5 minute leadership lessons that will transform your career
<p>Is it worth taking a few days away from work for a leadership course? If now’s not the right time because things are too busy, there’s no one to replace you, or you aren’t convinced on the value, read on.</p>
<p>I did a two-day course on <a href="https://executive.mcgill.ca/seminars/effective-leadership" rel="noopener ugc nofollow" target="_blank">Effective Leadership</a> at the McGill Executive Institute. It gave me a reason to press the pause button and free up space in my life for learning. I came away energized and enthusiastic.</p>
<p>I work in <a href="http://www.onespan.com/" rel="noopener ugc nofollow" target="_blank">tech</a>, leading a small team of writers and content developers in Marketing. We’re deadline driven, which makes it easy to get caught up in short-term tasks and crossing items off a to-do list. The challenge is, if you’re always heads down, you’re not looking forward.</p>
<p>So how do you reconcile your inner visionary with the pressure to jump into projects faster, make decisions faster, and pump out results now?</p>
<p>By delegating today’s to-do list and freeing up time to think and plan.</p>
<p>Like anything worth having, good leadership doesn’t come fast or easy. It is a journey. During the course, a series of moments reinforced this for me, especially when our coach prompted the class to think about:</p>
<ul>
<li>The ratio of time spent managing and doing vs. strategy and planning</li>
<li>Making decisions based on data rather than personal bias</li>
<li>Helping people find their own answers by asking open-ended questions [rather than giving them the answers, which creates dependency]</li>
</ul>
<p><a href="https://medium.com/@JeannineMullin1/10-leadership-lessons-for-any-team-lead-63cfcb96efe3"><strong>Click Here</strong></a></p>