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You are here: Home / Archives for B2013

Learn 12 Secrets to Becoming a Thought Leader

November 19, 2013 by David Zinger 19 Comments

Cogito ergo sum – I think therefore I am.

(Reading Time: 5 Minutes)

David Zinger Cartoon Smaller Version

Learn how to be a thought leader from David Zinger’s employee engagement thought leadership. Do you want to be a thought leader? This post outlines a quirky 12 step process to thought leadership.

What’s in a name? I have been referred to as a thought leader in employee engagement and was conferred engagement Guru status by the UK’s Engage for Success movement. I never knew that a business and workplace movement in the UK could confer guru status. I believe that if you think you are a thought leader or a guru in all likelihood you are neither of these things. I don’t think I am a thought leader, just a fifty-nine year old guy living on the Canadian prairies in Winnipeg who developed an abiding passion for the various permutations and combinations of engagement in leadership, management, work, and living.

Here are 12 idiosyncratic steps if you are interested in being thought of as a though leader:

Do I contradict myself? Very well, then I contradict myself, I am large, I contain multitudes. – Walt Whitman

Develop a mild to medium obsession with a topic.  I admit that I am obsessed with engagement and what it means. I can’t resist reading a book or blog about engagement. I check tweets on engagement about five times a day. I think about engagement all the time.  Psychologists suggest we have about two thousand 14-second daydreams each day. A fair number of my daydreams involve engagement.

Be willing to go anywhere to learn about your specialty. I have gone from military bases in Winnipeg to distilleries in Manitoba to learn about engagement. I have walked the tunnels of uranium mines in Northern Saskatchewan and spent time scurrying though a platinum smelter in South Africa in search of engagement. I got a real buzz of engagement by using computers over three summers to interact with honeybees in their hives to learn about social engagement. If you want to buzz off for a few moments click on the title of my free eBook: Waggle: 39 Ways to Improve Human Organizations, Work, and Engagement. Thought leaders need to go anywhere to learn from anyone (even another species) about engagement.

Your best thoughts always begin with ignorance. Everything I have learned about engagement has come from my ignorance. To me, ignorance simply means not knowing. Stupidity is thinking you know when you don’t. It is okay to be ignorant just don’t be stupid about it. Just because we start with ignorance doesn’t mean that we stay there.

You are only half right but don’t let your brains fall out. I believe that half of what I say is right on, evidence-based, and state of the art while half of what I say is wrong. The conundrum  is that I don’t know the difference. Concepts, ideas, and practices need to be played out and what works for one person, team, or organization may not work for another. Jacob Needleman, the philosopher offered the following advice, “it’s good to keep an open mind, but not so open that your brains fall out.”

It is more important to write than be right.  E. M. Forester once wrote, “how do I know what I think until I see what I write.” Writing has proven to be a good way to think. I have written over 2500 blog posts, 3 books, and 10000 tweets. I read to learn but I also write to learn. A thought leader can seldom go wrong by writing.

You can think on our own but you are never alone. Thought leadership does not exist in isolation or a vacuum. I founded and host a 6100 member community on employee engagement.  I have devoted countless hours over the past 6 years to this community and it has been worth every second. We are now firmly embedded in the era of social thinking supplanting solo thinking.

You can never know enough, or retain enough, to stop being a student. I am enthralled by learning and learn from everyone I encounter. I default on being a student. I study rather than read. Currently, I am studying, Employee Engagement in Theory and Practice. I can’t help myself as I make notes and draw little diagrams in the margin, I argue with certain statements and put giant check marks beside other statement, and the white pages of the book are streaked with contrails of yellow highlighter.

the Pyramid Model of Employee Engagement Square

Build a pyramid so that your thoughts will outlast you. I never intended to build a pyramid but I ended up building a 10 block pyramid of  engagement. I am a visual thinker and created images for the key elements of engagement. Before I knew it the blocks took the shape of a pyramid. Partially as a tribute to the great UCLA’s basketball coach John Wooden’s pyramid of success and partially because the pyramid structure created a strong, almost intuitive, visual representation of the tactical and practical requirements of full engagement. It may be premature to declare this but I believe the pyramid of engagement may be my magnum opus, or it could be the manifestation of regression to when I was three years old and  totally engaged in playing with wooden alphabet blocks.

Embrace contradictions and change your mind.  My mind has been changed often in engagement. I have more questions than answers. My thoughts lead me more than I lead my thoughts. I have always loved the line by Walt Whitman at the start of these 12 steps: “Do I contradict myself? Very well, then I contradict myself, I am large, I contain multitudes.”

To find enlightenment be a lamp. A much wiser one than I, the  Buddha, said “be a lamp unto yourself.” We must shine a light on own thinking and approaches. We can go around the globe in search of engagement and fail to realize that it resides in our own hands, head, and heart.

Waggle while you work. My honeybees taught me to waggle. Waggles are their dance-like movements to communicate with their community about sources of pollen and even the location of a new home. I trust my thoughts will help others find and nourish their own engagement work. I place countless links in my tweets and updates on Facebook, Google+, LinkedIn and Twitter feeds.

Think, pray, laugh. I have kept everything in perspective by following the Chinese beatitude: Blessed are those who can laugh at themselves, they shall never cease to be entertained. I also maintain my serenity with the modified serenity prayer I learned about 30 years ago: God grant me the laughter to see the past with perspective, face the future with hope, and celebrate today without taking myself too seriously. Thought leaders who laugh, last. Enjoy Assorted Zingers: Poems and Cartoons to Take a Bite Out of Work.

Alfred Adler was a thought leader for psychological thinking. He didn’t follow Sigmund Freud’s path or someone else’s path, he created his own. Supposedly after presenting his latest theories and thinking on psychology in front of very large audiences he would conclude his presentation with this statement of heartfelt uncertainty, “things could also be quite otherwise.” As we journey forward in engagement towards 2020, let’s never forget that, things could also be quite otherwise.

The map is not the territory. ~ Alfred Korzybski

David Zinger Employee Engagement Speaker

David Zinger has been led around by his thoughts on employee engagement for the past 7 years. He is an employee engagement speaker from the Canadian prairies who believes we must be on the same level with everyone else and that pyramids are for blocks not for people.

Filed Under: Employee Engagement Tagged With: #employeeengagement, 12 steps, B2013, David Zinger Employee Engagement Speaker, Employee Engagement, Pyramid of Employee Engagement, Rosetta Stone, thought leader, thought leadership

Employee engagement: Don’t be blind to what you already do!

February 23, 2013 by David Zinger Leave a Comment

Overcome Your Organization’s Employee Engagement Metaphoric Disconnect.

I am honored to work with so many fine companies and organizations on engagement. To create a strong approach to engagement we must not use a cookie cutter or off the shelf approach to engagement. I have talked with 5 clients already in 2013 about the disconnect between what they offer their customers and clients and how they engage their employees.

I have called this the metaphoric disconnect meaning that organizations often have a lacuna or blind spot. Marketers would refer to this as the connection between the external and  the internal brand but I think it is bigger than that and the very use of the word brand blinds some companies to how they can have their engagement approaches mirror their purpose, tools, and approach to customers and clients.

For example:

  • If you are a dance company how does dance influence your engagement?
  • If you are an energy company how does energy generation and transmission fit for your approach to engagement?
  • If you are a health care organization how do you create healthy engagement?
  • If you are a social service organization how do you serve and connect your employees socially?
  • If you are a financial company how does investment, return, and currency fit within your engagement efforts?

Before you go looking for external solutions to internal challenges make sure you look at what you are doing externally and determine how you can transfer the concepts and approaches to internal engagement. Of course, as David Zinger, I may need to use more zingers and put more zing into my work!

Zinger Associates

David Zinger is not a brand, he is a human being who wants to help other organizations and individuals create strong engagement with work. He is working at putting a bit more “zing” into what he does.

Filed Under: Employee Engagement Tagged With: B2013

Employee Engagement: 13 Employee Engagement Heartbreaks

February 19, 2013 by David Zinger 8 Comments

Cleaning out 13 clogged arteries in employee engagement

Sheriff_Zinger5.1 (2)

Umair Hague wrote an intriguing post on the Harvard Business Review blog entitled: How to Have a Year That Matters. He offered a number of provocative questions, including: Why are you here? What do you want?  Who’s on your side? What’s it worth?

The question that caused me to pause was, what breaks your heart?

Hague stated:

Follow your passion, we’re often told. But how do you find your passion? Let me put it another way: what is it that breaks your heart about the world? It’s there that you begin to find what moves you. If you want to find your passion, surrender to your heartbreak. Your heartbreak points towards a truer north — and it’s the difficult journey towards it that is, in the truest sense, no mere passing idyllic infatuation, but enduring, tempestuous passion.

This made me think about what breaks my heart about employee engagement.

Here are 13 of my employee engagement heart breakers:

  1. Employees who experience work as sheer drudgery.
  2. Employees who are totally drained at the end of the day and have nothing left for their family.
  3. Parents who complain day after day about their work in front of their children and believe they are victims.
  4. That any employee, in any organization, would feel invisible and go unrecognized.
  5. The amount of productivity and performance that drains out of organizations because of disengagement.
  6. That we probably spend more money on employee engagement surveys than actually improving employee engagement.
  7. That employees and organizations believe that for honesty to occur surveys must be anonymous.
  8. That anyone would see disengagement as a punishable offence rather than a trigger for a conversation.
  9. Organization who “get” employees to engage rather than let employees engage and believe that there are “rules” to follow.
  10. When engagement is seen merely as sucking out more discretionary effort from overtaxed employees.
  11. CEO’s who fail to see they are employees and refer to employees as them or human capital.
  12. A mad dash to quarterly results at the expense of employees or organizational sustainability.
  13. The worry that employee engagement will die as a management fad rather than to truly improve how we work, manage and lead.

What breaks your heart in regards to work, management, leadership, and employee engagement?

Employee engagement works when it works for the benefit of all and does not cause heartburn or heartache. I know my heart breakers mean that I am working in the area that I need to be working in and I have found or created my heartfelt calling to improve the world of work.

Zinger Associates

David Zinger is an employee engagement expert who is willing to have his heart broken and also willing to develop and deliver on strong approaches to create hearty employee engagement for the benefit of all.

 

Filed Under: Employee Engagement Tagged With: B2013, David Zinger, Employee Engagement, heart broken, meaning, passion, Zinger & Associates

Employee Engagement: 10 Personal Work and Wellbeing Prescriptions for 2013

January 8, 2013 by David Zinger Leave a Comment

10 Engagement Prescriptions for 2013

1Ball_Engage

Here are David Zinger’s 10 personal prescriptions for work and wellbeing engagement in 2013

  1. 20 seconds to results. Begin each major activity with a 20 second pause to determine the result I am trying to achieve from that activity.
  2. Relationship turbocharging. Turbocharge relationships by reaching out to others for connection, assistance, input, contribution, insight, and collaboration.
  3. Just 24 minutes. Perform the bulk of my work in tightly focused 24 minute time blocks.
  4. 24 hours a month. Use sixty 24-minute periods each month to create a completed special project (ie. e-book).
  5. Wellbeing is a daily exercise. Enliven myself with daily wellbeing experiences from exercise and reading to healthy nutrition or afternoon naps.
  6. 3 word GPS. Engage daily with my 2013 three word theme of: discern, invite, engage.
  7. Give. Give more than I think I have and use the energy gain of work to surpass the energy drain of work.
  8. Be mindful of the 3 R’s. Practice mindful rest, relaxation, and rejuvenation.
  9. Shrink the world. Make the world smaller through travel and global connections.
  10. Bounce. Smile, laugh, and have a ball.

Prescription: Engage daily for 2013.

David Zinger is looking forward to a great 2013 based on robust and authentic work and wellbeing.

Filed Under: Employee Engagement Tagged With: 2013 engagement, B2013, David Zinger, Employee Engagement, work and wellbeing

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