Thursday, January 28, 2016

You Are What You Think

Happy Thursday All,

You've heard the saying, "You are what you eat."  If you eat cookies, chips, donuts, and cake...what do you think your body is going to turn into?
 
Your mind is like your body.  It turns into what it gets fed.  Your mind can be a very powerful thing.  Buddha said, "The mind is everything, what you think, you become."  Another very influential person, Napoleon Hill is quoted saying,  "What you think, so you will become."

So what is it that you think?  What is it that you feed your mind?  Your mind gets fed from many different sources throughout the day. 

First off, you feed your mind your thoughts.  Do you keep positive or negative thoughts going through your mind?  Are you thinking about the good things or the bad things?  Do you think about things getting better....or do you think how bad it's going to get?

Second, you feed your mind by allowing others to feed information to you.  What are your friends talking about?  What about what your co-workers are discussing?  Are they positive or negative?  Jim Rohn has a great quote, "You are the average of the five people you spend the most time with."  Who are you spending time with?  You are probably just like them.  You get to determine if you want that or not.

Another way you feed your mind is by what you watch on TV, listen to on the radio or read in a book.  What are these modes of communication feeding you?  TV is an extremely influential mode of communication.  Just think about how much money advertisers are willing to pay to spend just 30 seconds in front of you....this year's 30 second Super Bowl ad cost...$5,000,000.  That is over $166,000 per second, wow!!!  What are you watching?  What are you reading?  What do you listen to?
 
Henry Ford is quoted saying, "Whether you think you can or you think you can't, you're right."
 
If you are interested in growing, understanding what you are feeding your mind is pretty important.  You get to pick what you feed it so choose wisely.   "Watch your thoughts, for they become words.  Watch your words, for they become actions.  Watch your actions, for they become habits.  Watch your habits, for they become character.  Watch you character, it becomes your destiny."  Lao Tzu

Have a great Thursday,


Chris

Saturday, January 23, 2016

Do You Want To?

Happy Thursday All,

This weeks Think Tank is trying to get you to think about why you want to do something.  Too many times we are seeking the how on something when really the question should be, "How bad do I want it?"

Do we really want to change our thought process to a lean thinker and eliminate waste?  How bad do we want to think that way?  What are we willing to do to change? 

Do we really want to become better communicators?  How important is becoming a better communicator to us?  What are we willing to do to improve?

If you think you might want to run a marathon, 26 miles 385 yards, the question is how bad do you want it? Are you willing to put in the time and effort to train?  It's easy to google "How to train for a marathon."  I found 37 million answers from google. The real question, do I want to do it?

The answers to these questions come down to, "How bad do I want it?"  Knowing why I want to do something is the biggest part of the battle.  Find your why and you will figure out the how.  And if that part makes sense.....to lead others, help them understand the why and they will figure out the how.

I have learned this about myself, and I'm learning it about others....If you don't want to, it ain't gonna work. Find your why.

Have a great Thursday,

Chris

Thursday, January 14, 2016

Thinking About Lean

Happy Thursday All,

Are you starting to catch on that "Lean" is here to stay?  Remember, lean is just the elimination of waste.  A lot of times it is just eliminating what is bugging you.  Do you get a little confused by it all?  Don't we all.

First off, lean can be a lot of fun.  Lean is declaring war on any waste you can imagine.  Waste can be in the form of a defective cap, over-producing too many shirts on an order, waiting on a slow computer to process, not utilizing the talents of your team members, transporting an order from one office to another by foot, having to much inventory of shirts between processes (my favorite right now), doing a motion not needed such as cc-ing people who don't really need to know, or extra processing by printing an e-mail so you have it in print and electronically saved.

Second, lean is eliminating this waste through an empowered workforce.  What does that mean you ask?  That means as a leader, it is your job to create an environment where everyone on our teams feel safe taking risk and trying things.  Don't make them feel like Dilbert....

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Third, keep in mind that each of us have many, many things to improve in our own areas.  Not that you can't help others, but finding waste in another department, pointing it out to them, and then thinking you are doing lean things....not quite Dilbert.

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Lean is not a bad word, shouldn't be a negative to anyone, and sure as heck doesn't need to be hard or confusing.  If you are working on improving ways you do things and eliminating the wastes, you are being lean.  

We are all on the same team.......let's declare war on waste!!!!

Chris

Sunday, January 10, 2016

Humble Leader

Happy Thursday, 

Are you humble?  Do you enjoy giving others credit?  Are you committed to lean?  Here is an exert from a great book I am reading, “2 Second Lean."

Besides being 100% emotionally committed to lean, a lean leader must be humble.  What does that look like?  Let me give you a tangible goal.  Commit yourself to validating, complimenting and/or recognizing the work of your employees at least ten times a day.  Your people should be accustomed to hearing you say things like, “That’s a great idea, Stacy,” or “Eric, I appreciate how hard you’ve been working on this project,” or “Actually, Nancy, I like your idea better than mine.”  When humility becomes a central attribute of the lean leadership a vortex of creativity and buy-in will follow.  When there is a culture where people know there is not an egomaniac in charge they can begin to grow and thrive.  They know that leadership is singular in their focus to give others credit above themselves.  There are no politics, no jealousies or rivalries because everybody knows they’ll be acknowledged for their contribution and more importantly, they understand their job is to acknowledge others’ contributions.  A lean culture is a generous environment.  It’s generous in giving credit to others, generous in respect, generous in offering ideas, support and help.

Stop and think about that and how it relates to you?  I think most of us would say we give credit sometimes to others, but how many of us can say we do it 10 times a day?  Keep in mind, we are all on the same team and we need each other to succeed.  Let's pull together and point out each others positives.  You & I can only succeed and grow by helping other people grow and succeed.  Zig Ziglar said it best..."You can have everything in life you want, if you will just help other people get what they want."  Help others get the praise for a job well done....there is no limit on how much you can give. 

Humble lean is all about Leadership excellence.

Have a great Thursday!

Chris