What are you willing to risk for your big vision?
In the film "All In," we see how Dr. Martin Luther King took significant risk to move a mountain. What are you willing to risk?
Gail BowerThis blog will help you and your organization flourish.
Find provocative ideas, strategies, and best practices to increase your organization's visilibity, revenue, and impact.
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In the film "All In," we see how Dr. Martin Luther King took significant risk to move a mountain. What are you willing to risk?
This post will challenge you to think about your decision-making about risk and two factors you'll want to consider.
Change can feel overwhelming and chaotic, even if the change is ultimately positive and desired. Here's a concept to support you in visualizing and managing change.
It’s more challenging right now to keep your finger on the pulse of what your team is doing. Policies that made sense before the quarantine now may not make sense. And our circumstances today might need new or different policies. If you’re role is to lead a department or an organization, take the time to walk through what your service is like in today’s environment.
If you’re like most of my best clients, you’re well aware, consciously or subconsciously, of myriad changes all around you. I’ve noticed that leaders new to their organizations are exceptionally attuned to this knowing. Long-time leaders can sometimes become inured, unless a crisis suddenly lands in their laps. Because the flow of information across networks is so fast—beyond fast, it’s immediate—we’re expected to change fast. Make decisions fast. React fast.