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I’ll Give Back My Social Security…

Under three conditions I will give back all or part of my Social Security payments.

Many of my colleagues and I who are children of the Baby Boom have no intention of retiring anytime soon. Now, if that’s a secret then I’m not quite sure where you’ve all been living.

Some of us are continuing to work since we have no choice–we were devastated by the 2008 financial crisis. For those of us who were able to weather the storm, we continue to work because it’s our passion. We are, economically speaking, in good shape.

I’m in the latter category.

Lo and behold, I’m on the cusp of receiving my first Social Security check. That, plus my salary, will make for a comfortable lifestyle. But as a child of the 60s give-back and the sense of social responsibility are subliminally buried in the recesses of my collective unconscious.

Here’s the deal. I’m willing to contribute part and maybe even all of my Social Security benefits to the government under the following three conditions:

1. The government provides me with a checklist of agencies and programs to which I can allocate my Social Security payments–a portfolio if you will. For example, I should be able to divvy up my contribution thusly: 15% for education; 20% for Veteran Affairs; 24% for the Environmental Protection Agency and so on. The bottom line is that it’s my choice where the funds go.

2. I get a tax deduction for every dollar I choose to donate.

3. Every year I can reevaluate and make alterations in my contribution schedule for the following year.

Volunteeristic giving is where Republican personal choice meets the Democratic collective responsibility.

What I’m proposing is a volunteeristic system that will allow each of us who can afford it to choose whether or not we want to use some of our Social Security payments to help those governmental agencies and governmental missions that are particularity dear to each of us.

They may even have to compete for our dollars…wouldn’t that be wonderfully democratic.

Photo credit: Andrew Morrell

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BLG Leadership Insights Ideas Proactive Leaders Proactive Stories

7 Jay-Z Leadership Quotes

Jay-Z the self-proclaimed “greatest rapper alive” may seem like an unlikely source to turn to for leadership wisdom. However, the man who taught Barack Obama how to “get that dirt off your shoulder” (Obama quoted Jay-Z’s 2003 hit “Dirt off Your Shoulder” during the 2008 primary) is also CEO of Roc Nation and former CEO of Universal Music Group’s Def Jam label .

Jay Z’s legal name is Shawn Carter and under his leadership Def Jam enjoyed a period of financial and artistic prosperity. Carter not only released successful albums, but he discovered a bevy of young, successful, talent like Ne-Yo, Rihanna, and Kanye West.

Carter began his music career and started his own company when he and his friends, Damon Dash and Kareem Burke, founded Roc-a-Fella Records and released Jay-Z’s first album. The company was acquired by Def Jam and in 2005 and Carter was appointed CEO.

In 2008, Carter left Def Jam and formed Roc Nation, a multi-armed entertainment company in partnership with live-event giant, Live Nation.  Forbes Magazine lists Jay-Z’s current net worth at $450 million.

So what does the man who once boasted in one of his raps, “I’m not a businessman/I’m a business, man,” have to say on the subject of leadership?

Surprisingly, a lot.

Here are the top 7 Jay-Z  Leadership Quotes:

1. “Managing people is really difficult. Everyone has their own personality and their own idea of how everything should go. Then you got friends that’s fuedin with each other and you have to be the peacemaker. And the more people you have the tougher it is. But I don’t have a goal to be liked. I want people to relax and just focus on what’s important…” – Rolling Stone, December 2005

2. “I will not lose, for even in defeat, there’s a valuable lesson learned, so it evens up for me.” – From the song, Blueprint 2.

3. “Be water. If you pour water in a cup, it takes the shape of a cup. If you pour it in a teapot, it takes the shape of a teapot. Be fluid. Treat each project differently. The best style is no style. Because styles can be figured out. And when you have no style, they can’t figure you out.” – Rolling Stone, December 2005

4. “I’m not afraid of dying. I’m afraid of not trying” – From the song, Beach Chair

5. “I believe excellence is being able to perform at a high level over and over.” – Oprah Masterclass Documentary

6. “I’m far from being God/ but I work… hard.” –From the song, Breathe Easy

7. “I was forced to be an artist and a CEO from the beginning, so I was forced to be like a businessman because when I was trying to get a record deal, it was so hard to get a record deal on my own that it was either give up or create my own company. “

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BLG Leadership Insights Features Ideas Proactive Leaders

Steve Jobs, Firefighters and Momentum

On a daily basis someone asks me “how do I motivate those I lead?” It’s an age-old question. Whether you have tens of thousands of direct reports or only two or three, in order to get things done, in order to be successful, you have to find a consistently productive way to motivate and sustain momentum.  

I have always taught that motivation is about people’s willingness to expend effort to achieve a goal. You must discover if those you lead are you motivated by rational calculation—“I’ll do what’s expected of me as long as I’m paid for it”? Or are they motivated by their status and reputation in the organization—“They are not paying me much anymore, but for me, the job itself is what it’s all about”?

For those who are motivated by the later and not just by self-interest, their identities are wrapped up with the organization they work for and their profession. They have a sense that they are not just one alienated being, working in the factory. Rather, they feel like they are part of the communal organization and group culture that drives them to keep the momentum going forward.

This kind of cultural momentum deals with the sense of collective, the social and psychological sense of purpose and belonging. Culture deals with the issue of keeping people together—the spirit of “we-ness.”[1] For momentum to be sustained, it is not enough that you give people the structure and capacity to deal with uncertainty. It is not enough that you give them the resources, systems, and knowledge to keep going. It is not enough to make adjustments and corrections as you go along. You also have to keep them socially and psychologically motivated, sustained, and directed.

Momentum is sustained by a leader’s capacity to motivate, focus, and socialize individuals so they can feel as part of a group. By enabling others to engage with one another—and to feel part of a larger whole—leaders can sustain their agendas to completion and build commitment and confidence when the road becomes rocky. This is the role of cultural momentum and the leaders who are able to sustain it know how to motivate the group—that is, they reinforce the group’s purpose, direction, and identity.

Have you heard, “We have a can-do culture?” Or, “We have a culture that stays on top of things?” Sometimes momentum is a question of your ability to ingrain the culture of the group into the individual. In some organizations, you walk in and you immediately have the sense that they can run with the ball and go the distance. Such a culture is one of “drive.” Consider firefighters. Theirs is a culture full of tradition. They reinforce expected behavior through the stories of the heroic deeds of their brethren, by recounting pivotal events, important people and their actions. They tell and retell stories that subtly and not so subtly communicate how a firefighter is supposed to engage in that organization and that build a sense of belonging among its members. Firefighters take action and extraordinary risk because of their strong sense of mission.  As a result, their focused drive saves lives.[2] The most effective leaders of firefighters are able to sustain momentum by using the firefighter culture to inspire and deliver outstanding commitment and superior performance.

Imagine two groups with comparable resources. One group shows results, while the other can’t seem to get anything done. They start a lot of projects, but they finish nothing. They don’t have the capacity to go the distance. Sure, they may listen to the same CEO give the same call to action. But when it comes to implementing an agenda or demonstrating superior results, even though the teams have similar talent, a similar organization, “the B team” somehow falls short. Their agenda goes unfulfilled. You’ve seen plenty of examples of this. The new product launch, which was so highly touted, turns into a money pit. The reorganization that was supposed to improve customer satisfaction results in customer confusion. The roll-out of a performance management system gets stuck in meeting paralysis. The best-laid plans become some of the worst-laid eggs.

In many of these cases, the X factor is cultural momentum. Using value and purpose, the leader of the “A team” created a sense of belonging, commitment, and collaboration among the group’s members. People relate to others in the group. They relate to the group as a whole. In a real sense, they define themselves in relation to the group and/or the initiative. This is the foundation of cultural momentum that will get this team through adversity.

The leader of the “B team” is unable to build that sense of belonging and relatedness. On this “team,” people largely feel like individuals who happen to be clustered together, but they don’t have any deep feeling of belonging. When the agenda hits a bump in the road, members begin to question things. They point fingers. They criticize. They don’t rally together. This team will lose momentum quickly. And the source of the leak is the absence of a cohesive culture.

Despite his recent personal and professionaltravails, Steve Jobs is one of the great motivators and sustainers of cultural momentum. When he founded Apple, he built a culture of innovative thinking and a sense of belonging in the coalition battling “the dark side” of the PC industry. Apple’s early success was certainly due to its innovative design and its elegant and easy operating system. Its success was also due to Jobs’s ability to sustain cultural momentum—to maintain that sense of belonging to the “Apple cause” and to keep on battling even though Microsoft and IBM were becoming the industry standard.

Fast-forward to 1997. Jobs returned to Apple and re-infused the cultural momentum that the company lost under John Sculley, Mike Spindler, and Gilbert Amelio. One of his first moves was to launch the iMac line of computers. It was, arguably, Jobs’s ability to sustain Apple’s cultural momentum that got Jobs and the organization through hard times from 2000 to 2003 and to remain focused on its innovative capacities with the introduction of the iPod music player in 2001. By 2004, the iPod had reinvented Apple and had helped drive Apple’s stock price up five-fold. And through both his tenures, Jobs demonstrated the capacity to sustain Apple’s cultural momentum—to create and nurture “believers” in Apple’s products, its innovative capacity, and its commitment to “think different.”

When trying to sustain cultural momentum, you need to motivate your team. You have to constantly make people believe and accept the purpose and direction of your efforts. The managerially competent leader understands that a group’s culture should be strong enough to sustain commitment and identity, but not so strong that it creates an all-encompassing cult of enmeshed zombies. In sustaining cultural momentum you want to create an integrative, collective culture, but you do not want to destroy the capacity of people to reflect, deviate, and come up with creative alternatives.


[1] Judith Glaser, Creating We, Platinum Press, 2005.

[2]Samuel Bacharach, On The Front Line: The Work of First Responders in a Post 9/11 World, Cornell ILR, 2004. This two-year study of the firefighters after 9/11 necessitated working closely with hundreds of New York City firefighters.  One of the things I took away from this study was their belief that momentum could be sustained in even the worst situations over long periods of time.  The key to the sustainability is a culture that creates focused drive.

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BLG Leadership Insights Ideas Leadership On the Edge Proactive Leaders

Overcoming Fear: Public Speaking

Public speaking. Scary stuff. In the hierarchy of fears, Glossophobia is up there with heights, flying and death. Most of us have had that nightmare where we find ourselves giving a presentation in front of a large group of peers sans pants. Scary stuff. So what is a person to do? Are there some quick tips that will put you on the road to overcoming this common fear? Glad you asked.

In an insightful article from American Express’ Openforum.com, the founder and CEO of GrowBiz Media, Rieva Lesonsky offers up 6 steps to overcoming your fear of public speaking. Lesonsky, who is a widely recognized small-business expert and author of the bestselling book Start Your Own Business does a wonderful and concise job of breaking down the steps and skills you will need to become a more confident public speaker.

So the next time you have to give a presentation in front of hundreds of  judgemental co-workers, don’t call in sick. Take a deep breath, place your shaking hand on your mouse and click this link. Oh and don’t forget to wear pants.

6 Steps to Overcome Your Fear of Public Speaking.

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BLG Leadership Insights Ideas Social Media

5 Ways Social Media Can Help Your Business

We all want to find new ways to use social media. Tweeting about what you had for lunch or how much you hate/love your local sports team probably won’t get you much new business. Therefore it’s imperative that you listen to the pros as often as possible in order to get things done efficiently through social media. Here is a great article from ZDNet and TechRepublic’s Toni Bowers on the 5 Ways to Use Social Media to Propel Business Forward. Check it out and let us know if you think these ideas will work for you.