Friday, September 27, 2013
Tuesday, May 14, 2013
Transformation through Coaching
“Our conference is a few days away!”
I am calling
coaches, inviting them to participate by helping the organizing committee
promote the event and also to come and show support for our Chapter.
“Why be part of this?” I ask. “What
could possibly enhance your capability as a coach and leader?” “You have experience. You know people. Where’s one space where if you improved,
would simply open up a world of opportunities in terms of progress for you?”
As President
of the International Coaching Federation Malaysia Chapter (ICFM) I also work
hard to engage businesses in Malaysia.
You can imagine, not everybody buys into a new approach for
communicating that enables possibility and potential.
“What? Ask my staff for feedback? Allow people to share their opinion and get
involved in making decisions? Are you
out of your mind?” one executive commented.
Other bosses
are happy just to listen, observe, and stay safely within their comfort
zones. After all, leadership development
involves risk. What if things
change? Oh dear, what if people actually
become powerful?
People say
I’m a different type of leader than others. Okaaayyyy… I think I’m different because I
don’t settle, and because I consistently choose to speak to people’s highest and
best. That means I can see past the
excuses, bad habits, and the story telling.
I believe I play
a role in getting people clear and reconnected to their purpose. Once this happens confusion and self – doubt
naturally fades away. And when I help
people get what they want; they reciprocate by contributing more. Being a coach enables me to lead this
way. I don’t know any other type of
professional who is specifically trained to do this.
What other approach
empowers, encourages, and enables us to feel heard and important? What type of relationship allows us to
reflect and adjust for the best way to go forward? Unlike therapy that deals with how to heal
someone, coaching is solution – oriented and designed for positive change. Most importantly, coaching holds people
accountable to… going from good to great!
Today coaching
is not a perk anymore, but a necessity.
I say this because developing human potential is the defining factor for
any sustainable economy. You and I know
that for success, attitude is everything.
The more we
experience the gap between gender and generation, the wider the divide between
understandings, expectations, values, and objectives, coaching as a means to engage,
connect, and reconcile is the most effective way to communicate for desired
outcomes.
Want me to
elaborate? Think Gen – X and Gen –
Y. Try dictating terms. Younger leaders thrive on freedom, self –
expression, innovation, and free enterprise.
They are global citizens connected through technology to business in
real – time.
HR is focused
on training. We have the HRDF fund for
this. While training is about imparting mind
knowledge, coaching is about taking that knowledge from mind… to muscle. Coaching is about going from knowing… to
doing… and being.
Tell me if
you know the difference between someone who’s BEING a leader and another merely
doing leadership stuff. The answer lies
in the type of result we can expect!
When we have a successful event, we may think, “good leadership.” When we have a significant experience, we
have GRRRREAT leadership!
A leader
speaks to your heart and mind. A leader
walks their talk. A leader is about making
success available to all. When someone
is being a leader, we can speak of our experience with them in tangible, well –
defined ways because all parts come together as one whole. Coaching enables leaders to BE leaders.
How to
create a “coaching culture” in your organization? Modeling this culture requires a recipe and a
unique skill that enables us to take a pattern that works and teach it to many
without losing any quality in translation.
They say,
what we cannot measure, we cannot manage.
For this purpose, we need a benchmark.
We need a set of standards. We
need tried – and – tested training and mentoring that has an established track
record; one that delivers and will continue to deliver the desired outcome –
peak performance and sustainable development.
The ICF has this.
Why come to
the conference? Come and experience
possibility conversations!
Come and experience the shift from
performance to meaning that will turn change into transformation. High – income, high value is all about this.
Register online www.malaysiacoachingconference.com
Monday, May 13, 2013
PEACE is PROSPERITY
www.tessieworld.com
Certain parties may question the irregularities
and violations in the electoral process but it seems the market response to the
outcome of GE13 is extremely positive gauged by the demand for Malaysian
assets. On Monday May 6, the KLCI Index
surged more than 7.5% while the Ringgit climbed more than 2.3% against the US
dollar.
On April 7, the day Parliament was
dissolved, international banks were already singing praises of the Malaysian
Ringgit provided the right party comes to power. On May 7 the Ringgit climbed to a 19 – month
high, the highest since 2010. Against
the Singapore dollar, the Ringgit strengthened more than 2%.
Is this indicative of what investors
want? Aren’t people concerned about
integrity, justice, and the greater good?
The
Institute for Democracy and Economic Affairs, a group accredited by the
Election Commission to observe the vote said it was “only partially free and,
not fair.” While the campaign period
proceeded “without any major glitches,” wider issues such as media bias and
unequal constituency sizes gave an advantage to PM Najib’s coalition, it said.
What will protect our sustainable
growth? Does our future depend on who
wins the quarrel over indelible ink? Our
future depends on global market forces and rating agencies, those that see our
country and its assets with desirability and respect.
We should be thankful and proud that
international players are willing to pay top dollar for Malaysian assets
including Islamic bonds. In 2012 Malaysia’s
Islamic Banking assets rose to RM 494.6 billion while Islamic Insurance Assets
(Takaful) grew 12.4% to RM 19 billion.
According to Ernst & Young, there will be US $950 billion of
worldwide demand for Islamic bonds by 2017.
This week global market institutions
have turned bullish on the Malaysian stock market and have recommended the
banking, property, infrastructure, and energy sectors as the top plays.
May 7 – Moody’s said that Malaysia’s
fiscal reform is still unclear after the outcome of the elections. It added that money spent on the election
campaign will add to the government’s financial burden and that the poll
results may render it politically difficult for the government to implement the
goods and services tax to boost revenue.
However on the positive side Moody’s
said that BN’s election win ensured continuation of pro – growth policies and
was a positive for the rating of sovereign and government – linked entities.
Does Malaysia have a 2 – tier economy
just like Australia’s mining and resource sectors v regular business? In broad strokes one might describe our “2 –
tier” environment like this: [1] Rural v Urban [2] Government – linked
corporations v Proprietary businesses and SMEs [3] Chinese v Malaysian
“tsunami.”
May 5 –
Dato Seri Najib said in a press conference that his coalition had lost in
Selangor because of a “Chinese tsunami.” The PM called for “national reconciliation”
while blaming the opposition for making race an issue, and said he’d implement
moderate policies.
“The Chinese
tsunami is all nonsense -- it’s an urban middle-class tsunami,” said Edmund
Terence Gomez, a professor at the University of Malaya who has been writing
about Malaysian politics and business for more than two decades.
“So long
as he wants to polarize and racialize this phenomenon, then they themselves are
guilty of a racist outlook and they are incapable of any national
reconciliation,” Lim Kit Siang, who founded the Democratic Action Party, told
reporters on May 6, referring to Najib. “It’s not a Chinese tsunami; it’s a
Malaysian tsunami.”
Is it fair to assume that balance will
allay tension? When people think,
“Unfair!” there is likely to be contempt, anger, and hatred. When this is demonstrated with maturity it
takes the form of organized protests and peaceful public rallies. When negative emotion is suppressed or improperly
managed, it erupts and explodes into what we know as street fighting and crime.
May 8 – Former Prime Minister Tun Abdullah Ahmad Badawi
said in his message to the opposition, “Malaysians deserve stability and
certainty that can only come with finality and closure from this election. Let us move on in the interest of all
Malaysians.”
Malaysia has a unique history. We are a multi – faceted community; our
diversity is our strength. Calling for
“national reconciliation” suggests a rift, a breakdown. For our breakthrough… my common sense says we
must find common ground.
More than just promising hope… we must
stand for peace and progress; we must share the vision that ours is a story
with a happy ending. Peace is
prosperity. Unity… is everything. Is this something we are prepared to declare
and fulfill?
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