Archive for the 'Leadership' Category
Guest Post | 6 Ways to Build a Loyal Team by Todd Adkins
Today, RonnieFloyd.com welcomes guest writer, Todd Adkins. Todd is the Director of Leadership at LifeWay Christian Resources and host of the 5 Leadership Questions Podcast.
If you want to go fast, go alone. If you want to go far, go together. Developing leaders and working together in a team is the model that Jesus laid out for us with his very first followers. When you build the trust of your team, you are investing in the long-term future.
Here are 6 ways to build a loyal team:
1. If you want a loyal team, help them see their future
One of the quickest ways to endear yourself to your team is to ask them questions about their goals and aspirations. This can’t be just lip service; you actually have to want to see them develop and be willing to invest yourself in the process as well, even if it means you will have to replace them. In fact, if you’re good, they may even replace you.
2. Celebrate effort even if the results are less than expected
I am not talking about creating an environment where everyone gets a trophy and has their turn as employee of the month. There are extenuating circumstances that can thwart the best-laid plans even when they were executed flawlessly. Nothing reveals character like how a leader loses. If they went down swinging, don’t treat them like a loser. They have just shown you what they are made of and learned a valuable lesson or three along the way. Coach them up and process it with them, but celebrate the effort privately and publicly.
3. Hand over more decisions to your team
Congratulations, you are the leader. While you have every right to make all of the decisions for the team, if you do so, you greatly limit your impact and the impact of your team. Don’t be that guy who makes all the decisions and then complains that your people can’t make decisions for themselves. The truth is the higher the level of leadership, the fewer decisions you should be making. The best way to help your staff person make a decision when they come to you is by asking them questions, starting with: What do you think? Don’t offer ideas; guide them to their own conclusion by asking them questions.
4. Brag on your team
If you don’t have good things to say about your team on a regular basis, you probably have the wrong team. No leader ever suffers because everyone underneath them is a rock star. Seriously, think about it. When is the last time that someone developed the people around them so well that they got fired.
- Brag on them privately one on one.
- Brag on them publicly in front of them.
- Brag on them privately behind their back; they will hear about it.
When the time comes to have a difficult conversation or when you have to ask them to make a sacrifice, they won’t bat an eye.
5. Offer real time feedback
Don’t wait for a performance review to address any performance issues that may arise. If you have done a good job with #4, this should be no problem at all. In fact, by keeping close accounts like this, you will further endear yourself to the people you lead.
6. Ask them to teach you something
This can be personal or professional, but they will likely enjoy and appreciate adding value to their boss. I asked one of our finance guys to teach me how to build a budget that accounted for cannibalization from our main campus when we started doing multi-site. I didn’t just ask for it to be done, I took a genuine interest in his craft, became much more informed, and in the process showed I truly valued his work.
Everybody wants to be liked and to have a loyal staff, but if you apply these principles, you’ll not only have a better staff, you will also become a better leader in the process.
Finally, I’d love for you and your team to join me for PIPELINE this October in Nashville, TN. Thom Rainer, Trip Lee, Paul Tripp, Brad Lomenick, Carey Nieuwhof, Jenni Catron & others will be speaking. Ephesians 4 says that the calling of church leaders is not simply to do the work of ministry but to “train the people in the work of the ministry” in order to have the healthiest, most effective churches. PIPELINE aims to help you do just that. PIPELINE is unlike other church leadership events because it offers real training, something staffs can take home and begin implementing immediately.
Todd Adkins
Director of Leadership, LifeWay Christian Resources
@ToddAdkins
Guest Post | How’s Your VISION? by Jeff Crawford
Today, RonnieFloyd.com welcomes guest writer, Dr. Jeff Crawford. Dr. Crawford is the President of Cross Church School of Ministry and a Teaching Pastor at Cross Church.
Each summer for the last 12 years, I have either led or been involved in a staff advance experience for our ministry team and their spouses. We just got back from this year’s time away and a major theme that was brought to the table for our team was VISION.
VISION is the stuff of life in a church. The Bible says that where there is no VISION the people cast off restraint (Proverbs 29:18). That means where there is no VISION, people lose focus, they get restless, and things fall apart. I believe that the local church must have a compelling vision. Pastor, God has put it on you to be the primary vision caster for your congregation. It is on you to seek the face of God and to absorb from the Holy Spirit the unique vision the Lord has for your church. I believe that kind of VISION will energize, focus, and breathe life into all you do as a pastor and your church does as a Kingdom force in this lost world.
One thing I re-discovered on our recent staff advance is that if you are not spending a lot of time talking about and doing VISION, it is easy to forget what VISION looks like.
What does VISION look like?
- VISION is bigger than you.
- VISION must be biblically based.
- VISION is external, not internal.
- VISION thinks BIG, as in God-sized, as in only God can do this.
- VISION thinks FUTURE.
- VISION is about MORE.
- VISION is about REACHING.
- VISION is RISKY.
- VISION evolves as VISION is realized.
Let me challenge you to apply the above statements about VISION to your family, work, life, and yes, your church. The default position for all of us is to be internally focused on what we have now, “making it the best it can be.” This, of course, is necessary and you SHOULD be doing these things, BUT these things are not VISION, they are maintenance.
I encourage you to PRAY and ask God to give you a VISION for your life. God says that His ways are higher than our ways and His thoughts are higher than our thoughts (Isaiah 55:9). If that is true and if we really believe that, then we need to think GREAT thoughts and dream BIG VISION, because no matter how big we dream or how big our VISION, we will never be able to out-do God!
Dr. Jeff Crawford
President, Cross Church School of Ministry
Teaching Pastor, Cross Church