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BLG Leadership Insights Creativity

7 social media and leadership stories from the past 7 days

Here are seven stories from the past seven days about social media and leadership.
Enjoy!

1. The Biggest Company you’ve never heard of is about to go public

2.  I guess anyone can be honored for “leadership”

3. Meet the 13 Companies that Came Out on Top at Launch

4. Create Your Own Opportunity

5. Socrates on Communication

6. Curiosity tears down walls

7. Filmmaker to Create Egypt Documentary Through Social Media

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BLG Leadership Insights Ideas Leadership On the Edge Proactive Leaders Social Media

7 social media and leadership stories from the past 7 days

Here are seven stories from the past seven days about social media and leadership.

Enjoy!

1. The Wisdom of Booker T. Washington

2. Grading Time Warner CEO Bewkes on Leadership

3. Time for Apple to speak up on future leadership

4. Don Banks from Sports Illustrated on the looming NFL strike

5. It is never too early to learn leadership

6. How 7-Eleven discovered the secret to success is service

7. Yes, Virginia, You Can Get Business with Social Media

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BLG Leadership Insights Ideas Leadership On the Edge Proactive Leaders

The Myth of Productivity: Is 8 the Magic Number?

It’s all about getting things done. If you can get those you lead to rally around your ideas then success isn’t that far away. But once you’ve reached a certain level of success it becomes imperative that you sustain the momentum you worked so hard to build.  One way to sustain momentum is to make sure that you keep your employees motivated–motivated to continue the high level of work that got everyone to the top of the mountain in the first place.

Entrepreneur magazine’s Tony Bradley recently wrote an article entitled Telecommuting Is Good for Employees and Employers. In the piece, Bradley makes the point that, despite what we’ve been taught for years, allowing workers to break out of the normal 9-5 grind will actually help maximize their time. He argues that forcing those you lead to sit in a cubicle for 8 hours a day doesn’t guarantee that more work will get done.  In fact it does  just the opposite. There is no incentive to work faster if the only reward is more work and more time sitting around.

The idea that telecommuting is more than just people sitting in their bathrobes watching game shows instead of working is a perfect example of how leaders have to burst The Myth of Productivity. There is no generally agreed upon norm for productivity. Working eight hours-a-day in a sterile, fluorescent lit, cubicle is the result of nothing more than a law to keep unscrupulous bosses from forcing people to work fifteen hours a day in a dangerous and poorly ventilated mine shaft. There is no science behind the number. It’s not some perfectly worked out equation that guarantees success. Yet we still hang on to it like Moses brought it down from Mt. Sinai.

The key here is to understand that you must be able to adapt your criteria for success and productivity.  The bottom line is that you want to get things done. But everything that comes before that final goal must be flexible and adaptable in the face of change. Setting understandable and clear criteria for your employees is an ongoing and continual process. You might have been told that forcing your employees to work a certain number of hours in a certain place is a must, but it is just not so. Don’t be afraid to shape, mold, and transform your criteria as your initiatives and ideas change.

Picture credit: Legozilla

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BLG Leadership Insights Ideas Leadership On the Edge Proactive Leaders

10 Things the HR Department Won’t Tell You

Things are tough all over. With unemployment hanging around 9.6%, you need every advantage you can get to keep the job you have or to get a new one.  In a recent issue of Woman’s Day magazine Kimberly Fusaro lays out the 10 Things the HR Department Won’t Tell You . The list includes things like how background checks have become more stringent for new job applicants all the way to something as simple as your personal hygiene (i.e. if you want to get and keep the  job, don’t stink up the room).

Leaders today demand so much out of their workers, in many cases they demand that employees do 2,3 or even 4 jobs at the same time. So leaders need to make sure those they are hiring can handle the pressure and get the job done. Some of the items on this list aren’t very PC and in fact a couple of them seem downright illegal. But no matter where they fall on the morality/legality scale, they appear to be facts of life, and most of us in the business world need to be aware of them in order to stay head of the game.

I don’t work in HR, I don’t know a lot of people who do. If you do work in the wonderful world of HR, drop us a line and let us know if these rules deserve a key to the executive washroom or if they should get a pink slip.

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BLG Leadership Insights Leadership On the Edge

10 Must-Read Social Media & Leadership Stories From June 28-July 2

1. Are bosses changing and becoming soft, approachable, hugg-able figures in today’s economy? The possible reformation of bosses.

2. Management is a skill that can be learned, but it’s not exactly a profession.

3. Great presentation on how to get people to notice your social media efforts.

4. Good analysis of network versus organizational leadership.

5. The story (and facts) behind narrative leadership.

6. 11 productivity enhancing tips for those “brain dead” days.

7. During a crisis you can’t act like a cowboy .

8. 7 good tips that help you create a content masterpiece…from Bach.

9. Is your blog or company website similar to the unpopular person at high school? Here’s a rescue ladder.

10. Fun discussion on NYC’s recent Russian spy scandal.

Picture Credit: Ocularinvasion