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Benefits of Connecting with Like-Minded Professionals

Last week in San Diego, I had the opportunity to connect with 56 like-minded professionals. C-Suite and entrepreneurs from across the US, Canada, Netherlands, and the UK. When you get a group of leaders together, connections are made and learning is amplified. Shared professional and personal experiences bond, inspire and motivate.

Another serendipitous connection occurred on route back to Vancouver. Seated next to a woman who had palpable excitement for the adventure she was commencing to Nepal. Lawyer by profession and survivor, she was embarking on a trek to Everest Base Camp raising money for cancer research. We had a great conversation and I had the opportunity to share my past trekking stories of the Annapurna Circuit. She reminded me to continually seek out new adventure and challenged me to stretch and do something new next weekend and yes… I promised too!

Put yourself in a position to meet new people this week, connect and have a meaningful conversation. Moreover, don’t forget to stretch yourself professionally and personally. Plan to do something new that you have not done before.

Here is to an adventure!

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Struggling to make a difficult professional or personal decision?

Take the stress away from your decision-making process and simplify by following five easy steps:
1. Define the problem, and determine the real decision required.
2. List the reasons the decision is difficult.
3. Determine if the decision is as important as you initially perceived. Write down the pros and cons of not making the decision.
4. Brainstorm the various outcomes that could be a result of your decision making.
5. Now breathe, lean in and make the decision. Yes, go for it – you know the best and worst that can happen.

If you are feeling overwhelmed, or stuck in your decision-making process, sign up for a free 30-minute strategy consultation and experience a high-performance coaching session. What are you waiting for, complete your contact details by clicking on the button below, and we will be in touch within 24 hours to schedule a convenient time to connect.

Mentors Make A Difference

The Golden Rule; the Gold Standard of Leadership

Treat others as you would like to be treated…the Golden Rule sets the framework for the Gold Standard of leadership.

Our perception of ourselves as a leader, and how we are seen by others can be extremely different. What do your staff, colleagues, clients actually think of you? Have you asked? If asked to provide five words to describe you, what would they say?

How do you arrive when meeting with others? Distracted and disheveled? When answering the phone, are you focussed on the caller, patient and professional — or are your thoughts elsewhere? In written communication, are you concise and articulate? Or do you ramble in requests or come off as impatient in your responses?

Being present, focussed and energetic are true leadership traits. If you intentionally think about your interactions and how you would like to be perceived, rather than reacting to others, significant shifts in perceptions and relationships will occur.

How can you set reminders to retain your energy throughout the day? Schedule a cue on your phone to remind yourself or deliberately take a deep breath prior to every new task or meeting. These simple actions can put you in the true frame of mind for a high-performer. How you present yourself –, your positivity, negativity, and energy — can affect a meeting, your performance, or the productivity of others, and most importantly, the desired results.

There are three areas that you can implement strategies in that will affect your influence over professional relationships:

1.Interaction Intentions

Thinking about how you want to appear in a situation is the first step; the act of setting the intention for that appearance simply follows. So many leaders forget the basics and go through their day at lightning speed, without setting an intention for what they want to get out of an interaction. How can you succeed if you haven’t defined success? Consider how you want to be perceived, the results that you would like to attain, how you would like to treat the individual/s that you are meeting with, and how you would like to be treated, and your meetings will be more valuable.

2. Energy and Presence

We’ve all been in a meeting with an “energy-suck” — the person who sinks the room by her heavy sighs and led shackles. Now think of a situation whereby the energy, engagement, and presence of an individual was palpable and buoyed the room. Which do you want to be? The Titanic or the lifesaver? You too can create those same responses by being conscious of the energy and presence you exert through awareness, practice and confidence in what you are doing. Exhaustion, dissatisfaction, disinterest, distraction and frustration create far fewer positive results than focus, energy, passion, and interest. How would you want to be perceived and what can you do to create that perception?

3. Greeting, Positive Framing, and Exit Standards

When meeting with new people, setting a positive first impression is imperative, and you have less than seven seconds to do so. You are read on your energy, expression, appearance, tone, handshake – so make those first seven seconds count!

For those that know you, it takes even less time to read your mood, and how they perceive the interaction will be based on your body language. Whether you are meeting with someone for the first time or meeting with those that you know, set the stage for your desired results.  Positive framing at the commencement of the interaction also goes a long way in achieving the best outcome. If you start off a conversation by highlighting what has not gone well rather than framing it in a positive light, it will likely end   in confrontation, disagreement, and conflict. Your framing can set and change the direction of a meeting, and it is well worth the effort to focus the positive.

Your exit standard is as important as your greeting and framing. How an individual feels after an interaction with you is often remembered more than what is said. Restating any follow-up that will be made is the key to closure for the interaction and full understanding of what next-steps may be.

Are you up for the challenge?

Over the next week, set your interaction intentions prior to every meeting, be conscious of your energy level and presence, and set your own greeting, framing and exit standards. After one week, email me at jenny@jennyreilly.com and let me know if you felt any significant changes in your level of influence.

As a reminder of the three strategies, please download a copy of the related blog post handout by clicking on button below.

To schedule a free 30-minute coaching consultation to discuss how the strategies worked for you over a week period after implementation, or learn more about 90-day High-Performance Coaching packages please click on the button below.

Leadership Resilience

Crucial Characteristic In Today’s Complex Marketplace.

I was in correspondence with a C-Suite Executive last week. This is a leader who I hold in high regard for his breadth of knowledge and vast experience running a multinational organization recognized as one of Canada’s Best Managed Companies.

We were discussing leadership challenges. One in particular incorporated a significant legal component. Through the discussion, we spoke of our different experiences, the importance of resilience and standing firm on our values.

He made a positive comment on my demonstrated level of resilience and it motivated me to share with you this topic today.

  • Are you a resilient leader?
  • What does resilience mean to you?
  • Do you acknowledge obstacles as they arise, seek clarity and input from different perspectives before dealing with the situation?
  • If you are under attack or challenged by individuals, are you able to remain emotionally composed?
  • Are you able to shift an obstacle into a possibility for change?

Leadership resilience is not something that is normally corporately prioritized, however, is crucial to leadership success. Global thought-leaders on the topic acknowledge that leaders and organizations need to be more agile and adaptive than ever before. In order to be successful, it is imperative to rebound after a setback.

A group of middle managers recently asked me how they could develop their professional resilience.

They did not quite understand how professional resilience could be nurtured and were really struggling with why it was an important attribute for success. I explained that in my experience, resilient leaders are often referred to as “tough”. However, they are more often than not, focused, engaged, have a strong value base and exceptional work ethic. When they encounter obstacles, they show resilience and grit in moving forward in a purposeful way.

They are transparent, seek input and clarification with the goal of solving the problem. Resilient leaders understand and appreciate that seeking and hearing different perspectives assists them in making informed decisions. The process that a resilient leader goes through when faced with a challenge is one that can be broken down and learned.

Individuals who lead by title alone, perceived personal authority or superiority by the level of degrees they hold, do not win in the long term. They deplete others’ confidence in their leadership ability, lose power and ultimately respect.

Sound resilience advice from the seasoned, C-Suite leader:  “Adversity is a Wonderful Gift”.

I embrace the adverse leadership situations I have been in over the last 25 years and encourage you to do the same. The most challenging professional situations that I have dealt with are those that involve opposing values. Working with others who have polar opposite values, and/or those that did not align with the corporate mission were exceptionally difficult.

I am proud to be a resilient leader. I have continuously reflected, improved and built upon my leadership style. I know what works and most importantly, what doesn’t work.  Leadership development is a journey. Effective leadership requires a lifelong commitment to continual practice and progress.

Supporting and guiding leaders in their challenges, development, growth, and transformation, is something that I am very passionate about. On July 1, 2018, I am launching the LEADERS CIRCLE membership for experienced leaders who want to revitalize their leadership style, boost personal performance and attain productivity levels for themselves and their team that they have not had in the past.

Are you interested in developing your resilience and leadership capabilities?