[Ohio-talk] Boundaries for Leaders

COLLEEN ROTH n8tnv at att.net
Sat Nov 9 13:50:40 UTC 2013


Hi Sunanne,
Thank you for posting this. Leadership is important. Leaders do not have to be elected to a Board. Many of us have served as Leaders.
Leaders who do a good job inspire others to do their best and garner respect by being willing to do what we ask others to do.
I certainly saw some good leadership at the 2013 Convention.
Personally I was very happy with the Convention Agenda.
It was very informative and we can say we all learned some new things.
Personally I love agendas which are filled with information.
I also was happy to see that people stopped up to help when needed.
We need to work on getting people to bun in to the fact that Convention Sessions are worth attending and that they benefit from these sessions.
Sometimes leaders aren't willing to set the Boundaries in the workplace or other things we are involved in.
This does require tact and grit.
I hope you share this widely.
Colleen Roth



----- Original Message -----
From: Suzanne Turner <sturner at ClevelandSightCenter.org>
To: "ohio-talk at nfbnet.org" ohio-talk at nfbnet.org,"Delcenia at prodigy.net" Delcenia at prodigy.net,"musicwonder71 at gmail.com" musicwonder71 at gmail.com,"richardkirks at yahoo.com" richardkirks at yahoo.com,"wo.turner5 at sbcglobal.net" wo.turner5 at sbcglobal.net,"CHRISTAL TURNER (TURNEC03 at odjfs.state.oh.us)" TURNEC03 at odjfs.state.oh.us,"Ojmccaf1963 at yahoo.com" Ojmccaf1963 at yahoo.com,"Ty.hartfield at gmail.com" Ty.hartfield at gmail.com
Date: Friday, November 8, 2013 12:45 pm
Subject: [Ohio-talk] Boundaries for Leaders

>
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> Good Afternoon,
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> I thought I would send this out sence we are about to embark upon a new year.  For those who are leaders or aspiring to be: this information is one to consider!  This is not only for the work place, but in organizations, like the NFB!  Please pass this on.
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> Thanks Cheryl!
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> Suzanne
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> This Week's Tip:
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> Boundaries for Leaders at the Workplace What do boundaries look like at the workplace? They are made up of two essential things: what you create and what you allow. A "boundary" is a property line. It defines where your property begins and ends. If you think about your home, on your property, you can define what is going to happen there, and what is not.
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> As a leader in the workplace, you are in charge of the vision, the people you invite in, what the goals and purposes are going to be, what behavior is going to be allowed and what isn't. Leaders build and allow the culture. You set the agenda, and you make the rules. And what you find there, you own. It is your creation or your allowances that have made it be. Simply stated, the leaders' boundaries define and shape what is going to be and what isn't. In the end, as a leader, you are always going to get a combination of two things: what you create and what you allow.
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> I (Dr. Cloud) was leading an offsite for a health care company recently about a range of leadership issues, and the director of HR asked a key question. "So, how can you know if the problem is about the leader, or the follower?"
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> He went on to talk about "problem employees," who don't perform or who are difficult. "There is such a thing as a 'follower' who isn't getting it, right?" he said.
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> "Sure," I said. "But on whose watch? In whose culture? Who built the team that allows that? Who is over that employee that is a 'problem'?
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> And who is over the employee that allows employees like that to be that way? And if that employee is confused about the strategy or direction, who is it that sets that strategy and direction for their team or the organization? In the language of Apple, 'who is the DRI , the directly responsible individual"'" Who owns it?
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> It is a central principle of boundaries: ownership. Ultimately, leaders own it. They are the ones who define and create the boundaries that drive the behavior that forms the identity of teams and culture and sets the standards of performance. Leaders define the direction and are responsible for making it happen. And they are responsible for the accountability systems that ensure that it does happen. It always comes back to leadership and the boundaries they allow to exist on their property. Leaders define the boundaries, and successful leaders define them well in several key areas:
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> — The vision, the focus, the attention, and the activities that create forward movement are defined by leaders.
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> — The emotional climate of the organization and its culture is created and sustained by leaders.
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> — The unity and connectedness of the organization and the teams are built or fragmented by leaders.
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> — The thinking and beliefs of the organization are sown and grown by leaders.
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> — The amount and kinds of control and empowerment that people have are given and required by leaders.
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> — The performance and development of their teams and direct reports are stewarded by leaders.
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> — The leadership of oneself, which entails establishing one's own boundaries and stewardship of the organization, is required by leaders.
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> Good leaders, through a handful of essential boundaries, make sure certain things happen, prevent other things from happening, and keep it all moving forward. Leaders are a positive force for good and a negative force against bad. You know what they are for and what they are against.
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> Spotlight of the Week
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> Featured Resource: Boundaries for Leaders
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> Why do some people get results and others don't? In Boundaries for Leaders, Dr. Henry Cloud gives leaders the tools and techniques they need to achieve the performance they desire. Drawing on the latest findings from neuroscience, Dr. Cloud shows why it's critical for leaders to set the conditions that make people's brains perform at their highest levels. Discover seven leadership boundaries that set the tone and culture for a results-driven organization.
> 
> Suzanne Turner, BSW, MPA
> Employment Coordinator and Benefit Specialist
> 
> Cleveland Sight Center
> 216-791-8118 (main)
> 216-658-7350 (direct)
> 216-791-1101 (fax)
> sturner at ClevelandSightCenter.org <mailto:sturner at ClevelandSightCenter.org>
> 
> 1909 East 101st Street
> P.O. Box 1988
> Cleveland, Ohio  44106-0188
> 
> We want to thank all our supporters for making Spellbound a great success this year!
> Videos and pictures from the event can be found at http://www.clevelandsightcenter.org/gala
> 
> Our Mission: To empower people with vision loss to realize their full potential, and to shape the community's vision of that potential.
> 
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