= Leadership 101 == Decision Making Leaders make decisions. Choosing the right style for each decision is important and will significantly impact your ability to lead effectively. Students should read this brief summary of the 4 primary decision styles prior to meeting: https://www.zingtrain.com/content/decisions-part-one-choosing-decision-style Meet to discuss decision making, pros and cons of each style, when to use them, and ask students to note their decisions over the next few weeks, to try to use each style, and to discuss them at subsequent meetings: what worked well, what didn't, and why. This topic is crucial to introduce as early as possible so student leaders set the tone properly with their early decisions when building trust through consensus is easier. == Leadership and Taking Action Distribute 7-Habits book to all participants. Initial discussions focus on leadership ideas broadly: what does it mean to lead, what are the qualities and characteristics of a leader. * Management is doing things right, leadership is doing the right things * Who would you want to follow: discuss integrity, empathy, caring, dedication, competence * Differentiating technical skill from team leadership * Introduce Habit 1: "Be proactive" as a sine-qua-non for leadership and effectiveness. * Introduce mantra: "It's better to be kind than to be right" - revisit this often. == Goals and Priorities Establishing clear goals and setting priorities is critical to being effective. This topic is covered in at least two meetings: Meeting 1: Introduce habits 2, 3. Discuss Ben Franklin's habits. Try to keep the focus concrete and relevant to the students' perspective (how these techniques can help them juggle their class work, college applications, friend/family obligations, and extra-curriculars like robotics). Students should review these links before this meeting: * Habit 2: Begin with the end in mind - clear goals serve as your compass * Habit 3: Put first things first - know how to prioritize * http://www.workwondersnow.com/2011/05/31/managing-your-priorites-time-and-life/ * http://www.forbes.com/sites/patbrans/2013/01/01/twelve-time-management-habits-to-master-in-2013/#211f09252cad * Students should commit to identifying 3-6 high-level goals for their sub-team for training and build season to be brought in writing to the next meeting * Post-mortem Exercise: what do you want others to say about your leadership at the year-end banquet. * Discuss the value of soliciting goals from team members rather than suggesting goals to them; people are more invested in achieving goals *they* suggested. * Discuss prioritizing activities using the urgent/important matrix. Students should review these links before next meeting: * [https://www.mindtools.com/pages/article/newHTE_91.htm Eisenhower Matrix] * [https://www.usgs.gov/media/files/time-management-grid Time Management Grid] Meeting 2: Briefly review everyone's goals (homework from meeting 1), choosing good examples for deeper discussion * Discuss prioritizing and urgent vs. important. These are the activities you must consciously make time for because they are not pulling at you for attention but are critical for success. Review goals that are important but not urgent (e.g.): * Rookies should go home with new knowledge and wanting to come back next year * Prepare written documentation and processes to help in future years * Build relationships with other teams and organizations * Training new students to take over roles and responsibilities currently held by juniors/seniors == Relationships (Interdependence) Meeting 1: Discuss importance of relationships and their impact on teams * Note that activities around relationships and planning/preparation are often important but not urgent. (review Habit 3) * Introduce habit 4: Think Win-Win. Students should review: https://toughnickel.com/business/The-Seven-Habits-A-Practical-Summary-Habit-4-Win-Win * Introduce habit 5: Seek first to understand then be understood. Students should review: http://www.behavior-change.net/covey-5-seek-first-to-understand-then-to-be-understood/ * Discuss trust and the emotional bank account Meeting 2: Explore concrete examples of thinking win-win or no deal (focus on learning to break zero-sum thinking) * Zero-sum vs. abundance mentality (and it's relation to thinking win-win or no deal) * Hidden Agendas (and how they damage trust) * Defending/loyalty to the Absent (and how it builds trust) * Respecting everyone's role and the importance of avoiding words and ideas like "above", "key", "subordinate", etc. * Watch [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FbOIA9vhHG0 this video] on paradigms before the next meeting: Meeting 3: Paradigms, Building Morale * Show students that every single one of them has had very difficult experiences in high school (family crisis/death in the family, breakup, rejection, feeling excluded, etc.) - show of hands usually does the trick. * Importance of friendships: [http://www.thetentruths.com.au/Downloads/First_break_all_the_rules_exec_summary.pdf FBATR]: "I have a best friend on the robotics team" * Most important aspect of team per alumni * http://www.gallup.com/businessjournal/511/Item-10-Best-Friend-Work.aspx * Importance of praise: FBATR: "I have received praise in the last week for something I've done well". * Review how to deliver praise: honest, specific. * http://positivesharing.com/2012/09/the-top-5-ways-not-to-praise-people-at-work/ * http://www.gallup.com/businessjournal/25369/Praise-Praising-Your-Employees.aspx) * Discuss the importance of getting to know your teammates, building relationships with them, and helping them build relationships with each other. * Student leaders should know everyone on their team: names, grades, background, likes/dislikes, etc. - develop a relationship. * Students on the team should know everyone on their sub-team (at a minimum) === Resources * https://www.usgs.gov/about/organization/science-support/human-capital/leadership-tools [[Image(bossVleader.jpg,300px,center)]]