- Secret is to have a great chairman
- Hire for talent and rent for experience
- Major differences between a governing board and advisory board
- It’s lonely at the top - an advisory board can be a great “sounding board”
- Leveraging Outstanding skills
- An Advisory Board is easy to change
- Important for advisory board to have a structure and frequency - not random
- Remuneration - investment is outstanding value for money
- Need to know your why before getting an advisory board
- Ensure your advisory board is results focussed
Referron enables you to send your vcard to people you meet , and easily refer them to people in your network that you know like and trust in seconds. Referron can report your activities - because what you can measure you can manage! This blog will h lp you as an entrepreneur and business owner to grow with the 5 Cs . Connection, Collaboration, Contribution, Continuity and building Capability to build old an amazing Community
Wednesday, November 28, 2018
The 10 Gems from Peter Williams Mastermind Lunch on Advisory Boards
Tuesday, November 20, 2018
Active Listening is an Art
Over the years , I have attended countless meetings ...... and I so often don’t implement the secret that I know makes for a successful meeting - and that is
Below are 3 key strategies - that I am going to make an active point of improving.......
- Give people time to reply
I am guilty of starting a conversation and putting a thought or question out there, and instead of giving the other individual time to formulate a response, i immediately re-phrase the question or remark and answer it!
I tend to hi-jack a conversation and realise that I spoke too soon and cut off the other person’s response.
- Listen to understand
We often don’t hear, or worse, understand what the other person says because I am so busy formulating our response to what I assume they will say.
I want to be perceived as quick witted and always prepared with a snappy comeback to any question or comment.
The problem with this is that I missing so much vital information, because I am not actively listening to what the other human is saying
- Listen with intent and notice verbal and non verbal cues
Hear every word, pick up on each nuance, and watch their non-verbal body language.
For example
When a person is excited to share information, or tell you a very key point, they intuitively lean forward as if to say, “don’t miss this next point because it is very important”.
Whether they raise or lower the volume and the tone they use - watch for non-verbal hints.
Hear what your client tells you, and how many times and ways they tell you the same thing. Listen to what they need and frame your response on how you can help them .
This is a tip that my mentor Allen Pathmarajah shared with me - (that works really well when I use this strategy)
Count to ten before responding
It will seem like an eternity, but be smart and give the person with whom you are communicating the time to acknowledge your comment or statement.
It expand the opportunities for communication, and gives you time to hear and take notice of what they are trying to say and how they are feeling
Listening builds respect and credibility
Listen and Silent have the same letters
Thursday, November 15, 2018
Does Culture eat Strategy for breakfast?
We had a great knowledge share by the legendary Monica Graham on what’s more important in a business - culture or strategy? - and came up with some interesting insites - or what I call “gems”
What you think about in your business becomes the actions you take, and those actions lead to your business habits, which go on to shape how you conduct business (your business character).
And that shapes your business destiny.... and ultimately your business culture.
As a business yoy need to be very careful about what you as a Business think about and focus on.
In our BBG Thinktank that followed - facilitated by BBG facilitator, Judith Rose Max , the answer we came to after much discussion and collaboration was
Leadership eats strategy and culture for breakfast
Have you thought about where your business wants to be in 6 months, a year, or 5 years?
Have you thought deeply about how to get there?
Have you thought about what type of culture you need in your business in order to set yourself up for success next year?
What is leadership?
The 4 steps are
1 Role Model
2. Fostering Understanding and Conviction
3. Develop talent and skills.
4 Reinforce with formal mechanisms
- Systems and processes are key
- Have formalised Onboarding sessions
- Continuous training is key
- Have formalised accountability sessions
- Share wins
- Reinforce your culture
- Get your team to use the tools that you have (Referron or hubspot or salesforce or Act ) .
- Reward and recognise outstanding behaviour
“the importance of living above the line”
- Where cash is king
- Act now
- Be accountable
- Challenge and respect
- Have clear discussions and outcomes and
- Be fit for purpose
Thursday, November 8, 2018
What is the BEST Way to Start a Speech⁉️🤔
Great post by the legendary Bobby Umar
Every good speaker has their style 👏🏾
We also want & need to be unique for our audience
One of the hardest things for any speaker journey is to figure out how to start & how to end a good speech
Over the years I’ve learned many different tactics that work
Imagine you’re on stage or in front of an audience..
What do you do to get their attention, to get them to invest in you?
There are many options:
❇️ QUESTIONS: Start with a compelling question (often seen in TED Talks) 🌟
❇️ GRATITUDE: Focus on thanking, being grateful & share why 🙏
❇️ MUSIC/IMAGE/VIDEO: Something to grab their attention 🔥
❇️ STORY: An opening story is often the best way 💯
Anything else⁉️🤓
I’d love to hear your thoughts so COMMENT below 👇🏽🤗
✳️ Follow the #PowerOfConnection channel every Mon/Wed/Fri
#motivation #personalbranding #careers #entrepreneurship
Great comments from interesting people:-
Never start with a video or something similar. It distracts.
Ross Simmonds
Start with a story
Show your passion and have energy
Nick Gibson
Ask a question - engage the audience
Kimberley S
Fast forward to the climax of the story /\ then start at the beginning so they understand how we got to the climax.
Ivan Kaye
Get to know your audience - engage them
Aditya Mukherdjee
A video with an energising song
Furan Qureshi
Verb it. Shock, Surprise, Challenge (keep a few chocolate bars as reward), Question then walk around the audience with a mike, Humour (make sure it's related to the topic or something current), Play a video, Make them Sketch you, Start talking from a space that they can't see you and walk up to the stage/podium while talking, and if you like try this one - come on stage walk up and down without speaking a word without eye contact for 5 seconds, then very softly and humbly ask everyone to make a wish and pray for it. The last one has usually feedback as 'that was so relaxing, that was a great start, guess what-my wish came true ......
Izzy Mamnoon
Be authentic, vulnerable and relevant - use your body - project your energy
Speak slowly and clearly -
Vishnu Chinta
A story about childhood in a more insightful and most common way, where everyone in the audience relate to, can get audience's interest in to your speech!
C Jos
Smile: Just a warm hearted smile and be grateful saying that how thankful it is to see the respected audience there (even if only 2 are present)...
Amit Jain
I often keep asking questions to the audience to keep them engaged during my training sessions...usually works well!!
Fared a Zaeimfar
Start strong and share a relevant story - to the point - people want to be engaged !
Dave Rosenberg
Understand what you want to achieve - share
I like to start with something "disrruptive/interruptive."
Every attendee has a potentially different outcome. You must bring everyone in the audience to the same place . Once there, you have their full attention!
Nancy Narang
Start with some alarming statistic or fact. Gets ppl attention maybe?! 🙂
Michael Page
Start with a simple compelling story: “It was...<date, time, place>...”
End by circling back to the simple compelling story: “Like the story of the <story topic>, we are...”
Start and end in a same place with substantial and compelling content in between.
Wednesday, November 7, 2018
5 gems to help you build an Awesome team that Knows likes and trusts each other
- spend time debating, discussing problems, and making decisions
- address unacceptable team behaviors promptly
- give each other tough feedback
- Talk about those “undiscussables” that others can’t talk openly about
- Assume positive intent. Give your teammates the benefit of the doubt. Assume they are providing feedback not to judge you but to make you better.
- Talk to your teammates, not about them. You can’t solve problems with gossip. Venting without follow-up action ensures that you are building cliques and solidifying rifts. It takes courage, but talking directly and respectfully with teammates when something goes wrong can solve many misunderstandings without creating drama or bringing others into it.
- Care about your teammates’ success. Start by taking an interest in your teammates’ success. Ask questions about their concerns, know what their goals are, help where you can, and be a good listener and collaborator. You can’t be a great teammate if you don’t know what drives others’ success.
- Push your teammates to do their best work and vice versa. Great Teams, have members challenge each other to reach their goals. They don’t spend energy watching their own backs, so they take risks and reach higher. Start by asking your teammates to challenge you. Bring them ideas and ask for input. Ask for feedback on your plans. Embrace the idea that your teammates make you better.
- Ask for personal feedback. Before offering feedback, ask for it first. Ask your teammates what you could do to better support their success. Ask peers for suggestions on one behavior you could work on to become a better teammate. Give permission for teammates to share feedback by asking for it regularly and listening openly. Thank others for giving you feedback.
- Great teams deliver stronger results, faster. They’re more innovative.
- They challenge you to learn more quickly and to be at your best.
- And, let’s face it — they’re simply more fun to work with.