THE Bhagavad Gita is an Indian spiritual text of about 700 verses. The classic takes the form of a conversation between Krishna and Arjuna. The book by Debashis Chatterjee weaves their beautiful battlefield conversation into a narrative on the problems faced by leaders such as Arjuna and the solution provided by Krishna from a perspective that is both compelling and contemporary.
In this book, Krishna guides Arjuna through the ABCs of leadership. A for authenticity or truth; B stands for Being, which is the fundamental raw material for becoming a leader; and C stands for Convergence, which a leader achieves between his or her current reality and his & her goal, or between a problem/ challenges and its solution.
In the chapter “Leaders are Masters of their Minds”, the book poses the question: How does one begin the conquest of the turbulent mind? Krishna’s prescription is to return to the calm and stillness of the real self. Self-image is characterised by change and anxiety while the real self stands still in intense observation.
Stillness is the power behind intense action. Timeless leaders have taught us the art and science of always being still. Timeless leaders succeed only by the application of stillness. A mind that is restless, anxious, and nervous always misses the mark. Only a steady, controlled, almost machinelike hand can shoot the arrow that hits the bull’s eye. Krishna speaks of being indivisibly one with one’s goal, even like the arrowhead that has struck into the target.
An undivided concentration naturally brings about an absolutely unshakable stillness. The journey towards self-realisation involves the disciplines of silence and solitude. The Bhagavad Gita tells us: “The unreal has no being: the real never ceases to be. The final truth about them both has thus been perceived by the seers of ultimate reality”.
In the concluding chapter, the book relates the plight of the modern leader stuck on the information superhighway. Krishna argues that the busy mind is a mob of unprocessed thoughts and emotions. The only way to deal effectively with this mob is to create distance between the mob and the observer, who can now see the mob without being part of it. This observer within the leader is like the screen on which a filmed drama is projected.
For professionals navigating negative Corporate karmas, Leadership Lessons from the Bhagavad Gita offers a way forward for overcoming self-defeating habits and managing the mind’s negative chatter that is often the main obstacle to effective leadership. By promoting a leadership approach of caring for followers, stakeholders and future generations, the book offers hope for harmonious workplace relations and a protected environment.
Based on leadership by inspiration as opposed to leadership by control, Leadership Lessons from the Bhagavad Gita provides an alternative to conventional leadership. Particularly, in the times we live, where there is a crisis of faith in leadership, the insights from this book presents a vision of linked-leadership—leaders who are linked through loving-connection or bhakti-yoga with themselves (through self-knowledge), with other beings, with nature and with the supreme source. As exemplified by Krishna taking over the reins of Arjuna’s chariot, the crux of this book is leadership, not as a title or position, but as a commitment to service, excellence and virtuous character that motivates and inspires others to pursue the same
Leadership lessons from shree krishna(As in mahabharat)dhamechadk
In Hindu Mythology , Shri Krishna is considered as "The greatest Crisis manager."His name is synonymous with great intelligence , effective communication, Pure Compassion, Love affection. The remarkable ability to solve any crisis at any time faced by his followers .
In today's challenging times , we are also looking for such type of leaders as Shri Krishna, who can manage the present crisis & offer some silver bullets to the world .
Let's look at some of the anecdotes from Mahabharata & understand.
Bhagwad gita and its relation with Motivationmuktaichavan
This presentation explains the relation of various motivational theories with characters from Mahabharata. It also tried to explain the relevance of Geeta in today's organizations.
Managing an organization is like fighting a righteous war. This presentation shows plus & minus points of great war leaders who were part of this epic war.
Leadership lessons from mahabharata
The story is about the Kauravas and the Pandavas and the battle fought between them, in which the Pandavas were victorious. Krishna known as the divine avatar of Vishnu guided the Pandavas to victory.
llessons of ledership from mahabharat
For professionals navigating negative Corporate karmas, Leadership Lessons from the Bhagavad Gita offers a way forward for overcoming self-defeating habits and managing the mind’s negative chatter that is often the main obstacle to effective leadership. By promoting a leadership approach of caring for followers, stakeholders and future generations, the book offers hope for harmonious workplace relations and a protected environment.
Based on leadership by inspiration as opposed to leadership by control, Leadership Lessons from the Bhagavad Gita provides an alternative to conventional leadership. Particularly, in the times we live, where there is a crisis of faith in leadership, the insights from this book presents a vision of linked-leadership—leaders who are linked through loving-connection or bhakti-yoga with themselves (through self-knowledge), with other beings, with nature and with the supreme source. As exemplified by Krishna taking over the reins of Arjuna’s chariot, the crux of this book is leadership, not as a title or position, but as a commitment to service, excellence and virtuous character that motivates and inspires others to pursue the same
Leadership lessons from shree krishna(As in mahabharat)dhamechadk
In Hindu Mythology , Shri Krishna is considered as "The greatest Crisis manager."His name is synonymous with great intelligence , effective communication, Pure Compassion, Love affection. The remarkable ability to solve any crisis at any time faced by his followers .
In today's challenging times , we are also looking for such type of leaders as Shri Krishna, who can manage the present crisis & offer some silver bullets to the world .
Let's look at some of the anecdotes from Mahabharata & understand.
Bhagwad gita and its relation with Motivationmuktaichavan
This presentation explains the relation of various motivational theories with characters from Mahabharata. It also tried to explain the relevance of Geeta in today's organizations.
Managing an organization is like fighting a righteous war. This presentation shows plus & minus points of great war leaders who were part of this epic war.
Leadership lessons from mahabharata
The story is about the Kauravas and the Pandavas and the battle fought between them, in which the Pandavas were victorious. Krishna known as the divine avatar of Vishnu guided the Pandavas to victory.
llessons of ledership from mahabharat
One of the greatest contributions of India to the world is Holy Geeta. It is the song of god sung by sri krishna to arjuna as a counseling to do his duty in the battlefield of kurukshetra.
The bhagvad Geeta’s approach to management focuses on exploring the inner world of the self.
Ramayana is an ancient epic written by Valmiki. Today it have been considered as a management bible by all top B-schools across the globe. It defines the transformational leadership qualities of Lord Rama. It also give a clear indication of hidden qualities and abilities of employees which need to be ignited by leaders.
Leadership Training- Learning from Chuk De India- The MovieTime Rahul
This is a leadership training presentation,
learning from the Movie- Chak De India
for complete presentation Pls contact
Rahul Kumar
rajcite@gmail.com
8051139888
Mumbai
Application of ramayana to management principlesdhamechadk
Ascertaining the goals, or job to be done.
Getting mentally prepared for it.
Having a right plan.
SWOT Analysis (strength, weakness, opportunities and threats) of your business.
Leading a team- 'Leadership'.
Organizing the resources required.
Coordinating with the people.
Controlling: checking things are happening as per the plan.
Implications of bhagavad gita in management.This presentation shows the relationship between management and bhagawad gita.Lord krishna's sayings are explained in this presentation with respect to the management studies.
One of the greatest contributions of India to the world is Holy Geeta. It is the song of god sung by sri krishna to arjuna as a counseling to do his duty in the battlefield of kurukshetra.
The bhagvad Geeta’s approach to management focuses on exploring the inner world of the self.
Ramayana is an ancient epic written by Valmiki. Today it have been considered as a management bible by all top B-schools across the globe. It defines the transformational leadership qualities of Lord Rama. It also give a clear indication of hidden qualities and abilities of employees which need to be ignited by leaders.
Leadership Training- Learning from Chuk De India- The MovieTime Rahul
This is a leadership training presentation,
learning from the Movie- Chak De India
for complete presentation Pls contact
Rahul Kumar
rajcite@gmail.com
8051139888
Mumbai
Application of ramayana to management principlesdhamechadk
Ascertaining the goals, or job to be done.
Getting mentally prepared for it.
Having a right plan.
SWOT Analysis (strength, weakness, opportunities and threats) of your business.
Leading a team- 'Leadership'.
Organizing the resources required.
Coordinating with the people.
Controlling: checking things are happening as per the plan.
Implications of bhagavad gita in management.This presentation shows the relationship between management and bhagawad gita.Lord krishna's sayings are explained in this presentation with respect to the management studies.
• Bhagwad Geeta is essentially a discourse on motivation & focus on as to how under odd conditions success can be made sure?
• In this candid discussion Krishna talks about three approaches that can lead to obtaining desired results:
Path of Action, Path of Knowledge, Path of Love
• He leaves it to Arjun which path he wants to choose?
• Geeta is a synthesis of essential abilities that leaders need to exhibit to write success stories:
Intellectual Emotional Spiritual
Secretary of the Air Force Deborah Lee James called for Bold.docxkenjordan97598
Secretary of the Air Force Deborah Lee James called for Bold Leadership. But what does bold leadership mean, and what does it look like? Boldness takes courage and courage is product of vulnerability. To get to a place of bold leadership, first leaders must understand the many complex emotions that are a part of leadership (uncertainty, risk and emotional exposure) and how to manage or make use of them in a way that's healthy and productive so they can be a powerful source of influence and motivation rather than seeking to repress or ignore them or letting them spiral out of control.
These are my notes/thoughts so far, and would appreciate an opportunity to discuss/determine how to best capture these themes. I only provide this to give you a general idea of what I'm thinking. I'm not tied to any of this, and am open to feedback.
- Leading is about people – if done right it is an emotional experience, a leaders own emotions, beliefs and biases play a large role in who they are as a leader and their effectiveness.
- Leadership roles constantly generate feelings of vulnerability, but leaders are typically conditioned to hide their vulnerabilities at all costs. Leaders need to cultivate the ability to be vulnerable without feeling compelled to close themselves down in an attempt to safeguard or project the image he or she has been taught is that of a successful leader. Leaders have to develop a sense of comfort with discomfort, and understand the emotions behind it in order to r
- The ability to do this is of critical importance to a leader, for leaders not only not only manage their own emotions, but also need to be aware of the significant impact his or her emotions have on everyone around them (positive or negative). Science has shown that emotions are literally contagious--we sense them in others, pick them up and pass them on--and people are even more sensitive to the emotions of those in leadership positions or if viewed as having a high status.
Therefore understanding emotions, and having the skill set to leverage this dynamic effectively provides a leader tremendous advantage.
Leaders need to have a better understanding of the emotions that are inherent to leadership, and how to manage or make use of them in a way that's healthy and productive so they can be a powerful source of influence and motivation rather than seeking to repress or ignore them or letting them spiral out of control.
- Leadership is an inside-outside game. Leaders have to look in to see out. How we think about things impacts what we do. In today’s frenetic world, we’re often so busy doing things that we don’t notice our thinking—our Inner Operating System, which then takes on a life of its own and it is often hidden from our view. We are caught in our own habitual patterns, without noticing, at high cost since the inner life impacts personal effectiveness, creativity, innovation, and performance.
USAF Secretary James called for bold leadership in fa.
Mind Is Our Enemy If We Can't Control It.pdfXGHOSTNOVA
"Mind Is Our Enemy If We Can't Control It" is a thought-provoking exploration of the intricate relationship between the human mind and our overall well-being. This concept-driven discussion delves into the idea that while the mind can be a remarkable source of creativity, intelligence, and innovation, it can also become a formidable adversary when not harnessed and directed effectively.
The central premise of this topic revolves around the notion that an uncontrolled mind can give rise to negative thought patterns, self-doubt, impulsivity, and emotional turbulence. These internal struggles can profoundly impact our decision-making, relationships, and overall quality of life. However, the topic doesn't merely dwell on the challenges; it offers insights, strategies, and practices aimed at regaining mastery over one's mind.
Throughout the exploration, readers are introduced to mindfulness, self-awareness, cognitive reframing, and other transformative techniques that empower individuals to become architects of their own mental landscapes. By fostering an understanding of the mind's potential and limitations, the topic guides readers toward the path of self-mastery, where they can gain control over their thoughts and emotions, leading to enhanced mental clarity, emotional resilience, and personal growth.
Ultimately, "Mind Is Our Enemy If We Can't Control It" is an enlightening and motivational journey that invites readers to recognize the immense power of their minds and provides practical tools to transform it from a potential adversary into a steadfast ally on their quest for inner peace, fulfillment, and personal development.
Peter Salovey, along with his colleague John Mayer, put forth one of the first formal theories of emotional intelligence in 1990. They coined the term emotional intelligence and described it as “the ability to recognize, understand, utilize, and regulate emotions effectively in everyday life” (Yale Center for Emotional Intelligence, 2013).
The Holy Geeta is the commentary of Bhagavad Gita by Poojya Swami Chinmayananda. This presentation gives a general introduction to the book as well as Bhagavad Gita.
What is Mind Control?
Mind Control. When you hear those words a myriad of images may come to mind. You might envision a devious man using the power of his mind and will to dominate the actions of some
unsuspecting and innocent women. You may think of some clandestine cabal of world leaders
secretively planning the next steps toward a unified world economy. Or perhaps you are the cult leader (one of my favorite images) with a gathering of loyal followers ready to hear every word.
It is not likely you have in mind a loving parent reading to his children or an Alcoholics Anonymous meeting helping its members live a decent life of sobriety. It is also unlikely that, as you stand in your favorite church of worship, you will recognize the grasp that Mind Control has on you. Or as you sit with your psychiatrist you are unlikely to be aware of the subtle acts of Mind Control that are being used on you. But it is there. And for the sake of this book, any attempt to bring about a change in your thoughts and feelings, and therefore your actions, is an
act of Mind Control. That may sound shocking because most people see Mind Control as a bad thing done by bad people. So let me make it clear; the intention and motives of the controller are not relevant to this discussion. The controller may be motivated by the most altruistic
ideals or may only want your money. This book will attempt to uncover the methods of how those thoughts and feelings are instilled to bring about the controller's outcome.
To make a distinction Mind Control differs from the vulgar actions and tactics of coercion. Coercion is when all a controller wants is to have someone make a specific action and has no concern for their motivation. Threats, guilt and humiliation will usually do the job. But coercion lacks any form of grace or elegance. Coercion cares nothing about the thoughts and feelings of the people being coerced. This is the major difference between coercion and Mind Control.
Is your company’s human resources operation a true “business partner” that makes a major contribution to your bottom line? Or does it merely fulfil the daily tasks of hiring, firing and paying your employees? If the latter, don’t worry – that can change. So say the human resources experts who founded the RBL Group and the RBL Institute, a consultancy and an educational organization dedicated to helping HR leaders attain new levels of professionalism. Using the institute’s tools and tactics, you can “transform” your human resources department into a valued, knowledgeable and contributing member of your corporate team. While you don’t have to be a human resources professional to benefit from this book, its HR-speak presents a pretty dense thicket that might daunt a novice.
Why is a great company culture so rare? How can you make sure your organization has one? The good news is that creating an inspiring and sustainable culture is not as hard as you might think. Dr. David “Doc” Vik reveals the keys to success in The Culture Secret.
A remarkable culture begins with visionary leaders who help their teams take a holistic approach to creating engagement inside their companies and sharing it with customers. Discover how to take culture beyond casual Friday and into more meaningful conversations like:
•Driving Vision
•Defining Purpose
•Clear business model
•Unique/WOW factors
•Meaningful Values
•Inspired Leadership
•Great customers and customer service
•Brand enhancement
•Experience and the emotional connection
If you don’t think you have to focus on attracting—and retaining—the best employees in today’s hypercompetitive war for talent, you are living in the past. The employees and customers of today have a choice and a voice. The secret to culture is simple: take care of your people, never stop innovating, and leave customers wowed. Build a better culture to secure the future for any organization
Drawing upon a six-year research project at the Stanford University Graduate School of Business, James C. Collins and Jerry I. Porras took eighteen truly exceptional and long-lasting companies and studied each in direct comparison to one of its top competitors. They examined the companies from their very beginnings to the present day -- as start-ups, as midsize companies, and as large corporations. Throughout, the authors asked: "What makes the truly exceptional companies different from the comparison companies and what were the common practices these enduringly great companies followed throughout their history?"
Filled with hundreds of specific examples and organized into a coherent framework of practical concepts that can be applied by managers and entrepreneurs at all levels, Built to Last provides a master blueprint for building organizations that will prosper long into the 21st century and beyond.
How Stella Saved the Farm is a simple and logical book based on a story which narrates the learning process about making innovation happen. The book is divided in two parts and consists of total nineteen chapters. First part carries nine chapters and remaining are under the second part, which explains the conversion of idea into innovation and then great success. The story is about the competition of two farms one run and managed by animals (Windsor farm) and another by human beings (McGillicuddys farm). Windsor farm is working through change and innovation where the status quo is no longer good enough. Interestingly, in view of poor performance of Windsor farm McGillicuddy is hoping to take over the Windsor farm, but due to the innovations, Windsor farm crosses all hurdles and gets a remarkable status in the business.
Rumelt describes strategizing as identifying pivotal issues within your market and your industry and making a plan focused on forceful, results-oriented action. He reminds readers that strategy has little to do with ambitious goals, vision, leadership, innovation or determination. For many business leaders, strategy means promulgating meaningless slogans that tout impressive but unrealistic goals. A sound business strategy presents a specific action plan to overcome a defined challenge. Rumelt says good strategy involves multiple analyses and the painstaking development of thoughtful, expertly implemented policies that surmount obstacles and move the firm profitably ahead.
Can passion be taught? Can it be fostered? The answer is yes. But perhaps more accurately, a team leader must create the right conditions for passion to emerge. Those conditions must be nurtured, not unlike a gardener creating the right conditions for his plants to flourish. Make your job easier. Get the inside scoop on the secrets of success that motivate teams to top performance. In the matrix of workplace roles and responsibilities, managers are pivotal to corporate success. Yet a manager is often the unsung hero who must adapt to demands from all sides—and do so with little or no training, and without mentorship for the role. Learn from Dan Bobinski, who draws from 20 years of consulting experience, extensive studies of best practices, and the latest in neuroscience research. You'll learn the principles and methods top managers use to develop passionate, engaged employees who are dedicated to success. You'll be able to:
— Motivate without manipulating
— Turn mistakes into a fervent drive for quality
— Equip teams to enthusiastically adapt to change
— Create environments in which people strive for excellence—and more
Today's workforce requires managers to be more than just a person in charge. Creating Passion-Driven Teams show you how to tap your team's natural motivations and achieve consistent, sustained top performance.
Whether corporate governance is a burden meant to report compliance on companies’ performance, or can it be used as a competitive advantage in view of the changing laws, awareness and scenario is the important question which is present in the minds of those at the top of the company affairs including the CEO, Directors and Boards.
The book under reference, “Boards that Deliver”, by Ram Charan attempts to answer this question in a certain and prudent manner. The author believes that with the right set of practices, any group of directors can become a board that delivers value to the management and to the investors and goes ahead to demonstrate his points giving directions on various steps to be taken to make this happen.
"I'm the boss!"
It's a common mistake to think management is defined by formal authority—the ability that comes with a title to impose your will on others. In fact, formal authority is a useful but limited tool.
People Want More Than a Formal, Authority-Based Relationship with the Boss
Many managers—especially those who were achievement-driven stars as individual performers—don't even think about relationships. They're so task oriented that they put the work to be done and their authority as boss at the heart of what they do and assume they can ignore the human aspects of working with others.
The problem is that most people don't want your authority to be the be-all and end-all of the relationship. They want a personal, human connection, an emotional link. They want you to care about them as individuals. They want you to encourage their growth and development. Research tells us this kind of human relationship with the boss is a key factor determining an employee's level of engagement with the work.
We know of a small-company owner, a warm, decent woman, so pressed for time she consciously decided to avoid small talk at the office. She never opened up to people about herself or asked about their lives and interests. She didn't, that is, until her people rose up and expressed, through an intermediary, that they hated how she treated them. They wanted a real human connection with her, even if she was "the boss."
In his previous bestseller, Built to Last, Jim Collins explored what made great companies great and how they sustained that greatness over time.
One point kept nagging him, though — great companies have, for the most part, always been great, while a vast majority of good companies remain just that: good, but not great. What could merely good companies do to become great, to turn long-term weakness into long-term supremacy?
Collins and his team of researchers used strict benchmarks to identify a group of eleven elite companies that made the leap from good to great and sustained that greatness for at least fifteen years. The companies that made the list might surprise you as much as those left off (the likes of Intel, GE
and Coca Cola are nowhere to be found).
The real surprise of Good to Great isn’t so much what good companies do to propel themselves to greatness — it’s why more companies haven’t done the same things more often.
Value for the Reader :
The reader will walk away with a set of highly referred tools for increasing the personal & professional Mojo, which the author defines as “ That Positive Spirit towards what we are doing now that starts from the inside and radiates to the outside”
He defines his purpose as “ helping successful people achieve positive, lasting change in behavior “ . It is a real world advice embodied in simple processes for the reader to consider using that can improve his or her thinking , behavior and results.
Very thought provoking book and helps the reader to lead a happier, more purposeful and more productive life.
Strong Leaders at all levels within an organization are a requisite for business success. Yet the leadership pipeline –internal architecture for growing leaders is often broken or
nonexistent. This updated edition of the bestselling book has been revised to help address the challenges of today’s business environment. Anchored in experience based case studies, this
remarkable book synchronizes a proven model for planning leadership succession and development for corporate organizations. The Second edition is an improvement based on
learning and review of the authors who have drawn their work at more than one hundred international companies over a period of ten years since the first edition of the book with the same title was published. The book under review is addressed to the leading corporate organizations, where the succession path of leaders/ chief executives is being formulated & executed on a continuous basis to perpetuate the organization and make it strong and robust while facing trials and tribulations of corporate growth and success.
We attempt or avoid difficult conversations every day-whether dealing with an underperforming employee, disagreeing with a spouse, or negotiating with a client. From the Harvard Negotiation Project, the organization that brought you Getting to Yes, Difficult Conversations provides a step-by-step approach to having those tough conversations with less stress and more success. you’ll learn how to:
· Decipher the underlying structure of every difficult conversation
· Start a conversation without defensiveness
· Listen for the meaning of what is not said
· Stay balanced in the face of attacks and accusations
· Move from emotion to productive problem solving
In the continual quest for sustainable growth, companies
have traditionally focused on the competition.
They have fought over the same customers, tried to
improve on the same benefits, and hoped to wring
profits from a shrinking revenue stream. In Blue
Ocean Strategy, professors W. Chan Kim and Renée
Mauborgne argue that the key to success is to make the
competition irrelevant. They offer a practical, tested
analytical framework that innovators in any sector
can use to create new, uncontested market space. In
this “blue ocean,” organizations can take advantage
of untapped demand and deliver powerful leaps in
value—both for their customers and for themselves.
Emotional Intelligence 2.0 , a self-help book by Travis Bradberry and Jean Greaves, provides a toolkit and guide for readers to increase their emotional intelligence (EQ), which the writers say can be a benefit in business and personal relationships.
You can no longer count on a return to “ Normal” competitive conditions. The business world is flat, with capital & knowledge able to move anywhere instantly. Brands are losing value, regulations are increasing and competitors can come out anywhere. Filtered information, Selective hearing, Wishful thinking, Fear and Emotional over investment can all act to prevent an organization from Confronting and dealing with reality.
As a way to understand reality, the authors put a high premium on business savvy- the ability to understand the fundamentals of a business, and the connections between them. The book presents a model and process to help leaders learn business savvy to recognize the position of their business in wider external realities and to take action based on that understanding.
The triple bottom line consists of financial profit (or success), social justice, and environmental protection. It is sometimes summarized as “Profits, People, and Planet.” An intimately related concept is “sustainability”---corporations that are built to last, societies that are stable and just, and a global natural environment that is in a healthy equilibrium. The basic argument is that we live in a time when a narrow, short-term focus on the financial bottom line alone will generate dysfunctions among people and in the environment that will come back to bite the corporation.
Sustainability and the “3BL” are, instead, about mutual benefits flowing in all three directions. The challenge is to find the sustainability “sweet spot” (think golf) where all three interests coincide. Example: Toyota’s Prius low-fuel hybrid benefits the environment, the people who build or buy them, and the owners of the company. Certainly there will be trade-offs; 3BL choices and strategies will require negotiation and compromise. But this is now an economic reality, not just an altruistic dream
It could be argued that what’s new here is just a strong case that financially successful companies must think more broadly and holistically and be sure to take into account all their stakeholder interests, including the environment and society. But it is still the financial bottom line driving the business.
Business ethics is a huge canvas, bigger than sustainability, CSR, corporate governance, or the 3BL. Business ethics is about doing the right thing and building good organizations. Business ethics and values grow out of purposes, missions, and visions and are organically intertwined with corporate cultures. There are more than three bottom lines---there are bottom lines related to every stakeholder. Business ethics doesn’t just ask how to keep three of those stakeholders (owners, environment, society) going and make them last (sustain them) but about what is right and fair and just, about what would constitute excellence and success.
By reading this book or the summary you learn about
· Why Leaders are effective because of who they are on the inside –Being of the person.
· How to go the highest level of leadership by developing character qualities from the inside out.
· How true commitment inspires and attracts people.
· How to start and sustain the process of continuous personal growth.
The commonly held belief that life gets easier at the top is partly true. The loftier your role in a large enterprise, the more control you have over your day-to-day activities and more you are compensated for them. But the challenges also get tougher. For one thing, you are more visible. Your mistakes, and your ability to recover from them will be noticed. Also, fewer positions exist at that rarefied level. To advance, you have to either displace someone above you or create an entirely new business. Failure is not an option, unless you can make it seem like success. To manage all this with Integrity- that is a challenge indeed.
There are two ways to proceed. You can practice relentless discipline: curbing every impulse, making every moment count , and preparing diligently for each potential challenge. Or you can approach the world with insouciant savoir-faire, trusting that your charm and resourcefulness will get you through while making it all look easy.
At the heart of this book is a question about the proper way to live. To what extent must we lead disciplined lives to be powerful people? Is that discipline a matter of duty, compensation for the original sin of being imperfect, or is it a matter of joy, of calling forth the inner golden virtue that lies deep within all of us ? In Goldsmith’s eye, it is both- and it is both- an if you dare to take on the practices he recommends, you may come to agree with him.
John Maxwell’s “The 21 Irrefutable Laws of Leadership” is a book that I have found quite helpful in measuring my own personal growth in leadership abilities, as well as in finding the areas where I struggle or need to grow. The premise of this book is not to say there are only 21 principles concerning leadership. That idea is clearly false, proven by the number of leadership books, articles, blogs, and podcasts available today. Rather, accord to Maxwell, there are 21 “laws” to leadership that are universally true no matter where one may lead in any culture or area of society. (Note: Sociologists generally agree that there are 7 “areas of society” which are business, government, media, arts and entertainment, education, the family, and entertainment.)
Since each chapter of this book discusses one of the leadership laws, it will be most beneficial for this book review, to walk through theses laws one at a time.
Artificial intelligence (AI) offers new opportunities to radically reinvent the way we do business. This study explores how CEOs and top decision makers around the world are responding to the transformative potential of AI.
Oprah Winfrey: A Leader in Media, Philanthropy, and Empowerment | CIO Women M...CIOWomenMagazine
This person is none other than Oprah Winfrey, a highly influential figure whose impact extends beyond television. This article will delve into the remarkable life and lasting legacy of Oprah. Her story serves as a reminder of the importance of perseverance, compassion, and firm determination.
The case study discusses the potential of drone delivery and the challenges that need to be addressed before it becomes widespread.
Key takeaways:
Drone delivery is in its early stages: Amazon's trial in the UK demonstrates the potential for faster deliveries, but it's still limited by regulations and technology.
Regulations are a major hurdle: Safety concerns around drone collisions with airplanes and people have led to restrictions on flight height and location.
Other challenges exist: Who will use drone delivery the most? Is it cost-effective compared to traditional delivery trucks?
Discussion questions:
Managerial challenges: Integrating drones requires planning for new infrastructure, training staff, and navigating regulations. There are also marketing and recruitment considerations specific to this technology.
External forces vary by country: Regulations, consumer acceptance, and infrastructure all differ between countries.
Demographics matter: Younger generations might be more receptive to drone delivery, while older populations might have concerns.
Stakeholders for Amazon: Customers, regulators, aviation authorities, and competitors are all stakeholders. Regulators likely hold the greatest influence as they determine the feasibility of drone delivery.
Senior Project and Engineering Leader Jim Smith.pdfJim Smith
I am a Project and Engineering Leader with extensive experience as a Business Operations Leader, Technical Project Manager, Engineering Manager and Operations Experience for Domestic and International companies such as Electrolux, Carrier, and Deutz. I have developed new products using Stage Gate development/MS Project/JIRA, for the pro-duction of Medical Equipment, Large Commercial Refrigeration Systems, Appliances, HVAC, and Diesel engines.
My experience includes:
Managed customized engineered refrigeration system projects with high voltage power panels from quote to ship, coordinating actions between electrical engineering, mechanical design and application engineering, purchasing, production, test, quality assurance and field installation. Managed projects $25k to $1M per project; 4-8 per month. (Hussmann refrigeration)
Successfully developed the $15-20M yearly corporate capital strategy for manufacturing, with the Executive Team and key stakeholders. Created project scope and specifications, business case, ROI, managed project plans with key personnel for nine consumer product manufacturing and distribution sites; to support the company’s strategic sales plan.
Over 15 years of experience managing and developing cost improvement projects with key Stakeholders, site Manufacturing Engineers, Mechanical Engineers, Maintenance, and facility support personnel to optimize pro-duction operations, safety, EHS, and new product development. (BioLab, Deutz, Caire)
Experience working as a Technical Manager developing new products with chemical engineers and packaging engineers to enhance and reduce the cost of retail products. I have led the activities of multiple engineering groups with diverse backgrounds.
Great experience managing the product development of products which utilize complex electrical controls, high voltage power panels, product testing, and commissioning.
Created project scope, business case, ROI for multiple capital projects to support electrotechnical assembly and CPG goods. Identified project cost, risk, success criteria, and performed equipment qualifications. (Carrier, Electrolux, Biolab, Price, Hussmann)
Created detailed projects plans using MS Project, Gant charts in excel, and updated new product development in Jira for stakeholders and project team members including critical path.
Great knowledge of ISO9001, NFPA, OSHA regulations.
User level knowledge of MRP/SAP, MS Project, Powerpoint, Visio, Mastercontrol, JIRA, Power BI and Tableau.
I appreciate your consideration, and look forward to discussing this role with you, and how I can lead your company’s growth and profitability. I can be contacted via LinkedIn via phone or E Mail.
Jim Smith
678-993-7195
jimsmith30024@gmail.com
The Team Member and Guest Experience - Lead and Take Care of your restaurant team. They are the people closest to and delivering Hospitality to your paying Guests!
Make the call, and we can assist you.
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W.H.Bender Quote 65 - The Team Member and Guest Experience
Timeless leadership
1. Some Impressionistic Take away
from the Book of Debashis Chatterjee
Timeless Leadership
( 18 Leadership Sutras )
Ramki
ramaddster@gmail.com
2. About the Author
Professor Debashis Chatterjee has taught leadership
classes at Harvard University and at the IIM –Calcutta ,
Lucknow and Kozhikode for over two decades.
He has bee awarded the prestigious Fulbright Fellowship
twice for Pre-doctoral and Post-Doctoral work at the
Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University.
He published work include 17 books including Leading
Consciously , Timeless Leadership and Invincible Arjuna that
have been translated in several international languages.
He has trained more than 25000 managers globally in
Fortune 100 Corporations and over 20000 school Principals
and Teachers.
He has served as Leadership coach to political leaders and
CEOs of major Indian organizations.
He has served as Dean of International business school in
Singapore.
Director of IIM –Kozhikode from 2009-2014 and Dean and
tenured Professor at IIM Lucknow.
He was recently appointed as Director of IIM –Kozhikode for
a second 5 years terms
3. Prelude- 1/2
The plot of the Mahabharata, including the circumstances in which the
sermons of the Gita were delivered, is well known.
On the brink of the Kurukshetra war between the Pandavas and the
Kauravas, Arjuna, leading the Pandava army, has second thoughts
about taking up arms against the Kauravas, whose leaders are his
cousins.
Krishna, his charioteer, remonstrates with him and finally persuades him
to dump his doubts. The arguments he uses comprise the Gita - a book
within a book, and easily the most-closely analyzed of all the sacred
Hindu texts.
The central theme of Krishna's lecture, Nishakama karma - the need to
engage in action, but with detachment, without expecting any reward
from it - is also widely known, and, indeed, has been much debated.
Some have argued that the "fatalism" Indians are sometimes accused of
stems from internalizing the concept of Nishakama karma. Again, in The
Argumentative Indian, Amartya Sen has made the case that Arjuna's
initial reaction could well be as valid a moral position as that of Krishna's
4. Prelude- 2/2
Chatterjee maintains Arjuna's dilemma should resonate with modern day
executives since all wars are initially fought in the mind.
Arjuna's "near and dear ones", whom he does not want to fight, can be
compared with "the thoughts and emotions we are deeply attached to", or
the difficulty all of us face in "evolving out of our comfort zones".
"Arjuna is not unlike a (business) leader who has to navigate the corporate
world through shifting moods that cloud his vision and distort his
awareness," he writes. "Fear of the boss, pressure of deadlines, grief over
job losses, long hours of separation from the family, self pity and shame
resulting from underperformance - all of these paralyze a person at work.“
Later chapters elucidate related concepts in the Gita such as the unity of
thought and action - renunciation, a favorite Hindu theme, does not imply
doing nothing, it notes - or the power that comes from having an honest
purpose, or the importance of overcoming the ego, or of pursuing
perfection, not success. Likening the Gita to "a conversation on
performance enhancement", He also reinterprets certain passages to
stress the importance of keeping information overload - and the resulting
attention deficiency - at bay.
5. Sutra -1 – The Warrior’s Journey
Leaders Embrace Discontinuity & Death
“Death is very likely best invention of life. It is life’s
change agent. It clears out the old to make way for the
new. Right now the new is you, you will gradually
become the old and cleared away. Sorry to be so
dramatic, but it is quite true”
– Steve Jobs
6. Leading an organization of the twenty-first century requires more
than just a firefighter’s skill of putting out fires as and when they
reach alarming proportions.
The true warrior does not deplete his energy in emotional drama
that binds him to self-defeating patterns of fear and guilt. He
pierces through his self-created enemies with the sword self-
awareness and the shield of sharp discrimination.
All wars are first fought in the mind
All wars are first fought in the mind. Therefore, it is in the mind that all
wars must first be won.
We have the boon of choosing and the curse of the conflicts that we must
face when we have many choices. Whenever there is conflict in the world,
human beings have to realize that there is no such thing as a conflict in
reality. All conflicts reside in the content of our own mind.
Conflict arises when a mind is reluctant to get out its entrenchment in a
familiar way of life.
Sutra -1 – The Warrior’s Journey
7. The Mind is a mob
The agitated mind is a mob of thoughts and emotions.
What happens when the mind behaves like an unruly mob?
It loses power to act wisely. When the mind is unruly and indecisive, the body follows
through non-action.
When the mind behaves like a mob there are countless mutinies going on within it.
When a leader confronts turbulence in an organization his or her will to take decisive
action is seriously impaired by the irresolute mind.
A leader whose will is crippled wonders, “What will people think about me in my
organization if I act this way instead of that” He becomes a victim of self doubt.
A mob is an unruly capricious crowd. In a mob the individual loses the power to think
deeply and act out of individual will. A mob is unsteady and its actions are no longer
governed by rationality or a steady flow of individual will.
What most leaders do when they are caught in crisis an organization.
They express their own inadequacy through worry, impulsive behavior, and unsteady
will. They hold onto their own restless minds like a drowning man holding onto a straw.
To lead any organization, objectively in dealing with own’s mind is a crucial virtue.
Leaders can acquire this objectivity only when they know how to bypass their ego when
they are dealing with their own mind.
Sutra -1 – The Warrior’s Journey
8. The Ego is a disposable idea
An idea is like mental tissue paper that must be disposed of when it
outlives it utility. Yet we hang on to ideas as though they were
inseparable from us.
The wise grieve neither for the dead nor for the living form.
Have you ever thought of war as a clash of ideas and ideals? Very
often that’s how most wars begin. When old ideas are sought to be
replaced by new ideas, war becomes inevitable.
It is also about transformation: a change of mind and heart. Very
often the transformation of leaders happens during a crisis.
The ego cannot deal with threats to its own continuity; it cannot
embrace discontinuity in its habitual storyline.
Sutra -1 – The Warrior’s Journey
9. Leaders embrace discontinuity by dispossessing the Ego -1/2
To look beyond the ego is to embrace discontinuity.
Life moves on discontinuously; the ego struggles to hold back.
Life is multidimensional. Ego is personality centered and one-
dimensional.
Life is timeless and free flowing. The ego is conditioned by time,
space and personality.
The wise person is the one who does not grieve for finite and
fleeting forms.
A leader who is established in this wisdom is sustained by the
timeless order of life.
By embracing discontinuity leaders reinvent the future.
The future is often discontinuous with the past. Past forms perish;
old relationships fade away.
Sutra -1 – The Warrior’s Journey
10. Leaders embrace discontinuity by dispossessing the Ego -2/2
Old habit die-hard. A leader has to destabilize existing forms of
thought and action.
A leader has to learn to deal with discontinuity. Discontinuity comes
with an obvious sense of loss. How do leaders deal with it?
They do so by embracing the deeper continuity of the spirit
underlying the fragmentation of forms.
This is done through the power of internalization of one’s energies.
While looking inward, the leader is able to retrace the energy from
the diversifying sensory apparatus to the unity of soul within.
His or Her outgoing, differentiating, and fragmenting tendencies
are balanced by his or her internalizing and integrating and
meditative mind.
Sutra -1 – The Warrior’s Journey
11. The Secret of invincibility: The conquest of binary mind
The real duty of a warrior is not just to fight a righteous war.
The warrior’s aspiration is to enhance his or her own evolutionary capacity
while his or her is involved in the fight.
He or She needs to engage his or her entire physical & mental energy while
fighting. To keep his or her mind steady in the fight, he or she needs to stop
wasting the energy that his or her conflicting mind consumes.
He or She needs to overcome his or her emotional turmoil rather than be
overwhelmed by it.
He or She knows that he or she cannot always determine whether he or she
will win or lose – that will depend on multiple factors over which he or she
may or may not have control.
However, he or she can decide to go to battle with utmost intensity. He or she
will not die in his mind many times before his death.
This will make him or her invincible.
A mind that harbors dejection loses the battle even before it is fought.
The warrior becomes invincible when his or her work and their goal become
one..
Sutra -1 – The Warrior’s Journey
12. Self is the Cause ; Self is the Effect
A loser is self-made, and so is a winner. The raw material for all our
actions and all our achievements comes from our self.
In the ultimate analysis, leadership is Self-situated: you are the cause and
you are also the effect.
Hunting for the I
The warrior’s primary hunt is for the I that is whole and all-embracing.
It is the ultimate quest in all forms of human conflict.
The human identity is fragmented in many ways; us-versus-them; me
versus-you; intellect versus-emotion; old-versus-new; right-versus-wrong.
War is merely a symptom that we are attempting to heal this
disintegration.
To heal is to find our “wholesome” identity in the journey.
Sutra -1 – The Warrior’s Journey
13. Sutra -2 – Invincible Wisdom
Leaders Create Alternate Reality
Timeless leaders do: They reframe reality in a way
that gives hope to their followers, often in the most
hopeless of circumstances.
14. Grief, Pity and Shame: The Mind’s GPS system
Thoughts are like brick and feelings are like cement.
Together they create the illusion of a concrete structure of reality. This concrete structure
can be described as a mental model. When those shifting moods of grief guide a mental
model, pity and shame the world looks like a hopeless place.
Timeless leaders learn to discriminate between the real and the unreal.
Such leaders rise above the flood of emotions at work by means of this kind of
discrimination.
Creating alternative reality
Leadership is the art of creating alternative reality. Leaders always bring a refreshing
perspective that reframes current reality.
To change your reality changes the mental filters through which you look – your own
perspective.
Do not get stuck in the duality of pleasure or pain or in the though of losing or winning.
When one is stuck either in pain or pleasure, suffering is the result. There is a way out of
this suffering.
This is the way of mental equipoise or shitapragnya. In this state of mind one is not
affected by circumstances of pain or pleasure or victory or defeat. One just continues to
work with equanimity of mind beyond one’s immediate gain or loss. In this state of
consciousness a leader begins to glimpse a whole new world beyond one’s narrow ego-
slot.
Sutra -2 – Invincible Wisdom
15. Motivation & Monkey’s mind
Desire is limiting perception to focus on an object or a person we desire.
Desire is a process of narrowing of perception.
When we narrow our perception often enough, desire becomes restless
obsession. Restlessness is a symptom of the monkey mind.
Timeless leaders do not motivate followers; they just enable their followers so that
they can inspire themselves.
The leaders inspiration comes from unselfish work.
The timeless secret of work, called nishkama karma or unselfish work.
The four facets of Nishkama karma are:
One has to be fully devoted to the work on hand to get the results.
Worrying over results cannot help, as the doer’s ego does not determine the
results.
The cause of the results is not just the selfish motive of the doer but the sum
of many contributions.
Therefore one needs to be detached from selfish motives.
Work is inevitable and no one can choose to be inactive.
Sutra -2 – Invincible Wisdom
16. Timeless leaders realize that the results are not separate from the
process of action. When all the processes of action are right and timely,
results are bound to follow.
Timeless leaders realize that work itself is inevitable. One cannot avoid
work because even as one is lying in bed, the organs of the body and
mind are still in work-mode:
The heart is beating; the brain is thinking thoughts, and so on. But work
that comes from the highest intent of contribution becomes an irresistible
force of transformation in the organization and society.
Unselfish work leads to evenness of mind.
The mind is carried away by the senses as a boat unanchored can be
tossed by the wind.
Timeless leaders realize that great work happens when there are
simultaneously fluidity and steadiness in the thought process. While
physical work is visible external movement of energy, mental work is
invisible internal movement of the same energy.
Sutra -2 – Invincible Wisdom
17. Applying invincible wisdom: Powered by the intellect and driven by
Unselfishness- 1/2
Timeless leaders know the difference between knowledge and wisdom.
Knowledge is like a library; a storehouse of valuable information.
Wisdom is the ability to process this knowledge and apply it at the right
time and the right place.
All the knowledge of the world – that which belongs to the past, present,
or future – comes from the sensing, feeling and thinking mind.
The mind is the largest library of the universe. To a leader the world
outside is merely the field of application.
The faculty in the human constitution that helps us apply knowledge
wisely is called the intellect. The result of cultivating the intellect is
concentration and steadiness of the mind.
Concentration is the integrating capacity of the mind to a focal point of
thought or action. Integration is power; disintegration is weakness.
Sutra -2 – Invincible Wisdom
18. Applying invincible wisdom: Powered by the intellect and driven by
Unselfishness- 2/2
The human mind is the executive assistant to the CEO called the
intellect. The mind receives data and perceptions from its inbox tray
called the senses.
Then the mind classifies this information, files, it, and sends it to its CEO,
the intellect, for its decision.
The intellect, based on its own past experiences and its powers of
judgment, make a final decision and conveys it to the mind for
implementation. The mind then sends this decision to the outbox tray
from where the organs of action pick up the final decision and implement
it.
If the intellect is weak, the quality of decision-making will be poor and
therefore implementation will be poor, too. Work unselfishly with an
inspired heart and a steady mind that is guided by the intellect.
Sutra -2 – Invincible Wisdom
19. Sutra -3 – Karma Yoga
Leaders Enter the Timeless Cycle of Action
20. The Warrior is Worrier
There are different strokes for different folks, as they say.
Temperamentally, leaders may be classified: the contemplative and the
active.
For a warrior it is a matter of shame to be unable to follow a decisive line
of action.
Work and its secret: action, inaction and effortless action
By not performing work you will never find freedom. By giving up action no
one attains perfection.
Merely by being inactive, by restraining the organs of action, one cannot
prevent action from happening. Inaction is nothing but hypocrisy. So called
inaction in also a negative action against the dharma of the warrior whose
duty is to act in the battlefield.
By energetic and cheerful performance of one’s duty one can move toward
true Self-knowledge.
Intense and conscious action unleashes the productive potential that is
latent in our muscles and in our minds.
Sutra -3 – Karma Yoga
21. Work and its secret: action, inaction and effortless action
By diligently performing one’s obligator actions, a leader moves to the
next stage of evolution at work – the stage of effortless action.
As the leader begins to work with deep attention, work becomes more
engaging. Attention makes any work engaging. Work we love to do never
tires us.
In the state of effortless action, we still work very hard and yet we do not
feel the drudgery as our being transcends our physical nature and we
reclaim the experience of the higher dimension that is inside us.
Work as Worship
It is not the action itself but the spirit behind the action that makes the
action effortless.
Workship literally means, “work as worship”. More explicitly, this phrase
signifies that when work is done in the spirit of worship, the quality of the
work undergoes a metamorphosis.
Sutra -3 – Karma Yoga
22. Work as Worship
It is not the action itself but the spirit behind the action that makes the
action effortless.
Workship literally means, “work as worship”. More explicitly, this phrase
signifies that when work is done in the spirit of worship, the quality of the
work undergoes a metamorphosis.
Workers are fundamentally spiritual beings involved in a human
experience; they are more than human resources looking for a paycheck
and a pat on the back.
There is an autonomous self-existent spiritual dimension to the human
constitution. Our body-mind-senses framework is but a partial expression
of our spiritual wholeness.
The measure of individuals – and hence of corporations – is the extent to
which we struggle to complete ourselves.
Our value, then, can be described as the energy we devote to living up to
our complete potential.
Sutra -3 – Karma Yoga
23. Discovering the Timeless cycle of Work
Timeless leaders do not see their work as mere activity but rather as a calling.
For them work is a means of transformation of consciousness.
Timeless leaders have a clear comprehension of the spirit – they give before
they take. By giving without expectation they spontaneously create space for
receiving from a bountiful and interconnected universe.
By forgetting their own narrow concerns and in being of service to others,
leaders begin to live in their consciousness the timeless cycle of work, The
sacrifice that we are talking about in the context of leadership work does not
diminish the self but extends the boundary of the self by giving up the lower
for the cause of the higher.
Character and credibility acquired through sacrifice do not diminish over time
like material resources. They obey the law of abundance by growing in time
and spreading in space.
Have great purpose to work for, a purpose larger than your personal agenda.
This is the way to make life significant. When you work in the spirit of yajna
your contribution will overflow the span of a lifetime and survive even your
physical death.
Sutra -3 – Karma Yoga
24. The case for righteous action work as a means of realizing who we are
The privilege of leadership comes with enormous responsibility.
Leaders have to live not only for themselves but also for others who
choose to follow them.
You are what your deepest nature is. As your nature, so is your will. As
your will is, so is your deed. As your deed is, so is your destiny. –
Brihadaranyaka Upanishad.
Work as a means of realizing who we are.
Dedicate the results of all your actions to a higher consciousness.
The immortal self is nothing but our soul.
The mind is subtler than the body, and the intellect is subtler than the
mind, but the soul is the most subtle aspect of our identify.
When we are able to dedicate our work to a higher cause we get the
strength to work with peace and calmness.
Sutra -3 – Karma Yoga
25. Sutra -4 – Timeless Leaders pursue Purpose as the Source of Supreme Power
26. The Leader is a Sage
Timeless leadership tells us that exercise of power that is not in harmony
with the greater purpose of life is fraught with danger.
Power devoid of purpose inebriates the holder as well as the beholder.
The leader who holds power often forgets that this power is help only as a
trust on behalf of the followers.
The many faces of the supreme power
The supreme power therefore makes itself available to a leader in a
measure that is in keeping with the temperament of the leader.
Power is not just a function of the position that a leader holds but also a
function of his mental disposition.
Twenty-Four Hour Leadership
Timeless leadership is a lifelong journey, not toward power but toward
perfection.
In this journey a leader must ceaselessly deal with the rigors of self-
conquest.
Sutra -4 – Timeless Leaders pursue Purpose as the Source of Supreme Power
27. Twenty-Four Hour Leadership
Leadership is an evolving process that embraces the whole of life.
An office boss is a static portfolio of competencies; a leader is a dynamo
of evolving life.
A leader is like magnetism or gravity, which works 24 hours a day without
fail.
When a leader is humble he does not think any less of himself. He just
thinks of himself less.
He annihilates his egocentric actions in the perennial fire of self-
awakening.
The return of the rishi
Organizations often fall prey to their own inertia and become directionless.
In these hard times we have seen a rishi leader come forth and transform
such an organization into a vibrant entity.
It is the leaders characteristic humility despite high performance that
underlines the rishi consciousness
Sutra -4 – Timeless Leaders pursue Purpose as the Source of Supreme Power
28. Sutra -5 – Leadership is the Art of Undoing
The State of Detached Engagement
Be totally engaged in whatever you have to do but
detach your ego from the illusion of doer-ship.
The ultimate goal of detached engagement:
A state of being in the zone of equanimity and
unshakable equilibrium even in middle of hectic
activity.
29. How anchors of past hinder performance
Past performance, past glory, past habits – all of them have the potential to
destroy our work.
While we are help captive by our past we are not able to move on and be fully
engaged with the work at hand.
If one needs to take a step forward, one must lift one’s foot.
One can do that only when one is awake and liberated from one’s location in
the past.
The art of detached involvement
Our sense has a tendency to be easily attached to the most trivial of things.
But that is not really the problem; the real problem begins when we are not
able to detach our senses with equal ease.
When leaders are able to govern their sense by withdrawing the needy
acquisitive mind from sensory engagement, they practice detached
involvement.
Leaders achieve this through the regular practice of reflections.
Reflection brings about equality of vision.
Sutra -5 – Leadership is the Art of Undoing
30. Evolving to the equality of vision
Timeless leaders strive constantly to equalize their vision.
This is crucial if one wishes to succeed in leading people. When leaders
do not have equality of vision they end up promoting partiality, prejudice,
and cliques, which ruins organizations. Followers expect their leaders to
be fair and just in their treatment of them.
Each time a leader betrays a bias toward someone or a certain class of
people, he violates the trust that people have placed in him.
Umuntu ngumuntu ngabantu – we are people through other people.
The art of undoing
As change agent leaders have to embrace the constant tug-of-war
between the past and the future.
When a leader’s personality is programmed by his past actions, his
energy is trapped in time. His future becomes only a recycled past.
Sutra -5 – Leadership is the Art of Undoing
31. The Art of undoing
A timeless leader refuses to get bogged down by mental chatter that is
corroding his vitality.
Most leaders in organizations are evaluated by the quantity of their
actions, whereas they should be measured rather by the quality of they
do.
When leaders move up in the hierarchy of their organization most of their
problems turn out to be not technical but behavioral.
The source of all behavioral problems that leaders face can be traced
back to the ego, which conditions and clouds their awareness by giving to
it the false notion of being the doer.
Timeless leadership is the reversal of the journey of the doer.
This can be achieved only by the progressive elimination of ego-centered
activity and the practice of selfless and dedicated awareness-centered
actions.
Sutra -5 – Leadership is the Art of Undoing
32. Sutra -6 – Leaders are Masters of their Mind
The Art & Practice of Meditation
33. Separating the self image from the real self
Many of our problems are self-created.
The source of self-created problems is the fact that we mistake the
self image for our real self.
He should elevate himself by the power of the real self, not
degrade himself; For the self is its won friend and its won worst foe.
Timeless leaders know that self image is nothing but the projection
of ego, which is subject to endorsement by the world outside.
Thus the ego’s position constantly changes in order for it to adjust
to the world’s opinion. The ego projects many fanciful notions of
the real Self.
The ego-self is bound by those emotions that make leaders feel
insecure and separate: Fear, Jealousy, hatred, and false pride are
the accompaniments of Self -image that the ego tried to defend.
Self image is guided primarily by the instinct of psychological
survival
Sutra -6 – Leaders are Masters of their Mind
34. Mastery of the mind
Just as an expert learns to master his craft, a leader learns to master his
mind. A leader has to work with many minds.
Before he can command others, he has to know how to command his own
mental forces.
The only way to harness the mind is through practice and dispassion.
The practice of meditation results in dispassion.
Dispassion creates a space between you and your though flow. Your
perception of though flow affects and regulates it like a traffic cop
regulates the flow traffic.
A dispassionate mind is aware of diversity and differences of forms
without getting overtly judgmental about them.
Such a mind does not get caught in the external appearance of forms and
is capable of seeing the intrinsic value of each form.
Action is the means for a learner who seeks to mature in discipline;
tranquility is the means for the one who is mature in discipline.
Sutra -6 – Leaders are Masters of their Mind
35. Disciplines of Mastery: Concentration, Detachment, and Transcendence
Concentration
Concentration is the process through which the leader can access the
subtle ability of the mind to remain focused on an object or a thought for a
sustained length of time.
Detachment
From whatever cause the restless and unsteady mind wanders away,
from that let him restrain it, and bring it back under the control of the self.
Transcendence
Transcendence is the final step when the mind and its movements are
completely interiorized.
At this point the body and the mind are united in one state, free from the
fluctuations of thought waves.
Transcendence is the ultimate disciple of the mind. It is the realization of
the minds inherent unity with its conscious source and its environment.
Sutra -6 – Leaders are Masters of their Mind
36. The Power of Stillness
Stillness is strength.
Stillness is the power-point behind the intense action.
The eye of the cyclone is an intense stillness at the center of the storm.
Timeless leaders succeed only by the application of stillness.
A mind that is restless, anxious, and nervous always missed the mark.
Only a steady, controlled, almost machinelike hand can shoot the arrow
that hits the bull’s eye.
The journey toward self-realization involves the disciplines of silence and
solitude.
Silence frees us from the noise of externalized consciousness and allows
us to probe our inner voice.
Solitude enables one to be intimate with oneself.
Sutra -6 – Leaders are Masters of their Mind
37. Sutra -7 – Leaders are Integrators
The Freedom of “ I Am”
38. Journey from ignorance to wisdom
Timeless leaders realize that knowledge is required to make a living while
wisdom is necessary to live a fully functional and evolving life.
Time leaders integrate people and process
One of the fundamental tasks of leadership is the task of integration.
Leaders do not take sides in the case of a conflict; they often bring the two
sides together.
Leaders integrate the world of diversity and differences into a unity of
purpose. Leadership is the search of synergy, symphony, and symmetry
in a world of conflict and disorder.
Leaders with integrity attract followers spontaneously, even beyond their
lifetimes.
For such leaders life becomes one song-a universe-of though, feeling,
and action. Integrity is another expression for this one song.
Integrity is more than just socially sanctioned, conditioned behavior.
It is a spontaneous life force that connects all our life’s experiences in a
unique wholeness.
Sutra -7 – Leaders are Integrators
39. The leaders world: A reflection of unmanifest dharma
In human form everyone can experience the manifestation of our dharma
in three observable states: inertia, dynamism, and illumination.
Those leaders who live dharma rather than speak about it understand that
the power of dharma comes only when you practice it.
Action has no power in itself. It draws its power from the unmanifest
purpose or dharma behind it.
That’s why action backed by the right cause is important. A leaders action
bears the signature of the justness of a great cause.
From ego-centered to spirit-centered leadership
The ego is like a tragic hero. It is delusional. A leader caught in the
whirlpool of the ego fails to see a world beyond power, privilege, and petty
perquisites that come from occupying a position.
An egocentric leader experiences the feelings of victor or victim. When
success comes, such leaders act like the victor. When failure stares them
in the face, they hide behind the façade of the victim.
Sutra -7 – Leaders are Integrators
40. From ego-centered to spirit-centered leadership
Very often, egocentric leaders fail to recognize the real intent of the
people they are leading
They get caught in the trap of flattery and suspect the motives of those
with dissenting views.
When established in the spirit center a timeless leader begins to develop
greater empathy and insight into human nature. Timeless leaders are
quick to discover the unchanging core of spirit that is deepest and highest
human aspiration.
Leader liberate themselves and others from suffering
Timeless leaders liberate themselves and others from suffering of the
following types:
Those in distress.
Those looking for fulfillment of their personal desires.
Those yearning for knowledge.
Those seeking wisdom.
Sutra -7 – Leaders are Integrators
42. Timeless leaders explore the meaning of life
If business becomes merely the means of living then it loses meaning for us.
Work becomes a chore – a means of making a living at the expense of the
meaning of life. Such a business eventually becomes demeaning.
The real question we must ask while we are in business is: What is the
meaning of this work for me?
If we find an answer to this question, the business & business of life
become one and the same.
The multidimensional meaning of life
This is the world of the physical nature of objects and events that we all can
touch, taste, see, hear and feel. Krishna describes this as Adhibhuta.
Second, there is the inner psychological world of experiences know &
Adhiyagna. This is the world of thoughts and emotions – human actions and
interactions.
Third, the ultimate governing principle is like transcendental being who
regulates the relationship between the physical & psychological world with
being part of either.
Sutra -8 – Timeless Leadership
43. The multidimensional meaning of life
To know the imperishable reality the leader must learn to convert the
energy of thought into the energy of understanding. While thought results
in neural noise, true understanding happens when this noise dissolves in
the depth of silence.
When our work is tied to the selfish motive of gaining advantages for
ourselves we lose the perfect understanding of our real nature & succumb
to our apparent reality.
When you put a fence around human being you get sheep. The fence of
selfish work makes us prisoners of our herd instincts.
Creation is sacrificing the smaller for the sake of the greater
Our life, on the contrary, is an organization of energies moving from the
higher to the lower; from the macrocosm to the microcosm; from the
subtle to the gross. A leader must understand the science of life and live
according to this organizing principle of life: the subtle and higher energy
drives the gross and lower energy.
Sutra -8 – Timeless Leadership
44. Creation is sacrificing the smaller for the sake of the greater
Leaders caught in the trap of ambition become vulnerable to flattery by
their subordinates. They squander energy by being too possessive about
their position and power. Ambitious leaders often use people as
steppingstones up to their own pedestals. Ambition binds them to lower-
order emotions such as fear, jealousy and passiveness. The arc of
ambition takes us upward in a misleading curve and then brings us down
with a thud.
Aspiration makes leaders dream of a better organization, country, or
world.
In our psychological universe aspiration creates greater energy than
ambition does. Ambition is gross; aspiration is subtle.
The most successful leader of this world, such as Buddha, Christ, or
Gandhi, gave up personal ambition for a higher aspiration. They created a
nuclear explosion of consciousness that continues to influence the world
of our thoughts and actions today real meaning of life is contained in life
itself
Sutra -8 – Timeless Leadership
45. The real meaning in life is contained in life itself.
The real meaning of life is contained in just being the whole of who we are.
What are those attributes of being that together give meaning to life? Being
has three attributes:
Truth, which gives meaning to our existence
Consciousness, which gives meaning to our experiences
Bliss, which gives meaning to our action in the pursuit of happiness
When a timeless leader relentlessly pursues the path of truth, she is able to
realize that all that she needs to know already exists in herself.
Consciousness is the knowledge that we become. When a leader is fully
conscious he steers clear of secondhand knowledge and third-party opinions
and makes decisions from the authenticity of his being.
It is difficult to find happiness within oneself, but it is impossible to find it
anywhere else!
A timeless leader, despite all his materialistic hunger, places immense value
on the intrinsic nature of happiness. However difficult the journey, the source
of happiness has to be found inside. Timeless leaders lead people to their
inner source of happiness rather than to external rewards.
Sutra -8 – Timeless Leadership
46. Meaningful work: A synthesis of reflection and action
One fundamental role of a leader is the ability to see patterns &
detect relationships between events and activities within and
outside the organization. In this role a leader is a pattern seeker
and meaning maker.
The greatest asset to a leader as he seeks to control the variables
that confront him in globalized world is his flexibility of mind. A
leader needs an open mind that is not conditioned by repetitive
thought and predictable action. Such a mind will be capable of
making sense of fast-paced socioeconomic changes that affect his
organization.
The opposite of an open mind is closed mind, in which thinking and
action are limited to the immediate local and temporal condition. A
leader with such a closed mind is bound to fall prey to myopic
decision-making and short-term activities that will ruin the
organization in a long term.
Sutra -8 – Timeless Leadership
47. Meaningful work: A synthesis of reflection and action
Timeless leaders solve problems by placing them in wider context.
When we widen the context the problem gets resolved at its
source.
Most of our work in our organization is reflexive rather than
reflective.
When leaders engage in reflexive action the context of their work is
narrowed down to habitual patterns and meaningless chores.
Sooner or later such work becomes tedious and wears us out.
Timeless leaders like Krishna rescue us from the mental rut and
bring us into the infinite cosmic source from which our work derives
deep meaning and significance.
Krishna thus enables us to synthesize reflection and action in
pursuit of work. Such becomes truly evolutionary.
Sutra -8 – Timeless Leadership
49. Sovereign self and the path of unity
Timeless leader use expanded consciousness to see the world in themselves
rather than seeing them in the world.
A timeless leader resides in the organization of form and phenomena as an
unseen intelligence that both includes and transcends the structure of the
organization.
The real presence of a leader is often determined by his absence. The value
of a leader in an organization can be experienced in the unseen dimension of
intelligence that he leaves behind when he is not there.
The leader who is able to devote himself to the pursuit of this intelligence
discovers the capacity of Self-rule.
The governance of the ego: the path of disintegration
The governance of the ego breeds the need to grasp rather than to give.
The tyrants that ruled the world over the ages were all obsessed with
personal acquisition at the expense of the common good.
The ego is the central organizing principle around which we grab clutch onto
experiences that bring us fleeting pleasures and momentary sensations.
Sutra -9 – The Sovereign Secret
50. Self-organization: when organization becomes community
What exhausts us at work is not the work itself but the worry and
anxiety that we associate with our work.
These cause psychological wear and tear and drain our energy.
Our horizontal relationships produce friction in the form of role
conflict and lack of role clarity.
In the absence if vertical relationship with an ideal to which can
offer both our failures and our successes, we become emotional
wrecks.
An organization achieves both horizontal and vertical unity through
a community. However, the horizontal relationship between
members derives their value from a vertical relationship with the
leader. The leader is therefore vested with the responsibility not
only of leading the organization but also of being completely
integrated with the principles on which the organization is founded.
Timeless leaders hold communities together on the basis of trust.
Sutra -9 – The Sovereign Secret
51. The law of giving: being and becoming
Timeless leaders are defined not so much by what they do but by
who they are.
This give-and-take between being and becoming, between the
unmanifest and the manifest, is the very basis of our Self-
organizing universe.
Everything in our universe follows the law and logic of an open
system.
An open system continuously exchanges energy with the
environment outside its physical boundaries.
· “Very truly I tell you, unless a grain of wheat falls into earth and
dies, it remains just a single grain; but if it dies, it bears much fruit.”
Sutra -9 – The Sovereign Secret
53. Leading consciously
A timeless leader does not deflect his energy by making the present
moment a steppingstone to an imagined future. He lives completely in the
moment in the moment. His thoughts, feelings, and actions are
synchronized to the one point of attention. This kind of living in the
moment has the power the potency of a seed that contains the mystery of
a whole forest.
Silence: The language of timeless leadership
The state of silence is not merely emptiness of sound; it is fullness of
unspoken intelligence. Silence is the pure potentiality of language.
Silence can be harnessed when we learn to be observers rather than
interpreters. When a leader observes without the urge to judge or
interpret, he is bringing his whole attention to whatever he observes. This
whole attention is silence.
Timeless leaders apply the discipline of silence by learning to be
observers.
Observation is the art of seeing without judging, naming or measuring.
Sutra -10– Leadership is an Adventure of Consciousness
54. Silence: The language of timeless leadership
Freedom of expression has two dimensions: freedom of speech
and freedom of silence. Freedom of silence enables us to explore
the deeper voices within us that speak to us without inhibition.
In speech, energy fragments into verbal silence, energy is
integrated into noiseless awareness.
If one holds back the urge to talk from time to time, one will
experience a surge of energy in the nervous system.
Silence is energy conserving. Therefore, a timeless leader
consciously cultivates the discipline of silence.
The dynamism of indivisibility
The ethos is the collective script of the organization. It signifies the
values that the organization stands for. Ethos gives meaning and
wholeness to the organization even while dealing with various parts
of the organization a timeless leader has his conscious attention
attuned to the ethos.
Sutra -10– Leadership is an Adventure of Consciousness
55. The dynamism of indivisibility
Timeless leaders have an intuitive grasp of the ecology of the
organization.
They view the organization not as a totality of commercial assets
but rather in the wholeness of its connection with the larger
society, community, and environment that it chooses to inhabit.
The pursuit of excellence
You shouldn’t be looking for people slipping up, you should be
looking for all the good things people do and praising those.
A timeless leader must examine with the eye of excellence
everywhere he looks and everything he perceives.
Excellence is a result of developing quality of mind through
constant awareness.
Sutra -10– Leadership is an Adventure of Consciousness
56. Sutra -11 – Timeless Leaders have Integral Vision
57. Integral Vision
Integral vision kind of sight involves foresight – the gift of being able to
see something before its time. Foresight gives us the power to
creatively reconstruct our universe by connecting the dots that are
visible in the present.
One of the virtues of timeless leadership is the ability to recognize
patterns based on inadequate or insufficient data points. The minds of
these leaders work like radar screens scanning the environment for
data and constructing patterns of intelligible information.
Timeless leaders have an integral vision of the changing faces of
reality.
They are able to sense a turning of the tide and to transmit this sense
to their followers.
When timeless leaders see the big picture, their thoughts and actions
become synchronized in a manner that serves the larger purpose of
their work
Sutra -11 – Timeless Leaders have Integral Vision
58. Sight and Insight
The fighter fights with his sight; the warrior fights with insight.
Insight comes not from memory but from unconditioned
awareness. Insight comes not from programmed thoughts but from
the underlying source of all thought, which is consciousness.
The pangs of plurality
When leaders are able to discriminate between the real and the
apparent they are free of emotional turmoil.
When leaders get caught in the illusion of their own separateness
in the battle of life they suffer the pangs of plurality. They cannot
fight without vengeance, fear, and attachment to their turf. When
leaders perceive only plurality without the underlying unity in
plurality they become unnecessarily combative. The real test of an
evolving leader is the ability to function in a fiercely competitive
field and yet nurture the cooperative and compassionate nature
within him.
Sutra -11 – Timeless Leaders have Integral Vision
59. The Leader as servant: being an instrument of the whole
The timeless leaders have to conquer the army of thoughts and emotions
commanded by their ego.
Gandhi wrote in his autobiography, “the best way to find your self is to lose
yourself in the service of others” A timeless leader can discover his sovereign
and essential Self when he is able to let go of his preoccupations with his own
body and mind. He can then be an instrument of the whole.
A perfect instrument makes no claims to glory and takes no credit for the best
of accomplishments.
Timeless leadership comes not from control of material resources but from
serving the very human source that creates those resources.
Leaders who demand authority in return for favors done or who rent out their
power to subordinates in exchange of subservience cannot lead for long.
Servant-leaders do not start with the intent of charming of influencing people.
Instead, they start with the intent of being as perfect an instrument of the
whole as possible.
In the process they become integral part of the very source of what it means
to be human. This is the basis of their influence
Sutra -11 – Timeless Leaders have Integral Vision
60. Sutra -12 – Love is the Leader’s Essence; Love is the Leaders Presence.
Do not try to manipulate the result of your work in the
direction if what you alone would like the work to be. Do
not dedicate your attention the urges of your ego. When
you renounce your need for censure or praise from the
outside world, you will acquire a silence and steadiness
of devotion to your work.
61. Leadership is love made visible
A true devotee works independently of the world outside and draws his
inspiration, equanimity, and ecstasy from the source within himself.
Work is love made visible. And if you cannot work with love but only with
distaste, it is better that you should leave your work and sit on the gate of
the temple and take alms of those who work only with joy – Gibran Kahil
Timeless leaders know that if work is creation, then love is the creative
impulse behind it. Such leaders trace the mysterious source of love not in
the world of approval and disapproval but within their own hearts.
Timeless leaders realize that while work is external to our state of being,
love is an intrinsic state of our deepest human nature. One can be truly
devoted to work on a sustainable basis only when one can do so from the
state of love.
The greatness of the effort actually comes from the intensity of love, which
is the spirit behind the action. Timeless leadership is the manifestation of
the invisible energy of love expressed through the visible medium of
action.
Sutra -12 – Love is the Leader’s Essence; Love is the Leaders Presence.
62. Leadership is love made visible
Love is not merely about recognizing the objective value of a given task.
Rather, it is the process of creating value from the inside out in any work
we do. Paying attention to detail, giving greater energy to process rather
than the output, and being fully present in the work are foundations of love
in action.
Devotion: Art and practice of leadership
Ordinarily, our minds are fixed on our likes and dislikes. Whatever we like
engages us and what we dislike repels us. Most leaders spend time doing
what they like to do rather than what should be done.
A three-step way out of messy mind-state:
Surrender to the highest intelligence that controls your mind and
intellect.
Dedicate all that you do to the intelligence that governs the universe &
keeps the might planets whirling in their orbits.
Trust this might intelligence to guide your mind and intellect in the
most effective and efficient way.
Sutra -12 – Love is the Leader’s Essence; Love is the Leaders Presence.
63. Devotion: Art and practice of leadership
Timeless leaders see love as the common value present in both
competitive and cooperative frames of reference.
In competition, love becomes merely the means to achieving an
end, as when we love our work because it will fetch us greater
rewards than our colleagues.
In cooperation, love becomes an end in itself, as when we love
doing work for our families for no other reason than the sheer joy of
sharing our lives with others.
Attributes of leader as devotee
The path of devotion is not about emotional excess. It is rather
about dropping the emotional baggage of the mind toward a
singularity of purpose.
Devotion means discovering that creative source in our heart rather
than acquiring the approval of the world.
Sutra -12 – Love is the Leader’s Essence; Love is the Leaders Presence.
64. Sutra -13 – Leaders command their field with the Eye of Wisdom
65. The leader as a knower in the field of knowledge
It is not a great CEO but it is actually a great fit between a CEO and a
company’s contextual needs that builds great organizations.
Leadership is an integral feature of an organizations social system.
Leaders are influence by and in turn exert an influence on the social
and organizational contexts that they command. A leader not only
grows within a culture but also carries a culture within himself.
A leader pursuing true knowledge has to learn to be an observer not
only of “the world out there” but also of all that happens “in here,”
inside his own mind.
In course of a day a business leader has to go through a dizzying
array of situations and an unimaginable variety of contexts. Given the
dynamic nature of his business setting, a leader needs the conceptual
depth that will help him understand and deal with ambiguities and
inconsistencies.
The knower, with pure and limitless awareness, is thus able to
comprehend ambiguities and reconcile contradictions in the field
Sutra -13 – Leaders command their field with the Eye of Wisdom
66. The dimension of the field and the knower of the field
A timeless leader achieves this detached engagement through the
power of empathy. Empathy is not a mushy emotional state where
the leader gets lost in pleasing everybody. Rather, empathy is a
detached and objective appraisal of how another person is feeling.
Through empathy, a leader is able to rise above his own emotional
isolation and connect with a follower.
The timeless leader as the knower is perennially alive and alert to
whatever physical modifications and psychological distortions
happen in his universe.
Such a leader remains humble and rarely seeks the spotlight.
Seeing with the eye of wisdom
Timeless leaders have the ability to see the invisible. Behind visible
universe of objects and events there is the invisible universe of
beliefs, perceptions and emotions.
Sutra -13 – Leaders command their field with the Eye of Wisdom
67. 12 qualities of a leader who has truly integrated the head and the heart:
Humility
Non-injury
Unpretentiousness
Forgiveness
Uprightness
Service to one’s teacher
Purity
Steadfastness
Self-regulation
Absence of egoism
Even-mindedness
Seeking periodic solitude and silence
These qualities give the leader those subtle eyes that reflect reality
without mental distortions and biases.
Sutra -13 – Leaders command their field with the Eye of Wisdom
68. Sutra -14 – Leaders Harness the Dynamic Forces of Nature
69. Nature’s Manuscript: The three forces
Inertia, dynamism and illumination – these three qualities of nature
bind and embody the indestructible soul in us.
Inertia is the state of passivity; it is the seed form of physical or
psychological action.
Dynamism, the second process is the movement from non-action
to action and from passivity to passion, Illumination, the third
process, represents another dimension of evolution –the evolution
of consciousness.
How leaders harness the three forces of nature
A conscious CEO allows some problems to remain undecided
because he is conscious that a certain amount of inertia is more
useful in solving a problem than premature and aggressive action.
Leaders discover that the secret of right action is to allow the action
to unfold at the right time rather than to force it ahead of its time.
Sutra -14 – Leaders Harness the Dynamic Forces of Nature
70. How leaders harness the three forces of nature
His solution to problems will be based on a correct appraisal of
reality.
A mind guided by the force of inertia obscures reality and veils
it.
A mind guided by the force of dynamism projects reality through
the ego and distorts its.
A mind guided by the force of illumination discriminates &
perceives reality correctly.
Transcending the dynamics of nature
Those who transcend their own nature are not disturbed by the
actions of the forces of nature.
They know that is these forces of nature that act and that the soul
self within is a mere witness to those actions.
They therefore remain unshaken and abide within themselves.
Sutra -14 – Leaders Harness the Dynamic Forces of Nature
71. Sutra -15 – Timeless Leaders discover their Invisible Source
72. The tree of life
The imperishable tree of life has its rots above, its branches are below,
and its leaves are its expressions of knowledge.
Those who know this know the whole truth. Our sensory work is a topsy-
turvy world like the tree of life where we are so obsessed with the effect
that we do not investigate the cause.
The tree of life has no stability. It changes its patterns and appearances
faster than the human mind can grasp.
The leaves of this tree multiply like many desires. These desires chase
sense objects and indulge in repeated actions. Actions repeated from
habits that bind a human being to his world.
When the life in a human being is driven by personal will and habits of
self-aggrandizement, he isolates himself by his petty desires and forfeits
his access to the wholeness of life.
A timeless leader has to cut asunder and detach him from the roots of
addictive material attachments. Only then can he reclaim the
magnificence of his invisible Self
Sutra -15 – Timeless Leaders discover their Invisible Source
73. The invisible leader
The most significant role of a leader is to make the invisible clearly
visible.
Inspiration is invisible but inspired action is visible. Trust is invisible but
trustworthy behavior is visible. A leader has to constantly cross the
bridge between what is unseen and that which is seen in order to
connect with his followers.
Electricity is not designed for the bulb. Rather, the bulb is designed to
obey laws of electricity. When a narcissistic leader obsessively things
about his physical appearance and his image in the organization, he
becomes like a bulb devoid of the power of electricity.
He is cut off from the unseen self and the divine source that has
created him. A wit once said that the difference between a god and a
narcissist is only this: The god does not believe that he is a narcissist!
Timeless leaders, however, derive their power from unselfish service
rather than servility to their ego’s demands. Unselfish service frees the
hold of the ego on the Self.
Sutra -15 – Timeless Leaders discover their Invisible Source
74. From the perishable to imperishable: quest for the Supreme
Self
Timeless leaders see that behind the perishable forms of
nature there is the imperishable unity of life that sustains
nature.
When leaders behave like demigods, when they grandstand
and intimidate others through fear and exclusion, they are just
like caricatures of life’s real face.
When the same leaders see their actions in the mirror of the
timeless they understand their follies.
Such leaders see through their illusions.
To be completely disillusioned with the illusions of the senses
is the first step towards returning to the unit of life.
Sutra -15 – Timeless Leaders discover their Invisible Source
76. The crossroads of leadership: the devine and the devilish
The divine qualities in a human being lead to freedom; the devilish
to bondage.
Being forgiving or being truthful is valuable to these leaders not
because someone told them that these virtues are valuable, but
because they have realized in practice the value of these two
virtues.
Toxic leadership
There are seven types of bad leadership. The first three types
represent ineffective leadership:
Incompetent
Rigid
Intemperate
Sutra -16 – Leaders negotiate the Crossroads
77. The crossroads of leadership: the divine and the devilish
A leader and his followers who lack the will or skill to sustain
effective action characterize incompetence. In rigidity, the leader
and his followers are unwilling to accept any new ideas or adapt to
change. Intemperate represents leaders and his follower’s lack of
self-control.
The next four types represent unethical leadership:
Callous
Corrupt
Insular
Evil
Callousness comes from an uncaring or an unkind attitude toward
people.
Corrupt leaders and their followers are given to deception, stealing,
or cheating. Insular leaders disregard the welfare of their followers.
Sutra -16 – Leaders negotiate the Crossroads
78. Sutra -17 – Leaders follow their Faith
The Journey of Self-Giving
79. The Faith-Deep Structure of Leadership
Faith is the deepest driving force that shapes human beings values and beliefs.
It is faith that shapes one’s destiny. When he or she has deep faith in some ideal
or course of work, the leader becomes fairly autonomous. He or she rarely needs
an endorsement from the outside world when his or her faith has become truly
abiding.
Three kinds of faith
Serenity, good-hearted silence, self-control, purity of nature – these together are
called austerities of mind.
“In working out any plan or idea, I use what you might call the intermittent method.
I hit the problem hard, then leave it for a while, and later come back. This method
permits me to bring to the particular problem many ideas that come from mature
reflection” – Julie Fenster.
Austerity of speech:
The least evolved way of speaking is speak lies.
The second kind of speech is dynamic
The third and the most evolved kind of speech is the one in which the leader
is illumined.
Sutra -17 – Leaders follow their Faith
80. Three kinds of faith
Speaking words that are truthful, pleasing and beneficial – this is
austerity of speech.
Before he or she acquires the gift of his or her illumined speech,
the leader has to go through three kinds of mental austerities, in a
manner similar to security checks that the air traveler has to
undergo.
The first check comes from the security officer, who says: “You can
go ahead with your speech provided it is truthful.” If it is not truthful,
the speech is best not allowed to go.
The second security officer says, “It is truthful al right, but is it
pleasant? If it is truthful but unpleasant, its best you go back!”
The third and final security question is, “It is both truthful and
pleasant, but is it beneficial to the one you are speaking to. If it is
not beneficial, you cannot let it go.”
Sutra -17 – Leaders follow their Faith
81. The Art and Science of Self-Giving
Whatever is done without faith, whether it is sacrifice, austerity, or gift, is unreal. Such
actions have no real significance either here or hereafter.
Three kinds of gifts:
The first comes from an illumined mind. It is a gift given without thought or return on
investment.
The second kind comes from a mind that is dynamic – passionate but not illumined.
This gift is given with an expectation of the results it will produce for the giver –
whether it is name or fame or material benefits.
Third kind of gift comes from an ignorant mind dominated by inertia. This giving
happens at an appropriate time, under unsuitable circumstances, and to an unworthy
person. This gift of ignorance is often given with disrespect or contempt.
The leader who gives something to a follower, whether praise, power or promotion, has
to be sensitive to the context in which such gifts are given.
Praise or promotion given when they are not deserved creates a swollen ego in the
receiver as well as loss of morale in the ranks of others who are denied such
privileges.
The purest gift that a leader can give to a follower is the gift of self-reliance.
Self-reliance is nothing but faith in the larger self beyond one’s physical body and ego.
Sutra -17 – Leaders follow their Faith
82. Sutra -18 – Leadership is Transcendence.
The Unity of Two Wills
The fighter seeks success; the warrior pursues
perfection that sustains success.
Success is a temporary state, whereas the quest for
perfection is timeless.
83. The Source and Resource
Leadership is about setting the right direction.
Timeless leaders understand that whereas the spirit of the source,
all of matter is the resource.
When you are source the world exists in you. When you are a
resource you exists in the world.
When the leader thinks, acts or feels from a true source, whatever
he sends out into world comes back multiplied.
This is the creative & transformational potential of the source: it can
transform a resource.
When a leader expresses him from the source of pure potential he
is able to transform his followers. The followers are released from
their restrictive neural chemistry of fear and guilt, which makes
them feel like small and isolated entities. A timeless leader enables
followers to get out of their own restrictive though processes and
emotional maps.
Sutra -18 – Leadership is Transcendence.
84. The Algebra of Attachment
Appropriating to the ego what belongs to the larger reality of
nature is the entire game of attachment.
When we are not attached to the source, our mind becomes
addicted to whatever makes the ego perpetuate its story.
Timeless leaders help followers detach their minds from
egotistic pursuits and go about their business in pursuing a
purpose beyond their own personal cravings.
This is how great wars are won and great organizations take
shape.
Sutra -18 – Leadership is Transcendence.
85. Renunciation and regeneration of the leader
You cannot hold onto anything for too long without suffering the
consequences.
Timeless leaders realize that the renunciation is not merely about letting
go; it is just as much about the regeneration of energy in a decaying
system.
Three ways of doing this are
Renouncing old habits: Conscious restraint of the habitual flow of the
mind toward sense objects – taking a break from the Internet, for
instance.
Renouncing emotional outbursts: To be patient and forgiving even
when perceiving a small injustice done to yourself by another person.
This means not cursing when another driver cuts you off in violation of
traffic laws.
Renouncing personal aggrandizement: Not appropriating credit for
what one has not actually done. Many corporate leaders are tempted
to steal the limelight for what others have collectively accomplished. To
give to other credit where it is due is the renunciation of doership.
Sutra -18 – Leadership is Transcendence.
86. The Path of Transcendence
Transcendence is the art and science of being real. How does one
access reality? Reality unveils itself through the following steps:
Facts à Truth à Reality
Timeless leaders lead followers to ultimate reality of the source
self. Then they lead followers to strike at follower’s organized
mental defenses against engaging in the war.
The leader leads followers from their delusional thoughts to
tranquility of wisdom. He inspires followers to rise from non-action
to the freedom of spontaneous action.
The leader instills in the follower the power to awaken from fantasy
to deep devotion to real goal of all wars: the realization of our
larger identity – our source Self.
Sutra -18 – Leadership is Transcendence.
87. The Unity of Two Wills
An organization is not just an assembly of systems and structures but alchemy of
the collective wills of its people.
When people within & organization perceive the system and structures – both
social & psychological – as barriers to realizing their potential as source Self they
become fighters. This goes on until a leader comes along and makes them
evolve from mundane fighters to true warriors.
Fighters fight with their swords and shields. They become victims of their binary
minds: fight of flight; offence or defense. He see organizational structures and
systems as physical barriers that they must overcome.
Fighters depend on their limited physical and mental effort and their ego
propelled will. Fighters are doomed to fail like a fragile twig in raging storm.
The true warrior does not travel the path of the divided binary mind. Before he
takes up the fight, the warrior first surrenders his will to the will of the source,
which is ultimate reality. He draws his arrows from the focal point of his source
Self. Just as the fighter cannot win, the warrior cannot lose.
The unenlightened leader binds the follower in the vicious cycle of insecurity,
expectation and dependence.
The timeless leader gives the follower the freedom to choose.
Sutra -18 – Leadership is Transcendence.
88. Authenticity
Closing the gap between you and your own reality. First Leaders have to be very
Objective about themselves.
What kind of potential you have and how will you express this potential ?
How will you solve your most persistent problems & Challenges?
How will you suspend judgement about yourself and others?
How can you build your growth team ?
These are critical issues leaders need to explore
Connectivity
Creating Resonance. Leadership is much more than individual expertise. In a fast
changing world you have to quickly learn to connect with and mobilize talent, big ideas
and get people together.
How do you increase your team’s capacity ?
How they would do what they thought they could not do before?
How do you create emotional resonance and build trust ?
How do you leverage technology to build bridges ?
Leaders Exploration – 4 Themes
89. Productivity
The art of undoing. The core discipline of leaders in a VUCA world is about undoing
interference to focused work.
How do you survive a data distracted world ?
How do you recognize a day in your life in alignment with your purpose & priorities?
How do you get the best returns on your time ?
How can you learn from great transformational leaders, the secret of negotiating
time and stress ?
Possibility
Changing mental models. Every business will go through severe and several cycles of
disruption. The response to disruption is innovation and preparedness for possibilities.
Research has proved critical behaviours that promote innovation and thinking
possibility including risk taking & openness to new ideas.
How innovation happens through stretching existing resources rather than chasing
arbitrarily created targets?
How do you nurture an innovative and meditative mind?
How do you recognize your blind spots?
How to transform mind-sets?
Leaders Exploration – 4 Themes