Reflections on Higher Education: Culture and Energy

Culture and Energy

This series of six reflections on corporate culture was originally published in October and November 2013.  I am on summer break but I think these still have some value.  WVW.

Third in a series on Corporate Culture…

A culture is created and sustained by human energy expended to attain shared purpose.  Leadership sets the tone and pace of the development and expenditure of every member’s contribution to corporate energy flow.

Walter V. Wendler

“The key to the mystery of a great artist is that for reasons unknown, he will give away his energies and his life just to make sure that one note follows another… and leaves us with the feeling that something is right in the world.”

Leonard Bernstein

Bernstein’s energy expenditure principle applies to any work people undertake — from digging a ditch to conducting an orchestra, or teaching a student. Corporate energy is created by individuals working independently but motivated toward a common goal.

At Toyota, the Creating an Energetic Workplace initiative, introduced in 2006, was intended to develop strong relationships and a more energetic work environment. The world’s largest vehicle manufacturer believed energetic communication would lead to “employee happiness.”  Toyota wanted employees to have fun. This may sound like a truckload of naiveté on its way to OZ for a hard-boiled manager.  But, the principles of workplace satisfaction, a.k.a. “happiness,” lead to increased effectiveness, even if it sounds trite to a sophisticate.   As you might imagine, Toyota’s empirical measurement and positive trends substantiated the “bliss” brigade.  Effective leaders engage people in shared decision making.

Jeff Wolf, president of World Management Consultants, says simply that “people work for people, not companies or organizations.”  Energetic work environments are nurtured by people working towards shared goals.  A Gallup study, based on interviews with 12 million workers, at 7,000 companies, conducted over 25 years, found that, “…employee’s relationship with the manager/supervisor largely determines the length of an employee’s stay.”  Wages and benefits are important but down the list according to Gallup.

The Saratoga Institute conducted a survey of 12,000 people who had left their place of employment and it “revealed that the main reason people quit is the manager’s behavior.”

Wolf confirms the Corporate Leadership Council contention that, “a high quality leader is the single most significant factor in attracting and retaining key talent.” Effective leaders should convivially share values with staff, not for adoption, approval, or agreement but for transparency and insight… we have forgotten what honesty means.

In a blog piece dubbed “Alaka’I Managers are The New Energy Bunnies”, Rosa Say declares “Energy is what sustains a vital business, and a lack of energy is what will kill it.”  Human energy guided by a passion for excellence is the only thing that matters in an organization bent on a purposeful impact, says Say.

Tony Schwartz and Catherine McCarthy reveal in “Manage Your Energy, Not Your Time”, in the Harvard Business Review, that longer hours do not always lead to higher levels of productivity.  People may work 60 hours a week but attain only marginal effectiveness. These toiling souls get an “A” for effort, but sometimes a “C” for accomplishment. What’s more, taking a page from the Toyota experience, all that work with a lackluster return on investment may diminish “happiness.”  Exhaustion does not equal excellence, even for a rabid fan hard work.  Effective leaders should celebrate value in all positive contributions.

Schwartz and McCarthy suggest that “in order to get more out of people you have to put more into them.” This is not a technique for squeezing more juice from an orange, but rather giving the tree light and water, in turn producing oranges that have more juice.  I concur with Tony Schwartz’s chapter head in the ASTD Management Development Handbook: “The Way We’re Working Isn’t Working: More And More Less And Less.”  Schwartz’s assessment: Energy in the workplace creates a powerful corporate culture. He says, “We are guided by a fatal assumption that the best way to get more work done is to work longer and more continuously.”

The magic of energetic shared achievement rests on everyone’s shoulders.  A positive corporate culture resonates with teamwork.

Such a mindset might exist at Toyota, but it must permeate a university.  Distributed leadership and accomplishment at its zenith exists when human energy is expended to provide educational opportunity, by those who teach, to those who learn: ubiquitous and unbridled uniqueness.

Our universities should be fountains of human energy.

Pastor Rick Warren: Can you really count on God?

Can You Really Count on God?

“Trust the LORD with all your heart, and don’t depend on your own understanding. Remember the LORD in all you do, and he will give you success” (Proverbs 3:5-6 NCV).

For most of us, the reason we don’t trust God fully with our lives is because we really don’t know him. We usually don’t trust people we don’t know.The same is true with God. That’s why God wants you to know the real him — not a fake version you’ve learned from popular culture. There are many popular myths about who God is that simply aren’t true.

For example, some believe he’s like:

A cosmic cop: He’s the big, bad policeman in the sky looking to catch us doing something wrong.

The celestial Santa Claus: He’s just there to give gifts. He smiles, nods, and never really pays attention to the naughty list.

The grand, old man: He’s the old, old god who isn’t that different from you. He has his own failures and faults. But he doesn’t have any of the answers.

The Force: Like in the popular science-fiction series “Star Wars,” God is an impersonal force that we can bend to our own will.

If I thought God was like any of those popular misconceptions, I wouldn’t trust him either. But he’s not. The Bible paints an entirely different picture of the character of God.

The truth is, God is infinitely worthy of your trust because no being in the universe is as capable to influence the world around you as he is. The Bible says, “Surely God is my help; the Lord is the one who sustains me” (Psalm 54:4 NIV).

God has the power (and the desire) to sustain and help you through whatever you’re going through. He wants to give you his best for your life — and he is uniquely able to help you get there. He is the creator of the universe. He literally has all the resources in the universe that he can mobilize on your behalf as you seek to follow him.

But the key is, you must trust him.

The Bible says, “Trust the Lord with all your heart, and don’t depend on your own understanding. Remember the Lord in all you do, and he will give you success” (Proverbs 3:5-6 NCV). You can trust God with everything you are because he is able to help you succeed if you do. That doesn’t mean that God will give you all the money, fame, or power you want. But if you trust him, God will help you succeed in what he has called you to do and be.

Talk It Over

  • Which of the misconceptions about God do you think is the most common among your friends and family? How about society?
  • How would someone’s life change if they had a proper understanding of what God is like?
  • What is one area of your life where you need to begin to fully trust God?

Give hope, prayer, and encouragement below. Post a comment & talk about it.

Op-Ed: Raises should be based on merit, not ‘steps’

It’s been two weeks since Illinois lawmakers and Gov. Bruce Rauner began congratulating themselves for passing what they claimed was a balanced budget that spends every bit of last summer’s $5 billion tax increase.

Here’s the link to the editorial at Illinois News Network.

A Word for Today — Overcoming the intimidators

OVERCOMING THE INTIMIDATORS

READ NEHEMIAH 6:1 THROUGH 7:73; JOHN 17:1–26 

“I am carrying on a great project and cannot go down. Why should the work stop while I leave it and go down to you?” (Nehemiah 6:3).

Nehemiah was a man with a vision. God had called him to lead a group of exiles in rebuilding the walls of Jerusalem.

Nehemiah faced challenges. Those who opposed his task tried various tricks to distract Nehemiah and his coworkers. They tried to get him to leave and meet with them. They threatened the men doing the work—and their families. They tried to discourage the workers and make them feel ineffectual. They tried to get Nehemiah to leave the task so they could hurt him or make him stop and defend his integrity. They tried everything to get him off course. But Nehemiah saw through them and kept working.

Thought for Today: When God gives us a job to do, Satan and his cohorts will try everything to get us off track. But the key is to keep our eyes on God and keep at the task.

FCN Daily Bible Verse

Make every effort to live in peace with all men and to be holy; without holiness no one will see the Lord.
Hebrews 12:14 (Read all of Hebrews 12:14)
New International Version

Pastor Rick Warren: When you make idols, you end up like them

When You Make Idols, You End Up Like Them

“Those who make idols end up like them. So does everyone who trusts them (Psalm 115:8 GW).

I mentioned in yesterday’s devotional that everyone trusts in something. We can even make good things — like our marriages, our families, or even our ministries in the church — into idols.But trusting in things other than God can have devastating effects upon our lives. If we think who we’re with or what we do will make us totally fulfilled, we’re setting ourselves up for deep disappointment. The Bible reminds us of this in Jeremiah when he says, “Those who make idols are disillusioned” (Jeremiah 10:14 GNT).

But we do it all the time with our careers, relationships, and bank accounts. We act as if those created things give us meaning in life.

And when we do that, we’re just setting ourselves up for failure. The Bible says, “The poor, deluded fool … trusts something that can’t help him at all. Yet he cannot bring himself to ask: ‘Is this idol that I’m holding in my hand a lie?’” (Isaiah 44:20 NLT)

Oh, yes, those idols are lies. Sadly, idols don’t just stop after they’ve disappointed us, though. Eventually, they enslave us, too.

The Bible says, “Those who make idols end up like them. So does everyone who trusts them” (Psalm 115:8 GW). Whatever you value the most in life, you’re going to become like. If you value money, you’ll eventually become a materialist. If you value pleasure, you’ll become a hedonist. If you value works, you’ll become a pragmatist. If you value above all else Jesus Christ, you’ll become a Christian.

So if putting something else first in our lives warps us, why do we do it?

We want a god we can control. We want to be able to manage him. If we make money our god, we feel as if we can control it. If we make other people our gods, we set out to control them. It makes us feel better.

But we can’t control God. He says, “Don’t reduce me. Don’t try to fit me into your lifestyle. Don’t try to control me.

Talk It Over

  • How have you seen other people set up idols in their lives that eventually dominated them?
  • How can even healthy things become idols in our lives?
  • What do you need to let go of your control of so that it is not an idol in your life?

Give hope, prayer, and encouragement below. Post a comment & talk about it.

Daily Devotion for Competitors

Have you ever competed in track?  Do you remember running in a race and seeing someone caught running out of his lane?  Was that person disqualified?  That’s what happens when one runs aimlessly.

Here’s a link to Roger Lipe’s Daily Devotion for Competitors.

FCN Daily Bible Verse

Taste and see that the LORD is good; blessed is the man who takes refuge in him.
Psalm 34:8 (Read all of Psalm 34:8)
New International Version

Pastor Rick Warren: What is your greatest ability?

What Is Your Greatest Ability?

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“Live life, then, with a due sense of responsibility, not as men who do not know the meaning and purpose of life but as those who do” (Ephesians 5:15 Phillips).

You and I have a variety of great abilities. For some of us it’s the ability to do math, fix computers, or to sew. We all have abilities — even if at times we need others to point them out to us.But do you know what your greatest ability is?

Responsibility.

Responsibility is your ability to respond to life. It’s what makes you human — and it’s a gift from God. Much of your life hasn’t been in your control. You didn’t choose where you would be born. You didn’t choose who your parents would be. You didn’t choose how your parents would raise you. You didn’t choose the unique gifts and talents you would bring into the world.

Responsibility is how you handle everything else. God has given you the freedom to respond to what comes your way. How you respond to what life throws at you impacts your life more than any other factor.

In fact, in many ways, life is a test of how we handle responsibility. We spend only a fraction of our lives on this side of eternity. God doesn’t care about our achievements while we’re here on this earth. He cares about our character.

Our lives today are mere warm-up acts for what’s to come. God is testing your responsibility for what’s going to happen later on. God put you on this earth primarily for two reasons: to know him personally and to develop character.

In the past three to four decades, we’ve seen a steep decrease in responsibility throughout our culture. Many in our world live by the motto, “I’m not responsible for anything. It’s not my fault.”

That view is in stark contract with what the Bible says: “Live life, then, with a due sense of responsibility, not as men who do not know the meaning and purpose of life but as those who do” (Ephesians 5:15 Phillips).

If you’re a follower of Jesus, you know that he is the one who gives meaning in this life. You can live responsibly because you know you’re a steward of the life you’ve been given. Responsible people make the most of the life they’ve been given.

How will you use the life you’ve been given?

Talk It Over

  • What are some of the ways you’ve seen irresponsibility affect the lives of people you care about? What are some ways you’ve seen it affect your life?
  • What is one area of your life, such as finances, parenting, relationships, etc., where you feel you could be more responsible?
  • How can you make the change to be more responsible in that area?

Give hope, prayer, and encouragement below. Post a comment & talk about it

Opinion: More Illinois high school grads are leaving, for better and for good

Illinois lawmakers are finally catching on that it is a problem when high school grads enroll in well-funded universities, meaning those outside of Illinois. The bright young people don’t come back to Illinois to energize this workforce or pay taxes.

Here’s a link to the editorial at the Belleville News Democrat.

Benton, West Frankfort, Illinois News | Franklin County News