artilecastles.com artilecastles.com
   Main :> About Us :> Privacy of Info :> Terms & Conditions :> Add Your Link :> Add Your Article
Search:   
Add Your Link
 

Creative Arts

Shopping & Auction

Games & Play

Family & Home

Self Help

Business & Companies

Hotels & Travel

Eating & Drinking

Teens & Kids

Finance & Investment

Sports

News & Media

Medicine & Treatment

Jobs & Careers

Academics & Learning

Entertainment

Fitness & Health

Automotive

Property & Estate

Society & Issues

Fashion & Lifestyle

Computers & Software

Law & Politics

Science & Space


 

Main –› Self Help –› Art Of Leadership
 

Leadership Value Alignment - Nu Leadership Series

 

Any committee is only as good as the most knowledgeable, determined and vigorous person on it. There must be somebody who provides the flame. Lady Bird Johnson

Lets explore another value issue. T.S. Blake was a dynamic preacher. His congregation loved him as their pastor. Yet, this church didnt progress because the pastor refused to communicate his vision. Often, Pastor Blake found himself taking aggressive actions to accomplish his vision without any church input. His critics called him a dictator while his supporters called him a visionary leader. Each aggressive deed caused greater strife. No one could figure out the key problem.

Vision and core values must be aligned in organizations. A leader who tries to be Superman moves ahead of his followers with a vision. This becomes an issue if open communication isnt promoted. Malphurs, a value-based guru, maintains that a churchs core values are a vital part of its character.

Wall, Solum, and Sobol, authors of the Visionary Leader, postulate a new paradigm shift where a vision is based on communication, free flow of ideas, and motivation of employees full human potential. Authority is then shifted to frontline workers. Workers are a reflection of their leaders. If leaders arent communicating with followers, do you think communications will be any better between members? Organizational leaders should align their visions with organizational values and communicate them to followers.

References:

Malphurs, A. (1996). Values-Driven Leadership. Grand Rapids, MI: Bakers Books.

Wall, B., Solum, R. and Sobol, M. (1992). The Visionary Leader. Rocklin, CA: Prima Publishing.

2006 by Daryl D. Green

Author: Daryl Green
 
Author Bio:
Daryl Green is an expert on this subject. Daryl has written several articles in the past on this topic.
This article can be searched using: leadership skills, good leadership skills, leadership qualities, leadership skills development
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Mirror and Matching; The Basis of Rapport and Communication Skills!
 
Leadership Rules You Absolutely Need To Know
 
Business Success Tip #53 - Time Management - Who's Winning... You or Time?
 
Discovering Your Passion and Purpose
 
Achievable Goal!
 
How to be a Leader at Work
 
The Eye Of The Storm
 
Fuelling Your Ambition
 
Coaching for Success
 
Praying in Secret
 
 
 
Main :> Privacy of Info :> Terms & Conditions  
Copyright © 2006-2008 www.articlecastles.com - All Rights Reserved.