Bob Turner

Where Do We Start?

On occasions a nugget comes through and it is exciting to read and share with others, especially in leadership matters. Today is one of those days. Nido Qubein said, “Your present circumstances don’t determine where you can go; they merely determine where you start.”

There is much depth to this idea.

The tendency most of us share is allowing present circumstances to determine where we can go, which results in limited possibilities.

However, when we see our present circumstances as merely the starting point, the possibilities become unlimited.

There is something to the idea surrounding the “will to want to” when achieving the plans that have been established.

We must not allow our present circumstances to shape our thinking, direct our steps, or hinder our growth and development.

These circumstances must provide a launching/starting point for moving forward to achieve our desired goals.

What Questions Are We Asking? Part 4

To this point, we have considered three questions that all great leaders ask. There is a fourth question these leaders ask that is also significant to consider: “What might be missing?”

Mike Maddock, who writes for Forbes online, claims “great leaders are open to the fact (and it is a fact) that they are missing something.”

We do not have the space to list all the possible answers to this question. It should be noted that what is missing can range from the most simple of ideas to the most complex of leadership teams.

The value of asking this question, and for leaders to impress upon others the need to answer this question, demonstrates the kind of humility great leaders need in their leadership.

When humility is part of the leadership equation, along with an openness to the possibilities, then followers will provide answers.

A sense of creativity, innovation, and motivation will exist to provide a stronger morale in achieving short and long term goals.

We cannot underestimate the power of humility seen in God’s leaders.

What Questions Are We Asking? Part 3

Is this urgent or essential? What should we stop doing? These two questions provide the foundation for the questions that great leaders ask.

The third question Mike Maddock contributes in this Forbes article is another step in leadership development: “What makes you feel strongest?”

There is no doubt when it comes to great leaders needing to understand their strengths and weaknesses. They know the areas where they are weak and how to find the individuals who have strengths to complement those areas.

By doing so, great leaders continue to focus on their strengths. Numerous sources claim that leaders should focus 80% of their time in areas of their strengths and only 20% in areas of weakness.

While this may sound opposite to what we consider the right approach, great leaders tend to prove the theory.

Focusing on the areas of passion and strength makes a good leader great, and makes a great leader outstanding.

The challenge for us is taking the time to ask the right questions and make sure we provide the answers to deliver what is needed to reach our greatest potential.

What Questions Are We Asking? Part 2

Yesterday, we looked at the first of four questions great leaders ask. The article, written by Mike Maddock for Forbes, has powerful insight into questions leaders should ask. The first question involved answering the difference between what is essential and urgent.

The second question is one that also demands thought: What should we stop doing?

This question follows on the heels of the first question. Once a leader understands what is essential, there are certain elements to be eliminated.

These elements distract leaders and become time stealers, robbing leaders of the time to focus on matters of an essential nature.

Through the process of eliminating areas of lesser importance (what we should stop doing), leaders can focus their time and energy on the essential side of the “to-do” list.

The implication for spiritual leadership is significant. Spiritual leaders realize the need to prioritize life and work by recognizing the proper balance between what is urgent versus essential.

As we make our way through each question, please take time to consider the answers in application to the leadership needed in the church today.

What Questions Are We Asking? Part 1

Voltaire is noted as having said, “Judge a man by his questions rather than his answers.”

The Forbes website provides information about several areas concerning leadership.

One specific article focuses on “Four Questions Great Leaders Ask.” Over the next few days we want to look at each of these questions and how they apply to spiritual leaders.

The first question: “Is this urgent or essential?”

Every leader wrestles with determining the difference between urgent and essential matters. Often times the urgent matters distract leaders from what is essential. A common phrase is “the tyranny of the urgent.”

While leaders in every field deal with how to address the balance between these two areas, the stakes increase when considering spiritual/eternal matters.

Jesus was the Master at asking questions. One of the great studies of the Gospel accounts involves the questions asked by or of Jesus. A study of these questions demonstrates the powerful leadership of our Lord.

Spiritual leaders are needed who recognize what is essential and lead with an urgency to help others discover the way to what is essential for their lives.

Strategic Leadership…

Strategic planning involves long-term aims and interests and the means of achieving them.

The Director of Strategic Leadership at the University of Tennessee, Dr. Kate Atchley practices a strict approach to each student.

Dr. Atchley asks several questions each student must answer as they prepare for the program as part of the entrance assessment.

Where are you as a leader?

What kind of leader do you want to be?

What is the gap between these two points?

What kind of plan needs to be developed to bridge the gap?

This type of self evaluation is essential for advancing a strategic plan for leadership development. Each leader must consider where they are and where they want to be, and only when leaders understand the specifics of what separates these two points can a strategy be developed to narrow the gap and become the leader desired.

While the assessment is part of a business leadership model, the spiritual application also has powerful implications.

The relevant question to consider is, “Are we bridging the gap between where we are and where we want (or perhaps need) to be?”

A Word of Thanksgiving…

Two of the most unused, yet the most needed and powerful words are “thank you.” To be thankful and to express appreciation are descriptive of what is needed in leadership.

The primary purpose is not to spend the entire post focused on areas for which leaders should be thankful, but rather to consider why leaders should be thankful.

Leaders should be thankful because…

1) God has placed them in this position to glorify Him.

2) The opportunity to influence others for the Lord is the greatest task on earth.

3) Hope is the message provided through godly leaders.

4) Others are trusting in leaders to show them the way.

5) Leadership is making a difference on an eternal scale.

More answers could be provided if space and time allowed, but suffice it to say that leaders must recognize why they should be thankful as much as understanding what we are thankful for and the need to show gratitude.

Our God is great. Let us thank Him who has given us leaders!

Who or What Holds Us Back?

The answer to the question is surprising based on what Denis Waitley said, “It’s not who you are that holds you back. It’s who you think you’re not.”

The power of the mind is immeasurable. An old Chinese proverb says, “Limitations are but the boundaries we place in our minds.”

The idea is demonstrated in the Old Testament as ten of the spies sent into the land of Canaan delivered a bad report to the people of Israel. Their claim indicates the limitation in their thinking. They saw themselves as grasshoppers in the sight of the people.

They could not see themselves conquering the land, nor God doing so through them.

The same is true today of leaders who are held back, not because they do not have the ability, but because they do not see themselves as able to accomplish the task.

We must recognize who God is and all He can do through the power that works within us.

Stop considering who we are not. Start thinking about who God is and what He can do if we allow Him to rule in our lives.

Vision and Character…

Leadership requires an awareness of the future, a vision that points on in the proper direction. Napoleon Hill said, “The world has the habit of making room for the man whose words and actions show that he knows where he is going.”

If we assigned one word to describe the power behind this statement, it would be “confidence.”

However, this level of confidence connects both the words and actions of the individual described. Thus, there must also be a strong consistency in the character of the individual.

The lesson for leaders is nothing new.

For leaders to build the type of relationship with followers where trust exists, their character must be defined by consistency, which lays the foundation for their confidence to lead.

This may be one of the truest measures for defining integrity as it relates to spiritual leadership.

The take away is an encouragement to position our words and actions in such a way that where we lead portrays the confidence of someone whose life is consistent.

Ultimately, both should be guided by the teachings of God’s word.

Truth and Leadership…

Synonyms for truth make for some interesting application. Honest, sincere, genuine, and trustworthy are a few that seem natural and positive. However, candid, frank, forthright, and straight are words with a little more spice to them.

Considering the opposite of truthfulness leads in one direction, deception.

Leaders need to not only be truthful in relationship to followers, they need to be truthful with themselves.

One of the greatest challenges for leaders is to be honest enough with themselves to make the kind of decisions that demonstrate integrity.

Being truthful with the direction we should take may not always align with our initial choice.

Being truthful with those who are invested in following will not allow us to be self-centered.

Being truthful with God will always lead in paths of righteousness.

The application of truthfulness often falls short because leaders can fall prey to justifying their actions and convincing themselves something is true, when in reality it is false.

Leaders must be careful not to allow good intentions to vindicate pretentious actions.

Be truthful with self, others and God in all areas.