13 Questions For Year-End Reflection

13 Questions For Year-End Reflection

Article
As the year comes to a close, it’s an excellent time to take stock of our experiences in 2020, and consider what we want more of in 2021. Self-reflection is one of primary ways we can gain insight into ourselves, and is the first step on any path to learning and evolving. I watch people grow through self-reflection in my sessions everyday, as they discover new insight and pivot to live more fully into their potential. Working at their best, they bring others along with them, helping colleagues to become their best selves, too. I've seen small and big changes emerge from reflection: · Noticing and giving credit to others in a team meeting · Creating new beliefs about others that changes their interactions for the better · Letting go…
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Staying Connected From a Distance

Staying Connected From a Distance

Article
Successful businesses and organizations have made ballet-star-worthy turns this year, pivoting en pointe with virtual huddles, team meetings, retreats and conferences. We are getting a lot out of these, but they can’t always slake our hunger to be together—to celebrate our wins with a meal, to have an ad hoc hallway conversation with a colleague that sparks an idea, or to laugh at a team meeting and remember why we do what we do.  A recent survey from Morning Consult found that, for many people, working from home feels beneficial in some ways, for instance, saving time that has allowed people to focus on their health. But the survey respondents also reported feeling disconnected from coworkers, with many experiencing feelings of isolation and loneliness. We ache for in-person connection.  Of course, our disconnection…
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Hard Work of Acceptance

Hard Work of Acceptance

Article
Don’t we all want to be accepted and understood for who we are? And to feel safe enough to share what we think and feel without fear of judgement? I think we are all striving for this acceptance and safety in our work and our lives. What we may not realize is that it's hard to make progress in these areas if we don’t figure out how to accept ourselves. There are many ways that we judge ourselves. We may find it difficult to accept what we consider to be our negative qualities. We haven't made peace with our impatience, lack of ambition, workaholic tendencies--even our judgmental nature! We may also be unable to acknowledge or accept those sterling qualities that others seem to consider as positive, such as our…
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Bringing Leadership To Family During Pandemic

Bringing Leadership To Family During Pandemic

Article
At work, leaders feel a responsibility to inspire, support, and align their teams. If yours is one of many families spending lots of time at home together during the pandemic, you may find yourself needing those same leadership skills in your family relationships. If we tend to be in a CEO role at home, we may be noticing some connections between this leadership role and the one we have at work. Are there lessons we can carry between one role and another? How are you helping to lead in terms of empathy, inclusion, support and inspiration within your family?  I’d like to share a couple of the most helpful actions we have been taking at my house (I have a spouse and 3 kids) to support one another during this…
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Six Actions Working for Leaders Right Now

Six Actions Working for Leaders Right Now

Article, Uncategorized
With a pandemic at hand, plenty of things have gone wrong. But as I work with my clients, I also notice some things that are going right as leaders work to strengthen their organizations. Leaders are taking actions and initiating changes that will improve their businesses, not just during difficult circumstances, but into the post-pandemic future. Here are six amazing, effective actions leaders are taking right now:  Building Closer Connections: Leaders are maintaining and enhancing connections in the workplace at a time when most people are working remotely, and usually alone. Online meetings and phone calls contain more immediate, in-the moment conversations about feelings, priorities, and actions, which helps employees feel connected, often more so than before the pandemic hit. Discussions about what is happening for people right now, today, are…
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What Meaning Can We Make Today?

What Meaning Can We Make Today?

Article
Over the last couple of weeks, many of the conversations I’ve been having with clients have led us to an important topic: the ways we are struggling to make meaning today, knowing that our future is no longer something that is promised.  Of course, the future never is promised, but we all had plans for next year, this summer, and even next week, that we are no longer sure we'll be able to carry out. Just planning for tomorrow feels like a challenge. As it turns out, a lot of the meaning we make of our lives happens when we set our wonderful goals and work on fulfilling them over time. How do we make meaning in our lives, when we aren’t sure what tomorrow will bring?  It’s a time…
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Three Things That Can Block Our Empathy

Three Things That Can Block Our Empathy

Article
Most of us would like for others to understand, recognize, and share in our feelings, and it can be demoralizing, lonely and painful to experience another person’s lack of empathy. In business, this can affect employees, and can also lead to a poor understanding about what customers might need or want.  So how do we get closer to the empathy that makes the world an easier place, and helps our businesses work more smoothly inside and out?  For a start, we can look at what blocks the natural empathy inside us.  Lack of empathy can be the result of exhaustion, distraction, or stress. But a few common roadblocks to empathy trip people up even when they are feeling great. I have found that paying attention to such roadblocks has helped…
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Tolerating discomfort is a leadership trait.

Tolerating discomfort is a leadership trait.

Article
It can feel like a paradox: the times when we grow the most and feel happiest often require that we experience discomfort. When I think about moments of greatest growth for leaders and teams I work with, or for myself, they almost always occur after we move through something and/or have an experience that’s hard, challenging, or uncomfortable. An easy analogy is to consider what exercise does for us. We may drag our feet on going to the gym, getting out on a run, or taking a yoga class, and when we start, we might or likely to feel the discomfort of stiff joints and lazy muscles. We get out there despite this initial rough patch because we know that as we move through that we'll find a greater feeling…
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