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How to keep achieving your goals
By.Dr.Sammy D.James


I like to define success as the progressive realization of a worthy goal. The purpose of this message is to tell you of a wonderful way to keep realizing -- to keep achieving -- your goals, one after another, in the years ahead.

A goal sometimes seems so far off, and our progress often appears to be so painfully slow, that we have a tendency to lose heart. It sometimes seems we'll never make the grade. And we come close to falling back into old habits that, while they may be comfortable now, lead to nowhere.

Well, there's a way to beat this. It's been used successfully by many of the world's most successful people, and it's been advocated by many of the greatest thinkers. It's to live successfully one day at a time!

The building blocks of a successful life
A lifetime is comprised of days, strung together into weeks, months and years. Let's reduce it to a single day, and then, still furthermore, to each task of that day.

A successful life is nothing more than a lot of successful days put together. It's going to take so many days to reach your goal. If this goal is to be reached in a minimum amount of time, every day must count.

Think of a single day as a building block with which you're building the tower of your life. Just as a stonemason can put only one stone in place at a time, you can live only one day at a time. And it's the way in which these stones are place that will determine the beauty and the strength of your tower. If each stone is successfully placed, the tower will be a success. If, on the other hand, the stones are put down in a hit-or-miss fashion, the whole tower is in danger. Now this may seem to be a rather elementary way of looking at it, but I want to make my point clear -- and it's a good and logical way of looking at a human life.

Putting this idea into practice
All right, then, let's take it one day at a time, from the time we wake up in the morning until we drop-off to sleep at night, keeping our goal in mind as often as possible.

Now, each day consists of a series of tasks -- tasks of all kinds. And the success of a day depends upon the successful completion of most of these tasks. If everything we do during the day is a success -- that is, done in the best fashion of which we are capable -- we can fall asleep that night in the comfortable knowledge that we've done our very best, that our day has been a success, that one more stone has been successfully put into place.

Do each day all that can be done that day. You don't need to overwork -- or to rush blindly into your work, trying to do the greatest possible number of things in the shortest possible amount of time. Don't try to do tomorrow's or next week's work today. It's not so much the number of things you do, but the quality, the efficiency of each separate action that counts. Gradually, you'll find yourself increasing the number of tasks and performing them all much more efficiently.
This is the way to really live!


Want to be more successful? Develop an attitude of service

According to the late self-help expert Earl Nightingale, our success in life is directly proportional to the number of people we serve and the quality of that service. While this life principle may seem to be so simple as to be-self-evident, it's surprising the number of people who don't seem to be unaware that it applies to them. But, like any natural law, it does apply, to everyone.

Let's take a closer look at the relationship between your service and your compensation in life, and then explore some creative ways that you can enrich others -- and yourself -- by increasing your service to them.

Measuring your service
Earl Nightingale was a fan of visual metaphors as a tool for communicating important principles and concepts. To illustrate the relationship between service and compensation, he used the image of an apothecary scale -- the type of measuring device once used in pharmacies in the early part of the 20th century. It consisted of two bowls, hung from a horizontal arm. In one bowl, the pharmacist placed the medicine to be weighed. In the other bowl, he or she placed precisely calibrated metal weights, until the two sides of the scale were in balance -- in other words, until the arm was perfectly horizontal.

What does an old pharmacy scale have to do with our comparison of success and service? Imagine that one of the bowls is marked "compensation" and the other is marked "service." According to Nightingale, we only need to focus on the quality of the service we provide and the number of the people whom we serve -- the service side of the scale. The compensation will follow, in proportion to the service we offer to others. As you sow, so shall you reap.

Focus on service, not compensation
Many people, Nightingale complained, are too focused on increasing their compensation, without providing a commensurate increase in their service. Many people fall prey to an attitude of, "My employer isn't paying me enough, so I won't do any more for them." Others may feel stuck on the same job, year after year, but never make a personal commitment to learn more about their job or profession, and therefore increase their ability to serve their employer, and therefore their value.

Many organizations offer credit for continuing education as part of their compensation packages, yet these benefits are often chronically underutilized by workers. In short, the vast majority of people who complain about the lack of pay, fulfillment and opportunity in their careers are victims not of their jobs, but of the attitudes they hold about their jobs. In other words, these people are focusing their attention on the wrong side of the scale.

In order to increase our compensation, you must develop creative ways to increase your service -- and in so doing, set in motion a positive "boomerang effect" of increasing returns to yourself. For those who understand this principle, life is a grand adventure. These unique souls focus on the service side of the scale, and superior compensation follows in turn, in proportion to their service.

Strategies for improving your service
So how can you increase your service, and therefore your compensation? There are many creative ways to do this. One of the best strategies is to engage in continuous, ongoing learning in your field of study as well as other areas of interest to you. By developing a mindset of continuous learning, you are constantly feeding the raw material pile of your mind, which it can then draw upon when you're brainstorming.

For example, one of my "occupational hobbies" has been business creativity and innovation. I read every book and article I can get my hands on, I subscribe to creativity newsletters and I purchase and use tools designed to help me develop more and better innovative ideas. The results in my career have been outstanding, and my expanded ability to think creatively has had a very positive influence on all areas of my life. It is also resulted in a launch of the InnovationTools Web site you are visiting right now!

People who engage in continuous learning naturally tend to outgrow their jobs over a period of time, often resulting in promotions or better job offers. Most often, people are promoted because they have outgrown their current position, not because they have repeated the same level of experience year after year.

Another way to increase your service is to cultivate what's called an "insight outlook." In other words, learn from your experiences and your ongoing education, but always with an eye toward how you can apply it or adapt it to your current situation. Companies are always in need of fresh ideas, insights and outlooks, and they will pay the people who provide them and who can solve problems creatively.

Align yourself with opportunity
In addition, Earl Nightingale believed (and I agree) that people who concentrate on the service side of the scale find themselves profiting from all sorts of unique opportunities that others dismiss as "luck."

To use another metaphor, opportunities and ideas don't come into your life dressed as shiny gems or diamonds. Rather, they tend to appear like diamonds in the rough, or as opportunities dressed in work clothes. In other words, it's easy to look right at a situation that contains a potential opportunity, and overlook it. On the other hand, if you know what you're looking for, you can uncover these opportunities, often right under your own nose. You must then use your creative thinking and problem solving skills to hone them and shape them into the successes they will one day become.

Conclusion
As you can see, your success in life depends, in large part, on cultivating an attitude of service, and by providing value to others. If you want to be more successful, stop focusing on how much you're being compensated today. Instead, using the strategies you've read about in this article, spend some time brainstorming new ways to increase your service to your employer, your family and the other people whom you serve in your life. I think you'll be delighted by the results. After all, as you sow, so shall you reap.

Success strategy: The Law of the Farm
Most knowledge in any area resembles a mosaic of facts, principles and applications, with each expert building upon and enhancing the ideas of others in that field. In the same way, the ideas and principles of self-help authors often overlap and intersect in remarkable ways. One recent connection I discovered is that between Steven Covey's "Law of the Farm" and the late Earl Nightingale's concept of considering each day as the basic "building block" of a successful life.

The Law of the Farm
The concept behind the Law of the Farm is simple: As in farming, success in life comes from regular disciplined, daily effort. Jesus expressed this life principle in the Bible, when he told us that as we sow, so shall we reap.

A farmer cannot expect to reap a bumper crop by being lazy for three months and then "cramming" to catch up. Similarly, the greatest successes in life are built slowly and deliberately through focused, consistent, high-quality efforts on a daily basis.

The basic unit of success: The day
Covey's Law of the Farm principle is strikingly similar to a concept presented by the late Earl Nightingale in one of his audiotapes. In Nightingale's mind, success is built upon the most basic building block of time -- the day. Success comes not from sudden, sporadic bursts of activity but through the cumulative effect of disciplined, daily effort.

Looking back upon a successful life, Nightingale asserted, a person would usually discover that no one individual day was responsible for turning the trick. Rather, it was the successful succession of days, lived as best as one can, one day at a time, that was responsible for his or her ultimate success.

There are no shortcuts
Today, it seems like many people want instant wealth and success. They want the rewards of life, but don't really want to put forth the effort and creativity it actually takes to become successful. The metaphor of "cramming" Nightingale referred to could be compared today to those people who are constantly on the lookout for "get rich quick" schemes -- shortcuts to material success which are usually too good to be true, or which may involve some moral or ethical compromises.

If these people only knew about the Law of the Farm, they would realize that they can only reap what they have sown. So if you want to increase your harvest, increase the quality of your efforts in tending to the garden plot of your work and home lives.

Conclusion
In short, success comes not from finding an easy shortcut or by taking advantage of one's fellow man, but from daily, disciplined, focused effort, directed tirelessly toward a desirable goal. Try putting the Law of the Farm to work for you on a daily basis; you'll be amazed with the results over time!

How to creatively meet customer needs, and grow your business,your Church,your

Country,your Organization,your Party Political, in the process
These days we hear a lot about surviving big businesses and how important it is to be big and survive. There's nothing wrong with big business and one of the most interesting things about it is that no matter how big it might be today -- it started small.

One of the largest corporations in the United States was started with about thirty thousand dollars of borrowed money and after ten years of operation had only six thousand dollars in the bank. A good thing to remember is that every business, no matter how far-flung or how many thousands of employees and skyscraper office buildings it might have, got its start in the mind of one human being.

Find a need and fill it!
Committees and groups are good when it comes to solving problems, but every good idea had to start in the mind of one human being and usually is the result of something observed. One could start a business of their own this year that in twenty or thirty years will be a big far-flung business, too!

There are people who think all the good businesses are taken or that there are not opportunities anymore, but they are full of hot air. There are quite a few of them running around. They make one want to quote Shakespeare's classic line, "He jests at scars that never felt a wound."

Six words lie at the root of any business success: FIND A NEED AND FILL IT! The extent of your success will be determined by your ability to fill a need and by the need's importance.

Anytime we see a business that is thriving and successful we realize that it is filling a need. If it were not, it would stop thriving and close shop. The size of a business is controlled by the number of people it serves. For example, a store that can accommodate 500 people must be larger than a business that accommodates 100.

Undiscovered opportunities exist in any kind of business

I know a man who made a small gas station into a really big business. He was watching a customer and noticed that while the customer's car was being serviced, he simply waited. The customer had money to spend and there were undoubtedly things he would buy or needed -- but they were not available. My friend started adding things and kept adding them until he ended up with a big sporting goods store alongside a large, modern gas station. While servicing a car at his station, one could buy anything from a pack of gum to a $200 fishing rod. On any given Friday or Saturday, he rings approximately forty or fifty thousand dollars in sales from waiting customers.

My friend's business is not different from any other gas station in the country, but he thought about his business and had an idea. He saw a need and filled it. He could sell his business today for a few million dollars.

The fact is -- there is more opportunity today than ever before -- we just have to see it!

A lot of people want to try new things but are too afraid of change. Remember … it is impossible to reach second base without taking your foot off of first.

River people vs. goal people
By Chuck Frey


The late self-help expert Earl Nightingale once explained that there are two types of people: river people and goal people. Both types of people can experience personal fulfillment and success in life, although in different ways.

Goal People
Most of us are undoubtedly familiar with goal people. They are the individuals who write down their objectives and timetables for reaching them, and then focus on attaining them, one by one.

By laying out a roadmap of future achievements in front of them, goal people give their creative minds a clear set of stimuli to work on. Their subconscious minds can then get to work incubating ideas and insights that will help them to reach their goals.

To use a football analogy, goal people need an end zone or a set of (what else?) goal posts, upon which they can focus their creative energies.

River People

River people, on the other hand, don't like to follow such a structured route to success. They are called river people because they are happiest and most fulfilled when they are wading in a rich "river" of interest -- a subject or profession about which they are very passionate. While they may not have a concrete plan with measurable goals, river people are often successful because they are so passionate about their area of interest. This, in turn, helps them to recognize breakthrough opportunities that may not even be visible on the mental radar screens of the more narrowly focused goal people.

River people are explorers, continually seeking out learning opportunities and new experiences. For river people, joy comes from the journey, not from reaching the destination -- exactly the opposite of goal people.

From the standpoint of creativity, river people are more likely to benefit from serendipity, because they tend to be more open to new ideas, points of view and insights than single-minded, focused goal people.

Recognizing both qualities in yourself
Most people are a combination of these two personality types. I know I am. In my full-time job, I am expected to be goal oriented. I have specific personal and departmental objectives for which I'm responsible.

At the same time, however, I get the most "juice" out of being an explorer, learning new skills, collecting information and writing about innovation and technology -- and nurturing this growing Web site! So at different times, I embody characteristics of both a goal person and a river person. Likewise, most of you embody traits of both personality types at one time or another.

The important point is to recognize and nurture both aspects of your personality. Joyce Wycoff, in her new book, "A Year of Waking Up," tells a story that illustrates this in a memorable way. When she reached the age of 50, she felt curiously unfulfilled. At the same time, a little, persistent voice inside her was urging her on to explore new activities and experiences. She answered that call, taking art classes, keeping a personal journal, writing poetry and pursuing other artistic endeavors. It has been a marvelous, exciting, enlightening journey ever since.

"This journey has made me wonder anew how much there is to ourselves that remains undiscovered," she reflects. "Are we like a fractal (image) that, as we zoom in, reveals ever more patterns, each wonderful and beautiful?"

Indeed, there is so much to explore and so much to know that we ought to make time in our lives for both our goal and river personas. Both bring richness and fullness to our lives, like yin and yang sides of our personality.

If you're predominantly a goal person, why not slow down and smell the roses, as our friend Joyce Wycoff did? Take an art class, just for the fun of it. Try reading different magazines. Talk to different people, or go to different seminars or classes outside of your core competencies, with the goal of opening yourself up to new experiences. I think you'll be amazed at the richness these new inputs bring to your life.

If you're predominantly a river person, you may want to try brainstorming a handful of goals for yourself, to give yourself a bit more focus and direction. For example, you may want to jot down lists of books you'd like to read, knowledge or skills you'd like to acquire or places you'd like to visit.

Finally, be on the lookout for new experiences and learning opportunities on a daily basis. You never know when they're going to appear -- the key is to recognize them when they do!


The Strangest Secret

When we say "nearly five percent of men and women achieve success" then we have to define success. The following is the best definition we've found: "Success is the progressive realization of a worthy ideal."

If a person is working toward a predetermined goal and knows where to go, then that person is successful. If a person does not know which direction they want to go in life, then that person is a failure.

"Success is the progressive realization of a worthy ideal."

Therefore, who succeeds?

The only person who succeeds is the person who is progressively realizing a worthy ideal. The person who says, "I'm going to become this"… and then begins to work toward becoming it.

Have you ever wondered why so many men and women work so hard and honestly without ever achieving anything in particular? Why others do not seem to work hard at all and yet get everything? We sometimes think it is the magic touch or pure luck. We often say, "Everything they touch turns to gold." Have you ever noticed that a person who becomes successful tends to continue this pattern of success? Or on the other hand, how a person who fails seems to continually fail?

Well, the answer is simple -- those who succeed have established personal goals.

Success is not the result of making money; making money is the result of success and success is in direct proportion to our service.

Here are five steps that will help you realize success:

Establish a definite goal.
Stop running yourself down.
Do not think of all the reasons why you cannot be successful -- instead think of all the reasons why you can achieve success.
Trace your emotions back to childhood -- discover where you first got the negative idea you would not be successful -- face your fears.
Renew your self-image by writing a description of the person you want to become -- Act the part -- You are that person!

George Bernard Shaw said:

"People are always blaming their circumstances for what they are. I don't believe in circumstances. The people who get on in this world are the people who get up and look for the circumstances they want, and if they can't find them, make them."

Well, that is pretty apparent, isn't it? And every person who discovered this believed – for a while – that he was the first one to work it out. We become what we think about.

Now, it stands to reason that a person who is thinking about a concrete and worthwhile goal is going to reach it, because that's what he's thinking about. And we become what we think about.

Conversely, the man who has no goal, who doesn't know where he's going, and whose thoughts must therefore be thoughts of confusion and anxiety and fear and worry, becomes what he thinks about. His life becomes one of frustration and fear and anxiety and worry.

And if he thinks about nothing…he becomes nothing.

So decide now. What is it you want? Plant your goal in your mind. It's the most important decision you'll ever make in your entire life. All you've got to do is plant that seed in your mind, care for it, and work steadily toward your goal, and it will become a reality.

How do you begin?

First: It is understanding emotionally as well as intellectually that we literally become what we think about; that we must control our thoughts if we're to control our lives. It's understanding fully that…"as ye sow, so shall ye reap."

Second: It's cutting away all fetters from the mind and permitting it to soar as it was divinely designed to do. It's the realization that your limitations are self-imposed and that the opportunities for you today are enormous beyond belief. It's rising above narrow-minded pettiness and prejudice.

Third: It's using all your courage to force yourself to think positively on your own problems, to set a definite and clearly defined goal for yourself. To let your marvelous mind think about your goal from all possible angles; to let your imagination speculate freely upon many different possible solutions. To refuse to believe that there are any circumstances sufficiently strong to defeat you in the accomplishment of your purpose. To act promptly and decisively when your course is clear. And to keep constantly aware of the fact that you are, at this moment, standing in the middle of your own "acres of diamonds."

And fourth: Save at least 10 percent of every dollar you earn.

It's also remembering that, no matter what your present job, it has enormous possibilities – if, you're willing to pay the price by keeping these four points in mind:

You will become what you think about.
Remember the word "imagination" and let your mind begin to soar.
Courageously concentrate on your goal every day.
Save 10 percent of what you earn.

Finally, take action – ideas are worthless unless we act on them.


Dr.Sammy D.James

President of WVMI.World Vision Ministries International.

Purpose Driven Leader.By Dr.Sammy D.James

I,Dr.SammyD.James,i have a Clear Vision.

As a student and mentor of leadership for many years, one of my driving ambitions has always been to find what stirs people not only to succeed--but also to make a positive contribution to the world. How can we inspire leaders "to do well while doing good," in ways that stick and do not attenuate over time? My own experience and study after study show that the most successful leaders, and the truly great ones, balance their personal ambition with a dedication to a greater cause--what is known as a purpose driven leader. Some leaders may get by in being overly self-interested in the short run, but not over the long haul. If you look at the litany of derailed business and political leaders over the last decade, the one thing they have in common is overly self-interested ways of being. Check it out for yourself.

Take Wall Street as an example: Its purpose is to serve its customers and the American economy by providing well-functioning capital markets for producing goods, services, and innovation; but over the last decade, banks lost much of their liquidity by over-investing in risky assets to making their executives rich. Wall Street leaders lost their sense of purpose, and their actions led to the crashing of our economy. Tuesday's New York Times has an article, for example, on how Goldman Sachs' traditional ethos of customer service has faded in favor of simply making money. In contrast, Steve Friedman, a former CEO of Goldman Sachs, recently spoke at Cornell's Johnson School and said that while the truly great leaders on Wall Street are driven to make money, they also are motivated to serve something greater--a purpose other than themselves. As Henry Ford once said, "Any business that is just about making money is a poor kind of business."

Now let's look at Joe Lieberman: His purpose is to serve as an elective representative of the constituency of his state. Constituents in that state favor the public healthcare option, but Lieberman just announced he is against the Medicare buy-in version of that plan--even though he supported it just three months ago. Why? Self-interest, plain and simple. Rather than to serve his elected purpose, he feathers his nest with large contributions from rich insurance companies in his state with pharmaceutical lobbyists in Washington. He also gets to pay back liberal voters who refused to support him when he lost his primary in 2005. In waiting to the last minute, he has hijacked the process and magnified his power and influence as never before. As a result, he has made his position about himself and not about the people he serves.

What's the real reason our political process is so maddening? Our elected officials put the interests of their party, and their own re-election, above everything else. So we get gridlock and watered down healthcare bills at best. It's a sad state in our democratic process when one man can derail legislation for his own personal gain or thwart the public good for sake of special interests.

We need a new kind of leader, ones that are more purpose-driven.

Early on in the program I direct at Cornell's Johnson School, I ask students to develop personal mission statements through a process of several reflective exercises. Almost without fail, what they come up with statements that lead them to want to make a positive impact on the world. One of them reads, "I will work for the success and betterment of myself, my family, my community, my nation, and my world. I will wake up every day wondering how I can do this. I will work hard to learn as much as I can, because with knowledge and understanding comes influence and strength. I will stay true to my beliefs. Looking back on life, I will be proud of what I've done, who I've spent time with, and how I've spent my time. If I have achieved this, I have achieved success." If he maintains that sense of purpose, I bet his chances of success, as well as happiness, are pretty good.

I also bet if Wall Street executives and our politicians had a similar purpose, and tied that to their companies and their legislative processes, we could have avoided some of the periodic upheaval and political gridlock of our time.

Joseph: The Man with a Divine Purpose.
Joseph had a lot of things going his way in life at first. He was handsome. He was the first son born to Jacob through Rachel, and therefore, he was his father’s favorite son. He had great dreams that made him feel good about himself. But then one day his entire life changed. Can you imagine how it must have felt to know your brothers hated you so much that they would sell you out of their lives? He was forced to leave the comfortable life he had known, full of love from his parents, and go forth into the unknown. How frightening that must have been for a boy of 17. Yet, God had His hand on Joseph. God had a divine purpose for this young man. Joseph didn’t know why God had chosen this path for his life until the very end, yet he never seemed to waver. God was always in control. Joseph kept his eyes on God, and He used Joseph greatly. What an encouragement to us. Let God use you where you are. Let Him use you in the hard times, as well as the good times.

The story of Joseph spans many chapters, Genesis 37-50. We could actually do an entire study just on the life of Joseph, but because of time limitation, we will just focus on the key events in his life.

Lord, thank you for the lessons you teach me through Joseph’s life. Encourage me through his life to seek you more intimately and to trust you for every situation that comes into my life. Keep me mindful that you are always in control.
DAY 1: Joseph and His Family
Looking to God’s Word
Genesis 37
1. How would you describe Joseph’s relationship with his brothers?

2. Could Joseph have prevented the jealousy of his brothers? Why or why not?

3. How would you describe his relationship with his father Jacob?

4. In verses 21-27 Reuben and Judah came to Joseph’s defense. Why would these two, of all the brothers, try to save Joseph?

Looking Upward
5. How do you see God’s sovereign hand at work throughout this chapter?

6. How do you see God’s hand at work in your own life?

Looking Deeper
•We are told in Genesis 37:3 that Jacob made Joseph a varicolored tunic. What was the significance of this tunic and what impact might that have had on his brothers?

•How was God already developing Joseph’s gifts at the age of 17?

Looking Reflectively
God “broke” Joseph by taking him out of comfortable circumstances
and stretching him. God often has to “break” us before He can use us.

•How has God “broken” you? How did it “strengthen” you?

•Are you willing to let God do whatever He needs to in your life to make you usable to Him? If not, why? Be honest with the Lord, and ask Him to make you willing, trusting His loving and sovereign hand in your life.

DAY 2: Joseph’s Early Life in Egypt
Chapter 38 seems like an “interruption” to our story of Joseph in Egypt, but it is a narrative of what took place back in Canaan during this time, especially concerning the life of Judah. We pick up our narrative of Joseph in Chapter 39.

Looking to God’s Word
Genesis 39
1. How did God use Joseph’s captivity for good (vv. 1-6)?

2. How was Joseph able to resist the temptation of Potiphar’s wife day after day (vv. 7-18)?

3. Joseph was falsely accused by Potiphar’s wife, and Potiphar believed his wife over Joseph, resulting in his imprisonment. Yet, how did God use this for good?

4. What was one “mistake” that Joseph made that perhaps could have prevented the false accusation against him?

5. What does it mean that the Lord was “with Joseph”?

Looking Upward
6. Does God’s favor mean prosperity? Why or why not?

7. Have you ever been falsely accused? How did you handle it? What resulted from it?

Looking Deeper
•What does Stephen have to say about Joseph and what God did for him in Acts 7:9-10?

•As you look back over this chapter, note the times God’s favor and blessing on Joseph is mentioned. How does one gain favor?

Looking Reflectively
Joseph lived a life of integrity and was faithful to God in the
midst of prosperity and adversity. He is a great example for us to follow.

•Are you living faithfully in the midst of prosperity and adversity?

•Do others around you see Christ in you?

DAY 3: Joseph’s Rise To Power
Looking To God’s Word
We will not be able to look at every verse of every chapter, so I will try to summarize as we skim the following chapters.

Genesis 40:1-8
1. The king’s cupbearer and baker offended him, resulting in their being thrown into prison with Joseph. What do you learn about Joseph from the way he responded to them in prison?

2. The rest of the chapter tells of their dreams, Joseph’s interpretation of the dreams, and how the interpretations were later fulfilled. In Genesis 40:14-15 and 20-23, how was life once again “unfair” to Joseph?

Genesis 41:1-8 tells us of Pharaoh’s dream and his inability to find someone able to interpret it. In verses 9-14, the cupbearer finally remembers Joseph and his interpretation of their dreams in prison, and Pharaoh called for Joseph to come and interpret his dream. Joseph interpreted the king’s dreams, which foretold of the coming seven years of great abundance in Egypt (41:29) and the following seven years of famine (41:29). Joseph proceeded to tell Pharaoh what should be done (41:32-37).

3. Why did Pharaoh place Joseph in charge of Egypt (41:38-45)?

4. How old was Joseph at this point (41:46)?

Looking Upward
5. How had God worked in Joseph’s life during his captivity (see 40:8 and 41:16)?

6. How can you keep a proper perspective when you know you have been “wronged” by others and you are paying the unjustified consequences?

Looking Deeper
•Who are some other people in the Bible who had “delays” in their lives?

Looking Reflectively
There is no mistake in where God has you.
Allow Him to use you where you are.

•How are you allowing God to use you right where you are?

There is often a delay before seeing God work through us.
Delays are a necessary time of spiritual preparation.

•How do you see God’s hand in the “delays” in your life?

Josephs’ life teaches us that disappointments are vital to spiritual growth
because they demand faith and resting all hope upon God.

V. Raymond Edman wrote, “Delay never thwarts God’s purposes;
it only polishes His instrument.”1

•How is God “polishing” you?

DAY 4: Joseph’s Reconciliation With His Family
Looking To God’s Word
Genesis 42
1. Jacob sent his sons, with the exception of Benjamin, to Egypt to buy grain during the famine. When his brothers came before Joseph, why didn’t he just tell them who he was and why do you think he recognized them but they did not recognize him?

2. Why do you think Joseph responded to his brothers in the way he did?

3. Describe what his brothers were feeling in verses 21-23?

In Genesis 42:29-38, the brothers returned to Canaan to retrieve their younger brother Benjamin, having left Simeon back in Egypt. Jacob first refused to let them take Benjamin, but after all the grain was eaten, he sent his sons back to Egypt with Benjamin (43:1-15). When Joseph saw Benjamin, he responded with emotion (43:16-34). In Genesis 44, Joseph sent his brothers back to Canaan and played a little trickery on them. He “threatened” to keep Benjamin as his slave, and Judah pleaded with him to keep him instead of Benjamin. This brings us to Chapter 45, when Joseph reveals his identity to his brothers.

Genesis 45:1-8
4. What was Joseph’s perspective on what his brothers had done to him when he was seventeen?

5. What emotions were his brothers most likely experiencing when they realized this was indeed Joseph?

Looking Upward
6. How do you view painful or hurtful events in your life? How have hurtful events molded your life?

7. How is one able to gain the type of perspective that Joseph had about his life?

Looking Deeper
Read the entirety of Genesis 42-45. Trace Joseph’s actions throughout these chapters toward his brothers. Why did he do what he did?

Looking Reflectively
We must trust God with our emotions when we are
face to face with those who have hurt us deeply.

•Is there someone who has wounded you deeply? How have you handled it? Can you trust God’s sovereign hand in the midst of it?

•Is there someone you need to forgive?

DAY 5: Joseph’s Last Days
In Genesis 46-47 Jacob moved his family to Egypt. God once again spoke to him, encouraging him to not be afraid to go to Egypt and reminding him of His promise to make him a great nation (Gen. 46:1-4). Genesis 48-49 records Jacob’s final days. Today we look at Joseph’s last days after his father Jacob died.

Looking to God’s Word
Hebrews 11:22
1. How did Joseph show his faith in God’s promise to Abraham?

Genesis 50:15-26
2. How has Joseph changed in his relationship with God and his family since he was a young boy?

3. What stands out to you about Joseph’s life and the way he dealt with life?

4. How old was Joseph when he died (v. 22)?

Looking Upward
5. How does harboring an unforgiving spirit affect us?

6. What makes it difficult to trust God’s sovereignty?

Looking Deeper
Reread Genesis 50.
•What was Joseph trying to convey to his family in verse 24?

•Why would he want his bones carried back to Canaan?

Looking Reflectively
God is in control even when it seems that your world is
spinning madly out of control.

•Is there something going on in your life today that is hard for you to understand? Take it to the Lord and trust His hand.

God uses even the negative motives of others to bring about His perfect purpose.

•Meditate on Genesis 50:20. “You meant evil against me, but God meant it for good in order to bring about this present result, to preserve many people alive.”

Joseph had a divine purpose. His life was not always easy and was filled with ups and downs. Yet Joseph found favor with God and he allowed God to use him wherever he went. Where does God want to use you? What is His divine purpose for your life? Are you focused on Him, or are you focused on your circumstances and the situation in which you find yourself? Let God use you to accomplish His divine purpose through you.

8 dic 2009

What is passion? by Dr.Sammy D.James

In my work helping people create careers that energize and inspire them, I've come up with a simple definition for passion:

Passion is the energy that comes from bringing more of YOU into what you do.

Simply put, it's being who you are and doing what comes naturally. When what you do is in alignment with who you are, you get energy from doing it. It's like water flowing along its natural riverbed. It actually gains energy from the path it's taking (compare that to what most people experience in their work, which is more like trying to force it up and over a mountain).

How do you consciously, consistently bring more of YOU into what you do?
One simple approach that is at the heart of my process is to go beyond what you love and ask why you love it. Do some reverse engineering to identify the underlying characteristics that tend to be in place when you're on fire.

Gathering the resulting insights in one place gives you a passion-focused decision tool. Think of it as an internal compass that takes the heart-based passion decision and puts it in the realm that the analytical mind can understand as well.

It takes the guesswork out of the process and lets you make a more concrete evaluation. For example, you can look at a potential job and ask, “How well does this align with these underlying characteristics?” You can do the same with any choice you make. Simply ask the question, “Will this bring me closer to alignment with what energizes me, or farther away?

If you want to dig into this approach more deeply, check out my e-book, call believe in yourself. In it, you will find a step-by-step process to help you identify what lights you up, generate ideas for potential career paths, evaluate those paths and choose one, and make it happen.

21 oct 2009

The seat of knowledge is in the head, of wisdom.Dr:Sammy D.James

W V M I.It is an Organization non profit
World Vision Ministries International.
working an Education,Health,Agriculture,infrastructure, Micro-Finance,and we build church,and support other ministries.We make Conferences and Seminaries.
Are you in the right place to help your Brother or Sister?
W V M I is a Global Vision organization.By associating with wise people you will become wise yourself.
Dr:Sammy D.james holds a Masters Degree in political science and P H D in Theology,business owner.

.Prayer by,Dr:Sammy D.James

Welcome to W.V.M.I.World Vision Ministries International.
We are Located:Republic of Haiti,Port Au Prince,and america latina,Caribbean
Petion Ville,Rue gregoire.Tel-509-257-82-87/ 829-892-41-00/ 829-728-58-01
1-786-439-50-86// 1-561-202-43-85/E-mail.sammydestiny@hotmail.com/ wvmiseminarytheologieschool45@yahoo.fr
Father in heaven, your love for us never falters in spite of our sins and failures. Please show your mercy and care for me in my difficulty. For the sake of Christ, our Savior, have pity of me. Amen.
Awake and be vigilant in my defense, my God.
Loving Father, you are not far from any of us since in you we live, move and have our being. Kindly increase my awareness of your presence, and take care of my pressing need. Christ, our Lord, assures us you will. Amen.
Action: For this day, cast all your cares upon the Lord.
Your ways, O Lord, make known to me.
Teach me your paths.
Father almighty, your ways and mysterious purpose are often hidden from us; guide me now, I beg you, in my sorrow, and by your power aid me to know your will. May I do it in imitation of Christ, our redeemer. Amen.
Action: Consider seriously today how best you can do God's will.
Now will I arise, says the Lord.
I will grant safety to him who longs for it.
In you, heavenly Father, I confidently place all my trust. In your hands I leave all my anxieties with faith in your care for me. From you alone I away relief because of Christ, your Son, who pleads for us. Amen.
Action: For God's sake, help some person today whom you may not like.
Lord, reprove me not in your anger,
Nor chastise me in your wrath.
Merciful Father, you know my sins and disobedience, my weakness and ingratitude which have deserved punishment. Yet, you are ever ready to forgive, and gracious to all in trouble. In Christ's name, come quickly to help me. Amen.
Action: Hold back today the harsh word; banish the unkind thought
The Lord is a stronghold for the oppressed,
A stronghold in time of distress.
Father in heaven, you never reject those who seek your help, and are ever ready to comfort the sorrowful. Have pity on me in my needs, and rescue me from all my afflictions. In Christ's name I implore your compassion. Amen.
Action: In imitation of Christ, do good to those who dislike you.
The Lord is close to the brokenhearted,
And those who are crushed in spirit, He saves.
Your goodness, heavenly Father, responds speedily to our wretchedness. In my distress I call upon you to hear and answer my prayers. In you alone, O God, I will continue to trust despite everything. In Christ's name. Amen.
The Lord came to my support.
He set me free and rescued me because He loves me.
Gracious Father, I will thank you each day for your merciful goodness to me. With your help I will ever praise your kindness in my trouble. Please assist me now in faithfully following Christ, my Savior. Amen.
Action: In gratitude, be good to others today and always.

19 oct 2009

What’s the difference between telling and showing? Dr Sammy D.James

The education of the intellect and the training of the morals should go hand in hands . The devising brain and the The devising brain and the feeling heart should,never be divorced, and the question worth asking is not simply, What will education do for us ? what will it help us to do for others.Please help me to realize Center for Visionary Leadership An Haiti.I believe intellect work together with vision.

12 oct 2009

Helping us to realize this projet.Dr:Sammy D.James

In Jer 1:5, God says “Before I formed you in the womb I knew you, before you were born I dedicated you, a prophet to the nations I appointed you.” This is rather surprising. God knew Jeremiah before he was born. It follows that God knows all of us even before we are born.
gives purpose to life, and brings out the best in people life.
Proverbs 29:18 - Where there is no vision, the people perish: but he that keepeth the law, happy is he.Matthew 5:8 - Blessed are the pure in heart: for they shall see God.Isaiah 55:8 - For my thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways my ways, saith the LORD.
The notion of social change is complex it covers a broad range of social structures: Technological, economic, political, agricultural, industrial etc. In the field of “technology” for instance “the change occurs from simple and traditional techniques towards application of scientific knowledge” In agriculture the transformation in seen through the shift operating through “evolution from subsistence farming toward commercial production of agricultural goods” The industrial aspect is the “transition from the use of human and animal power toward industrialization proper or “men aggregated at power driven machines working for monetary returns with product manufacturing process,In the ecological field change is the movement from farm and village toward urban centers.’social change depend on what we take society to be, and we take society to be what our purpose and position dictate.
For I was hungry, and you gave Me something to eat; I was thirsty, and you gave Me something to drink; I was a stranger, and you invited Me in.
I have a projet to build a great center an rep of haiti.For two reason .
1-haiti is the first black nation free from slavery
2-an reality not.
why,because lack of visionary leadership.
Vision is hope in life.
Vision is the energy of progress
Sight is the fonction of eyes,but vision is the fonction of heart.
Center for visionary leadership.
I need {one million USD Dollars.} {$1.000.000 USD Dollars} to build Center for Visionary Leadership an Haiti.I know I'm not alone
how You one of haiti friend,please be a part of this projet.
I already have contact with haitian government in this projet, and government give me guarantee.I need your financial help and your support.
Are You Living By Sight Without Vision?
If you are operating by sight, you see the problems and challenges all around you.
You see how many bills you have to pay; you see that your company is downsizing; you see things that threaten your security.
Sight without vision is dangerous because it has no hope.
Many people have been living by sight alone, and that's one reason they have all kinds of medical problems- muscle tension, migraines, high blood pressure, heart disease, ulcers, tumors, and so on.

Living by sight can kill you.
Life is so full of depressing things that you need to learn to live by vision and see with the eyes of faith.
Remember that sight is the ability to see things as they are, and vision is the ability to see things as they could be. I like to go a step further and define vision this way:
Vision is the ability to see things as they should be. Maybe you are going through a hard time right now and you're disheartened.

You've lost your vision edge.

Perhaps this is because of your surroundings. Sometimes, the environments we live in are not the best for fostering vision. What people say to us is not always encouraging and can be very discouraging.

I have been tempted to be disillusioned and discouraged many times.
Even though we know that the discouraging things we see and hear are temporary, they still can distress and depress us. We must keep our visions constantly before us, however, because the visions in our hearts are greater than our environments.
God gave us vision so we would not have to live by what we see.
The Bible is very clear that "without faith it is impossible to please God" (Hebrews
11:6). If you try to function in any other way than faith, you will malfunction. That is why worry is ungodly and fear makes your vision short-circuit.
You were never meant to be afraid.
Jesus was filled with faith, and He was the calmest person on earth. He slept soundly in the middle of a storm. When His frightened disciples woke Him up, He asked them, "Do you still have no faith?" (Mark 4:40). He was telling them, "If you have faith you will be able to sleep during a storm, as well." You may be saying, "This doesn't sound very practical."
It is, however.
I have been living this way-by faith instead of fear-for over twenty years, and it's been so much fun. I don't worry for very long about anything, because I believe that, ultimately, everything is on my side.
Even the schemes of the devil work to my benefit.
All things work for my good because I am called according to God's purpose. (See Romans 8:28).

Helping our Orphenage an Kingston jamaica.Spanish Town,Portmore,St James.

Kingston is the capital and largest city of Jamaica and is located on the southeastern coast of the island country. It faces a natural harbour protected by the Palisadoes, a long sand spit which connects Port Royal and the Norman Manley International Airport to the rest of the island. In the Americas, Kingston is the largest predominantly English-speaking city south of the United States.

Religion


There are a wide variety of Christian churches in the city. Most are Protestant, a legacy of British colonization of the island. The chief denominations are Church of God, Baptist, Anglican, Methodist, Roman Catholic, Seventh-day Adventist, and Pentecostal. Afro-Christian syncretic religions such as Rastafarianism are also widespread.

There is a Jewish synagogue in the city as well as a large number of Buddhists and Muslims. There are several Islamic organizations and mosques in Jamaica, including the Islamic Council of Jamaica and the Islamic Education and Dawah Center, both located in Kingston and offering classes in Islamic studies and daily prayers in congregation



E-mail us at.sammydestiny@hotmail.com
E-mail us at.wvmijames@gmail.com

Vision Without Action...Is Just a Dream.
Action Without Vision...Just Passes the Time.
But, Vision and Action...Can Change the World.


What is child sponsorship?
Wonderful things happen when you make the choice to sponsor a child. For only about $25 or more a month, you'll show your child God's unconditional love by providing them with access to critical resources such as:
Clean Water
Nutritious food
Health care
Education
And more!Haiti need you,ll help.

E-mail us.sammydestiny@hotmail.com

All of our children have so much potential. All of our children deserve a chance at life.
Courage is rightly esteemed the first of human qualities... because it is the quality which guarantees all others.
Wisdom, compassion, and courage are the three universally recognized moral qualities of men.Courage is the first of human qualities because it is the quality which guarantees the others.A house must be built on solid foundations if it is to last. The same principle applies to man, otherwise he too will sink back into the soft ground and becomes swallowed up by the world of illusion.Let love flow so that it cleanses the world. Then man can live in peace, instead of the state of turmoil he has created through his past ways of life, with all those material interests and earthly ambitions.
Life is a song - sing it. Life is a game - play it. Life is a challenge - meet it. Life is a dream - realize it. Life is a sacrifice - offer it. Life is love - enjoy it.
Love one another and help others to rise to the higher levels, simply by pouring out love. Love is infectious and the greatest healing energy. The life ahead can only be glorious if you learn to live in total harmony with the Lord. What is new in the world? Nothing. What is old in the world? Nothing. Everything has always been and will always be. Rules are for the obedience of fools and the guidance of wise men.The successful pilots succeeded because they did not open fire until they were close to the target.Give the children an opportunity to make garden. Let them grow what they will. It matters less that they grow good plants than that they try for themselves.
Science may eventually explain the world of How. The ultimate world of Why may remain for contemplation, philosophy, religion.There are two essential epochs in any enterprise - to begin, and to get done.
I believe without exception that theory follows practice. Whenever there is a conflict between theory and practice, theory is wrong. As far as I'm concerned, we make theories for what people have done. What that book does for me is give me the tools in the same way that I had the tools when I learned the regular scales or the alphabet. If you give me the tools, the syntax, and the grammar, it still doesn't tell me how to write Ulysses. When I thought about the calibre of people in the room I realized we might just have a credible candidate for Mayor who will would finally enforce the laws of the city. It was almost too good to be true.
It was always said that the big distinction between the French and the English is that the English are intelligent and the French are intellectual. To get rich never risk your health. For it is the truth that health is the wealth of wealth. A dark and terrible side of this sense of community of interests is the fear of a horrible common destiny which in these days of atomic weapons darkens men's minds all around the globe.Industrialization based on machinery, already referred to as a characteristic of our age, is but one aspect of the revolution that is being wrought by technology.Probably people always feel that they are living in a time of transition, but we can hardly be mistaken perhaps in thinking that this is an era of particularly momentous change, rapid and proceeding at an ever quickening rate.Technology gives us the facilities that lessen the barriers of time and distance - the telegraph and cable, the telephone, radio, and the rest. Beauty is the disinterested one, without which the ancient world refused to understand itself, a word which both imperceptibly and yet unmistakably has bid farewell to our new world, a world of interests, leaving it to its own avarice and sadness. Even if a unity of faith is not possible, a unity of love is. Paul would say to the philosophers that God created man so that he would seek the Divine, try to attain the Divine. That is why all pre-Christian philosophy is theological at its summit. When are we going to say cancer is cured? I'm not sure when that will happen, if that will happen because cancer is a very slippery disease and it involves a vast number of cells in the body and those cells are continually mutating. When we talk about stem cells, we are actually talking about a complicated series of things, including adult stem cells which are largely cells devoted to replacing individual tissues like blood elements or liver or even the brain. I learned at an early age that I was given something special when I was born, and that was the gift of love.The fact that the internet is so active; people can now speak to me indirectly. Let him who would enjoy a good future waste none of his present.
When we are flat on our backs there is no way to look but up.The characteristic of scientific progress is our knowing that we did not know.The great function of poetry is to give back to us the situations of our dreams.
Every moment of resistance to temptation is a victory.
Kindness has converted more sinners than zeal, eloquence, or learning.
The buried talent is the sunken rock on which most lives strike and founder. They always win who side with God.
Leadership is particularly necessary to ensure ready acceptance of the unfamiliar and that which is contrary to tradition.
So long as large armies go to battle, so long will the air arm remain their spearhead.
The very exercise of leadership fosters capacity for it.Bertelsmann understood our vision when they first invested in us... They still believe in that vision.
No taxation without respiration.So just as I want pilots on the planes that I fly, when it comes to monetary policy, I want to think that there is someone with sound judgement at the controls. Democracy no longer works for the poor if politicians treat them as a separate race. You do not have to be superhuman to do what you believe in. Everybody is talking today about the economy.I don't believe, in the 21st century, in the balance of power system. This is a European idea of the 19th and 20th centuries,Solutions must be based on compromises. You never know what you're going to get as a receiver.
Be sure you positively identify your target before you pull the trigger.In whatever position you find yourself determine first your objective. My center is giving way, my right is in retreat; situation excellent. I shall attack. The will to conquer is the first condition of victory.It looks like business, and people are much pleased.
William.A government big enough to give you everything you want is a government big enough to take from you everything you have. For millions of men and women, the church has been the hospital for the soul, the school for the mind and the safe depository for moral ideas.
History and experience tell us that moral progress comes not in comfortable and complacent times, but out of trial and confusion.

I am Dr:Sammy, not Dr: Myles. I had a lot of experience with people smarter than I am. A hero is someone right who doesn't change.Everybody wants to be somebody. The thing you have to do is give them confidence they can. You have to give a kid a dream.I don't know if we ever fully get over the pain of watching a child trying to find their way through a world that too often doesn't understand.
Anne Ford
The country needs the political work of women today as much as it has ever needed woman in any other work at any other time. America does not fight for land, glory or riches.
I am responsible only to God and history. Black and white are the colors of photography. To me they symbolize the alternatives of hope and despair to which mankind is forever subjected. Education in the past has been too much inspiration and too little information.I would rather be poor in a cottage full of books than a king without the desire to read. Many politicians are in the habit of laying it down as a self-evident proposition that no people ought to be free till they are fit to use their freedom. The maxim is worthy of the fool in the old story who resolved not to go into the water till he had learned to swim. Misery loves company, but company does not reciprocate.
Addison Mizner.Ignorance of the law excuses no man from practicing it. God gives us relatives; thank God, we can choose our friends. The biggest impact I can have for what I want to do, the results I want to have with what God's given me, is to help as many people as possible get to heaven. Everybody is ambitious. The question is whether he is ambitious to be or ambitious to do. If we look to the history of other nations, ancient or modern, we find no example of a growth so rapid, so gigantic, of a people so prosperous and happy. God has cared for these trees, saved them from drought, disease, avalanches, and a thousand tempests and floods. But he cannot save them from fools.Take a course in good water and air; and in the eternal youth of Nature you may renew your own. Go quietly, alone; no harm will befall you. Teachers can change lives with just the right mix of chalk and challenges.
Joyce A. Myers
A BMW can't take you as far as a diploma.
Joyce A. Myers
A #2 pencil and a dream can take you anywhere.
Joyce A. Myers
I personally believe that those who are leaders with political power over the world will be forced some day, sooner or later, to give way to common sense and the will of the people.
Alva Myrdal
It is only too clear that man is not at home in this universe, and yet he is not good enough to deserve a better.
Perry Miller.


Value of Writing a Personal Mission Statement.

1. It forces you to think deeply about your life, clarify the purpose of your life, and identify what is really important to you.
2. It forces you to clarify and express succinctly your deepest values and aspirations.

3. It imprints your values and purposes firmly in your mind so they become a part of you rather than something you only think about occasionally.

4. Integrating your personal mission statement into your weekly planning gives you a way to keep your vision constantly before you.

Process of Creating a Personal Mission Statement

1. Identify an influential person in your life. Define the qualities you most admire in that person. List those and then ponder the qualities you would need to practice in order to achieve the future you desire.
2. Define who you want to become; not just what you want to have and do.

3. Define your life roles. You may have roles in relation to your profession, family, community, or other areas in your life. Describe how you would like to be described in each of these roles.

4. Write a draft of your personal mission statement. Carry the rough draft with you and make notes, additions, and deletions.

5. Write a final draft. Refer to it frequently. Use it as a standard by which you judge all your activities.

6. Periodically review and evaluate your personal mission statement to keep yourself in touch with your own development and keep yourself in harmony with your deepest self.

7. The final test of the value and effectiveness of a mission statement is: DOES THIS STATEMENT INSPIRE ME?

Developing a personal mission statement.

A personal mission statement answers questions like these:
-What do I want from my life?
-What do I value?
-What are my talents?
-At the end of my life, what do I want to have accomplished?
A personal mission statement is the beginning of personal leadership. It sets guidelines for life. By referring to it and internalizing its meaning, we make choices that serve values and reject the things that oppose them.

A mission statement often includes a set of personal beliefs.
A mission statement often answers another important question: What do I believe in?
Writing a personal mission statement is as much an act of discovery as an act of creation.
A mission statement is not exactly a piece of creative writing. We write what we sense to be true about ourselves, although often it seems we are writing what we would like to be true.
Writing what is true about ourselves isn't as easy as it may seem. We sometimes don't know ourselves as well as we think we do. We perhaps believe things because we are expected to believe them. We feel inclined to pursue a certain path because it is socially approved. We may fear other people's criticism if we do what we feel is right for us.

So writing a mission statement is really an adventure in self-discovery. We are working to uncover our talents, our interests, and our deepest desires for life. Writing a mission statement can be a tool for clarifying things that we otherwise might not know. Most people, at some point in their lives, long for a sense of meaning and purpose. They sense that they have talents and contributions to offer but are not sure what their talents are. The mission statement is a way of discovering that sense of purpose by coming to know ourselves better.

We clarify our personal mission by dividing it into roles

A mission statement gives us general guidance. We can make it more specific by applying it to specific roles. A role is a function that we serve in life.
Some of the roles we may have are family member, student, worker, or community member. The idea is to find some sense or order about life by dividing it up into meaningful patterns of related activities.

Roles are key to creating balance in life.

Perhaps the most useful aspect of roles is that they can help us maintain balance in our lives. For example, if, as we plan our day, we consider each role and ask what ought to be done within it, we will be more balanced in our effectiveness than if we simply attend to the most pressing problems. In fact, the way we define our roles can help us maintain the balance that is so critical to effectiveness in life.
Goals define what we want to achieve within each role.

Roles are more specific than our mission, but they still aren't specific enough to let us make clear plans. We need to take another step, this time breaking our roles into goals. We do this by asking, "What do I want to accomplish within this role?" In answer we create goals, specific results we want to accomplish at specific times.
These goals become the basis for our weekly and daily planning. Goals are the building blocks of our mission and our roles. From these goals we can create specific action plans that will help us succeed in our roles and fulfill our mission.

Goals can be lifelong, intermediate, or short term.

Goals have a deadline. They are broken down into steps, with each step having its own deadline. When all of the separate deadlines are reached, the overall goal has been achieved.
Some goals are lifetime goals-, meaning that we intend to achieve them before we die. To achieve them, we break them into smaller steps, perhaps ten year goals or five year goals. These intermediate goals are then divided into smaller steps, until we have subdivided the lifetime goals into immediate goals that we can work on today.

The best goals are consistent with our personal mission.

Goals serve us by organizing our actions and by giving them meaning. When we sense that our actions bring meaningful results, we have greater incentive to perform those actions. Our mission provides the purpose for our goals and actions, and goals that are backed by a sense of mission tend to be both more satisfying and more motivating.

Au-thor-i-ty: power to influence or command thought, opinion or behavior.

Authority is an interesting and important word, as it applies to an individual's ongoing quest to be a more effective leader. Those of us who aspire to more effective levels of personal and professional leadership need a clear understanding of what the word means practically, as well as literally. Consider Webster's formal definition above, and then consider the two workplace applications which can be fraught with either unexpected problems or untapped potential.

Formal authority: the organizational power that comes with the position that one hones or occupies; being able to ask (or tell) someone to do something and then expecting that it will be done. No matter what job or title we may hold in an organization, all of us have some formal measure of power or authority associated with that position. As is the case with most things, the level of power entrusted to us can either be used or abused, depending on our chosen actions or motivations.

During the course of an average day, every one of us makes dozens of different decisions. Besides the obvious business decisions required of our positions, we also make personal decisions regarding how we will act, speak, think, listen, respond, etc. If we become too enamored with the "power of our positions," it can become very easy to disregard, or overlook entirely, critical input that we might otherwise receive from followers, peers and superiors. Typical "managers" are notorious for this. Their attitude says, "I told them what I wanted them to do. Now it's their responsibility to do it - without asking questions." Informal authority: the personal influential power that comes as a result of others voluntarily granting their support. On occasion, all of us have encountered individuals who did not have the luxury of the power of a position to fall back on. They may have been assigned to labor in low profile, seemingly insignificant positions. Yet, in some amazing way, they were able to successfully lead others to consistently above average levels of performance. These individuals seemed capable of leading despite their positions and circumstance. How did they do it? How were they able to entice others to voluntarily support them and their actions even though the organizational hierarchy may have been stacked against them? Simply put, they do so by committing themselves to helping their followers/supports get the things the followers/supporters can secure for themselves. People voluntarily choose to follower another individual because they ultimately believe this particular individual, their chosen leader, can take them someplace that they would have never been able to reach on their own.

So how can we create such a bond with our followers? Excellent leaders know the answer to that question. They work to know each of their followers as individuals. They ask their opinions. They listen to them. They allow their followers to disagree - even publicly, if necessary. But they always work to ensure that followers benefit in the end. They use their authority and their common sense.



Dr:Sammy D.James

Sammy 21 st century visionary.With your help i will success.

INTRODUCTION
As we look around us today, it's clear that there is plenty of leadership--but we are sadly lacking in visionary leadership—leadership with a clear picture of a future that works for everyone and for all of life on this planet. There are few leaders who can see the big picture and who have a long term, whole-systems perspective.I have a dream that one day every valley shall be exalted, every hill and mountain shall be made low, the rough places will be made plain, and the crooked places will be made straight, and the glory of the Lord shall be revealed, and all flesh shall see it together.

But it's equally disappointing to realize that many of those with vision--those who have a holistic view of the future--also seem to lack leadership skills. They lack the fiery initiative and courage, as well as the practical skills, to make their visions a reality.

There is a growing recognition that without vision--and leaders of vision -- "the people perish." We think we would recognize a visionary leader when we see one, and we constantly complain about the quality of our leaders. Yet how often do we acknowledge that the attributes, qualities and abilities we collectively are willing to recognize and support in our leaders determines the kinds of leaders who can emerge? If we want visionary leaders, we have to be able to perceive them and support them.

This is being confirmed by what physicists call the "participative nature of the universe"--the fact that the act of looking for certain information evokes the information we are looking for. What we see is what we get.

But most importantly, we each need to challenge ourselves to develop greater leadership skills --and to develop a clearer vision. Effective leaders inspire people with a vision, but they also take charge and make things happen. They are courageous in presenting the big picture, but also in providing a sense of meaning for others. They express passion, commitment, and responsibility.

What are the qualities, abilities and powers of true visionary leaders? What is the mysterious inner process within leaders that enables them to work their magic and radiate the charisma that mobilizes others for a higher purpose? We can look for true visionary leadership in four major

areas: values, vision, thinking, and relationships.

A COMMITMENT TO CORE SPIRITUAL VALUES


A commitment to core spiritual values is an outstanding characteristic of all visionary leaders. More self-aware and reflective than others, they follow an inner sense of direction, and lead from the inside out, as Mahatma Gandhi did. Gandhi said, "I must first be the change I want to see in my world." He was a prime example of a commitment to values, as he freed India by appealing to the moral conscience of Britain and using "satyagraha" or non-violent action to reveal the immorality of the British Empire. Great leaders, rather than being corrupted by power, are elevated by power and exercise moral leadership, as best-selling author Stephen Covey notes.

Many successful leaders in business, such as J.C. Penny, have also demonstrated the power of living their values. Tom Chappell, CEO of Tom's of Maine, knew that he could "do well by doing good" in business. Living his values has contributed to his company's profits. Tom's uses all natural ingredients in their products to protect consumers and the environment, and it has been hugely successful-- both financially and in terms of social responsibility. This success has inspired other companies to follow their lead.

Aaron Feurenstein, CEO of Malden Mills in Lawrence, MA, producer of polartec fabrics, values his people as his greatest asset. He says a company has an equal responsibility to its community as to itself. Since his town has high unemployment, he kept all 3,000 employees on the payroll after a major fire destroyed 3 out of 4 of his factories. His loyalty to them repaid itself when the company rebuilt in record time and is now more profitable than ever

An important study by Prof. Curtis Verschoor published in Management Accounting last year found that companies with a defined corporate commitment to ethical principles do better financially than companies that don't make ethics a key component.

Visionary leaders have the ability to see higher spiritual forces at work behind the scenes of events, and they align with these supporting and redemptive forces. Both George Washington and Winston Churchill spoke about the help they received from a "guiding hand." Churchill said, "...we have a guardian because we serve a great cause, and we shall have that guardian as long as we serve that cause faithfully." Sojourner Truth, a former slave, was guided by an inner spiritual experience to preach the emancipation of slaves and women's rights all over the country during the Civil War. President Anwar Sadat of Egypt had a vision of Mohammed who told him to create peace in the Middle East. This is the hidden story behind the Camp David accords.

Visionary leaders embody a sense of personal integrity, and radiate a sense of energy, vitality and will. Will is standing in a spiritual state of being. Will is a spiritual attribute, which allows a leader to stand for something, and allows them to embody their principles. Qualities of intelligence and will are balanced in visionary leaders by a compassionate heart, as Marion Wright Edelman has demonstrated in her work over the years for the Children's Defense Fund. The Dalai Lama of Tibet has been an inspiration to people around the world in his compassion for his enemies, the Chinese who killed his people and destroyed Tibetan culture.

The best visionary leaders move energy to a higher level and inspire people to be better than they already are. They help them identify with what Lincoln called "the angels of their better nature"--as Martin Luther King did with his "I have a dream" speech. Like King, these leaders have the ability to sense the deeper spiritual needs of followers and link their current demands to these deeper, often unspoken, needs. They embody a spirit of service to the greater good, and inspire service in others, even asking followers to sacrifice something for the greater good as Eleanor

Roosevelt did in her work for the poor. John F. Kennedy inspired a whole generation in the '60s with his words, "Ask not what your country can do for you, but what you can do for your country." The creative power of lighted, inspired words can sound a certain inner note that people recognize and respond to. This can cause dramatic social change.


A CLEAR VISION AND FIELD CREATION

Visionaries who are successful at manifesting their visions base their leadership on an inspirational, positive picture of the future, as well as a clear sense of direction as to how to get there. Vision is a field that brings energy into form, and effective leaders broadcast a coherent message by themselves embodying their vision and their values, as physicist Margaret Wheatley notes in Leadership and the New Science. They keep communicating their vision to create a strong field which then brings their vision into physical reality. Nelson Mandela clearly held a positive vision of a racially harmonious South Africa for over 20 years while he was in jail, and then helped bring it into reality peacefully-- to the amazement of the world.

Compelling visions come from the heart and evoke enthusiasm and commitment from others. They link the current needs of people to their deeper needs. Visionary leaders transmit energy to people, giving them a new sense of hope and confidence in achieving the vision. President Roosevelt radiated a vitality that lifted people out of the fear and pessimism of the Great Depression, saying "We have nothing to fear but fear itself."

Visionary leaders often annunciate great values and principles that become guideposts for humanity, as Jefferson did with the Declaration of Independence. They intuitively draw on the eternal wisdom and present it in a new synthesis to meet the particular need of the times. In recent

years, Gro Brundtland of Norway helped articulate the principle of sustainable development that is needed to protect our environment for future generations.

INTUITIVE, INNOVATIVE THINKING


Visionary leaders are especially noted for transforming old mental maps or paradigms, and thinking "outside the box" of conventional thought. They embody a balance of left brain (rational) and right brain (intuitive) functions. These leaders think broadly and systemically, seeing the big picture, the whole system, and "the pattern that connects," as Gregory Bateson said. Environmental economist and futurist Hazel Henderson is an outstanding example today of an innovative thinker who sees the big picture.

Visionary trainer Peter Senge, author of The Fifth Discipline, has helped thousands of business managers see patterns of interrelationship in their companies and the interconnection of things. They have learned to shift their perception from seeing structures and linear cause/effect chains to seeing processes, and have thus transformed how they do business.

Visionary thinking is long term, rather than short term, and it explores the deeper causes of problems to find workable solutions. This is what Anita Roddick, creator of the hugely successful and innovative business, The Body Shop, has done by addressing with health and environmental problems, as well as poverty in the Third World, through her business. Visionary leaders anticipate change and are proactive, rather than reactive, to events. Their focus is on opportunities, not on problems, and they tend to emphasize win/win approaches, rather than adversarial win/lose approaches.

A PARTICIPATORY, PARTNERSHIP APPROACH TO LEADERSHIP


In contrast to the old style of leadership which tells people what to do, and pushes or dominates them, the new visionary leaders embody a receptive, as well as a dynamic energy. They know how to listen and learn from other points of view, asking questions as much as stating their own opinions and knowledge. The importance of good relationships in manifesting a vision is clearly understood. These leaders promote a partnership approach and create a shared sense of vision and meaning with others. This shared vision is more than an idea-- it is "a force in people's hearts," as Peter Senge notes. They exhibit a greater respect for others and carefully develop team spirit and team learning. Building this sense of shared vision and partnership has also been key to the effectiveness of many feminists such as Gloria Steinem.

The most effective visionary leaders are responsive to the real needs of people and they develop participative strategies to include people in designing their own futures. This approach has been very successful for Robert Haas, the CEO of Levi Strauss. Rather than confront or avoid conflict, the new visionary leaders have learned how to transform conflict into usable energy. They work to unite--rather than divide-- people.

CONCLUSION

All these different spiritual abilities describe the powers of the soul. When we see a truly visionary leader accomplishing great things, s/he is drawing on the resources of the soul and its remarkable capabilities. An effective visionary leader is someone who has experienced a certain degree of this higher soul infusion.

Today, as we approach the Third Millenium, thousands of new visionary leaders are emerging in all fields of human endeavor around the world, leading a quiet revolution energized by the power of the soul and their spiritual connection to a higher power. It's time we understand the deeper dimensions of these soul-inspired leaders and support them in helping create a more sustainable, just, and compassionate world for all of life. In the participatory universe in which we live, it is time we looked for these visionary leaders among us and supported them and humanity’s evolution

Visionary leadership is transformative. It involves greatness, penetrating the ordinary, and reaching through time to bring out the best the world has to offer. A visionary leader anticipates events, influences the future and enables people to flourish in fundamental ways. In associations this means perceiving challenges and growth opportunities before they happen while positioning the organization to produce extraordinary results that make a real contribution to the world.

Visionary leadership requires total involvement, tremendous work, a willingness to put everything on the line and continuous engagement. Visionary leaders often suffer opposition from all sides. Yet, the payoff is greater than anything imaginable: the personal reward that comes from making a genuine and substantive contribution to humanity.

I remember hearing in the fall of 1997 about the "Comprehensive Development Framework" from President James Wolfensohn of the World Bank. His inspirational idea pulled together concepts from many disciplines and laid out a framework for the effective alleviation of global poverty - no small task. He was calling for a holistic approach that put social concerns on equal footing with economic issues and, most importantly, put each country in charge of its own success. While many heralded these new ideas, they initially received criticism from all corners: denounced as a turn away from the necessary, hard line economic approach. Yet, today this framework has been embraced on a global scale and is often the reference for the creation of new policies addressing global poverty.

Visionary leaders not only have a clear idea of what is possible, they are involved in bringing it about. Mahatma Ghandi did more than recognize the value of religious tolerance and sovereignty for the people of India, he used his life to make it possible. Ghandi drew on everything to instigate the changes he was seeking: his diet, his clothing, his community, his speech. When a reporter asked him to state his message for the world, Ghandi replied, "My life is my message."

Martin Luther King, Jr, did more than have a dream of racial equality in the United States, he advanced civil rights through a critical juncture in American history. Likewise, executives who foresee the great potential in associations can exert their influence, bringing about profound changes in the ways people associate for the benefit of humanity.

Among the qualities visionary leaders cultivate are imagination, engagement, tangible results, and penetrating self-reflection. A strong imagination is needed to envision the future with clarity. This makes it possible for all who share the dreaming to know the courses of action to be taken. Leaders do not shirk from the overwhelming complexity of the world; instead they engage society with its competing, divergent viewpoints. In order to marshal the best possible chance of success they seek to communicate effectively: sharing and listening, building their knowledge through collaboration. Through their personal yearning to make a lasting, social contribution, they put in the time, energy and attention necessary to generate tangible results. They give everything to bring out their best, often plunging their personal depths to build from within.

Let's look at two real life examples that give meaning to these qualities. These stories come from the private sector and provide examples that we can draw from for successful approaches for associations today. We will look at Akio Morita, co-founder of Sony, and Anita Roddick, founder of the Body Shop.

The Power of Imagination
No one "needed" a Walkman before Akio Morita at Sony imagined it, made it and marketed it successfully. Today the Walkman is part of our culture and has evolved into a new industry: portable entertainment. However, this was not the most powerful example of Morita's ability to imagine what was possible and turn it into reality.

In 1946, just following Japan's defeat in World War II, Morita began the effort that would secure the reputation of his country as a marketplace leader. Imagine how tough those times were and the foresight required to envision Japan as a key player in the world economy.

When Morita first opened shop in the 1950s the phrase "Made in Japan" was synonymous with cheap imitations and inferior quality. As a result, most Japanese products were sold under another company's brand name. It was almost unheard of for a Japanese business to achieve brand status for its products. Yet, that is exactly what Morita set out to do. He was able to envision a day when his company, Sony, would be a brand that consumers would identify with the highest of quality. He devoted all of his efforts to realizing that vision.

What are the short-comings in your association today? Can you envision turning them around, setting an example to the entire industry? What achievements would you like your association to become known for? Can you imagine your organization as a leader in the field?

Morita had special alliances that gave him access to new territory. Most important was Morita's longtime partner, Masaru Ibuka. Ibuka brought engineering expertise and a product orientation that allowed the two to bring to market one success after another: the first AM transistor radio, the first pocket-sized transistor radio, the first all transistor television, the first home use VCR and on and on. Together the two of them were an unstoppable force, helping to open up unprecedented growth in the Japanese electronics market.

Rather than standing on his vision alone, Morita found a partner who helped him to turn dreams into reality. This combination was unbeatable and over the decades Sony became one of the top consumer rated businesses in the world. What alliances would enable your organization to excel? Are there companies in the private sector that understand your goals and membership? Perhaps there are overnment agencies that are particularly poised well for partnership. Ask, "What are the strategic partnerships and alliances that would turn our organization's dreams into reality? Who has the most to gain from partnering with my organization's success?"

Morita was able to imagine a future in which he had established his brand and his country as purveyors of excellence. Before he died in 1999 Sony was an acknowledged world leader in the consumer electronics and entertainment industries. He had personally played a leading role in transforming Japan's economy from post-WWII shambles to a superior player in the global marketplace.

Make Social Responsibility your Modus Operandi
Anita Roddick changed the multi-billion dollar global cosmetics business through her company, The Body Shop. In 1976 Roddick opened a shop in East Sussex with a handful of homemade products. Today there are "over 1,700 stores serving over 84 million customers in 49 different markets in 24 different languages and across 12 time zones." Her approach is studied in universities and management schools around the globe. By dedicating her business to the pursuit of social and environmental change, she garnered the support of a massive consumer base and raised the bar of employee engagement to new heights.

Organizations that demonstrate a commitment to improving our world stand to gain a great deal, especially when times feel uncertain. In our interconnected environment every member can contribute to -- or detract from - your association's presence in the marketplace. Make it easy for people to understand how their contribution to the work program makes a positive difference in the world and productivity will increase dramatically.

Roddick is not using social action as a marketing ploy. She says, "This is not about one penny being spent in so-called cause-related marketing which is disingenuous. This is about having a passion to shout out and be persuasive about what you do." Just this last February Roddick stepped down from her corporate position at The Body Shop to more effectively pursue her global concerns.

Let's step back in time and take a look at what happened that propelled The Body Shop into a global presence. Roddick opened the first store with just 15 skincare products that she had concocted herself. She selected her ingredients carefully, choosing those that were especially meaningful to her. The store did well and in less than a year there was a second store. Soon, a new business model was created whereby the stores were franchised and the Roddick's earned their income from the sales of products to the stores rather than charging for the franchise.

Instead of relying on traditional advertising, Roddick pursued marketing through in-store brochures and interviews with the press. The stories focused on the unique nature of her products and the social activism that was at the heart of her business philosophy. When the company went public in 1984 its stocks doubled after one day and continued to rise all through the decade. The store built a reputation not just by adopting global causes, such as saving the rainforest and banning animal testing, but by encouraging their staff to become active locally. The result has been a tremendously loyal customer base that extends beyond traditional consumer interests.

Aligning personal goals with organizational business objectives results in highly leveraged efforts. Word travels quickly through the informal networks that spring up around concerns people care most deeply about. Time and effort to support the cause turn into time and effort that fuels the organization's success and vice-versa. How might your association become involved in both global and local issues, making a contribution to your communities and the world? What issues are relevant to your members and your mission? The answers to these questions point the way toward visionary success.

Increasing Performance
Ultimately, visionary leadership is about increasing performance. Anticipating and influencing the future enables you to position your organization in the best possible way to achieve the results you are looking for. The payoff comes in satisfying organizational objectives while delivering tangible results to your membership, as well as the deep personal satisfaction you derive from making a contribution to the world.

Associations today are positioned well to usher in a new era of productivity. This means being ready to harvest opportunities before they happen while preparing the organization to produce the exceptional results that make a real contribution to the world. This is the transformation that comes through visionary leadership.


VISIONARY LEADERSHIP

Are you someone with a vision burning inside that seeks to manifest? Do you see yourself as a visionary?
What is it that makes a visionary become a visionary leader? A visionary may dream wonderful visions of the future and articulate them with great inspiration. A visionary is good with words. But a visionary leader is good with actions as well as words, and so can bring his/her vision into being in the world, thus transforming it in some way. More than words are needed for a vision to take form in today’s world. It requires leadership and heartfelt commitment.
A visionary leader is effective in manifesting his or her vision because s/he creates specific, achievable goals, initiates action and enlists the participation of others.
What are the qualities and abilities of true visionary leaders? What is the mysterious inner process within leaders that enables them to work their magic and radiate the charisma that mobilizes others for a higher purpose?
Visionary leadership is based on a balanced expression of the spiritual, mental, emotional and physical dimensions. It requires core values, clear vision, empowering relationships, and innovative action. When one or more of these dimensions are missing, leadership cannot manifest a vision.


A COMMITMENT TO CORE SPIRITUAL VALUES

A commitment to values is an outstanding characteristic of all visionary leaders. They embody a sense of personal integrity, and radiate a sense of energy, vitality and will. Will is standing in a spiritual state of being. Will is a spiritual attribute, which allows a leader to stand for something.
More self-aware and reflective than others, visionary leaders follow an inner sense of direction, and lead from the inside out, as exemplified by Mahatma Gandhi. He said, “I must first be the change I want to see in my world.” He was a prime example of a commitment to values, as he freed India by appealing to the moral conscience of Britain and using “satyagraha” or non-violent action to reveal the immorality of the British Empire.
Rather than being corrupted by power, visionary leaders are elevated by power and exercise moral leadership. Mary Robinson, former President of Ireland and U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights, embodies this type of moral leadership, as does Marion Wright Edelman, founder of the Children’s Defense Fund, who has a deep commitment to children’s welfare.
Many successful leaders in business, such as Jeffrey Swartz of Timberland Shoes, have demonstrated the power of living their values. Swartz pays employees to volunteer in the community and honors the “double bottom line”--profit and values”. Tom Chappell, CEO of Tom’s of Maine, found that he could “do well by doing good.” Doing good-- embodying his values--has made his company very profitable. Tom’s of Maine uses all natural ingredients in their products to protect consumers and the environment.


A CLEAR, INSPIRITATIONAL, VISION

Visionaries who are successful at manifesting their visions base their leadership on an inspirational, positive picture of the future, as well as a clear sense of direction as to how to get there. Vision is a field that brings energy into form. Effective leaders broadcast a coherent message by themselves embodying their vision, as author Margaret Wheatley notes. They keep communicating the vision to create a strong field which then brings their vision into physical reality. Nelson Mandela clearly held a positive vision of a racially harmonious South Africa during his 28 years in jail and helped bring it into reality peacefully-- to the amazement of the world.

The best visionary leaders move energy to a higher level by offering a clear vision of what is possible. They inspire people to be better than they already are and help them identify with what Lincoln called “the angels of their better nature.” This was the power of Martin Luther King’s “I have a dream” speech. The creative power of lighted, inspired words can sound a certain inner note that people recognize and respond to. This then creates dramatic social change. Like King, visionary leaders have the ability to sense the deeper spiritual needs of followers and link their current demands to these deeper, often unspoken, need for purpose and meaning.

Visionary leaders often have the ability to see higher spiritual forces at work behind the scenes of events, and they align with the vision of these redemptive forces. Both George Washington and Winston Churchill spoke about the help they received from a “guiding hand.” Churchill said, “...we have a guardian because we serve a great cause, and we shall have that guardian as long as we serve that cause faithfully.”

Sojourner Truth, a former slave, was guided by an inner spiritual experience to preach the emancipation of slaves and women’s rights all over the country during the Civil War. President Anwar Sadat of Egypt had a vision of Mohammed who told him to create peace in the Middle East. This vision is the hidden story behind the Camp David Peace Treaty between Arabs and Israelis.

Visionary leaders transmit energy to people, giving them a new sense of hope and confidence in achieving the vision. Television host Oprah Winfrey helps her guests believe in themselves and work to create a better world.

Visionary leaders often enunciate a vision based on principles that become guideposts for humanity. They intuitively draw on the ageless wisdom and present it in a new synthesis to meet the particular need of the times. In the Brundtland Report, Gro Brundtland, former Prime Minister of Norway, helped synthesize the principles of sustainable development that are needed to protect our environment for future generations.


RESPECTFUL, EMPOWERING RELATIONSHIPS

Good relationships are the heart of effective visionary leaders. They embody a deeply caring approach to people, seeing them as their greatest asset. Aaron Feuerstein, CEO of Malden Mills, kept all his employees on the payroll when a fire destroyed 75% of his factories. His employees were so grateful they helped him rebuild and within a year the company was more profitable than ever.

In contrast to the old style of leadership which tells people what to do, and pushes or dominates them, visionary leaders embody a receptive, as well as a dynamic energy. They know how to listen and learn from other points of view and have fine tuned their communications skills. Rita Bailey, Director of Southwest Airline’s University for People, says the secret of the airline’s amazing financial success is living by the golden rule--treating employees as family, with warmth and respect. Employees then treat customers the same way.
Visionary leaders promote a partnership approach and create a shared sense of vision and meaning with others. They exhibit a greater respect for others and carefully develop team spirit and team learning, Building this sense of shared vision and partnership has also been key to the effectiveness of feminist Gloria Steinem.

The most effective visionary leaders are responsive to the real needs of people and they develop participative strategies to include people in designing their own futures. This approach has been very successful for Robert Haas, the CEO of Levi Strauss. Rather than confront or avoid conflict, the new leaders have learned how to transform conflict into usable energy. They work to unite--rather than divide-- people.



INNOVATIVE, COURAGEOUS ACTION

Visionary leaders are especially noted for transforming old mental maps or paradigms, and creating strategies that are “outside the box” of conventional thought. They embody a balance of right brain (rational) and left brain (intuitive) functions. Their thinking is broad and systemic, seeing the big picture, the whole system, and “the pattern that connects.” They then create innovative strategies for actualizing their vision. CNN founder Ted Turner transformed television news by boldly creating an around-the-clock international news network.
CEO Ray Anderson took courageous action in transforming his world-wide company, Interface Carpets, into the most environmentally sustainable corporation. Interface launched a massive effort to cut its use of energy, replace petroleum-based supplies with vegetable-based substitutes, and reduce emissions by 24%. Customers now don’t buy a wall-to-wall carpet--they rent one--and when it wears out, all its component parts are recycled, and the customer receives a new one.
Visionary leaders anticipate change and are proactive, rather than reactive to events. Their focus is on opportunities, not on problems. They emphasize win/win--rather than adversarial win/lose--approaches. This is the strategy of environmental economist Hazel Henderson, author of Building a Win/Win World, who created The Calvert/Henderson Sustainable Indicators with the Calvert Social Investment Funds.
Body Shop founder Anita Roddick addressed health and environmental problems, as well as poverty in the Third World, through the innovative strategies she designed for her hugely successful products and stores. Products are made of non-polluting ingredients and stores are opened in poor neighborhoods to provide employment and return profit to the community.
When we see a truly visionary leader accomplishing great things, s/he is drawing on the resources of their soul and its remarkable capabilities. Each of us can access our inner resources to become a more effective leader in our own field. First we must be willing to take initiative and stand for something we believe in passionately. We must be ready to take the heat. Many of us avoid the responsibility of leadership primarily because we are too sensitive to criticism. But when we know who we truly are and we live from an inner core of values, criticism can be filtered to take in only what is true and helpful to our growth.
Today, as we enter the Third Millenium, thousands of new visionary leaders are emerging in all fields of human endeavor around the world, leading a quiet revolution energized by power of the soul. By appreciating and supporting those who lead from their core spiritual values, we strengthen those leadership qualities in ourselves.