Updating that Check on the Navigation Coordinates! Did the Heart Come Along?

Updating that Check on the Navigation Coordinates! Did the Heart Come Along?

PART 2 – Did you focus enough on the heart, and tapping into emotional intelligence to review your strategy?

Last Ferocious Warmth musings I asked you to consider some strategic reset questions for a mid-year reflection on where you were heading.

These questions were to provoke debate, the sharing of different perspectives and the unearthing of some unknown or undiscussed insights into your path forward.

?As quick as a flash when the Linkedin Newsletter went out, an old friend and wise, wise man Rod, came back to me with:

'These are great tips and I certainly affirm them, yet I’d say one of the great unanswered?questions is what is the cost of the impact of our goal? Are we thinking about the impact on people and the human costs in decision making?'

Quick as a flash I sent back (paraphrasing):

Yes, yes, yes, that is what part 2 next newsletter is all about!

Why? Because it can be easy to stay too cognitive when looking at your strategic goals. This is where we can typically head to first. While this is important, it can miss the human element of change and new directions. Bringing in our emotional intelligence skills of emotional awareness and management of others brings in the balance needed to understand our barriers, commitment and success.

Some of the questions posed in the last newsletter (you’ll find them further down this article)?gave a good opportunity to head further into the space of understanding what was going on for people when being faced with change, new initiatives, new directions – if you were courageous about delving deeper. My encouragement to you is to not stay shallow, or too cognitive, move into the heart space of really understanding where people are.

?Ferocious Warmth encourages us to be prepared to be vulnerable and explore areas of discomfort and to hear things we may not want to hear.

Here are some deeper dives that we should take when assessing where we are at:

The first two are Rod’s further suggestions:

How have our teams felt about the changes/direction we have taken positives/challenges/negatives?

What cost have the changes/ directions brought - are these acceptable costs??

Here’s where you could take the questions I posed in the last newsletter to a deeper level:

1) Are we still clear on our 'why' for each of our strategic goals? Do we know exactly why we are heading down this course?

Does everyone have this same clarity? Have we afforded everyone the space and time to discuss and raise their insights and perspectives? Have we considered them properly?

2) What are we expecting things to look like by the end of the year?

Are people closely involved in this work also on board with this? Have we had these clarifying discussions?

3) Where do we need to have some rigorous debate as to where a goal is heading or tracking? Are people feeling psychologically safe to raise issues and concerns?

How aligned are these goals to the values we stand by?

4) Are we measuring the right things? Are our actions taking us to the right endpoint?

This a perfect place to ask AND ACT on Rod’s questions above.

5) Are we nourishing our relationships? Are there any misunderstandings brewing that need to be discussed?

A question that already requires courage and vulnerability.

6) Are we resourcing this work appropriately? Time, budget, empathy and understanding, professional development?

Make sure you’ve hit the cognitive AND emotional insights here.

7) Are we being flexible in our plans, experimenting and analysing our impact? Are we open if our findings suggest we change course slightly?

Do we listen to other people’s ideas, concerns, barriers and enablers?

8) Where do people need more structure, or less to move the goal forward?

What do people need from us in general? Are we understanding their needs?

This is a great heart question. Empathy and non-judgement are the key ingredients here. How healthy is the professional culture? Is it giving us momentum, or are we stuck?

9) What are we doing to support the continued connection?

Have we celebrated what has been achieved so far? Have we acknowledged the shift, the challenges and the growth?

10) Do people feel valued and seen in the work they have been doing to achieve our goals??

To help you for this one, I ask you to connect feeling valued to a feeling of belonging.

My friend and colleague, executive coach Maree McPherson OAM posted some brilliant insights in her ‘Letters to Leaders’ newsletter a week ago about belonging:

?'When our need to belong is unmet, we leak energy and focus by obsessing on the unsafe environment and relations around us. There is no performance benefit in that.

When our need to belong in a team is met, our energy and focus pour into the team’s shared mission. We can lock into our role and the tasks we are being asked to deliver. We are comfortable being vulnerable in our quest to get better. We feel secure enough to help others and point out where we could be better as a team.'

Are people locked into their contribution to the mission and feel they belong to the team?

So how did you go? If you are investing the time to dig deep around your progress, did you visit both the head and the heart??

Love to hear how you went.


Best

Tracey

?

Who Am I?

I work with leaders, leadership teams and whole organisations to help them thrive. Through both Ferocious Warmth leadership and culture, we develop approaches that support results AND relationships, safety AND stretch, compassion AND accountability. It's an approach that balances the head and the heart in context, through leadership that is high in self-awareness and seeks duality not polarity.

I also work with networks, portfolios, systems and associations in building leadership capability in education leadership.

Books:

Ferocious Warmth: School Leaders Who Inspire and Transform

The Buzz: Creating a Thriving and Collaborative Staff Learning Culture

Glue: The Stuff That Binds Us Together to do Extraordinary Things

www.traceyezard.com

[email protected]




Amy Fenton

Passionate Educational Leader Deputy Vice Principal EEC, Primo and Junior School

7 个月

So great Tracey. Looking forward to reading it!

回复

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Tracey Ezard FACEL的更多文章

  • Us and Them

    Us and Them

    You can all the systems, processes and protocols in the world. Templates with bells and whistles.

    3 条评论
  • DONE TO, DONE FOR, or DONE WITH?

    DONE TO, DONE FOR, or DONE WITH?

    The air was full of infection energy a 'buzz'. People in the room where working in smaller groups looking at some…

    5 条评论
  • The Paradox of Yet in 2025

    The Paradox of Yet in 2025

    The Paradox of Yet: Leading with Duality, Rising Beyond Polarity Over the last few weeks I have had the privilege to…

    4 条评论
  • Leading Belief Shift

    Leading Belief Shift

    As you step into 2025, I’m sure your annual implementation plan, overarching strategic goals, and frameworks are ready…

    4 条评论
  • Let Them Go With Love

    Let Them Go With Love

    A LEADERSHIP REFLECTION For Australia, it is heading towards the end of the school year. Year 12 exams are done, and…

    14 条评论
  • Leading with Ferocious Warmth

    Leading with Ferocious Warmth

    In today’s complex job of leading education, our ability to both achieve results and build strong relationships is…

    4 条评论
  • AEL - Vol 45 Issue 4 2023 - Article 2

    AEL - Vol 45 Issue 4 2023 - Article 2

    The development of a robust professional culture within schools has been given considerable attention and research in…

  • Breaking News! Culture and Strategy Eat Breakfast Together!

    Breaking News! Culture and Strategy Eat Breakfast Together!

    Strategy without culture; culture without strategy - alone, neither of them lead to high performance 'Culture eats…

    13 条评论
  • Are People Too Fragile Nowadays? Or Are We Just More Aware?

    Are People Too Fragile Nowadays? Or Are We Just More Aware?

    This week's blog is about the challenge of toxic environments and knowing when to make a change - for yourself, or to…

    9 条评论
  • Fostering a Culture of Authentic Professional Dialogue and Feedback

    Fostering a Culture of Authentic Professional Dialogue and Feedback

    *This article was originally written for the Fall 2024 edition of Principal Connections Magazine, for the Catholic…

    2 条评论

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了