Thursday, March 27, 2014

Values

Leadership, no matter what form, is driven by the set of values a person or group of persons believe Values drive all aspects of leadership: process, ethics, and empowerment in the way people interact each other and purpose and inclusiveness in the reason for the group to be formed. The latter way that values are used in leadership is the reasoning behind a movement in the first place. The value of belief in free speech may motivate a person to join or create a group that fights to guarantee the free speech of others through protest or unionizing, for example. Within that group, the same value of free speech allows each member to be honest with each other and conduct business in a way that does not impede on the voices of its members.
 In group dynamics, it is important to understand the value of others. For example, it may not be a big deal to show up late to a meeting for some groups but others may value punctuality and efficiency. Knowing your audience as a leader or a follower can decide whether or not they will respect your ideas beyond your methods of achieving them. If a group cannot get past the fact that your report is scribbled on Post-It notes because they value professionalism or because it is in 20 page essay because they value creativity and engagement then the meaning behind the words on those notes or that essay is not going to well received, no matter the significance behind them.
As a leader and a follower, I value dedication more than any other trait. Dedication is the only trait that you absolutely need to make an idea or plan successful. Being creative, passionate, loyal, or truthful doesn’t carry much weight if you are not willing to put in the hard work to see a project through. Dedication is what can turn a failure into a success because you are not satisfied until the product is completed or the goal is reached. For example, if a member of a group has no desire to reach the goal, then they will not see it through until the end.
Another thing I value is the ability to effectively communicate, whether that is information or feelings because nothing can get done if everyone in the group is not on the same page. Often times disagreements are nothing but products of misunderstanding. In an informational sense, poorly communicating something like the purpose of a meeting, the goal of an organization, or what kind of lunch meat the group likes (maybe it’s a picnic meeting) will lead to members of the group either wittingly or unwittingly confused. Those who don’t know what is going on will either realize it and make unsure decisions or won’t realize it and make sure decisions that are wrong for the purpose of the group. In a feeling sense, poorly communicating how the actions of another affected you will make a bigger deal out of something small or vice versa. I found this out specifically in the Zebra/Water activity with both informational and emotional miscommunication. During the activity, we did not understand the intent of others in the group when it came to strategy. Because of that, some people’s ideas were shut down. Not until after the activity did I realize that some people felt left out or hurt about those decisions. Communication was not effective until we all had time to reflect and share how we felt.
Group values and individual values and the way they interact truly decide whether that group is successful or not in their endeavors.

3 comments:

  1. I like the notion of dedication being important. Unfortunately a good project can fail if people just aren't showing & getting stuff done. On the flip side just having that basic theme in place can awesomely take a team of normal people and have them achieving extraordinary larger than life projects. Any leader would hope for hardworking followers, and any follower would love a hardworking leader.

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  2. Nice post Ashley! I saw that in your introductory blog post you mentioned Strengths...taking it 5 times to be exact... :) Just out of curiosity - what are your top 5, and do you think those showed up in the values you expressed? Specifically I heard a lot of "responsibility" and "communication" in the post above. Glad to have you in class this semester - keep speaking up, you're rocking this course!

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  3. My top 5 strengths are input, responsibility, learner, restorative, and achiever in those orders. I found it interesting that they were all categorized into strategic style strengths and none to do with working with people, something that I see reflected in my leadership style that I am learning to work on in this class!

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