After watching the Carolina Hurricanes game last night with family a great lesson in leadership first spoken by the late great John Wooden came to light...
In case you missed it, David Ayres, a 42 year old zamboni driver for a Toronto ice hockey rink was forced to play as the emergency goalie for the Carolina Hurricanes vs. the Toronto Maple Leafs because of injury in front of over 18,000 fans in a must win game for Carolina.
The Canes won 6-3 and Ayres received star of the game.
Ayres gave up two early goals but settled in to shut out the home team over the last 20 minutes. His teammates mobbed him when the game was over.
Whether it was during his junior hockey days or maybe driving around on the zamboni in an empty rink; my guess is Ayres has played that scene in his head thousands of times.
And when he finally got his shot, decades after he first imagined, he was ready mentally and...
Every day we have crucial conversations.
However, there is one single factor that determines whether that crucial conversation is difficult or not.
Want to know this secret I have learned? Sometimes in the hardest way possible.
Take 30 minutes to listen to our latest podcast and begin how to master this secret.
"Hey, I’m Dr. Tom Miller and I’ve got an idea I want to share with you today: To be an effective leader you must inspect what you expect.
An expectation is defined as believing that something is going to happen or believing that something should be a certain way.
I know I struggle with communicating clear expectations. It is something I have to work on daily. I will allow my faulty assumptions to close that expectation gap. Which has never led to great results.
As a consultant and coach for school leaders across the country, the lack of clearly understood and communicate expectations is the number one issue I see in broken relationships, poor performing teams and the cause of most conflicts.
Here are seven steps you can adopt to communicate clearer expectations:
Get clear yourself. Most things are crystal clear in...
On this day we celebrate Dr. Martin Luther King Jr and I wanted to share my reflections with you on how to create a positive change in your organization, community, home and life...the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. way.
Listen to the archived lesson by clicking below.
My notes for each of the five strategies:
On this day, as we celebrate the life of Dr. MLK – his quote the desire for lifelong learning fosters an equally strong tendency to listen.
Strategy #1: Listen: Lead by being lead: Listen to the needs of the people – only those who do not seek power, are lucky enough to hold it. To be a life long learner, it takes listening.
At 9:22 a.m. on December 21, 2019, I was lounging on the couch as it was the first day of the holiday break. Dorsey, the family dog, was giving the look. If you have a dog, you know the look.
On went my shoes, grabbed my ear buds and tuuk as I hit the garage door opener. Dorsey took a sprint out the door and into the driveway. Yelling for her to come back I noticed something looked different.
The driveway had tons of space. I walked out thinking I parked the car on the street for some reason.
Nope.
At 9:34 am I dialed 9-1-1 with one phone, and Googled “What to do when your car is stolen” with another.
You might be asking, how could your car be stolen...from your driveway!!!
For the next 60 hours, from the car being stolen until it was found, here is what I learned:
For things to change, you need to change: Don’t leave your car unlocked,...
Hey leaders, Dr. Tom Miller here and I want to share with you something I believe is critically important to your short and long term success.
Best selling author John Maxwell teaches a "Year in Review" process that I have been implementing over the past four years to double my income but work less days. Travel to different parts of the world, reduce personal debt so I could increase retirement contributions, and improve my personal health (40 lbs. weight loss) as well as lowered cholesterol.
Without evaluative experience I am basically doing the same thing over and over, but expecting a different result. That’s the definition of insanity.
As the days on the calendar end for 2019, it’s critical to look over the last year and determine:
What made this year...
Hey fellow school leaders!
I have a thought I wanted to share.
This is true in ALL aspects of your life. As a middle school director we had strong academic results but a high turnover of our staff based on our unhealthy school culture and micromanaging leadership style.
Despite having a pretty solid administrative team to lean on and being enrolled in an Education Leadership doctoral program with a dozen other principals and higher education leaders to learn from...
Many hours were spent hiding in the office closet with the public school law guide book hoping to find answers!
It wasn't until the opportunity to visit other high performing schools and strategically collaborated with more effective school leaders did the school's results change for the better (healthier culture, trust, teacher empowerment, increased...
If you are one of the 55 million people who travel on Thanksgiving Day you may want to take something or someone to listen to pass the time.
Our Principal Office Podcast has over 50 hours of content that has been downloaded over 17,000 times.
I've linked some of our most downloaded below, plus two that will work well for the holidays!!!
Travel safely!
Learn Directly from Henderson Collegiate Executive Director Eric Sanchez
Steps to Effective Teacher Feedback
Setting and Achieving Goals
Have that conversation with the difficult adult in the room!
Connect with Everyone!
As a governance coach and consultant the question I get most often is, how do we keep our board meetings on track? The answer is the pretty simple.
I have learned the hard way, as a consultant and a board chair, that if you do not prepare on the front end you will be repairing on the back end.
One of the keys to facilitating an effective and purposeful board meeting begins with the setting of the monthly agenda.
Who Sets the agenda?
The agenda is a collaborative process set by the head of the school and the board chair.
When is the agenda set?
The development of the next months agenda begins at the end of the previous board meeting. At At the close of the meeting the board chair should:
You only get answers to the questions you ask. Otherwise, doors remain locked forever.
If you are in any leadership position, and breathing, odds are you will be solving a problem today. Take the opportunity to not tell people what to do, instead, ask them questions.
Three things will happen.
1. They will feel more part of the team.
2. You'll get better long term results.
3. You will learn how your team approaches problems so you can identify the gaps in your leadership and communication.
Here are a few questions you can ask:
Questions are the most effective way...
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