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29/01/2015 By Isla Baliszewska

Great leaders invest in their strengths

Great leaders invest in their strengths

There is now overwhelming evidence that leaders who focus on their strengths and the strengths of those who they lead produce better results.

The Corporate Leadership Council studied 19,000 employees across thirty four organisations in nineteen countries, where it found that an emphasis on performance strengths in appraisal was linked to a 36.4% improvement in performance. The opposite was also true, an emphasis on performance weaknesses was linked to a 26.8% decline on performance.

This supports the old adage  – what you focus on improves.

So, do we really want to focus on our weaknesses?

Or should we focus on our strengths?image-group-sub-smiling manPosted by Peter Mayes

Filed Under: leadership

21/01/2015 By Isla Baliszewska

Choosing your Career – Strategic Positioning

Choosing your Career – Strategic Positioning

May be you are looking for your first job – or maybe you are well up the greasy pole to career success?  And you feel it’s time to move? But to where and more specifically to what?

Have you ever stopped in your personal rat race to decide where you want to be in 5 or 10 years’ time?   On the beach might be great; but on the beach with no income – maybe not.

Some career advice starts with “What are you good at?” And channels you down that path.  Good at maths?  Usual career question.  Like meeting people? Who says ‘no’ to that?   What about good engineering ? Maybe.  But how about questions like “Good at caring for people?” “Good at encouraging people?” “Better at listening than talking?” “Good at inspiring people?” What can you be better at?” These are the kind of questions you don’t get asked in traditional career interviews.

These questions are all about what you are actually good or not so good at.

Far better question is – what do you want to be good at?  What things does it not matter if you are bad at?

And these questions should help you answer the big one – what do I want to be doing in  5-10 years time?

You should then be able to discover the skills you need to be good at; and what is not important.

So here is an exercise – write these questions down.

  • Identify what kind of jobs will enable you to develop those strengths?
  • And what  don’t you have now?

Now you can find the jobs which will help you onto the next big step – and if you can’t find – volunteer to get the experience to practice those skills.

To quote Stephen Covey’s 7 Habits of Successful People “Begin with the end in mind”.

By David Rigby who is running  an energising and inspiring  Personal  Branding workshop in the UAE, –  Abu Dhabi on 16th February and in Dubai on 18th February.

Filed Under: You and Your Career

18/12/2014 By Isla Baliszewska

Halina’s night out!

Halina’s night out!

We wanted to share with you a really special evening that Halina had recently with the Gasworks Community Choir and so here is her account of the event below, and if you want to see the video, with Tom Jones and Paloma Faith, see if you can spot Halina in the choir!
“Good morning from a still very fizzing with excitement … it was such a treat to be there. Biggest music event in UK in 2014 excluding the big music festivals + first BBC Music awards + last time Earl’s Court will be used for anything + last people ever to sing on stage at Earl’s Court. It is now being demolished for up market housing.  So an iconic moment all round.  And it was amazing being on the front row. Looking at the audience was mind blowing! The biggest audience ever that I have performed in front of.  And it was simply a question of saying yes and having no expectations except to enjoy the whole day with all the waiting around as part of the one off experience.

Shook hands with Gary Barlow from Take That – he’s really short!  Met Chris Harris. Shared that stage with Tom Jones and Paloma Faith … is there no end …. Worked with David and Carrie Grant of Fame Academy fame and our very own dedicated choreographer James! Special for sure.  So lucky to have been there.

Thank you for the congratulations … I eventually went to bed at about 4am – arrived home at just before 1am. It was very stormy here when I got back and overnight but once in bed I was sound asleep.  And probably soaring with the excitement on Cloud 9 as you say.  Such a treat to have been on the front row and spotted.  Amazing to experience how a live TV programme was put together.

Halina Jaroszewska, PCC

Filed Under: Something about US

08/09/2014 By Isla Baliszewska

Positivity Ratios, Flourishing and Languishing

Positivity Ratios, Flourishing and Languishing

To flourish : definitions –

  • “to grow or develop in a healthy or vigorous way, especially as the result of a particularly congenial environment”
  • “to develop rapidly or successfully”
  • “to be in a period of highest productivity, excellence of influence”.

and the one we like best…..

  • “to grow luxuriantly, to thrive”.

Here’s a great title – ‘Positive Affect and the Complex Dynamics of Human Flourishing’.  In this publication Barbara Fredrickson and Marcial Losada produced the result of their research in the field of positive psychology to demonstrate a magic ratio of positive to negative emotions.  And it is 3:1.   If you have more than 3 times the positive strokes to negatives you are flourishing. If you have less than 2:1 you are entering the languishing arena.  In between you are pretty much at normal.

Whether or not you agree with the research, and there is a whole lot of other data out there aiming at the same ideas, (Gottman’s work with married couples for example), we can assume that having good, positive emotions is a pretty good start for making people feel successful and achieving.

In the workplace, positive emotions benefit the individuals and the organisation, and those engaging with the organisation be they customers, service-users or other.   We associate emotions with particular circumstances or events and they can affect how we behave, our mood and our attitudes.  An organisation staffed by people who feel optimistic, personally resilient, pleasant and purposeful will not only have a high sense of efficacy and possibility but can build  a culture of co-operation, collaboration and collective wellbeing.  The knock-on effect is heightened productivity, better bottom line achievements and a generally nicer place to be and to work.

So getting the balance right and looking to raise the ration of positive to negative is probably not a bad thing to be aiming for.

Picture happy faces

Want to improve your flourishing possibilities?  Contact us at Smart Coaching & Training.

by Isla Baliszewska

 

 

Filed Under: leadership

08/07/2014 By Isla Baliszewska

The Viability Test

The Viability Test

accountablility The Financial Reporting Council has come up with another small headache for business owners.  In an attempt to improve on the current ‘going concern’ statement that Directors must tick in current year end accounts, the FRC has hit on the idea of getting Directors to commit to saying how long they think their organisation will stay viable.   Under the proposed new code a company board will have to state that the company is viable for ‘the foreseeable future’ and to identify how long that ‘forseeable future’ is.

What we are looking at here is accountability.  How accountable Directors and Boards should be.  To mix metaphors the waters here are a bit muddy and a thesaurian battle of words; to what extent should company Directors be making assertions, declarations, affirmations or committed statements about the future solvency of their business?   The FRC started this review last year in an attempt to clarify what ‘going concern’ actually means, and the distinction between the assessment of the company’s health when preparing the accounts and the assessment of the risks affecting its continued trading.  The consultation has been through several rounds so far and has been less than enthused about by the Institute of Directors, whose corporate governance advisor Oliver Parry said ” It would be difficult and unrealistic to think that a company could predict the future beyond 12 months.”

It goes without saying that there should be clear lines of accountability in organisations, however as yet no-one seems to be agreeing on how this accountability should be worded.   Accountability is about integrity and ownership of our actions, being responsible for the decisions we make.  This is relatively simple when it only involves us, the one person, but it is much harder when taken to an organisational level.

 

 

 

 

Filed Under: News, Uncategorized

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