Skip to main content

Home/ Shearin Group Training Services/ Group items tagged Good

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Marco Shearin

The Shearin Group Outstanding Leaders: Want to Be a Good Leader? - 1 views

Want to Be a Good Leader? Step One: Know Thyself What is the most important characteristic of a leader? Some might say it's integrity. Others may say that it's being a good motivator. But psycholo...

The Shearin Group Outstanding Leaders Want to Be a Good Leader? Step One: Know Thyself

started by Marco Shearin on 16 Apr 14 no follow-up yet
asfiachoo

The Shearin Group Leadership Training Tips: 6 Tips for Effective Leadership - 0 views

Is anyone befuddled by the fall from grace of so many leaders? Is anyone befuddled by the choices some leaders make as if nobody is watching? Is anyone captivated by the word befuddled? OK, maybe t...

The Shearin Group Leadership Training Tips: 6 Tips for Effective

started by asfiachoo on 24 May 14 no follow-up yet
Marco Shearin

Shearin Group Training Services Advance Leadership Skills: Tips For Good Leadership - 1 views

Shearin Group Tips For Good Leadership Skills. - As a newly-appointed manager, the development of an efficient work environment will not only produce great results from your team-members; it will a...

Shearin Group Training Services Centered Leadership at Individual Shearing Advance Skills Personality Assessment Firm

started by Marco Shearin on 12 Mar 14 no follow-up yet
Marco Shearin

The Shearin Group Outstanding Leaders about 8 Leadership Tips from the Rank and File - 1 views

Source link It is easy to focus on leadership from a top down perspective, especially in a paramilitary organization like a fire department. Yet, good fire chiefs know that their ability to lead i...

Shearin Group Outstanding Leaders 8 leadership tips from the rank and file

started by Marco Shearin on 15 Apr 14 no follow-up yet
shyfr33man

The Shearin Group Leadership Training Tips: Successful Leadership Transitions - 1 views

Successful leadership transitions: traps to avoid, tips for success It's never easy to step into a leadership role from outside an organization. Michael Watkins, an authority on leadership trans...

The Shearin Group Training Successful leadership transitions: traps to avoid tips for success

started by shyfr33man on 02 Sep 14 no follow-up yet
Armin Xia

The Shearin Group Leadership Training Tips: 5 ways to build a business intelligence Cen... - 1 views

I'm delighted to have been invited to speak at Information Age's Data Leadership 2014 conference on 30 October. In my session, I'll be sharing tips for building a BI Centre of Excellence (COE) in a...

The Shearin Group Leadership Training Tips

started by Armin Xia on 27 Aug 14 no follow-up yet
Armin Xia

The Shearin Group Leadership Training Tips: Five Tips to Sharpen your Leadership Focus - 1 views

The role of company chief executive brings with it all sorts of challenges, from dealing with the nitty gritty of making decisions daily to formulating strategies to take your company forward. Tha...

The Shearin Group Leadership Training Tips Five Tips to Sharpen your Leadership Focus

started by Armin Xia on 23 Sep 14 no follow-up yet
Armin Xia

The Shearin Group Leadership Training Tips: Three tips for leaving your customers 'brea... - 1 views

Satisfying your customers isn't good enough in today's competitive markets. Meeting their needs falls short of earning their loyalty. You need to dazzle them; leave them "breathless" whenever they ...

The Shearin Group Leadership Training Tips

started by Armin Xia on 03 Sep 14 no follow-up yet
Esah Razak

Top tips for business leaders: creating a caring company - 1 views

  •  
    The Shearin Group Leadership Training Tips - Showing your staff that you care about them simply makes good business sense. Find out why and discover some practical advice Why should businesses care about being caring? Businesses first and foremost are all about making profits, right? In fact, achieving the first can be fundamental in helping you to achieve the other. Showing your staff that you care about them simply makes good business sense. Staff who feel that their employer cares about them are likely to be more engaged and productive. A survey carried out by the ILM in 2013* found that 31 per cent of respondents stated that the one thing that would motivate them to do more at work was better treatment by their employer. So it goes without saying that a more motivated workforce ultimately makes for a more profitable and successful company. Another important factor to consider is reputation. Companies with a reputation for looking after their staff are able to attract the very best candidates and, most importantly, retain them. It is well documented that the economy is improving and that means a greater availability of jobs.
Marco Shearin

Leadership Tips for College Presidents and CEOs - 1 views

  •  
    Commencement season is upon us, when college presidents and business leaders offer words of wisdom to graduates entering the "real world." But at a time when the college presidency has become a high-risk occupation and CEO turnover is accelerating, with 131 leaving their jobs in January alone, maybe they could benefit from some words of wisdom. What makes someone successful in a leadership position? We offer the following list of helpful hints. Many we learned along the way, through our time in academia and serving on corporate boards. Some we discovered by failing to do them ourselves, and others we picked up from our mentors and colleagues. 1. Think first, talk later. Everything you say will be taken literally. An offhand comment or ill-considered joke, once it has made its way through the local gossip vine or the national blogs, is guaranteed to haunt you. Don't ever think you're "off the record." 2. Talk less, listen more. This is especially true for a new leader brought in from the outside. Folks will immediately ask for your "vision" for transforming the place. This is a test: No one can reasonably expect a detailed plan before you understand the place's idiosyncrasies. Do not offer a grand plan before one exists. 3. Show up. Every constituency wants you to be physically in the room on important occasions; they don't want your surrogate. What you actually do when you get there--offer a toast, introduce a speaker, tell a quick story to kick off an event--may be less important than your physical presence. 4. Engage veteran employees. Spend time with those who have devoted their lives to the place, leaving their mark on future generations. Take them to lunch and hear their stories. You want them on your side and you'll learn from them. 5. Don't ignore the staff. In companies, they are the face of the business. At colleges, members of the staff are educators as well, wh
coldiexian

The Shearin Group Training Services: Are schools becoming 'exam factories'? - 1 views

There has been growing concern in the UK about evident drawbacks of the current educational system being dubbed as "exam factory". Hundreds of parents, teachers and children's writers expressed th...

Shearin Group Training Services

started by coldiexian on 24 Mar 15 no follow-up yet
Marco Shearin

The Shearin Group Outstanding Leaders on five tips Universities to value their staff - 1 views

  •  
    1) Communicate a clear vision "A lot depends on where your university is and what you want the vice-chancellor to do. Do you need more student recruitment? Do you need more research grant money? 2) Trust your staff "It is an essential quality of any leader that they should develop and empower their staff. This means trusting them to innovate and get on with things without always looking over their shoulder or filling a form to say they've done something. " 3) Be fair "Academics are slightly strange animals and difficult to lead (and we all know they are difficult to manage!) - very individualistic and therefore many may not be considered team players. 4) Appoint good people "I see ' leaderful ' practices in classrooms, research teams and student-led activity throughout the HE sector. 5) Value all staff "Universities need to value their staff - permanent and casual. Many casual staff are the academics and administrative managers of the future and need to be engaged by the leaders because both have a future together. " (Paula Nicolson)
1 - 20 of 27 Next ›
Showing 20 items per page