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Anonymous feedback and honest feedback can both be true. We see that with ICE, Command Climate Surveys, and the recent Unaccompanied Housing Survey — all anonymous. If you dismiss anonymous feedback as dishonest, then you’d have to dismiss those mechanisms too. Yes, Hots&Cots is anonymous, but we’ve built ways...

18,702 просмотров • 9 месяцев назад •via X (Twitter)

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Bill Cowher said, "Get comfortable being uncomfortable...Because that's the only way you could be as good as you can be." "I pushed them to be as good as they can be, but it doesn't mean I don't care about you as a person." High standards aren't cruel, they're a sign that you care. It means pushing people beyond their comfort zone and showing genuine care for people. Great leaders master the balance of high standards and compassion. 𝟓 𝐒𝐢𝐠𝐧𝐬 𝐘𝐨𝐮'𝐫𝐞 𝐋𝐞𝐚𝐝𝐢𝐧𝐠 𝐰𝐢𝐭𝐡 𝐇𝐢𝐠𝐡 𝐒𝐭𝐚𝐧𝐝𝐚𝐫𝐝𝐬 𝐚𝐧𝐝 𝐂𝐨𝐦𝐩𝐚𝐬𝐬𝐢𝐨𝐧: 1. You challenge people to be their best, not just do their best - It means you encourage your team to stretch beyond their comfort zones. You coach character and growth. Growth happens when get comfortable being uncomfortable. You're no longer satisfied with "good enough" because you believe in people and their potential. 2. You give honest feedback with genuine care - It means you deliver feedback with respect and a focus on growth. Honest feedback builds trust. By communication with compassion, you ensure feedback is received as a tool for improvement, not as an attack. 3. You hold people accountable with support - It means you expect people to meet standards and give them the tools they need to succeed. Accountability without support feels like criticism without direction and support without accountability feels hollow. Ensure people have the coaching, encouragement, and process to do what they need. 4. You lead through example - It means you model the standards that you expect from others. People follow leaders who live their values and they see what you do, not what you say. Take the time to show those values consistently whether it's communication, accountability, or work ethic. 5. You build trust with consistency - It means people know what to expect from you no matter the outcome. Inconsistency breeds uncertainty. Trust grows when people they can count on you and your leadership. It becomes a representation of character and integrity. Bottom Line: Leading with high standards and compassion isn’t easy because it requires intentionality, self-awareness, and a deep commitment to others’ growth. - - - The video comes from Bill Cowher's interview with Trey Wingo (trey wingo) on Half-Forgotten History. A great listen if you want to hear more on Bill's story!

Coach AJ 🎯 Mental Fitness

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Last summer I found myself sitting in a room in Switzerland surrounded by world leaders from completely different industries, all talking about the future of our planet. A very different environment to what I was used to! I was invited onto to a channel to give my take on leadership with my best mate and brother Jay. We talked about leadership and what it meant to us both. I always used to think leaders were born but it’s far from the truth…. They are made. My biggest realisation was that we talk a lot about leadership like it’s confidence and certainty. Like leaders always know what to do. The truth is they don’t… and that’s ok. But good leaders will go seek out better answers and grow. While poor leaders will leave it to someone else to do or turn a blind eye. The day made me realise most of my growth has come from failing. I try to lead with my best intentions, but upon reflection or feedback, I realise there was a better way to do it and then next time…. I lead better and the process repeats! And that day forced me to look at myself properly. As for me, leadership isn’t a title, or being a CEO or having an armband. It’s influence. And that’s the scary part, because everyone has it. Even my two young kids. Every morning before school I tell them the same thing: Be the sunshine in the room ☀️ Because whether we like it or not, we’re leading every single day. In the changing room. At home. In how we speak. In how we react when things don’t go our way. We’re either having a positive impact or a negative one. And that choice sits with us. For the Full interview, hit the link👇

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101,539 просмотров • 5 месяцев назад

WATCH: CBS Evening News with Tony Dokoupil anchor Tony Dokoupil’s closing commentary from Minneapolis.... “There is so much to say about the last 24 hours, but sometimes what matters most is what is yet to be said at all, and what we all still need to hear. By now, we’ve all seen the videos. Renee Good is alive and those videos, behind the wheel of her SUV, her three children expecting mom home again soon come. And we’ve seen the freeze frames, too. We’ve heard the political warfare, the clashing declarations about what happened, and unfortunately, we know the ending for Renee Good. Nothing is going to change that. Yet what we have not yet heard his one another. I spoke to people today who haven’t slept since it happened, who want ICE out now, who don’t like masked men on their street, don’t want their neighbors arrested, don’t want families ripped apart.” “I’ve heard, too, not on the streets protesting but in passionate notes in my inbox from people who want to see our immigration laws enforced, legally and peacefully and with safety for all, including the officers who, in many cases, are also parents themselves. These are both deeply American sentiments.” “But our job now is may be the most American thing of all. It’s to find a way to live with people who are genuinely different from us. To try to be fair to them, and in doing so, to make things better, and keep things decent. Because in America, no one else is going to do it for us. It’s not my job to tell you what to think about what happened here yesterday, but I can tell you we owe our children a nation that is better than the one we live in today. And I can say that because we all know it’s true.”

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834,519 просмотров • 6 месяцев назад