Top Posts of 2011 Countdown #3 – Rules for Creative Meetings

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Top Posts of 2011 Countdown #3

18 Rules for Creative Meetings 

I’ve written before several times about rules for creative meetings, but wanted to create the “ultimate list of rules,” all together in one place!

Creating an environment for “being creative” takes work. It takes energy and preparation. You don’t just show up and flip the creative switch on immediately.

There is a reason that certain groups and organizations are ultimately more creative than others- it’s because they are on purpose when it comes to creating the right kind of environment for creativity. They are intentional with creating the creative environment.

Here at Catalyst, we are very intentional about our creative process. It’s part of our DNA.

When it comes to creating the right kind of environment, we’ve established some “rules” (suggested behavior) for our “creative” meetings:

1. Set the expectations for the meeting up front. Be very clear, even if there are no rules.

2. All ideas are welcome and needed. There is no bad answer. Ever.

3. Many times the great ideas end up being an average idea that was built on and built on and built on. Give the average ideas a chance.

4. The answer is always “yes, and” and never “no, but” in a brainstorming meeting. Debbie downer and Mr. No aren’t invited. NO has no place at the table. Ever.

5. No one person can dominate the conversation/meeting. Respect everyone’s participation and their thoughts.

6. Allow for movement- standing up, walking, sitting down, whatever works for people- especially those with shorter attention spans!

7. Provide creative “extras”, such as toys, sports items, collectives, visual effects and other “enhancers.”

8. Take mental breaks every 30-40 minutes, and physical breaks every 90 minutes at minimum.

9. Take VERY detailed notes. Capture everything that is said and created. You have to have a dedicated notetaker. Record every idea that’s thrown out. Capturing ideas and then being able to find them later and put them into action is crucial. Everyone thinks they can remember the best ideas, but literally within a couple of hours you’ll have forgotten.

10. Always allow for rabbit trails, but have a facilitator who keeps things moving in a certain direction.

11. Keep the fun factor high. Keep the fun meter above 50%. If it drops below that, stop and re-establish the fun factor.

12. If you have anyone leaning towards operations or finance or asking the question of “how much will that cost” then they are banned and can’t ever come to a brainstorming meeting again. Unless they can think outside the box, keep the bean counters out.

13. Think/dream way bigger and with no limitations whatsoever. Try to develop ideas outside the norm and outside your industry or niche.

14. Make sure you do your homework. Research ideas, get on youtube for a couple of hours, see what others are doing, and intentionally find ideas and insight that will fuel conversations and idea development.

15. Music, vibe and atmosphere are crucial. Set a tone with the appropriate music, appropriate and energetic lighting, lots of snacks, and plenty of coffee and caffeine. A high energy environment makes being creative way easier.

16. Invite friends from outside your team. Most creative people love being invited to creative meetings with other teams, because they know it will be invigorating and fun.

17. If possible, make sure your facilitator is NOT a participant. It keeps them neutral and away from “liking” certain ideas and thus influencing the nature of what ideas seem to be the most popular.

18. The meeting is only the beginning. The best ideas typically are created, gathered, and decided on outside of creative meetings. Make sure your creative meeting is a Catalyst for ongoing conversations and creative ideas.

Hopefully these are helpful as you create, brainstorm and ideate in your own environments…..

Top Posts of 2011 Countdown #4: Great Leadership Books to Read

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40 Great Leadership Books to Read 

I love leadership. And I read a lot. So I wanted to provide you with a list of some of the books I recommend.

These are not the only leadership books you should read. There are hundreds of others that are great. But these are just simply 40 of my favorites.

So here you go. And please share this list with your friends, team, and other leaders who might benefit.

40 leadership books to read:

1. Good to GreatJim Collins

2. The 21 Irrefutable Laws of LeadershipJohn Maxwell

3. Courageous LeadershipBill Hybels

4. The Next Generation LeaderAndy Stanley

5. Now, Discover Your StrengthsMarcus Buckingham

6. Love is the Killer AppTim Sanders

7. The Tipping PointMalcolm Gladwell

8. TribesSeth Godin

9. It: How Churches and Leaders can Get it and Keep itCraig Groeschel

10. IntegrityHenry Cloud

11. In the Name of Jesus: Reflections on Christian LeadershipHenri Nouwen

12. AxiomBill Hybels

13. In a Pit with a Lion on a Snowy DayMark Batterson

14. Five Dysfunctions of a TeamPatrick Lencioni

15. VisioneeringAndy Stanley

16. Drive: The Surprising Truth about What Motivates UsDaniel Pink

17. Silos, Politics and Turf WarsPatrick Lencioni

18. LinchpinSeth Godin

19. How to Win Friends and Influence People- Dale Carnegie

20. Wooden on Leadership: How to Create a Winning OrganizationJohn Wooden

21. Leadership is an ArtMax Depree

22. The Leadership Challenge- Barry Posner and Jim Kouzes

23. Leading with the HeartCoach Mike Krzyzewski

24. unChristianGabe Lyons and David Kinnaman

25. True NorthBill George

26. Built to LastJim Collins

27. Execution- Ram Charan and Larry Bossidy

28. In Search of Excellence- Tom Peters

29. The Seven Habits of Highly Effective PeopleStephen Covey

30. The 17 Indisputable Laws of TeamworkJohn Maxwell

31. What the CEO Wants You to KnowRam Charan

32. ReworkJason Fried and David Hansson

33. The Experience EconomyJoseph Pine and James Gilmore

34. Made to StickChip and Dan Heath

35. BlinkMalcolm Gladwell

36. Making Ideas HappenScott Belsky

37. The Effective Executive- Peter Drucker

38. Emotional IntelligenceDaniel Goleman

39. On Becoming a LeaderWarren Bennis

40. Leading ChangeJohn Kotter

Top Posts of 2011 Countdown- #5 – Too Big for your Britches

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The #5 post of 2011:

6 Warning Signs for Being too Big for Your Britches

This post ties in directly to the issue of Accountability. Having someone in our lives who will shoot straight with us is incredibly important.

Many times as leaders we start losing a sense of reality and get “too big for your britches,” as my grandmother used to say when I was growing up. When that happened as a youngster, my grandmother would go grab a switch from the tree outside and I would quickly shape up.

Here are a few warning signs of this potentially occurring for leaders. The pitfalls of becoming too much of a prima donna.

1. You feel like you need an entourage. Everywhere you go.

2. You’re unreachable. You have so many systems and handlers in place to shield you from the outside world that not even your closest friends can get in touch with you.

3. The only people who get any time with you are those who you need something from or who you see as further up the ladder of success. Anyone “below” you gets pushed off to someone else.

4. You speak and give advice WAY more than you listen and ask questions.

5. You quit laughing consistently, especially at yourself.

6. There are certain jobs or projects that you feel are simply “below” you. You would be offended if someone asked you to do some of these tasks.

7. Nothing is ever good enough or done well enough. A standard of excellence is one thing. But when nothing ever meets your approval or is good enough for you, you’ve crossed the line to being way too wrapped up in your own world.

Any of these consistently showing up in your world? If so, I recommend you take a chill pill and lighten up!

Favorite New Things December

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1. New Song: Break Every Chain by Jesus Culture; Spirit Break Out and At Your Name by Worship Central

2. New Movie: We Bought a Zoo- a feel good family film.

3. New App: Star Wars. I’m nerding out a bit on this one, but it’s really fun.

4. New Book: The Circle Maker by Mark Batterson

5. New Album: Austin Stone Live; Spirit Break Out by Worship Central; and Josh Garrels Love and War and the Sea in Between 

6. New Podcast: Carols from LifeChurch.tv. FREE album of great Christmas songs.

7. New Twitter Follows: Patton Dodd, Venture Expeditions, Krochet Kids

8. New Video: Tyler gets hit by Tony Romo at Catalyst Dallas earlier this year. One of my favorite moments ever at a Catalyst event!

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Top Ten Christmas Songs

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I’ve talked recently about the Top Ten Hymns of all time, and the Top Ten Modern Worship songs.

So I thought I would put together my TOP TEN CHRISTMAS Songs, since it is Christmas Eve Eve. Here you go! Not making the list are such classics as White Christmas, I’ll Be Home for Christmas, The 12 Days of Christmas, Do You Hear What I Hear?, and many others.

10. (tie) Hark the Herald Angels Sing/Deck the Halls- Deck the Halls gets added just because of the great scene in the movie A Christmas Story at the end of the film eating Duck on Christmas Day….

9. Jingle Bells- sang in every 2nd grade class across the country.

8. Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer- also sang in every 2nd grade class around the country.

7. The First Noel- classic.

6. Away in a Manger- much different meaning now that I’ve been to Bethlehem.

5. We Wish You a Merry Christmas- sung at every Christmas party.

4. O Holy Night- man, always powerful.

3. Silent Night- one of my personal favorites.

2. O Come All Ye Faithful- tough to put this at #2….

1. Joy to the World- hopeful, powerful, and singable. A worthy #1.

What would you add?

Questions to ask for reviewing 2011

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I posted this last year, but wanted to go back to it as a very practical resource/application for the end of the year. It’s important we take time as leaders to reflect and look back over the last 12 months, as well as looking forward to the next 12 months and beyond.

Year End Review Questions:

1. What are the 2-3 themes that personally defined 2011 for me?

2. What people, books, accomplishments, or special moments created highlights in 2011?

3. Give yourself a grade from 1-10 in the following areas of focus for 2011: vocationally, spiritually, family, relationally, emotionally, financially, physically, recreationally.

4. What am i working on that is BIG for 2012 and beyond?

5. As I move into 2012, is a majority of my energy being spent on things that drain me or things that energize me?

6. How am I preparing for 10 years from now? 20 years from now?

7. What 2-3 things have I been putting off that I need to execute on before the end of the year?

8. Is my family closer at the end of this year? Am I a better friend at the end of this year? If not, what needs to change immediately?

Treat your customers like Celebrities

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It’s important you treat your customers, your tribe, your clients, those you do business with like celebrities and VIP’s. What do I mean by this?

If Tom Hanks, or Denzel Washington, or Oprah showed up at your office, what would you do? How would you talk to them? What would be your body language? Would you be too busy with other things to say hi to them???….

A few thoughts:

1. Make your customers feel important. Shower them with encouragement and act like they are the only person in the room. Listen to them, and look them in the eye.

2. Show an amazing attention to details. Remember their names, their kids names, their favorite color, where they went to college, favorite movies, favorite snack, etc. And when they request something, even if very small, make it happen and execute.

3. Create a “customer rider.” Celebrities have riders, that provide demands on quirky stuff. Same with customers. Allow your best customers to create a “rider,” thus providing a way for you to get to know them better.

4. Truly be interested in what they are interested in. If they like the ballet, then learn about ballet. If they like sports, take them to a game. If they like art, give them a painting for their birthday.

5. Be eager to serve them. Your mindset should be to drop everything you are doing to take care of them. If Denzel or Beyonce walked in your house or your office, you would get them a diet coke and not be worried about the spreadsheet you are working on…..

6. Provide them swag. Celebrities get swag all the time. So should your customers.

7. Refer them to your friends and make connections for them that are win/win. Celebrities get tons of opportunities many times because people are always willing to introduce them to their friends. Make those same connections for your customers.

8. Respond immediately. Call them back the same day, return their emails in 24 hours, those kinds of things.

End of Week things to Know

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1. Check out my interview with Bill Hybels on the latest Catalyst Podcast. You can listen here or better yet download for FREE on iTunes.

2. Here are some FREE songs courtesy of North Point Music and Catalyst. From Todd Fields, Eddie Kirkland, and Casey Darnell.

3. Speaking of FREE songs, over 30 songs and other great resources are available for FREE on the Catalyst West website. Just click “open your FREE present” at the top right of the page.

4. Friend and designer Barton Damer won the Creative Catalyst design contest put on by Veer and also sponsored by OneDotZero. Check it out here.

5. If you are a college student, better get your tickets for Passion now. Only 2 weeks until thousands of college students gathered in Atlanta. Check out this great short film created to highlight a focus of the event this year- combating modern day slavery.

6. Got this from Tyler Stanton’s blog. Tyler has a way of finding the ridiculous. I love reading his blog. And this is awesome.

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