Title: The Leading from the Heart Workshop
1The Leading from the Heart Workshop
LEADERSHIP for the SECOND CENTURY
2Our Mission
To enable all young people, especially those who
need us most, to reach their full potential as
productive, caring, responsible citizens.
3FULLPOTENTIAL
44.5 percent
5warning
ON DECEMBER 31, 2006, THE JOB OPENINGS RATE WAS
3.2 PERCENT, ITS HIGHEST LEVEL SINCE APRIL,
2001 Source Bureau of Labor Statistics
6T h i s i s y o u r c a l l
WAKE UP
7What talent war?
17-21 -4
8Professional and business services jobs are
growing twice as fast as the overall economy.
Source Bureau of Labor Statistics
9About half of Human Resource professionals say
they are seeing new workers entering the
workforce lacking overall professionalism,
written communication skills, analytical skills,
or business knowledge. SHRM 2005 Future of the
U.S. Labor Pool Survey Report
10O N E I N F I V E
In five years, 20 percent of U.S. workers will be
fifty-five years old or older
Source Bureau of Labor Statistics
11The Baby Boom is de-booming and soon there will
be many more jobs than people available to fill
them. Why Retention Should Become a Core
Strategy Now Harvard
Management Update, October 2003
12Fact
In the war for talent, everyone is fighting over
your best employees.
13It may be time to reconsider the they have no
place else to go strategy of employee
retention. Why Retention Should Become a Core
Strategy Now Harvard
Management Update, October 2003
14Fewer than half of all U.S. workers are satisfied
with their jobs. -The Conference Board
15only half
of all employees have worked for their current
employers for at least five years
Source Bureau of Labor Statistics
16One out of four workers have been working for
their present employer for less than a year.
Source Bureau of Labor Statistics
17RETENTIONMATTERS
(Period.)
18People join an organization.
19Leadership
gtgt
MATTERS
20Are you helping your leaders reach their FULL
POTENTIAL?
21disadvantage Noun. The absence of advantage or
equality the state of being in an unfavorable
circumstance or condition.
22You will be confronted with questions every day
that test your morals. Think carefully, and for
your sake, do the right thing, not the easy
thing. - Commencement Speaker to the
St. Anselm College Class of
2002
23Ex-Tyco Chief Executive Kozlowski Sentenced to 8
to 25 YearsHeadline / Bloomberg.com /
09.19.2005
24Strong Fundamental Values We must demand of
ourselves and of each other the highest standards
of individual and corporate integrity. We
safeguard company assets. We comply with all
company policies and laws.
Source The Tyco Guide to Ethical Conduct
25We safeguard company assets. Regency mahogany
bookcase, c. 1810, 105,000 George I walnut
arabesque tallcase clock, 113,750 Custom queen
bed skirt, 4,995 Custom pillow,
2,665 Ascherberg grand piano, c. 1895,
77,000 Chandelier, Painted Iron, c. 1930,
32,500 Pair of Italian armchairs, c. 1780,
64,278 Persian rug, 20 feet by 14 feet, 191,250
26Arianna Huffington Pigs at the Trough
27Ebbers luck runs out in sweeping victory for
fedsHeadline / USA TODAY / March 16, 2005
28I said, Ship the documents to the feds. She
heard, Rip the documents to shreds.
29Theres a hole in the moral ozone and its
getting bigger. Michael Josephson
30 ONLY HALF, ONE OUT OF TWO, U.S. EMPLOYEES
TRUST THEIR SENIOR LEADERS. DO YOURS TRUST YOU?
49
Source Watson Wyatts WorkUSA 2006/2007 Survey
31With fewer than half of employees expressing
confidence in senior management, no company has
been left untouched by the fallout from recent
turmoil in the business environment. -Ilene
Gochman, Ph.D., Watson Wyatt
32Used-car salespersonslick Politiciandishonest La
wyerambulance chaser Librarianstuffy Postal
workerpostal
33Business leaderjustice-obstructing, debt-hiding,
earnings-overstating thief who uses company funds
to purchase personal artwork and to put on lavish
birthday parties for family members
34age of Corporate Governance
Leadership for the Second Century
35Consistency between an organizations stated
values and its leaders actual behavior is
critical to credibility.
36When there isbetween what leaders say and what
they do, employees immediately and rightly
recognize those leaders as frauds.
discrepancy
37PROACTI V E
- Todays leaders must demonstrate their
organizations valuesnot just in the moment of
truth, but continuously and proactivelyin order
to secure their employees trust.
38leadership is a
CRAFT
39The function of leadership is to produce more
leaders, not more followers.
Ralph Nader
40One of the most important
roles we have as leaders is to imprint these
values on each new generation of the company.
Orin Smith
41Workers who believe their
organizations act
with integrity are nine
times more likely to stay in their current jobs.
Source Walker Information Commitment In The
Workplace
The 2003 National Employee Benchmark Study
42Eighty-two percent of workers would rather earn
less money at an organization with ethical
business practices than receive higher pay at a
company with questionable ethics.
WHY BOTHER?
LRN Ethics Study 2006
43fullpotential!
44FULLPOTENTIAL?
45Employees aresearching for leaderswho will help
them reach their full potential.
46Reach yours!
47The Leading from the Heart Workshop
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