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LEADERSHIP: AVOIDING BLACK-SWAN DISEASE

published:2010-07-26 01:00:00

Nassim Nicholas Taleb, the best-selling economist and author of The Black Swan, is famous for his arresting insights. His recent postscript to The Black Swan is no exception: presenting ten lessons from the Global Financial Crisis. Above all, he recommends learning from “Mother Nature” – by making our

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LEADERSHIP: FOR SUCCESS – AND HAPPINESS

published:2010-07-19 01:00:00

Like Professor Clayton Christensen, I’ve faced a life threatening cancer and found it a crucible for clarifying my thinking about what’s important. The day

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LEADERSHIP: TRAINING AND DEVELOPMENT - BUT HOW?

published:2010-07-13 01:00:00

Due to a backlog of new registrations to work through this Potshot has been delayed by a day. Our apology to our regular readers

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LEADERSHIP: THAT ONE KEY LESSON

published:2010-07-07 01:00:00

How do you rate yourself on the following five actions? Showing self-awareness?. Demonstrating authenticity, integrity and compassion? Understanding and engaging people as

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LEADERSHIP: BEING THE BEST

Build enthusiasm, confidence, assurance, satisfaction and pride
Overcome defeatism, giving up, despair, lack of will

They say history's written by the victors. But, in business, the victors also win the customers, gain market share and make the best profits. Sounds good to me.

But, it's also hard work: planning the details, delivering on promises, addressing problems quickly and effectively and so on. And, beyond these physical tasks, there's the psychological challenge: getting people (both inside your organisation - and out in the market) to believe you're going to win. That's key. Confidence and belief.

If I talked to your colleagues (other executives and managers, and your customers and clients), would they believe you're going to win; that you're a winning leader? If so, why? And, if not, to improve things, what do you think they'd suggest?

Well here are a few ideas from successful leaders I've worked with. Drive (yourself and your team) relentlessly to be "the best" on all key measures. Aim beyond agreed goals. Before any challenge, reconnect with earlier winning experiences: what they looked, sounded and felt like. And, play hardball.

Which of these actions are second-nature for you; and, which aren't?

Don't hold back! You can be the best!

Categories for this Potshot:

Focus on being the best, Establish constructive values, Attend to customers, Build competitive advantage, Drive bottom line metrics, Develop plans and actions lists,



Dr. Timothy Pascoe AM
PhD (Cambridge), MBA (Harvard), BE & BEc (Adelaide)
Creator, V|E|C|T|O|R Leadership®

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