Pascoe's potshots

Latest

LEADERSHIP: TURNING AROUND FAILURE

published:2010-09-06 01:00:00

I’ve just discovered that my favourite blogger, Seth Godin, is also a columnist with the Harvard Business Review. However, even in this mainstream venue, he retains his quirky preoccupation with what’s wrong in the world. He prises open our minds and this is certainly true when he redefines

This Potshot has 0 comments:

Subscribe


Subscribe to RSS feed

Or receive Pascoe's Potshots weekly by email

Recent

LEADERSHIP: HOW’S YOUR KNOWLEDGE AND COURAGE?

published:2010-08-30 01:00:00

What do lobsters, scorpions and bees have in common? Yes, a capacity to inflict a nasty bite. But they also all lack a

This Potshot has 0 comments:

LEADERSHIP: 12 FACETS OF EMOTIONAL INTELLIGENCE

published:2010-08-23 01:00:00

A valuable gemstone has many facets, each finely polished. To be a valuable leader, you similarly need a range of carefully honed capabilities.

This Potshot has 0 comments:

LEADERSHIP: FIVE FAULTS TO FIX

published:2010-08-16 01:00:00

Another home run for Seth – my favourite blogger. His posting of 13 June* describes the entrepreneur’s desire for a magic lottery ticket –

This Potshot has 0 comments:

Search Pascoe's Potshots

Pascoe's Potshots search results ...

You searched for the string:   "Fix key commercial problems"   found 8 results

Search again:

(note: search terms must be more than four characters.
To search for a phrase like "road to success" enclose it in quotes as shown)

LEADERSHIP: THE MIDAS TOUCH

published: 2008-10-20

The legendary King Midas had a special gift.  Everything he touched turned to gold.  Sounds great, but it wasn’t good for his diet - and he died.  However today, having the "Midas touch" means the ability to make money.  And, many business leaders have this special skill.  They smell what's profitable and what's not.

LEADERSHIP: BEAT THE BUST

published: 2008-10-28

The Sage of Omaha, Warren Buffett, says the downturn is going to be both deep and long. Global central banks have caught the falling knife of financial collapse. But, there's blood (and shredded reputations) on the floor. And now, the real economy is in for a bad time. Customers are already delaying purchases; banks are loathe to lend - even to good businesses; and, no-one knows what the next fright will be.

LEADERSHIP: AND, THE OBAMA CABINET

published: 2008-11-30

As President-elect, three of Barack Obama's earliest appointments have been: Treasury secretary (Timothy Geithner); Director, National Economic Council (Lawrence Summers); and Director, Council of Economic Advisers (Christina Romer) .  Why these roles, and why so quickly?

LEADERSHIP: BEWARE OF YOUR STRENGTHS

published: 2010-03-22

Twenty years ago, I was shocked to hear that some of the reasons my wife had originally been attracted to me were now driving us apart. My decisiveness and energy were leaving no decision-room for her. It's often the same in business. Our natural attributes, which are powerful and value-adding, can go to extreme and undermine effectiveness. If I asked your colleagues, which two of your strengths would they say are most causing them trouble? Here's a checklist that might help.

LEADERSHIP: ARE YOU CONVENIENCE OR QUALITY?

published: 2010-05-03

Kevin Maney has created a strategic-choice continuum. At one end, businesses position themselves to offer quality (or what he calls fidelity). High-priced stuff, which customers buy for its market-standing and their personal-image enhancement. A Louis Vuitton bag says I’ve got taste – and money. At the other end is convenience. Discount flights and meals cost little but do nothing for your self-belief or mystique. If you applied this thinking to your leadership, where on the Maney Continuum would you fall? Nearer to quality or convenience? Let’s check that out.

LEADERSHIP: WHEN IN DOUBT, DISAGGREGATE

published: 2010-05-31

Seth Godin is part blogger, part public intellectual. Some days, he really nails a topic. Here’s an abbreviated introduction to a recent posting*.

“The typical American buys precisely one book a year … (but) when it comes to books, there is no typical American. There are a lot of Americans who buy zero books … and then there are people like me who buy 400. The average is irrelevant.”

It’s the old warning of the non-swimmer, who drowned in a river of one-metre average depth. So, what’s the equivalent for your leadership? Are you just taking “average” one-size-fits-all actions? Here’s a three-step alternative.

LEADERSHIP: THAT ONE KEY LESSON

published: 2010-07-07

How do you rate yourself on the following five actions? Showing self-awareness?. Demonstrating authenticity, integrity and compassion? Understanding and engaging people as individuals? Showing self-leadership and adaptability? Communicating, particularly listening well – and widely? These are my phrases but, taken together, they encapsulate nearly 80% of the responses to a recent online survey that asked “if you could teach one thing to a young leader, what would it be?” From my decades of working with leaders (and being one), I can’t fault any of these suggestions. Even though, at times and to my cost, I’ve ignored some! But, notwithstanding their importance, they’re less than the full picture. Let me explain why – and suggest what else might be needed.

LEADERSHIP: HOW’S YOUR KNOWLEDGE AND COURAGE?

published: 2010-08-30

What do lobsters, scorpions and bees have in common? Yes, a capacity to inflict a nasty bite. But they also all lack a spine. An exoskeleton (the lobster’s hard shell) is all that holds their bodies together. There’s no internal bone structure. Some leaders are like this. Outer toughness and a nasty bite: the cutting remark or petulant decision. But little inner structure or resolve that makes for true leadership that will deliver results and build respect. What would people say about you: outer show or inner strength? Here are some action options.