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happiness at work

The Best Things You Can Do When Faced With Not-Too-Ideal Situation At The Workplace Or In Any Organization

Sometime in 2033, NASA plans to send human beings to Mars. Russian, Chinese and private space agencies have planned as well to follow suit. Putting together the best team to perform effectively the functions related to this amazing journey is incredibly challenging. After all, they’ll be travelling in space for 8.5 months confined in cramped living quarters doing routine work as they cover 140 million miles going one way. The psychological pressure on each crew member can take its toll on morale. While various situations in running a business or managing an organization may be a whole lot less astounding, certain sensitive and volatile conditions can sometimes thrive in the workplace. Here’s what you can learn from studies conducted about extreme expeditions such as the mind-boggling journey to Mars: Pay close attention to some informal roles that may crop up. When faced with either too much pressure or boring routine work, employees could informally evolve into being buddies or storytellers, peacemakers or counselors. This transformation can sometimes help in bonding teams together. The thing is … when you get the right combination, the group would tend to do well. If you don’t, they’d do very badly. Make sure you meet the expectations as a leader. An effective leader is generally perceived as having wider experience, articulate in defining goals and flexible but fair when interacting with his teams. He also must have the ability to resolve group conflicts, address issues such as abusive or disruptive team members, keep projects on schedule without overworking his people and during, emergencies, stay calm while making rational, logical decisions. Not meeting these expectations will have just about everyone pointing at you for low morale, conflicts and unsuccessful completion of projects. Welcome some positive deviation among your team members. One informal role that could crop up in a tension-filled situation is “the court Jester.” He’s the person who could provide some comic relief and help everyone get along so they can continually function effectively. When one of your guys informally takes on this role, be glad. He’ll help mitigate the stress or conflict in the workplace. Unlike what could actually transpire on the planned extraordinary trip to Mars, the seemingly disparate, sensitive situation in your business or organization may not be of a make or break nature … but if you feel like it is, the foregoing tips should help you manage the circumstances better.

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Positive Leadership: Its the best kind of leadership

A lot has been talked about and written about leadership. It’s not surprising. It’s such an important factor for success, depending on the kind of leadership existing in a place, it can make or break big business corporations, civic organizations, sports associations, small or medium size enterprises and even fund-raising charitable institutions and foundations … and for that matter, in a more expansive perspective, even governments. What exactly is positive leadership? In the context of running a business or a typical organization, profit or non-profit, Positive Leadership is about putting the emphasis on what elevates individuals, teams, and organizations. It’s about developing and gearing them up to achieve their full potential in addition to supporting and guiding them as they face everyday challenges they meet in the course of their personal and professional lives. Positive Leadership is about creating affirmative bias – in other words, a positive leader focuses on the strength and capabilities of his people and affirming their human potential. Rather than harping on weaknesses and inadequacies … rather than seeing a glass of water as being half empty, but seeing it half full, a positive leader centers his or her efforts on his team’s inherent goodness. He focuses on the positive, putting his/her heart and soul on what is going right in addition to what’s going wrong. Practicing all these, a good positive leader becomes effective and prone to achieving extraordinary positive performance on the job, resulting in outcomes that exceed expectations. How does one go about becoming a positive leader? If you’re running a small or a medium size business or some form of an organized outfit, here are three key strategies you can apply to achieve positive leadership in your workplace: Create a positive climate –While it’s not something you should ignore, try not to dwell too much on the hard, no-nonsense, profit-or-bust stuff. Instead, foster compassion. Thank your people for well-done jobs. Where they may have some shortcomings, learn to forgive while teaching them how to do things the right way. Create a two-way positive communication – This involves that popular adage about building bridges rather than walls. Make sure your feedback system is one that is constructive in nature identifying flaws and weaknesses without demoralization and advocating training and development for professional advancement. It won’t hurt too for you to do an objective and honest self-critique. It’ll keep you on track about achieving positive leadership. Practice a positive relationship with your people – Build a community-like workplace where you connect to your guys’ personal values. Work towards their physical and emotional well-being, they are after all, not cold robots. Reinforce their strengths, constantly looking for ways to build their energy and enthusiasm. These then are the three important strategies in achieving positive leadership. As you imbibe and adopt these, a positive performance, the extraordinary kind that goes beyond expectations, becomes almost inevitable.

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How do you infuse compassion in leadership?

Today, one of the bigger challenges of modern leadership is developing leaders who earnestly and sincerely give a damn about their colleagues in the workplace, their organization, community, and the bigger world. As it should be. A strong, compassionate leadership, along with a healthy corporate culture, after all, is a key factor to a business company’s growth and success. You, as a serious manager, should recognize that injecting compassion in your top people’s brand of leadership in itself is serious business. It cannot be an afterthought like a half-baked pizza. It needs no less than a well-planned, perfectly calibrated and adequately tempered heating system to beat those that come out from the ovens of the Yellow Cabs and Pizza Huts of this world. You will need an integrated approach. And here’s how : When hiring, look beyond technical skills. Sure, technical skills are important but just as essential is recognizing a candidate’s soft skills. Creativity, ability in problem-solving, imagination, intellectual humility and compassion should be right there next to software savvy and those high-sounding college degrees. Hire based on a clear understanding of what a person’s role is. A recent poll says 64% of hired personnel have no clue of what their job is. So, before you finalize those employment contracts, ask these guys to detail and define what their tasks will be, what they should be committed to and point out how they’ll fit into the organization’s culture. Foster and cultivate compassion within the whole organization. Various studies have shown clearly that genuine care for co-workers has a positive influence on a company’s bottom line since employees who enjoy being at work and have a sense of belonging in a culture anchored on compassion have generally demonstrated high productivity and efficiency. Building a culture with compassion as its centerpiece begins with leadership training. This should often be stressed. Leaders must first learn self-compassion and then learn how to effectively spin off these same considerations to their teams. In a nutshell, look into creating an environment where employees feel okay to share their feelings and speak up at any turn and not feel judged or fearful. As they begin to value themselves, their confidence will reach new heights leading to better job performance.

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