Showing posts with label Leadership. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Leadership. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 4, 2015

The MBA Forum — LEADERSHIP (Part 2)

Dr Kenroy WEDDERBURN

Sunday, February 01, 2015    

I start with the premise that the function of leadership is to produce more leaders, not more followers — Ralph Nader

AS indicated in the previous article, MBA programmes typically have a course on Leadership, which provides knowledge about leadership theories, styles, behaviours and characteristics. Given the critical role played by the leadership in any organisation, much attention should also be placed on leadership development. The MBA student should not just be satisfied with ingesting some knowledge about leadership, perform well enough to get an “A”, then forget the course content and move on.

Having said that, I know the constraints, and so when I lecture on Leadership — after covering the theoretical aspects, I try to zoom in on a few key leadership development areas for the students to work on individually after the course, and then – with repeated emphasis — ask them to consistently improve themselves even incrementally, by applying the concepts. Reviewing several case studies also highlights leadership areas that one can target for improvement.

As Marshall Goldsmith indicated in his article “Are Leaders Acting on their Training?” you need to apply the learnings, and seek to measure the changes. For emphasis, Goldsmith quoted Arnold Schwarzeneggar as saying, “Nobody ever got muscles by watching me lift weights!”

Let me therefore touch on a few key leadership development areas for you to focus on — and try to consistently improve on.

Leadership Development — “The Basics”

We cannot be effective leaders if we ignore what I call “the Basics”. I also think that these are the items that determine whether a leader can execute — or get things done. My experience in Jamaica is that we have very bright people, wonderful planners, and fantastic speakers. Yet we find it hard to get things done! We have many meetings simply to have meetings — and the Action Items List remains untouched. So “the basics”: time management, meeting deadlines (read Stephen Covey’s 7 Habits of Highly Effective People), honouring your word (if I say I will call you back tomorrow, — I call you back tomorrow!), being organised, being able to work efficiently and effectively, conducting effective meetings, etc.

OK — so we live in Jamaica and we use “Jamaica time”. Have you ever considered (and converted to dollars) how much productive time is wasted waiting on people who are late? Similarly, I am constantly amazed at the reaction when I tell a customer with an issue that I will call them back by, say, Wednesday, and when I do call them they always say that they really never expected me to call! I believe “the basics” is the substratum (learnt that from a lawyer recently – means “foundation”), of the skill set of a leader who can execute.

Emotional Intelligence

Jack Welch, the famous CEO of General Electric from 1981 to 2001, wrote in his autobiography Jack Straight from the Gut, that his problem with business schools was that the graduates they sent to him were only trained in the technical skills, but not in the soft skills (which are much more difficult to learn). So, how important are the soft skills for a leader? Critical! The higher up the organisation structure one goes is the more emotional intelligence and other soft skills are required and the less technical skills.

In 1995, Daniel Goleman wrote about emotional intelligence in his book which became an international bestseller. Emotional Intelligence can be simply defined as the ability to manage one’s own emotions as well as the emotions of others — not a simple feat!

There are five emotional intelligence competences: self-awareness, self-regulation, motivation, empathy, and social skills. I consider the first one — self-awareness — the biggest hurdle of them all. Are you able to recognise your own emotions in a situation, as well as their effect? Many times you will see someone being overly defensive in a meeting, unnecessarily angry, or obviously biased. The sad thing is that often they are oblivious of their actions.

I started becoming aware of my own emotions years ago when I read a booklet entitled, “Be careful, your reactions are showing!” One way I find that is great at becoming more self-aware is to ask for the help of a spouse, a sibling or a trusted friend. These persons will be blatantly honest in providing accurate feedback!

After self-awareness comes another hard one — self-regulation. This involves self-control — being able to keep potentially disruptive emotions in check. You know, that “below the belt” semi-sotto voce remark in the meeting that ends up creating another enemy. Guys, remember, you are on the same team!

Coaching

As an MBA student/graduate, you also need to understand that after going through the leadership training, it is good to submit to coaching, especially in the work environment. Some organisations have official coaching programmes and these can be good. However some are geared narrowly at achieving certain specific goals or targets. The MBA student may then have to seek out a mentor with good leadership qualities, and is willing to assist you to develop your leadership skills. Many executives are really very willing to help — but nobody asked them. Try it — you may be surprised.

Active Observation

Unfortunately, you may not be able to formally enter a coaching programme or be able to find a suitable or willing mentor. In the interim, therefore, I would suggest what I term “active observation”.

This includes studying good leaders, as well as reading leadership books and biographies of good leaders. Having covered the theory in leadership, you may be able to observe a particular style or trait from one leader, another from the next leader etc.

For example, a good leader has to be able to clearly articulate a vision. So it helps for you to improve your public speaking skills.

Start by listening to great speakers. If you are still doing your MBA and will be doing a group presentation, let the group video the practice presentation and then critique it. You will be amazed at the improvement the next time round!

Dr Kenroy Wedderburn, JP, is a part-time lecturer on the MBA programme at the University of Technology, Jamaica. Send your e-mails to drkwedderburn@gmail.com.


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The MBA Forum — LEADERSHIP (Part 2)

Sunday, February 1, 2015

UWI students take top spots at US Student Leadership Conference

By Balford Henry, Senior Staff Reporter

Saturday, January 31, 2015 | 1:20 PM    

KINGSTON, Jamaica — Garrick Donaldson and Rashaun Kanute Watson, undergraduate students in the Department of Government at the University of the West Indies, Mona took first and second places respectively at the Charles E Williams II Advanced Leadership Institute annual Oratorical Contest in the USA.

The contest was staged at the 27th South-western Black Student Leadership Conference on Saturday, January 24 at the Texas A&M University. The UWI was also presented with an award for International Recognition.

The subject this year was, “Homicide is the leading cause of death amongst African American youth ages 15-24″.

Black youth in the US are 10 times more likely to be victims of homicide than their white peers. On August 9, 2014 an unarmed 18-year old African American male, Michael Brown, was shot 6 times and killed by a white police officer, Darren Wilson, as Brown and a friend were approaching the sidewalk. After his death the photos of Brown that were used, not only, portrayed a negative image of Brown; but young black males over all.

Mainstream media and commercial advertising continue to portray African-Americans in stereotypical roles with anti-black images. How did you believe the media framed the shooting of Michael Brown and why? Do you believe this situation stood for the justice and equality our nation prides itself on?

The Charles E Williams Advanced Leadership Institute (ALI) is a special forum specifically for seasoned student leaders who have demonstrated their abilities at their own colleges.

ALI pushes these students to take it to the next level. This limited enrolment programme is held in conjunction with Southwestern Black Student Leadership Conference (SBSLC), but provides a more in-depth workshop line-up and one-on-one attention.

The UWI participants received a generous contribution from the principals office.

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UWI students take top spots at US Student Leadership Conference

Monday, October 20, 2014

Adventist leadership in west Jamaica pledges more community involvement

MONTEGO BAY, St James — THE leadership of the Seventh-day Adventist Church in western Jamaica has pledged to become more involved in the parish of St James through social intervention.

This will involve the use of some of its churches — outside of the regular Sabbaths, Sunday and Wednesday night services — in some of the inner-city communities of Rose Heights, Mount Salem, Flankers Canterbury and Norwood. The initiative is to provide academic, counselling and other humanitarian outreach to these areas.

“So far we have engaged a number of churches in the Montego Bay basin, and a number of our members who are medical and academic professionals have given their commitment to give their time in free medical assistance and tutoring to those in need,” said Pastor Glen O Samuels, the newly elected president of the West Jamaica Conference of Seventh-day Adventists.

Pastor Samuels was speaking at the Service of Installation for the new administration of the Adventist Church in Western Jamaica at its conference centre in Mount Salem, St James recently.

In addition to what the churches will be doing, Samuels said “the staff at the conference headquarters has made themselves available once each month to leave their desks as a team and go into the community to give hot meals and prayers with those in need on the streets”.

He said: “We believe that God didn’t call us only to sit by desks, but to live it, so that struggling humanity will understand that there is a God who cares.”

In his address to the congregation, Member of Parliament for North West St James Dr Horace Chang said, “The entire western region owes a debt of gratitude to the Seventh-day Adventist Church in this region.

“The work of the Seventh-day Adventist Church is not only in bringing the gospel, but their work in education is outstanding. You have provided moral leadership in the communities in difficult times. The communities we represent in Montego Bay offer many challenges and the church was there to assist and guide us through them.”

The conference will also focus on family wholeness as a part of its strategic plan to touch the lives of people and improve the social and moral fabric of not only St James, but the other parishes of Westmoreland, Hanover and St Elizabeth, which are a part of the West Jamaica Conference of Seventh-day Adventists.


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Adventist leadership in west Jamaica pledges more community involvement

Tuesday, July 29, 2014

Patrick Hoyos: Mia Mottley settles the Barbados leadership question

mia-mottley-740 Leader of the Barbados Labour Party, Mia Amor Mottley (Credit: Mia Mottley/Facebook)

Patrick Hoyos

BRIDGETOWN, Barbados, Monday July 28, 2014 – Last week proved to be a turning point in the career of Mia Amor Mottley, both as Opposition Leader and potential next prime minister of Barbados.In short, there is no doubt now who leads the Barbados Labour Party, not just in name, but in deed.

Some people (including me, if someone were to have asked me) may have advised her not to lead last Thursday’s march from Parliament to Government Headquarters, where the increasingly embattled cabinet of the Freundel Stuart administration was having its regular meeting, but Ms. Mottley did as her leadership instincts advised, and went ahead anyway.

Even the rain accommodated her, falling late in the evening as the sun went down so as not to disturb the sunshine-filled midday event.

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Her brief speech from the back of the lead truck at the Bay Street-Beckles Road stoplight – the march been made to end there by the police in an over-abundance of caution – was a metaphorical victory lap for Ms. Mottley, as she surveyed the thousands who had followed her and her parliamentary colleagues, but she displayed no unseemly pride in her new unchallengeable status.

She can now move forward with confidence in taking the fight to the government without looking over her shoulder all the time.

Even on the day of Mia’s complete ascension to the title of undisputed leader, Owen could not resist asking for attention. 

What a difference a day makes, goes the lyric to an old jazz standard. And that difference is Mia Mottley. You might think I am making a big thing of this, but I say – knowing nothing about politics and all of its strategies – to give credit where its due.

The announcement of the demonstration, the first held by one of the two major political parties in a very long time, was openly criticized by one MP, who went on the air – as if he were her equal in party status – to say he wasn’t going to take part and that it was a bad idea. Something about raising the expectations of the people too high, which would only disappoint them and turn them against the party, if the hated Solid Waste Tax was not repealed as a direct result of the march.

It was an argument that was a solid waste of broadcast time. Nobody in their right mind who takes part in a demonstration is crushed if they don’t get their way. They accept that they may not achieve their goal, but they want those in power to understand how they feel. They know that cumulatively this may in time tip the balance in their favour.

Ms. Mottley seems to be succeeding in stirring up a national whirlwind of countrywide opposition

A couple of hours after it ended, I spoke to one of the people who took part in the demonstration. She was at work keeping the dining area of a popular mall clean and tidy for patrons. For her, she said, it was more a victory for Barbados than for the BLP. She felt so good that she had been able to let the government know her view on the tax and how hard they had made life in general, even if nobody knew that she was there individually. It was good for her psychologically, she told me, to actually go out and peacefully protest against what you thought was unjust in your country.

That was why it was a good day for Barbados, as the people didn’t do enough of these kinds of demonstrations, she said. And then she went back to work.

Ms. Mottley, I realised, had reached past all of the intellectual ‘long talk’ about political strategy and gone out on a limb. She might have failed, but she would have done so with her heart in the right place. Many people (yes, including you-know-who) have wondered about her overall strategy, which is reflected in the public sessions which the Bees have been hosting all over the country of late, and in her speech from the back of that lorry on Thursday.

Ms. Mottley, I realised, had reached past all of the intellectual ‘long talk’ about political strategy and gone out on a limb. 

There she read from her letter to the prime minister, offering ideas for the way forward and calling on the administration to bring the Opposition into its confidence and work towards a bipartisan approach to getting us out of the economic whirlpool dragging us to the bottom.

Ms. Motley has take an all-inclusive approach and while I would never have come up with it myself (which is why I am no politician) I have to admit that it finally seems to be gaining traction.

Instead of just trying to stir up a political storm, Ms. Mottley seems to be succeeding in stirring up a national whirlwind of countrywide opposition to an administration whose policies may leave the country bankrupt, given a little more time.

Two opponents of Ms. Mottley were swift to harden their positions. Minister of Finance Chris Sinckler said essentially that you could march wherever you liked, but you will eventually have to march over to your bank for money to pay the solid waste tax anyway.

And Owen Arthur, the sole MP not to take part, whose lack of support for Ms. Mottley was as much in evidence as much as it was unmissed, however lost no time in calling up a newspaper to try to re-direct the spotlight on himself. He hinted at an early resignation from Parliament, claiming he was tired of always being made the centre of controversy, or words to that effect.

Even on the day of Mia’s complete ascension to the title of undisputed leader, Owen could not resist asking for attention. Like Winston Churchill, the great man can not concede that his era of leadership is over. (Source: Broad Street Journal)

Pat-Hoyos-150The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of Pat Hoyos. Pat Hoyos is a business writer and publisher of the Broad Street Journal.


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Patrick Hoyos: Mia Mottley settles the Barbados leadership question

Sunday, February 2, 2014

UWI students excel at Texas leadership contest


TWO members of the University of the West Indies’ (UWI) Department of Government High Achievers’ Society (HAS) placed in the top five of the 26th annual Charles E Williams II Advanced Leadership Oratorical Contest at the Southern Black Student Leadership Conference in Houston, Texas earlier this month.


The two are Renee Osbourne and Cleopatra Parkins.


The conference, which was themed ‘Leaders over Limits’, focused on developing the youth leaders skill sets and characteristics, to aid in motivating them to achieve goals and objectives despite societal and personal limitations.


The oratorical contest is aimed at challenging and stimulating the minds of participants, and providing them an opportunity to display their talents of speaking and interpreting their ideas on a specific subject. The competition was open to more than 600 students from over 50 universities across the United States. The Jamaican students were successfully placed in the top five, with Parkins placing second in the competition.


Their success has been welcomed by the Department of Government, given the new vision and focus of the head of the department, Dr Lloyd Waller, who has paid significant attention to youth development and mainstreaming. This has led to various new initiatives and a greater focus on advocacy for youth-led participatory programmes placing youth at the centre of the development process.


The department has also placed youths as the drivers of development and good governance. Its upcoming Research Day will feature a youth-led initiative, spearheaded by the HAS. The focus of HAS is that of Vision 2030′s Youth Perspective. The forum will consist of individuals with a vested interest in youth and youth development, as well as young leaders of the nation.


The Good Governance Society, under the theme ‘You think it, We do it’, will be participating in civic tours across Jamaican high schools, with the aim of educating students about various tenets of good governance, such as accountability, transparency, participation, the rule of law, the equity and inclusiveness, as well as how the Jamaican youth can play their role in preserving these ideals for the good of the nation.


The students were accompanied to the Texas contest by facilitator Shinique Walters. The Office of the Principal assisted in sponsoring the students to attend the conference.


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UWI students excel at Texas leadership contest

Saturday, August 31, 2013

PHOTO: Taking on leadership

News

Thursday, August 29, 2013

Several managers and supervisors of Sandals Negril Beach Resort & Spa recently received their certificates after successfully completing an in-depth six-week leadership development course coordinated by the Sandals Corporate University, and aimed at honing their leadership skills. Proudly displaying their certificates are (from left, front) Oliver Reid, loss prevention and security manager; Denisha Powell, environmental health and safety manager and evening duty manager; Odecia Williams, spa attendant; Dalasha Ferguson, assistant cost controller; and Jacqueline Clarke, executive administrative assistant. (From left, back) Warren Dyer, loyalty manager; Carey Foster, bar manager; Nicholas McKenzie, assistant restaurant manager; Norman Drysdale, assistant restaurant manager and Evern Mills, cost controller.

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PHOTO: Taking on leadership

Monday, July 29, 2013

New leadership for St Vincent Strambi High

MANDEVILLE, Manchester — For the De La Salle Christian brothers, a group within the Roman Catholic faith, education is more than a profession and is considered part of the divine plan for their lives.

The “Brothers”, according to Reverend Ronald Hamilton, business manager of the Catholic Pastoral Centre in Mandeville, and immediate past acting principal of the St Vincent Strambi High School in Bull Savannah, St Elizabeth, “are a group of vowed religious men who have heard the Lord’s call to sell everything and follow him.”Started in the 17th century by French priest St John Baptist De La Salle who focused his own life on teaching, the Brothers today have taken a vow of “chastity, poverty and obedience”.The extent of their devotion to education has resulted in the operation of schools in 80 countries worldwide, including the United States of America and in African countries like Kenya, Ethiopia and Nigeria, Hamilton said.He said that come September, Jamaica will for the first time benefit from “Lasallian” teaching with the coming of two Americans to the St Vincent Strambi High School. They are Brother Augustine Nicoletti, who is to be the new principal and Brother James Wallace, an administrator.According to Hamilton, their coming is “timely” as the De La Salle teaching style emphasises practical or vocational areas which is a focus of the Ministry of Education.“They emphasise skills training which is what the country needs,” Hamilton said.On a recent visit to Jamaica, Nicoletti and Wallace — who are both on secondment from the Manhattan College in New York — told the Jamaica Observer of plans to make an impact during their two-year stint.“In any setting, you can always [make improvements]. We want to improve the spiritual dimension of the faith community, include some theatre, drama down the road, more opportunities for vocational education; we want to infuse life skills. We want to really teach their (children’s) minds and touch their hearts,” Nicoletti said.Wallace said that the “aim is to get all students to do well”.In doing his research, Nicoletti said that he discovered that Catholics are only about three per cent of the Jamaican population. However, he is undeterred.“I don’t base my life on statistics. [Our work looks beyond] nationality, culture, race,” he said.The two elderly men said that the commitment that they have to the work that they do will ensure that they do it for as long as they can.“We love what we do despite tough days,” Nicoletti said.He said that one of the main tenets of being a Brother is that they live in a community with other Brothers.During their stay in Jamaica they will live on the school’s compound, which Nicoletti said will enable them to be available to the students all the time even outside of regular school hours. Their reimbursement will be a stipend from the church, Hamilton said.Hamilton in his report at the school’s recent graduation outlined developments at the institution that the De La Salle Christian Brothers can build on.He claimed that the last school year’s external examination results were at their “usual high standard” in subjects including English Language, Mathematics, Information Technology, Accounts, and Office Administration. In addition to the candidates for the Caribbean Secondary Education Certificate (CSEC) Level subjects, Hamilton said that the school also prepares students to undertake the certification assessment for the HEART Trust/NTA at levels one and two.The former head of the 19-year-old St Vincent Strambi High School expressed confidence that the new leadership will help to continue the school’s growth path.The graduating class with former Acting Principal Reverend Ronald Hamilton (left), Bishop of Mandeville Neil Tiedemann (rear centre) and Monsignor Gregory Ramkisoon, director of Mustard Seed Communities and guest speaker at the graduation. (CONTRIBUTED BY CATHOLIC PASTORAL CENTRE)Hamilton said that the vocational emphasis of ‘Lasallian’ education is in line with the Ministry of Education’s goals in that area. (OBSERVER FILE PHOTO)Brother Augustine Nicoletti (right), new principal for the St Vincent Strambi High School in St Elizabeth, with his counterpart Brother James Wallace at the Catholic Pastoral Centre in Mandeville, recently (PHOTO:GREGORY BENNETT)St Vincent Strambi High School in Bull Savannah, St Elizabeth. (CONTRIBUTED BY CATHOLIC PASTORAL CENTRE)

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New leadership for St Vincent Strambi High