Leadership Vision: Are you an Eagle or a Nocturnal Turkey?

photo credit: brettneilson Eagle via photopin (license)

Today (January 5) marks National Bird Day.  Since birds have long been sources of inspiration,  I’ll use a couple of very different birds to contrast an important leadership skill:  vision.

Let’s start with Bald Eagles.  They have such remarkable vision, we’ve developed the term, “Eagle Eye” to describe people with good eyesight.  Bald eagles are capable of seeing fish in the water from several hundred feet above, while soaring, gliding or in flapping flight.  An eagle’s eye is at least four times better than that of a person with perfect vision.  In fact, an eagle flying at 1000 feet over open country can spot prey over an area of almost 3 square miles from a fixed position!  Now that’s long-range vision…

Turkeys, on the other hand, have very poor vision at night.  While they, too, can see three times better than we can in the daytime, their nocturnal vision is weak.  Benjamin Franklin argued the turkey should be America’s national bird because it is a native bird with a proud demeanor and protective instincts, unlike the Bald Eagle—which is more of a scavenger, who robs other birds and animals for prey.

In my first week’s readings of the New International Version (NIV) Leadership Bible, the focus is on long-range planning…which starts with vision.

Click here to learn more about the 3 keys to long-range planning.

Merry Christmas 2013: Learning from the Leadership Wisdom of Jesus

Leadership Wisdom of Jesus

In Mark 9:35, Jesus said, “Whoever wants to be first must be last and servant of all.”

Today, as we celebrate the birth of Jesus…the Christ…and my Lord…let’s stop and reflect on Charles Manz’s perspective about the Leadership Wisdom of Jesus:  Practical Lessons for Today.

Manz describes four major themes found in Jesus Christ’s leadership.  He starts the same way I started my Out of This World Leadership blog this year…with your most powerful leadership tool (click here to see my first blog post).  Manz claims, “the first step to becoming an effective leader is to look in the mirror.”

 

Clean Mirror Image

Master the art of leading yourself and you will lay the foundation for helping others do the same.  Manz points to Matthew 7:5, which says, “First take the log out of your eye, then you will see clearly to take the speck out of your neighbor’s eye.”

Optimal leadership requires that we keep our insides (our self-leadership heart) as well as our outsides, clean.  Jesus is more concerned with honesty & integrity than he is with our “professional image” or “executive presence”.

To learn more about the other three themes from Jesus’ leadership, click here.