AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL

save mt. Kenya campaign
In partnership with africapoint.com

SEARCH WITH GOOGLE

Custom Search
Click here to Determine yourself

I joined and i have proof it works,Join free today and get paid to socialize.

Advertise here

Search4Jobs brings to you vacancies from across the globe

Continue supporting our campaign

Continue supporting our campaign
We did it with Guantanamo closure everything else is possible

Peace has to start with you.

them Heartlings

  • My dreams:To be the CEO Of The Republic of Kenya,to help all needy people in my village.
  • my likes:Writing poems,reading,playing basketball,swimming,playing table tennis,playing politics.
  • My Novels
  • My poems:they are many request and i will send you.

dunpresidents world of information

Loading...

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

What Makes a good Leader

According to Lipnack and Stamps, “Virtual teams can be successful only if people cooperatively manage the coordination involved in membership and leadership,” meaning that managers must give up the ideas of power and control, and replace them with service leadership. In the old days, the people who held onto the knowledge, data, and so on held the power in an organization. Today, the people who readily disseminate information, connect people with each other, and facilitate hold the real power in an organization. True leaders empower their teams by their behaviors (for examples of how these characteristics look when a manager is under pressure, watch Star Trek — no, really). True leaders perform the following actions:
-  Remove roadblocks. -  Act as an advocate for the team with upper management.
-  Facilitate open, honest communication.
-  Model behaviors that they want from the team.
-  Act instead of react.
-  Facilitate decision making and discussions with team.
-  Recognize the strengths of each team member and focus those strengths to the benefit of the team.
-  See the big picture and communicate each member’s role in that context.
-  Encourage independent thinking and trust their team to make good decisions.
-  Gather team members with complementary skill sets and draw from the strengths of each member.
-  Share leadership appropriately with other team members. These characteristics are particularly important on virtual teams. Virtual team members must operate with a certain amount of autonomy because they might be separated by several time zones, resulting in a delay in feedback. It is often easier to “beg forgiveness” than it is to ask permission when the team leader or supervisor is six time zones away. Leaders and managers must trust that their teams are acting in the best interest of the project and the company, and should listen carefully to strenuous objections. For example, one of the reasons cited in the accident report for the Columbia space shuttle disaster was that upper management did not take seriously the concerns expressed by several project engineers when the foam hit the shuttle. As teams work together, often informal roles develop. One person might be really good at planning social functions, while another person might have an aptitude for troubleshooting. Smart team leaders and managers take advantage of these diverse skills by delegating these tasks to the people who enjoy doing them and who are good at them. Doing so enriches everyone’s experiences and builds ownership. Lipnack and Stamps described the following virtual team leader roles, originated by Reuben Harris:
-  Coordinator
-  Designer
-  Disseminator
-  Tech-net manager
-  Socio-net manager
-  Executive champion In a virtual team, each of these roles might be played by a different person, or one person might play several of the roles, depending on the size and complexity of the team.



This is His Excellency The President of the republic of Kenya 2040

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Thanks for reading my post


ShoutMix chat widget

Search with google

Google
 

What should be done to end Violence against Women? Please sign the Guestbook and tell me.

Daily Visitors

Powered by WebRing.