek feedback. The only
way to know how others view us is to ask.
Getting their input can tell us where we are
now, which is an important step in getting
where we want to go. Honest feedback
illuminates our current state and provides a
foundation for our betterment.
In addition to seeking out trusted friends
and mentors, it is helpful to learn from the
people you interact with on a regular basis.
How do you treat those who can neither hurt
nor harm you, like the clerk at the
convenience store? The answer could be
revealing.
- Be courageous. Whether
or not you believe in making resolutions for
the new year is immaterial. If you discover
that you behave in ways that make it
difficult for others to do their jobs, you
have a responsibility to change your
behavior. The alteration might be as simple
as communicating in person instead of
through memos. Or it might be more complex,
requiring you to restructure the way you and
your management team do business. Remember
that embarking on such a course implies to
those who take the journey with you that you
are serious about change. To request
feedback is not easy, but to seek it and
then do nothing invites cynicism.
- Do not assume anything about
your employees. Know them better
than they know themselves. New tools are
available to tell you exactly who is working
for you – their competencies, their
weaknesses and their goals. Do not decide
that you can apply the same management style
to everyone and get the same results. A
multitude of different faces greet you when
you walk into the department. They are
likely to include four different
generations, both genders, and different
races and ethnicities. In the global
marketplace, you will find variations even
within identifiable groups. It is
imperative that you learn what skills your
employees have, the skills they are capable
of acquiring and what it takes to keep them
motivated.
- Stay focused. Pledges
you make to yourself come with a tempting
reality: If you made them, you can also
unmake them. The consequences of straying
off-course can be daunting, however. One of
the biggest is inertia that permeates your
organization. If you start something you
don't finish, who will keep others focused?
Create an accountability system. Make a list
and read it at regular intervals. Or go a
step further and give your list to a trusted
peer to review with you regularly. Think of
your colleague's reminders as a pep talk.
- Recheck midyear. In
today's fast-changing world, a goal that's
only a few months old can quickly become
obsolete. Examining each item on your list
after six months will let you know whether
you need to stay the course or readjust. Of
course, you may have seen some flaws in your
accountability plan and made changes
accordingly. Remember that the creation of
new goals does not have to wait for a new
year. You can set goals anytime. Build a new
list as necessary depending on what has
happened inside and outside the
organization.
- Manage frustration.
Realists know there are some things they
will never change. Smart leaders recognize
obstacles and adapt their responses when
difficult changes are beyond their control.
Keep this in mind whenever you feel caught
between harsh choices.
- Know your limits.
Sometimes achievers forget that no one is
perfect. Just as an artist is never done
with his creation, each of us is still a
student of life and a creation in progress.
This is not permission to remain static, but
we don't need to consider ourselves
failures, either. Take the middle path:
Admit your mistakes and resolve to do
better.
As we commit to improve our leadership
behavior in the coming year, we must remember
that discomfort accompanies important change.
But if we do nothing, the return will also be
nothing.

Jim Sirbasku, CEO
Profiles International
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"Inside my empty
bottle I was constructing a lighthouse while
all the others were making ships.”
– Charles Simic, Serbian-American, former
poet laureate.

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What Kind of Leader Are
YOU?
Take our quiz to find out what kind of leader
you are. Keep in mind that leadership qualities
can change depending on your role, your
manager's leadership style, and your employees'
differences. Also, you might use a combination
of several styles depending on your team's
personality, the type of role you have, and the
work issues you face. This quiz only suggests
how you might respond to important decisions
that you might face on a regular basis.
1. You have two days to make a big
decision. You:
a. Decide without input from peers, subordinates
or team members.
b. Depend on your veteran employees to make the
decision, knowing they will make the right one.
c. Quickly convene a meeting with your team
members and make your decision based on the
prevailing attitude you hear.
d. Prefer to leave the decision to a
subordinate, then take credit if it's a good one
and stay silent if it does not work.
2. What do employees want most from
their jobs?
A. Feeling valued
B. Less stress
C. Being part of a team
D. Shared vision and values
3. Your team misses a deadline. You:
A. Take responsibility, then immediately finish
the project yourself.
B. Appoint one or two people on the team to get
the project finished by a new deadline they set
themselves.
C. Find out why the team missed the deadline and
ask for suggestions about what the next step
should be, then set a new deadline.
D. Yell at team members, tell the group at large
to fix the problem, then stride away.
4. When you have an idea you believe
is good for the company, you:
A. Float it immediately to higher-ups in your
organization who can make it happen.
B. Ask highly trusted members of your team to
research and test the idea and get back to you
with their thoughts, then forget about it.
C. Present your idea at a team meeting and seek
opinions before deciding what to do next.
D. It's not your job to have ideas.
5. When a trusted team member is late
for three meetings in a row and is evasive with
you about the reason, you:
A. Tell the employee privately that you expect
punctuality and insist that the tardiness not
occur again.
B. Ask human resources to find out what is going
on, but request no report back to you.
C. Seek out the advice of several trusted peers.
D. Confront the employee in a public setting and
ask in a loud voice why he or she keeps missing
work.
6. Budget concerns mean there will be no
raises in the new fiscal year. You:
A. Discuss the issue with no one, but write and
distribute an internal memo instructing people
with questions to see you.
B. Tell your veteran team members there will be
no raises, and let them inform employees the way
they see fit.
C. Convene a meeting of team members, break the
news and allow questions. Then ask them for
ideas on how to tell everyone else and what your
organization can offer instead of raises.
D. You never plan raises in your budget anyway,
so it doesn't matter. |
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How to Be THE All-Around
Top Leader
When the leaders of an
organization are the kinds of
people everyone wants to follow,
so much the better for the
growth of the organization. The
author of THE 360 DEGREE LEADER
believes that even those who are
not in the top spot of a company
can lead.
Whom should they lead? For
starters, their peers, their
managers and those in lower
positions. Or as author John
Maxwell says: across, up and
down. Here's a glimpse of his
philosophy:
- When leading up:
Lead yourself first. Share
the boss's vision.
Demonstrate that you know
the job is not all about
power and glamour. Others
might turn up their noses at
the dirty work, but you
tackle it. Even though your
job does not offer all of
the appearances of being at
the top, you can still act
like a leader.
- When leading
across: Are your
actions and your conscience
more important to you than
cutthroat competition? Then
be a friend. Listen to your
peers so that they will
reciprocate when you need to
tell your ideas to someone
you trust. Be honest. Make
yourself available after
hours. Keep your sense of
humor honed. When Maxwell
advises leaders to put "completing
fellow leaders ahead of
competing with them,"
he explains that competition
is natural, but a better way
to lead peers is to work on
balancing competition
against reaching team goals.
- When leading
down: This familiar
leadership lesson is to
"catch people doing
something right," and we can
do it only if we leave our
workspaces and walk around.
In Maxwell's veteran view,
development is a process,
not an overnight miracle,
and individuals thrive on
one-on-one contact.
The author divides his book
into sections that examine these
areas: the myths associated with
leading from the middle; the
challenges that people face when
they try to be 360-degree
leaders; the principles they
practice when they lead up, down
and across; and their value to
their organizations.
Founder of the INJOY Group,
Maxwell has developed leaders
for 30 years and has often heard
people ask how to lead from
their roles in an organization.
He believes that committed
employees can always have an
impact, and that developing
themselves propels them upward.
He has sold more than 12 million
copies of his 25 books about the
principles of success.
ABOUT
THE BOOK

THE
360° DEGREE LEADER
Author: John Maxwell
336 pages
ISBN: 0785260927
Publisher: Nelson Business
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"Let's be honest. There's not a business
anywhere that is without problems.
Business is complicated and imperfect.
Every business everywhere is staffed
with imperfect human beings and exists
by providing a product or service to
other imperfect human beings.” – Bob
Parsons, entrepreneur and founder of
domain registrar, GoDaddy.com
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If you answered
mostly A:
A is for autocratic
leadership. Although you get the job done
efficiently, you tend to be a bit inflexible and
this could build resentment among employees,
giving you results that will prevent your
organization's growth (lack of development and
high turnover).
Light-bulb moment:
Develop some of your trusted
subordinates by teaching them what you do so
well, and you won't have to work such long
hours. You might even enjoy work more!
If you
answered mostly B: B is for
benign, or laissez-faire leadership. Your style
works best when people are old hands at their
jobs, and your employees appreciate you for
putting your trust in them. However, be sure to
designate specifically who is responsible for
which projects or they may not get done.
Light-bulb moment:
Set firm deadlines and check along the way to
make sure you get what you expect. Also,
schedule dates for reports to come directly to
you in the form (written or oral) that makes
sense for you and the team.
If you answered mostly
C: C is for collaborative leadership.
It's a nice way to make team members feel useful
and a good development tool. It also cuts down
on cutthroat competition if everyone has an
equal say.
Light-bulb moment:
If you are a leader who thrives on quick
decisions, or if your organization requires
them, find a way to compromise between you-think
and group-think.
If you
answered mostly D: Your employees
probably do not trust you. Do you trust
yourself?
Light-bulb moment:
One of the first things you can do is to lay a
strong foundation by treating others the way you
wish to be treated. If you want the
responsibility of leading, develop your
interpersonal skills in leadership training
courses. |
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"Nothing so conclusively proves a man's
ability to lead others as what he does from day to day to
lead himself.”
– Thomas J. Watson Jr., former president of IBM
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“The leadership
instinct you are born with is the backbone. You develop the
funny bone and the wishbone that go with it.” – Elaine
Agather, banker and chairman of Chase, Dallas
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Plan for the Future
with CheckPoint 360°™
A story told by former President Jimmy Carter
illustrates the reality of life going on no matter what.
He recalled a holiday visit with his family to an Aspen
mansion that a Saudi prince, who was a friend of
Carter's, owned. It was atop a mountain and the family
had great fun. One day one of Carter's grandchildren
asked him if he was going to die one day.
"Yes," Carter told him, "everyone dies." When his
grandchild fell silent, Carter asked him what prompted
the question. The grandson asked if he could still come
to the prince's house once Carter died.
This story is a vivid lesson of looking to the future
while remembering the past. This truth that applies to
organizations during harsh economic times. Will we stick
our heads into the sand like an ostrich until the storm
passes, or will we face challenges bravely? We can
successfully endure challenges if we retain and develop
our best employees and encourage them to find creative
ways to perform their jobs.
It's helpful to remember that even in a dismal
economy, your most talented people might be tempted away
by seemingly better situations. Whether key workers are
worried about the organization's future or their role in
it, you can address the worry with an assessment
especially designed to discern where your organization
is now and where it needs to go. This useful tool is
called CheckPoint 360°™, and it will help you answer
these questions:
- What strengths of this manager can I capitalize
on?
- Which areas should my manager focus on
developing?
- How can I provide guidance in this area?
- How do I effectively manage conflict?
- Do I have enough leaders in the pipeline to meet
tomorrow’s needs?
CheckPoint 360°™ employs 70 interview questions about
specific management behaviors to give a complete picture
of a manager’s capabilities in such areas as
communication, leadership, adaptability, ability to
build relationships, managing tasks, productivity,
development of others, and self-development. Profiles'
clients have used CheckPoint 360°™ to help them grow
effective leaders, build their talent bench, guide
leaders through career transitions, develop top talent,
and use leadership development to enact key changes in
the business.
All things change, but commerce continues even when
times are tough. Call Profiles International at (254)
751-1644 to help ensure your top performers are going up
– at your place of business.
"A good leader is a
person who takes a little more than his
share of the blame and a little less than
his share of the credit.” – John C. Maxwell,
American author and speaker
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CheckPoint 360°: See
What People Are Saying
Editor's Note: Here's a checklist for
CheckPoint 360°: Complete -- check. Clear --
check. Concise -- check. Comprehensive -- check.
Credible -- check. Profiles did not have to dig
very deep to find all of these words our clients
used to describe CheckPoint. We've paraphrased
some of their remarks, but the essence of each
comment is intact.
- From a healthcare services
organization: Of 141 people we
hired over 18 months following our use of
The Profile, only one fell through…resulting
in an incredible 99.3% success rate in terms
of identifying and hiring productive and
retainable team members.
- From a marketing firm:
We completely restructured one of our
departments. The positive results include
better motivation, a more focused team, and
a significant positive impact on our bottom
line.
- From a transit organization:
The ease of administration,
including online entry and administration,
makes use simple and easy. It also gives us
timely reports.
- From a healthcare services
organization: We first used the
CheckPoint 360° Feedback system with a team
of 25 of our most senior managers. We gained
great credibility and universal acceptance
of the process. We also received extremely
positive response about the quality and
depth of information.
- From an HR outsourcing
organization: We liked the
colorfully presented data and the multiple
formats. This allows participants to see
their management and team competencies first
with a wide-angle lens and then
progressively narrow the focus to the survey
item level.
- From a marketing firm:
The 360-degree feedback provides
transparency with our managers, and the
information this generates gives us an
opportunity to prepare personal plans for
the key people within the business.
- From a transit organization:
Senior management found helpful the
Organizational Management Analysis report.
It provided a big-picture analysis on
management development needs.
- From a healthcare services
organization: Not only did we get
validated feedback but a useful,
comprehensive action plan for each person.
They can use this to make changes based on
the facts from customized reports.
- From an HR outsourcing firm:
Your staff was there to help with
follow-up, and this gave credibility to our
efforts to provide our managers with top
quality, confidential feedback on their
management and team competencies.
- From a marketing firm:
The process led us to change our thinking in
the area of recruitment. We decided to use
an interviewing technique program, and thus
far our latest recruits are delivering a far
higher yield than we had before.
- From a healthcare services
organization: The questions are
clear, easy to understand and require only a
minimal amount of time to complete. This is
a time-saver for the respondents, and the
information that comes back is concise,
solid and accurate.
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"Business is a combination of war and sport." -
Andre Maurois, French Author
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