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Archive for the 'Leadership philosophy' category

When not doing your job is the best thing you can do

I’m obviously a big fan of not doing more than you need to do to get the job done (and also not doing less than you need to do).
When I got my first big gig leading people I went from leading a team of 2 to leading a team of 100. I needed a lot […]

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No principle at all

I have fun doing a regular weekly article at HPCWire that covers some of the same topics we cover here, only with more of an emphasis on supercomputing. I usually don’t publish items that are substantially the same here and there. Today’s topic is important enough, however, that I think it’s worth making an exception […]

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Don’t do everything on your list

Want to kick your career up a notch? Then here’s something that virtually no one will ever tell you. I don’t think anyone ever told me this, either, but I’ve found time and again that when I make real progress I’m following this rule: don’t do everything on your list. My rule of thumb is […]

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From leadership philosophy to career skills

There are lots of little skills and bits of attitude and information you need to pull together to make a complete person, and the same is true in making a complete leader or a even complete employee. No one collection of tips, insights, tricks, and anecdotes can fully prepare you for anything interesting.
Find a foundation, […]

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What gets checked gets done

We touched a little bit on part of this concept already when we discussed the need for everyone to perform. If you do everything we’ve talked about so far just right, have your teams set up, and take the time to empower them to make decisions, but you do nothing else, all your work will […]

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Getting buy-in for your vision without writing by committee

Right, so now you’re convinced that you shouldn’t create a vision by committee. That’s a good thing. You’re ready for the risk of failure. But you also know that it’s your team that’s going to have to bring your brilliant vision to life, and if you aren’t writing by committee, then how do you get […]

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Don’t create a vision by committee

When you mention that you are working on a vision for your organization, it is almost inevitable that some helpful wag will say that you need buy-in on the vision and that the only way to get that is to have a committee help you form the vision. This sounds like a good idea.
The case […]

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Articulating your vision exposes you to failure: do it anyway

So you’ve taken your time, built up a big picture, and now you have a vision you’re ready to share throughout your organization (inform and infuse).
Butterflies in the stomach? Palms sweaty? Yeah, me too.
This is your job, and you’ve got to do it or your organization will never grow or change, which means it will […]

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Taking your time and managing change with a new vision

In general, people hate to change.
Changing the big picture, and then changing the fundamentals of what they are doing and why, is something you want to do only occasionally, and usually only in ways that in some way relate to your previous directions.
Change infrequently, or you’ll confuse everyone
You want people to see a […]

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New managers: take your time finding a vision

Obviously in order to inform and infuse your vision you have to have a vision first. It is an integral part of being a leader, and is in fact one of the things that separates leaders from managers (and sheep herders). So as you’re developing your leadership skills you might be a little freaked out […]

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This is my parking place for the philosophy, tools, and skills that scientists, engineers, and technologists need to manage our own contributions, careers, and success.

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