Leadership Simplified: Doug Van Dyke

Leadership Blog

The Magic Touch for the Dodgers

Last month an investment group headed up by basketball hall-of-famer Magic Johnson purchased the Los Angeles Dodgers. At auction no less. What lies ahead for the Dodgers is a myriad of changes, not least of which will be reorganization and team building. The past few years the Dodgers have played like a bunch of talented individuals, with no team synergy holding them together. Most assuredly, the Dodgers will need to create/expand their sense-of-team on the field. In addition, they will have to ensure the proper alignment of their front office team. This will call for the development of a cohesive vision, a solid action plan, and a consistent quality-oriented mindset.

 

My advice to the Dodgers is to embrace a strategy of change that includes team member involvement and lots of meaningful communication. Next, they should consider proper workplace alignment, which includes aligning talent with team potential. Finally, they should delve into copious amounts team building that will assist them in coming together as a unit.

 

Can the Dodgers pull off the kind of excellence that will be needed to deliver on-field and off-field success? You betcha, they have all the tools and resources they need in order to be successful. With a proper plan of action and solid execution, they can turn their world around. Do they have options if they fail? Of course, they can always move back to the open-arms of Brooklyn.  

 

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Please do so, as long as you do not alter the content or embedded links. Also, please include the following information: Doug Van Dyke is a leadership and collaboration consultant, executive coach, and strategic planner. Doug’s book, Leadership Simplified, as well as CDs and DVDs are available at www.leadershipsimplified.com. To learn more about coaching and training services, contact Doug today at .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address). 

© 2012 Leadership Simplified. All rights reserved.

Posted by Doug Van Dyke on 2012-04-30 at 08:00 AM
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Enterprise Zone Strategic Planner

During a recent strategic planning session that I facilitated with a client, the topic of Enterprise Zones came up. These are interesting animals which are best defined as State designated areas that are targeted for economic revitalization. Moving your business to, or increasing the employment in an Enterprise Zone holds the promise of a bevy of tax benefits. Interestingly, when we moved the headquarters of Leadership Simplified to downtown Bradenton we did not realize that our new location was smack in the middle of an Enterprise Zone. I guess that makes me an Enterprise Zone Strategic Planner. Anyway, think strategically about your business, as well as the location of your business. You never know, it just might lower your tax bill.

 

Do you want to use this blog post in print or online? 

Please do so, as long as you do not alter the content or embedded links. Also, please include the following information: Doug Van Dyke is a leadership and collaboration consultant, executive coach, and strategic planner. Doug’s book, Leadership Simplified, as well as CDs and DVDs are available at www.leadershipsimplified.com. To learn more about coaching and training services, contact Doug today at .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address). 

© 2012 Leadership Simplified. All rights reserved.

Posted by Doug Van Dyke on 2012-03-20 at 07:37 AM
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HARP Could Make Beautiful Music – For Some

While many of you may be aficionados of an enormous stringed musical instrument called the harp, this narrative has nothing to do with music. Rather, this prose is dedicated to the Home Affordable Refinance Program (also known as HARP), which is designed to assist homeowners in refinancing their mortgages – even if they owe more than the current value of their home. HARP is a means for people who have paid their home loan on time, but are underwater from a loan-to-value standpoint, to be able to refinance and take advantage of today’s low interest rates. Please note: The program pertains ONLY to mortgages that are held by Freddie Mac or Fannie Mae, which is 50% of all the loans in the United States. What makes the timing of today’s leadership blog post interesting for some people, is that on March 19th HARP is revising (i.e., increasing) their loan-to-value limits AND beginning to take applications for refinances of investment property, as well as primary residences. You can find out more or apply for the program by connecting with your favorite lending professional. If HARP resonates with you, my advice is to pursue this beauty sooner versus later. 

 

Do you want to use this blog post in print or online? 

Please do so, as long as you do not alter the content or embedded links. Also, please include the following information: Doug Van Dyke is a leadership and collaboration consultant, executive coach, and strategic planner. Doug’s book, Leadership Simplified, as well as CDs and DVDs are available at www.leadershipsimplified.com. To learn more about coaching and training services, contact Doug today at .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address). 

© 2012 Leadership Simplified. All rights reserved.

Posted by Doug Van Dyke on 2012-03-19 at 07:05 AM
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Motivational Speaker

It is always nice to receive a call from a client who is looking for a motivational leadership speaker. While we here at Leadership Simplified seek to coach and train leaders, it is fun to speak to groups from a motivational perspective. As a Florida-based motivational speaker one would think that Doug Van Dyke would speak to groups mainly in the Southeastern United States. This is not always the case, however. As a long-standing member of the National Speakers Association (NSA), Doug has worked with groups from coast-to-coast, as well as north to south. Doug believes that being in business for over 16 years, coupled with an NSA affiliation has greatly helped with increasing motivational speaking bookings. We would like to extend our thanks to all our wonderful clients. It is an honor to speak, to coach, to train, to strategically plan with you!

 

Do you want to use this blog post in print or online? 

Please do so, as long as you do not alter the content or embedded links. Also, please include the following information: Doug Van Dyke is a leadership and collaboration consultant, executive coach, and strategic planner. Doug’s book, Leadership Simplified, as well as CDs and DVDs are available at www.leadershipsimplified.com. To learn more about coaching and training services, contact Doug today at .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address). 

© 2012 Leadership Simplified. All rights reserved.

Posted by Doug Van Dyke on 2012-02-28 at 08:33 AM
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Team Synergy

The definition of synergy is two or more things functioning together to produce a result not independently obtainable. In other words, the whole is greater than sum of its parts. This certainly is the case with high-performing teams. They find a way to coalesce into a unit that gets along and produces results far in excess of the capabilities of a group of individuals.

 

The best teams also have a fine compliment known as a great leader. Many of you have heard my definition of leadership which is: Leaders impact culture. Indeed, solid leaders build a sense of team. Along the way, they also provide a vision of the future that serves as a roadmap to show where the team is going.

 

If you are leading a team and are desirous of team synergy or a greater sense of team, take stock and look in the mirror. When you do, you will be staring at the person who sets the tone, the vision, and enables an otherwise disjointed group of individuals to come together and conquer all.         

 

Do you want to use this blog post in print or online? 

Please do so, as long as you do not alter the content or embedded links. Also, please include the following information: Doug Van Dyke is a leadership and collaboration consultant, executive coach, and strategic planner. Doug’s book, Leadership Simplified, as well as CDs and DVDs are available at www.leadershipsimplified.com. To learn more about coaching and training services, contact Doug today at .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address). 

© 2012 Leadership Simplified. All rights reserved.

Posted by Doug Van Dyke on 2012-02-27 at 02:16 PM
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Workplace Learning Helps Everyone Win

Interestingly, many people do not associate the workplace with learning. Rather, they think of the workplace as a place for doing. Now certainly there are an abundance of results that must be achieved while at work – that takes much doing. However, it is important that leaders do not lose site of the importance of people learning while at work. This calls for leaders to be good coaches and trainers. There are many advantages for those leaders who choose to help their people learn at work. First, the time a leader spends in helping team members learn, translates into greater productivity down the road. Second, team member retention is increased when the workplace serves as a center for learning. Finally, leaders hone their own skills by teaching others to build theirs.

 

The best leaders actively seek methods to coach and develop their valued team members. Not only does workplace learning help both organizations and team members win, but it helps leaders win as well.   

 

Do you want to use this blog post in print or online? 

Please do so, as long as you do not alter the content or embedded links. Also, please include the following information: Doug Van Dyke is a leadership and collaboration consultant, executive coach, and strategic planner. Doug’s book, Leadership Simplified, as well as CDs and DVDs are available at www.leadershipsimplified.com. To learn more about coaching and training services, contact Doug today at .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address). 

© 2012 Leadership Simplified. All rights reserved.

Posted by Doug Van Dyke on 2012-02-13 at 12:57 PM
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Power On

A hotel client of mine has made miraculous strides over the past few years. Started just six short years ago, they have transformed themselves from a U.S.-based mid-scale hotelier to a global upscale branded boutique hotel. In the process of changing their value proposition, they have been recognized by JD Power as the best of their class. Not bad for the new kid on the block. They have effectively elevated their level of cool, while smoothly entering the upscale landscape.  

 

Even though each one of their hotels looks different (and they have 39 of them), they use three words to describe the personality associated with all of their hotels: vibrant, curious, and original. The following takes a look at each one of those qualities, plus a few that I added just for good measure. 

 

Vibrant. From the colors and designs that adorn the lobby, to the personalities that greet you at check-in, vibrance abounds. This client has done a masterful job of creating a cool, fun vibe at each of their hotels. At the same time, individual establishments possess a uniqueness that resonates within the local community. And the local community is important to each hotel. They reach out to their neighbors and allies in the community in order to be a destination for conversation, power business meetings, tasty delectables, or whatever other eclectic flair neighbors desire to summon on a given day. As a result of their commitment to the concept of vibrant, their hotels exude vibrance at every turn.

 

Curious. There is youthful and authentic curiosity that is part of this organization’s culture. They sincerely want to learn about each one of their guests. Not from a nosey or intrusive way, but from a sincere curiosity standpoint. Curiosity is the cornerstone that drives their service culture. They figure the more they know about a guest, the greater their ability to tailor their service to make the guest feel welcomed. Like many hotels, their team members offer to help guests with luggage, packages, and other items they may be carrying. However, it is the marvelous questions they ask, and the empathetic manner in which they assist people that sets them apart.    

 

Original. When we talk about original, we are really discussing differentiation. One of the ways this brand differentiates itself is by being one of the few “pet-friendly” hotel establishments in the industry. No, there are not Great Danes running rampant through the halls. Each hotel has dedicated pet-friendly rooms in order to serve furry friends. Sound proofing, fanatical cleaning, and courteous guests keep pets unnoticed by those who may not be so animal-inclined. The fun, cool, and authentic vibe is another way that this hotelier is original. When you enter the hotel it just looks like everyone is having fun – it’s contagious, so new guests just naturally join the fray. Nice.

 

Passionate. Being rated best overall, as well as tops in seven out of eight JD Power evaluation categories is no easy task. By the way, the eight categories are: Reservation, check-in/check-out, guest room, food & beverage, hotel services, hotel facilities, cost & fees, and overall satisfaction. In other words, this hotelier gets it right from start to finish. How many businesses can boast the same? From the time a potential guest contacts this establishment, through the booking and check-in phase, they get it right. Further, they help their guests enjoy their stay by nailing the room experience - sight, sound, smell they call it. Then, the service at the hotel, as well as their food and beverage takes over. During their guest’s visit, they also ensure that their facilities offer an exceptional experience and their costs and fees are seen as a bargain. This may sound simple, but it takes a passion for excellence in order to consistently deliver these goods across a 39-unit organization.  

 

Driven. It would be easy for this youngster to rest on their laurels, and bathe in their success for a bit. Not so with this passionately precocious upstart. They want to expand the fan base that enjoys the cool and calm that is part of this hotel’s authentic vibe. The leader of each hotel also believes they can achieve anything. After all, look what they have accomplished in six years. Across the company they are committed to expanding the awareness of their brand, turning guests into devotees, and broadening their geographical market. As such, their mantra has become PowerOn!

 

Bottom Line: Leaders and their teams deliver results that create brand perception in consumers. Whatever consumers perceive of us in the marketplace is our true and real brand. As such, seek to deliver the kind of product, service, and quality in the manner by which you desire to be remembered. Be well my friends, and whatever brand is associated with your flag, fly it proudly! 

 

Are you curious about the name on the flag that flies above the unique and rocking brand highlighted in this narrative? Read a few of the comments below and the identity of these ingenious hoteliers will be revealed.  

 

Do you want to use this blog post in print or online? 

Please do so, as long as you do not alter the content or embedded links. Also, please include the following information: Doug Van Dyke is a leadership and collaboration consultant, executive coach, and strategic planner. Doug’s book, Leadership Simplified, as well as CDs and DVDs are available at www.leadershipsimplified.com. To learn more about coaching and training services, contact Doug today at .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address). 

© 2012 Leadership Simplified. All rights reserved.

Posted by Doug Van Dyke on 2012-02-08 at 08:01 AM
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Matrix Delivery Model Calls for Engagement & Collaboration

The structure of an increasingly large number of organizations these days is one of a matrix. In other words, teams and leaders are being placed into silos as they accomplish their work deliverables. There is nothing wrong with a matrix structure. It can be very efficient and often makes perfect sense. What it does call for is excellent communication within a given “silo team,” as well as between teams. Effective collaboration leads to outstanding output. On the other hand, the matrix structure and collaboration process can be undermined by a few people who do not play nice in the sandbox. If you are a leader in a matrix organization, seek to drive communication and collaborative engagement at every level of the company. Also, deal with personnel problems quickly and thoroughly. A people issue that is allowed to fester is a killer in a matrix structure.   

Posted by Doug Van Dyke on 2012-01-06 at 04:26 PM
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Leadership Success Involves Taking Ownership

The other day someone asked my opinion on why Wikipedia is so successful. I pondered the qualities that I associate with online, informational behemoth and then replied, “Ownership.” In my view, the people who contribute and conduct quality-control for Wikipedia really take pride in owning the valuable information they provide. Now, someone could certainly find errors and omissions on selected Wikipedia articles. However, it is difficult to argue the great sense of ownership that contributors take in building Wikipedia’s knowledge base. So what can leaders glean from this viewpoint and information? The answer is: Take ownership of issues and do not pass the buck. Solid leaders practice taking ownership every day. They realize issues occurring under their watch are their responsibility. In turn, they realize that great accomplishments that occur under their watch are best attributed to their fine team. A paradox, yet good leadership. Lead well, my friends.

 

Do you want to use this blog post in print or online? 

Please do so, as long as you do not alter the content or embedded links. Also, please include the following information: Doug Van Dyke is a leadership and collaboration consultant, executive coach, and strategic planner. Doug’s book, Leadership Simplified, as well as audios and videos are available at www.leadershipsimplified.com. To learn more about coaching and training services, contact Doug today at .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address). 

 

© 2011 Leadership Simplified, all rights reserved.

Posted by Doug Van Dyke on 2012-01-02 at 09:21 AM
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I Hate Selling (The Gonzo Method)

I was recently talking with my wife as she read one of my sales articles and she exclaimed: “Wow, people really need this stuff!?”

“Yes,” I calmly retorted, “people really need, and read, mind you, this stuff.” Sidebar: She is a wonderful woman who heads up the technology division of our company; and I love her dearly. Back on task.

“So much communication….so many techniques,” she said.

“Yes.”

“Wow, I hate selling,” she said.

“Of that I am painfully aware,” I said, in a bit of a resigned tone.

My wife then looked at me and said: “I just tell people the price and say there it is. If they say ‘no,’ so be it, I’m busy.”

“That’s true honey,” I said, “you don’t beat around the bush.”

“It’s the Gonzo Method,” she said as she was heading out the door. “Just go for the ‘no,’ you should try it some time!”

 

And so I share with you my friends, the Gonzo Method for sales. Simply state your price with supreme confidence, go for the ‘no,’ and get ready to write an order – because, I assure you, in the appropriate situation the Gonzo Method just flat out works…..every time.

 

Do you want to use this blog post in print or online? 

Please do so, as long as you do not alter the content or embedded links. Also, please include the following information: Doug Van Dyke is a leadership and collaboration consultant, executive coach, and strategic planner. Doug’s book, Leadership Simplified, as well as audios and videos are available at www.leadershipsimplified.com. To learn more about coaching and training services, contact Doug today at .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address). 

 

© 2011 DVD Consulting Incorporated, all rights reserved.

Posted by Doug Van Dyke on 2012-01-01 at 11:15 AM
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Measure Results, Not Time

Peter Drucker once implored: “You can only manage what you measure.” This is sage advice for leaders to consider. Many leaders, however, get caught in a retail mindset whereby they measure results via the measure of time. In a certain way, this makes sense since many leaders compensate their team members by the number of hours they work. Time does not necessarily serve as the best measure of productivity. Just because a team member is onsite does not mean that they are being wildly productive. As such, seek to have a deeper measure of productivity. Developing meaningful measures sometimes takes time and creativity. In the end though, a meaningful measure provides a barometer as to the contributions that team members deliver to the organization. 

 

Do you want to use this blog post in print or online? 

Please do so, as long as you do not alter the content or embedded links. Also, please include the following information: Doug Van Dyke is a leadership and collaboration consultant, executive coach, and strategic planner. Doug’s book, Leadership Simplified, as well as audios and videos are available at www.leadershipsimplified.com. To learn more about coaching and training services, contact Doug today at .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address). 

 

© 2011 DVD Consulting Incorporated, all rights reserved.

Posted by Doug Van Dyke on 2011-12-30 at 08:47 AM
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E-Leadership

The electronic leader. When many people ponder the topic of leading virtual teams, they envision far-away leaders using tools such as the telephone, video-conferencing, and email as they connect with team members. With the meteoric rise in email usage, however, many leaders manage electronically even when their people are 10 feet away. In other words, there is an epidemic of leadership from afar, despite the leader being within easy walking distance of the people they are supposedly leading.

 

There is nothing wrong with leaders taking advantage of the ease and speed of email. Furthermore, the preferred communication method of many workers is email. However, it is the leader’s responsibility to take stock of the needs of their team members and the goals of the organization, and to make certain that he/she is leading in an appropriate, interpersonal manner. The electronic leader can be valuable and effective. Just do not sacrifice the many benefits of the personal touch in an effort to save time.      

 

Do you want to use this blog post in print or online? 

Please do so, as long as you do not alter the content or embedded links. Also, please include the following information: Doug Van Dyke is a leadership and collaboration consultant, executive coach, and strategic planner. Doug’s book, Leadership Simplified, as well as audios and videos are available at www.leadershipsimplified.com. To learn more about coaching and training services, contact Doug today at .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address). 

 

© 2011 DVD Consulting Incorporated, all rights reserved.

Posted by Doug Van Dyke on 2011-12-28 at 08:31 AM
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Boundaries for Leadership: Guard Rails, Not Rules

A wise leader recently shared his management mantra with me. He said, “Guard rails, not rules that’s how I like to manage.” He went on to share three components of his leadership philosophy:

  1. Give your people the flexibility to meet the needs of their market
  2. Give your people the means to have the kind of price, product, and placement they need to be successful
  3. Get the heck out of their way and do not be an impediment to their success!

Meaningful words from a wise and successful leader.

 

Do you want to use this blog post in print or online? 

Please do so, as long as you do not alter the content or embedded links. Also, please include the following information: Doug Van Dyke is a leadership and collaboration consultant, executive coach, and strategic planner. Doug’s book, Leadership Simplified, as well as audios and videos are available at www.leadershipsimplified.com. To learn more about coaching and training services, contact Doug today at .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address). 

 

© 2011 DVD Consulting Incorporated, all rights reserved.

Posted by Doug Van Dyke on 2011-12-27 at 10:21 AM
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Get Out of the Weeds – Go Aerial

Last year I published an article which detailed three types of leaders: Foot-Soldier, Aerial, and Satellite. The foot-soldiers are the leaders that are physically positioned where the rubber meets the road. As such, they are in the weeds by design and work shoulder-to-shoulder with worker bees. Foot-soldier leaders do and tell. By contrast, the aerial leaders maintain a bird’s eye view of processes, operations, and the delivery of goods and services, and become involved with team members on an as-needed basis. Aerial leaders ask a lot of great questions and delegate tasks effectively. Satellite leaders set the vision for the organization and provide the means for team members to accomplish goals. They see the entire organization and think of it in its entirety. Satellite leaders rarely get stuck in the weeds.

 

Many leaders who should be aerial find themselves getting stuck in the weeds. Odds are likely that these leaders came from the weeds, so it makes sense that in times of stress they would gravitate back to where they are most comfortable – production (i.e., the weeds). This trap, however, does not serve the leader or the organization very well. Typically aerial leaders are charged with completing higher tasks, and when they get mired in the weeds they are, in essence, abandoning their core responsibilities. A leader who is not supposed to be in the weeds needs to develop the kind of delegation skills, prioritization skills, time management skills, and coaching skills that will maximize the production of their team. Certainly this is easier said than done, but getting things done is the leader’s job nonetheless. While rolling up your sleeves and doing the work yourself has a time and a place, it is usually not the most effective means for aerial leaders to drive a team to world-class results. 

 

For a detailed description of the preferred competencies associated with each one of these leaders, read an article I published entitled Competencies of Leadership. And remember: During the upcoming year seek to get out of the weeds by striving to become aerial.

 

Do you want to use this blog post in print or online? 

Please do so, as long as you do not alter the content or embedded links. Also, please include the following information: Doug Van Dyke is a leadership and collaboration consultant, executive coach, and strategic planner. Doug’s book, Leadership Simplified, as well as audios and videos are available at www.leadershipsimplified.com. To learn more about coaching and training services, contact Doug today at .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address). 

 

© 2011 DVD Consulting Incorporated, all rights reserved.

Posted by Doug Van Dyke on 2011-12-26 at 10:08 AM
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Selling by Using Permission

Greg is a likeable and knowledgeable professional. He works in sales, but also functions as a leader in the capacity of sales manager. When he meets with prospects and customers they can be assured that they will receive a thorough presentation. Often times, while Greg is making a presentation his audience seems to drift off and lose interest. He tried adding more sizzle to his handouts and PowerPoint slides, but still the same result. After a visit with his sales coach the light went off for Greg: He was talking too much, and for way too long without interruptions. What coaching taught him was a technique whereby he sells by using permission. The permission technique can hold a myriad of benefits during conversations or the selling experience. A handful of those benefits are shown below.

 

  1. Move a conversation forward, without losing your audience in the process. Some leaders and sales professionals talk and talk and talk and, at some point, their audience loses their will to live due to disinterest. Yet, it is easy to keep the listener engaged by simply pausing on occasion and asking them something to the effect of: “That is a lot of information I have thrown at you, shall I continue or shall we go in a different direction?” If the listener desires to go in a different direction, they are still part of the conversation and you have not bored them. If they request that you carry on, you have gained their permission to move forward, and learned they are engaged in the conversation.

 

  1. Keep your fingers on the pulse of the listeners needs. Sometimes professionals have great information to share and volumes of it, but at some point the listener’s needs are met. By breaking up a conversation with various “permissions,” we land closer to the point where the listener’s needs are met.

 

  1. Demonstrate empathy. The skillful use of a permission sell telegraphs to the listener that you are empathetic to their point of view. It also shows good respect for their time. In other words, you want to share maximum information in minimal time.

 

  1. Help the listener feel in control of the conversational flow, even though you are controlling the core conversation. The asking of permission involves the other person, yet you are not relinquishing control of the floor. 

 

  1. Deliver buy-in to the topic at hand. Skillful use of selling by permission can let the leader or sales professional know if someone is onboard or not with regard to the topic of discussion.  

 

Bottom Line: Whether you tend to ramble during conversations or simply want to tap in to the mindset of your audience, selling by using permission holds vast benefits. By mastering this easy conversational technique, leaders and sales professionals can confidently move conversations forward, maintain the pulse of the listeners needs, and save time in the process.

 

Do you want to use this blog post in print or online? 

Please do so, as long as you do not alter the content or embedded links. Also, please include the following information: Doug Van Dyke is a leadership and collaboration consultant, executive coach, and strategic planner. Doug’s book, Leadership Simplified, as well as audios and videos are available at www.leadershipsimplified.com. To learn more about coaching and training services, contact Doug today at .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address). 

 

© 2011 DVD Consulting Incorporated, all rights reserved.

Posted by Doug Van Dyke on 2011-11-28 at 07:48 AM
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