20 Points on Leading Millenials

in Leadership Rules,Misc. 11 Comments

A good friend asked me the other day my thoughts on how to lead the millennial generation, basically those born after 1980. We gather thousands of leaders who fit this category on an annual basis, and most of our Catalyst staff are under the age of 30.

I have to admit- I don’t always get this right. As a 100% Gen X’er, my tendency is to lean away from several of these points, and lead how I’ve been led over the years by Boomer and Busters. But I’m working on it….

So with that said, here you go, thoughts on leading millenials:

1. Give them freedom with their schedule. I’ll admit, this one is tough for me.

2. Provide them projects, not a career. Career is just not the same anymore. They desire options. Just like free agents.

3. Create a family environment. Work, family and social are all intertwined, so make sure the work environment is experiential and family oriented. Everything is connected.

4. Cause is important. Tie in compassion and justice to the “normal.” Causes and opportunities to give back are important.

5. Embrace social media. it’s here to stay.

6. They are more tech savvy than any other generation ever. Technology is the norm. XBOX, iPhones, laptops, iPads are just normal. If you want a response, text first, then call. Or DM first. Or send a Facebook message. Not anti calls though.

7. Lead each person uniquely. Don’t create standards or rules that apply to everyone. Customize your approach. (I’ll admit, this one is difficult too!)

8. Make authenticity and honesty the standard for your corporate culture. Millenials are cynical at their core, and don’t trust someone just because they are in charge.

9. Millenials are not as interested in “climbing the corporate ladder.” But instead more concerned about making a difference and leaving their mark.

10. Give them opportunities early with major responsibility. They don’t want to wait their turn. Want to make a difference now. And will find an outlet for influence and responsibility somewhere else if you don’t give it to them. Empower them early and often.

11. All about the larger win, not the personal small gain. Young leaders in general have an abundance mentality instead of scarcity mentality.

12. Partnering and collaboration are important. Not interested in drawing lines. Collaboration is the new currency, along with generosity.

13. Not about working for a personality. Not interested in laboring long hours to build a temporal kingdom for one person. But will work their guts out for a cause and vision bigger than themselves.

14. Deeply desire mentoring, learning and discipleship. Many older leaders think millenials aren’t interested in generational wisdom transfer. Not true at all. Younger leaders are hungry for mentoring and discipleship, so build it into your organizational environment.

15. Coach them and encourage them. They want to gain wisdom through experience. Come alongside them don’t just tell them what to do.

16. Create opportunities for quality time- individually and corporately. They want to be led by example, and not just by words.

17. Hold them accountable. They want to be held accountable by those who are living it out. Measure them and give them constant feedback.

18. They’ve been exposed to just about everything, so the sky is the limit in their minds. Older leaders have to understand younger leaders have a much broader and global perspective, which makes wowing Millenials much more difficult.

19. Recognize their values, not just their strengths. It ain’t just about the skillz baby. Don’t use them without truly knowing them.

20. Provide a system that creates stability. Clear expectations with the freedom to succeed, and providing stability on the emotional, financial, and organizational side.

Thanks to the Catalyst team and our band of millenials for their input and advice on these points. James Wilson, Julianne Graves, Sabrina Esposito, Alyssa Raymer, Stan Johnson, and Ansley Lawhead. You guys provided great insight!

 

One of the great corruptors of Leaders

in Misc. 1 Comment

POWER. One of the great corruptors of leaders.

We all deny it in public, but struggle with its pull over us in private.

If you recall, it was one of the temptations of Jesus while in the desert for 40 days. Actually the 3rd temptation he faced.

“I will give you all the kingdoms of this world in their splendor,” the demon said to Jesus (Matthew 4:9).

Power is intoxicating. Throughout history, leaders have given in to the temptation of power- whether political, military, economic, or even moral and spiritual power- even though many continued to speak and lead and influence in the name of Jesus.

But when looking at Jesus, we see a different example. Jesus did not cling to power, but instead emptied himself and became as we are.

Henri Nouwen writes so eloquently in his classic leadership book In the Name of Jesus that the reason power is such a strong corruptor is “it seems easier to be God than to love God, easier to control people than to love people, easier to own life than to love life.” BAM.

We are constantly confronted with the temptation to replace love with power. Ruling over vs. leading forward. Control vs. love.

Leaders are naturally given power when they are in charge of something. It comes with the territory in leadership. So it’s a given that with leadership and responsibility, you are given the power to influence.

The question is “What do you do with it?” Do you leverage it for your own gain, or steward it for the benefit of others?

Followers vs Fans

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Follower vs. Fan.Is there a difference?

1. Followers are committed. Fans can be fickle.

2. Followers trust their leader. Fans trust in their leader only when it benefits them.

3. Followers want a vision. Fans want a show.

4. Followers ask “what have i done for you?” lately. Fans ask “what have you done for me lately?”

5. Followers are in for the long term. Fans are in for the short term.

6. Followers have an intrinsic connection; it’s not about wearing a t-shirt. Fans have an extrinsic connection; it’s ALL about wearing a t-shirt.

Are you a follower or a fan?

10 Best Worship Songs

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A few weeks ago I shared what I think are the top ten hymns of all time.

So now another list…What are the top ten modern worship songs?

When I say “modern,” I mean during the last two generations, so basically the last 25 years, since 1985.

Lots of folks are going to have a different top ten list than I do. So lots of potential discussion on this. But I wanted to throw this out there and get the conversation going. You can listen to Ken Coleman, Carlos Whittaker and me banter about this on the latest Catalyst Podcast.

Here you go:

1. Shout to the Lord

2. How Great is our God

3. Mighty To Save

4. Lord I Lift Your Name on High

5. I Could Sing of Your Love Forever

6. Holy is the Lord

7. God of Wonders

8. Our God is an Awesome God

9. Agnus Dei

10. Salvation is Here

Honorable mention:

How He Loves, Our God, Majesty, Sweep Me Away, Not to Us, Everlasting God, You Are My All in All, You’re Worthy of My Praise, Sing to the King, With Everything

What did I miss?

West Coasters… Catalyst One Day in Orange County

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For all the Leaders in San Diego, Los Angeles, Orange County, Las Vegas, Phoenix, and the Bay area….

I want to make sure you know about Catalyst One Day on Thursday, October 27 at Saddleback Church in Orange County, CA.

Andy Stanley and Craig Groeschel will be speaking on Healthy Organizational Culture. And special guest Rick Warren will be joining in for the event as well.

Please make sure and register TODAY as the best rates on tickets expire today, September 22.

 

and…. for everyone in the Chicago area, we’ll be at Willow Creek for Catalyst One Day Chicago on Thursday, Nov 17 with Andy, Craig, and Bill Hybels.

Characteristics of good employees

in Misc. 4 Comments

Here you go, 5 points on Monday to help you be a better employee, partner, or peer to others in your organization.

1. write everything down- never show up to a meeting without something to write with and something to write on. And write it down. Everything. Otherwise you’ll forget. I don’t care who you are.

2. honor people’s time- show up early and finish on time. Actually finish early if at all possible.

3. come with solutions, not just ideas- this is crucial. move towards completion, not away from it.

4. learn how to anticipate- always be one step ahead. Do something every day you weren’t “asked” or “told” to do, but know you should do.

5. be a disciplined learner- understand it’s your role to be an expert, no matter what level or role you play in an organization. Don’t just be one step ahead of your boss in being skilled at your job…. be an expert.

6. create corporate culture, don’t just consume it- help set the standard in your organization, don’t just reflect it. Be a thermostat, not a thermometer.

7. be a servant- much harder said than done. Much of this perspective comes from having a great attitude.

 

A few videos worth watching

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Take a few minutes today and laugh or be inspired……..

Here you go:

1. An elderly couple who just got their first laptop ever, complete with a built in video recorder……and that is where the fun begins:

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2. This is just funny. Thanks to Ken Coleman and Bill Hampton for introducing this:

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3. A great video from Chipotle entitled Back to the Start. Good friend Jonathan Bostic turned me onto this:

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4. This is why I love my good friends from Gungor. Because they create amazing music:

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Young Influencers List, September Edition

in Misc,Young Influencers List. 1 Comment

Here you go, the September edition of the Young Influencers List. You can find past month’s editions HERE.

1. Bubba Watson- PGA Tour golfer and Georgia grad. A great follow on Twitter.

2. Angie Smith- Über blogger and Women of Faith speaker. Wife and mom and writer. Amazing story of God’s grace.

3. Josh Garrels- musician and songwriter from Portland. Recent album is Love and War and the Sea in Between. Download for free.

4. Tim O’Mara- founder of Beltline Bike Shop, a community project/initiative in Atlanta.

5. Peter Ahn- founder of Metro Community Church and Zimele, a ministry in South Africa that won the Courageous Leadership Award in 2009 at the Leadership Summit.

6. Heather Larson- Compassion and Justice Director at Willow Creek Community Church.

7. THI’SL- songwriter, artist and rapper.