2 assignments module three

Assignment 2: Do Civil Rights Apply to U.S. Companies?

You are a business consultant to the National Minority Supplier Development Council. An international petroleum products distribution company, based in the U.S., consults with you on cultural diversity matters. It faces some complex choices at its overseas locations. While equal opportunity, affirmative action, and individual civil rights are the law of the land in the U.S., this frequently is not the case in other countries. Therefore when moral and legal issues run counter to host-country customs, problems are bound to arise.

Prepare an executive summary, briefly discussing the following specific topics:

  • Should U.S. civil rights laws apply to U.S. companies’ foreign operations? Express your opinion on this issue.
  • Describe a cultural diversity policy for the firm expanding overseas operations. Highlight any differences that might arise in some Middle Eastern countries where a distribution center is currently being built.
  • Explain the value of understanding the importance of, and complying with, the other country’s legal system while operating in a foreign country.
  • Americans tend to believe that the U.S. legal system is better than that of most other countries. Discuss the ramifications of this belief in an overseas, culturally diverse operation.

Create a two-page executive summary in Word. Use at least three resources to justify your responses. Apply current APA standards for writing style to your work. Include a title page and reference page(s) in addition to the summary. Use the following file naming convention: LastnameFirstInitial_M3_A2.doc.

By the due date assigned, deliver your assignment to the Submissions Area.

Assignment 2 Grading Criteria Maximum Points
Provided rationale for whether or not U.S. civil rights laws apply to U.S. companies operating in foreign countries.

20

Discussed the components of a potential diversity policy for this company considering that the company will be operating in the Middle East.

20

Explained the value of understanding the importance of and complying with the other country’s legal system while operating in a foreign country.

20

Discussed the ramifications of the belief that the U.S. legal system is better than most other countries in an overseas, culturally diverse operation

20

Supported assertions with examination of evidence and reference to authoritative sources using the online library and text. Applied current APA standards for editorial style, expression of ideas, and format of text, citations, and references

20

Total:

100

Hide Rubrics

Rubric Name: MGT450_M2A2_Grading_Rubric

Criteria


GR1 Provided rationale for whether or not U.S. civil rights laws apply to U.S. companies operating in foreign countries.

Maximum Points

/ 20

Maximum Points – 20 points


GR2 Discussed the components of a potential diversity policy for this company considering that the company will be operating in the Middle East.

Maximum Points

/ 20

Maximum Points – 20 points


GR3 Explained the value of understanding the importance of and complying with the other country’s legal system while operating in a foreign country.

Maximum Points

/ 20

Maximum Points – 20 points


GR4 Discussed the ramifications of the belief that the U.S. legal system is better than most other countries in an overseas, culturally diverse operation.

Maximum Points

/ 20

Maximum Points – 20 points


GR5 Supported assertions with examination of evidence and reference to authoritative sources using the online library and text. Applied current APA standards for editorial style, expression of ideas, and format of text, citations, and references.

Maximum Points

/ 20

Maximum Points – 20 points


Total

— / 100

Assignment 2: Training on Diversity Trends

As a new member of a top management consulting firm’s diversity team, one of your responsibilities is to conduct training on diversity trends. Consultants use this training in their management practices with Fortune 500 companies.

You are asked to lead a training session next week. The topic is “The Global Demographic Trends Impacting Diversity.” The training will be presented to mid-level managers in your firm. The purpose of the training is to inform the management consultants of the latest changes in worldwide demographics relative to five key diversity areas of interest and provide recommendations for managers on sustaining a diverse workforce.

Prepare a seven to nine slide Microsoft PowerPoint presentation on this topic. Include a discussion of the following:

  • Diversity Trends
    • Population trends
    • Working-age population movements
    • Racial and ethnic trends
    • Sexual-orientation trends
    • Gender trends
  • Impact of diversity trends and changes to the firm based on statistical data
  • Recommendation to the firm for sustaining a diverse workforce

Include detailed speaker notes with your presentation that fully explain each point and justification for your recommendations.

Use at least three resources to justify your responses. Apply current APA standards for writing style to your work. Include a title slide and reference slide(s) in addition to the main slides.

By the due date assigned, deliver your assignment to the Submissions Area.

Use the following file naming convention: LastnameFirstInitial_M4_A2.ppt.

Note: If your version of Microsoft PowerPoint does not have the option to include speaker notes, you will need to submit a Microsoft Word document that contains all information from your presentation, including the speaker notes.

Assignment 2 Grading Criteria Maximum Points
Discussed the key points of population trends, working-age population movements, racial and ethnic trends, sexual-orientation trends, and gender trends.

48

Explained the potential impact of the changes in diversity trends to the firm.

60

Recommendation of actions that should be taken based on the statistical data.

48

Style (4 points): Tone, audience, and word choice
Organization (12 points): Introduction, transitions, and conclusion
Usage and Mechanics (12 points): Grammar, spelling, sentence structure, 7-9 pages
APA Elements (16 points): In text citations and the inclusion of at least three references, paraphrasing, and appropriate use of quotations and other elements of style

44

Total:

200

Hide Rubrics

Rubric Name: MGT450_M3A2_Grading Rubric

Criteria


GR1 Discussed the key points of population trends, working-age population movements, racial and ethnic trends, sexual-orientation trends, and gender trends.

Maximum Points

/ 48

Maximum Points – 48 points


GR2 Explained the potential impact of the changes in diversity trends to the firm.

Maximum Points

/ 60

Maximum Points – 60 points


GR3 Recommendation of actions that should be taken based on the statistical data.

Maximum Points

/ 48

Maximum Points – 48 points


GR4 Style (4 points): Tone, audience, and word choice Organization (12 points): Introduction, transitions, and conclusion Usage and Mechanics (12 points): Grammar, spelling, sentence structure, 7-9 pages APA Elements (16 points): In text citations and the

Maximum Points

/ 44

Maximum Points – 44 points


Total

— / 200

Competency Based Interviewing

In this assignment, you will be evaluating the use of a selection tool and developing your own questions to improve the tool.

Imagine that you are working as an Industrial Organizational (I/O) Psychologist involved in the selection of managers. The current selection includes a competency based interview. Please evaluate the current interview questions. Please use the attached template for your submission.

Part A: For each of the listed questions, explain whether or not the question is relevant to the competency it is supposed to measure. Each response should be a minimum of 150 words per question and should integrate concepts from the course reading and scholarly resources.

Part B: For each competency, identify two alternative interview questions and provide a rationale for why they were selected. Your explanation should be a minimum of 150 words per question and should integrate concepts from the course reading and scholarly resources.

Your paper must also:

Be in APA format, including a title page and reference page.

Be proofread and contain few to no grammar errors, misspellings, or typographical errors.

Incorporate a minimum of three supportive scholarly references to support content and conclusions.

Christianity, assignment help

In this assignment you will summarize beliefs about the origin of the universe and life, including what Christians believe, what you believe, and how people’s beliefs about origins might impact how they live.

After reflecting on Chapters 1 and 2 of Genesis, create a 15-slide PowerPoint presentation covering the following topics, paying particular emphasis on item three:

Briefly explain the Genesis account of creation (first two chapters). The point is not to retell all aspects of the story in detail but just to make the message of the Bible clear.

Explain and support your interpretation of the origin of the universe. Here you may want to address evolution, age of the earth, and whether or not it can be reconciled with the message of the Bible.

Express how your understanding of the origin of the universe impacts your worldview, specifically your view of God, of humanity, and responsibility to care for the earth.

The first slide will be the title slide including your name and course information. The last slide(s) will be your list of references. You may use the textbook, the lecture, or other scholarly references. Cite all sources, including the Bible, as you would in an essay. The in-text citations should be placed on the actual slides in the presentation so the audience can see them. Put basic content on the actual slides and elaborate on all your points in the slide notes.

In an effort to keep the file sizes reasonable, use no more than four low-resolution images. As in all aspects of this course, show respect for all other views, with no condescension. Keep your presentation positive and focused on what you believe, not on what you do not believe.

Use one to three resources, other than the Bible.

While GCU style format is not required for the body of this assignment, solid academic writing is expected, and in-text citations and references should be presented using GCU documentation guidelines, which can be found in the GCU Style Guide, located in the Student Success Center.

This assignment uses a rubric. Please review the rubric prior to beginning the assignment to become familiar with the expectations for successful completion.

Terrorism research paper

Needed by Saturday Aug 11th

Terrorism research paper due no later than 2nd week in August. Must be written on “Socratic Method.” The Socratic method is a different style of education than a lecture. This approach involves a conversation in which a student is asked to question their assumptions. It is a forum for open-ended inquiry, one in which both student and teacher can use probing questions to develop a deeper understanding of the topic. The text of study is “Terrorism and Homeland Security by Gus Martin. Area of interest will be: International terrorism vs domestic terrorism. Is it all one and the same? In the dropbox are the research guide lines.

Modigliani-Miller Proposition, business and finance homework help

Need responses to the student post below

1. Modigliani-Miller Proposition II states that the required return on a firm’s
equity is positively related to the firm’s debt-equity ratio therefore, any
increase in the amount of debt in a firm’s capital structure will increase the
required return on the firm’s equity. Since MM proposition II deals with the
Weighted Average Cost of Capital (WACC) it states that as the proportion of debt
int the company’s capital structures increase, its return on equity to
shareholders increases in a linear fashion. The existence of higher debt levels
makes investing in the company more risky, so shareholders demand higher risk
premium on the company’s stock. 

Under MM theory of perfect capital markets believes in the existence of
“perfect capital markets and assumes that all the investors are rational, they
have access to free information there are no
floatation or transaction costs and that the market is
frictionless. The only problem with this is in reality there is not such thing
as the “perfect market” unfortunately the more information investors have or
know the more they are going to find a way for it to favor them because
dishonesty will always play.

2.

Anything investable that is not a stock, a bond or cash is commonly referred
to as an alternative asset. Alternatives run the gamut from “real” assets like
commodities, farmland, and timber, to sophisticated debt structures, derivatives
contracts and partnership interests in privately-held businesses.  Partnerships
that involve publicly-traded securities but allow the manager to hedge by
selling short are also considered to be alternatives.

Alternatives are popular with institutional investors and wealthy individuals
because their returns are perceived to have a low correlation with those of the
stock and bond markets.  Many consultants, chief investment officers and
advisers claim alternative investing combines higher returns with lower risk
relative to the stock market.

Arthur Miller’s play Death of a Salesman, American Literature Final Paper, English homework help

Assignment Instructions:

After reading Arthur Miller’s play Death of a Salesman (pp. 1208-1279), write a 3-4 page paper in

which you react or respond to the play. In other words, don’t just summarize the text; offer some kind

of perspective or opinion about it. This perspective or opinion can take on a variety of forms, as

exemplified by the following three prompts (you may choose one of the following three prompts, if you

like, or you may develop your own central, controlling idea):

1. In what ways is this story timeless, and in what ways does it relate specifically to the time in which it

was written? For this prompt, be certain to research the historical, social, and cultural time period in

which the play was written, and in addition, consider how the play relates to the human experience

more generally. See Chapter 31 (pages 1565-1567) of Literature by DiYanni for more information.

2. Examine three of the play’s main characters. How are they different, how are they alike, and how does

each relate to the play’s overarching themes? For more information, see Chapter 24 (pp. 922-925) of

Literature by DiYanni.

3. What is typically “American” about Miller’s play? What cultural attitudes and values displayed by the

characters make it “feel” American? How does the theme relate to the American experience of the

American Dream? See Chapter 31 (pages 1565-1567) of Literature by DiYanni for more information.

4. What is the overarching theme of the play, and how does Miller express that theme using the elements

of drama (characterization, setting, staging, imagery, etc.)? For more information, see Chapter 24 of

Literature by DiYanni.

For more information on reading and writing about drama, see Chapters 21-25 of Literature by DiYanni.

Grading:

Write a structured, organized essay with a clear thesis statement; paragraphs with unity,

development, and coherence; an engaging introduction; and an effective conclusion that reiterates

your main points. In other words, write a strong, detailed essay about the play. Revise and edit your


paper thoroughly before turning it in.

Remember, also, to use quotes and otherwise reference the play, and be sure to cite any outside

sources that you reference with both in-text citations and reference page citations. Failure to cite

properly is considered plagiarism, a serious academic offense with severe penalties (as discussed in the

Hondros Catalog). Be sure to follow standard APA formatting, and remember the 3-4 page length


requirement.

The rubric below details

Reaction Paper Rubric Possible

Points

Points

Earned

Essay indicates a controlling idea: A clear thesis statement

indicates the essay’s argument, which answers the question about

the analyzed poem.

7

Essay develops a controlling idea: This thesis statement is

developed throughout the paper, without digressions, into a

thoughtful, careful, precise analysis. This includes specific, cited

quotations and paraphrases from the poem and any relevant outside

sources, as well as a discussion of critical theory, literary elements,

and/or biographical and historical information.

20

Essay develops a strong and logical structure: The essay as a

whole has a unified, coherent, and developed point of view, with a

thesis statement, introduction that contextualizes the discussion,

properly ordered body paragraphs, and a conclusion that ties

together the main points of the essay. Transitions connect sentences

and paragraphs throughout the essay.

8

Essay paragraphs are unified, coherent, and developed:

Paragraphs make one single, coherent point that fits within the

structure of the essay. Topic sentences and concluding sentences

are used appropriately.

7

Essay is edited and revised properly: The essay is written with

clear, interesting, sound sentences; appropriate tone; a lack of

grammatical, mechanical, typographical, and punctuation errors.

8

Essay meets APA formatting guidelines: The essay has an APAstyle

title page, uses Times New Roman 12 font, has appropriate

margins, offers a correctly formatted References Page and in-text

citations, and otherwise acceptably meets APA standards.

5

Essay meets length guidelines: The essay should be about 3-4

pages in length

5

TOTAL: 60

the breakdown of points for this assignment.

Anthropology Question

Article evaluation assignment: Barrett, Caitlín E. 2017. “Recontextualizing Nilotic Scenes: Interactive Landscapes in the Garden of the Casa Dell’Efebo, Pompeii.” American Journal of Archaeology 121, pp. 293–332 and additional images at https://www.ajaonline.org/imagegallery/3421Article Evaluation assignments. Your essay should be a critical review (ca. 750-1000 words) of the article. • What is the primary argument or thesis of the article?

What is the author’s (or authors’) approach to understanding ancient art and/or archaeology?
How does this article relate to class discussion and/or other course materials?• Did you find the main argument convincing? Why or why not?
o Does the author make a clear distinction between what has been found and what the author believes must have existed, but hasn’t found?
o Does the author make it easy for you to distinguish between data, descriptions of data, and interpretations of data?
o Do you detect any biases and/or stereotypes?
Questions to consider:
Support your points by citing specific examples in the article.
Complete references are essential. For assistance, please consult the How to cite your sources document on moodle, the Trinity College Handbook section on academic honesty, and/or the professor.
Your critical review should be concise and direct. You may write in 1st person or 3rd person, whichever you prefer.
Also, be careful about citing and i have attached the requirement of citing.

Stakeholders identification in the case “Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission” Two page needed.

Your textbook defines stakeholders as an entity that is benefitted or burdened by the actions of a corporation or whose actions may benefit or burden the corporation.Some common examples of stakeholders would include customers, employees, suppliers, stockholders, and the community.

The case study presents the history of events leading up to the Supreme Court of the United States’ decision in Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission, a brief summary of the public’s reaction to the decision, and some thoughts to consider about the effect of this decision.The assignment requires you to identify stakeholders who will be affected by the court’s decision in this case and the impacts the stakeholders will have in the aftermath of the court’s decision.

Businesses will almost always have multiple stakeholders, and many times their interests will conflict.This means that a business decision-maker will frequently have to make a decision in the face of competing claims from different stakeholders.The question of whose interestsYour textbook defines stakeholders as an entity that is benefitted or burdened by the actions of a corporation or whose actions may benefit or burden the corporation.Some common examples of stakeholders would include customers, employees, suppliers, stockholders, and the community.

Businesses will almost always have multiple stakeholders, and many times their interests will conflict.This means that a business decision-maker will frequently have to make a decision in the face of competing claims from different stakeholders.The question of whose interests should be prioritized requires the exercise of judgment.This skill—examining competing claims and deciding which one is the strongest—is called evaluation. You will want to consider the power, urgency, and legitimacy that each stakeholder presents.

In your assignment, you will be asked to identify all relevant stakeholders and determine how they could be impacted by the Supreme Court’s decision in Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission.You should put yourselves in each stakeholder’s position—Why do they care about the outcome of the decision?How will they be affected?What outcome would they prefer?What are their arguments in support of their preferred outcome? You will want to consider the power, urgency, and legitimacy that each stakeholder presents.

To summarize, do not answer the questions that follow the case. Instead, identify all stakeholders affected by the court’s decision and determine the impact that the court’s decision has on the stakeholder or the impact that the stakeholder could have in the aftermath of the court’s decision.

If you use sources, you must use APA format for the in-text citations and references page. However, the assignment does not require sources. An abstract, title page, and running head are not required. You can always refer to Purdue’s Owl website (Links to an external site.)Links to an external site. for APA formatting style. The paper must be double-spaced, have one-inch borders, and the type must be in Times New Roman size 12.

PAY ATTENTION!! YOU ONLY NEED TO identify one stakeholder in this assignment: Citizens/Corporation. Please also add related stakeholder such as employees, shareholders, directors, officers.

The attached files of the detailed introduction of this case is linked down below.

Discussion board ( at least 200 words answer per question)

1.Bazin and Zavattini are both interested in seeing “reality” conveyed on screen, albeit in different ways. Bazin’s emphasis on the long take and deep focus might be considered a phenomenological realism, as this this kind of filmmaking reflects the way humans experience space and time. Zavattini, on the other hand, is primarily interested in social realism, focusing on actual, everyday problems of common people. But these two aspects may be related as well, with the long duration and ambiguity of the deep focus shot capturing certain social realities typically neglected in many classical Hollywood films.

With either/both of these aspects of “realism” in mind, address how you see this conveyed in Bicycle Thieves or any other film (there is a subcategory of contemporary indie films critics have called “neo-neorealism”) that may take up this approach to great effect.

2.

Address how Cléo from 5 to 7 and/or The Circle exemplify some of the European Modernist or New Wave sensibilities that directly challenge the classical Hollywood tradition. In what ways do these films, or other contemporary alternative cinemas break particular conventions in order to convey certain stories about—or the perspectives of—individuals or groups that were historically excluded from most conventional films? In other words, how does the film form (ranging from lighting, cinematography, and editing to narrative structure) contribute to its social/cultural/political message?

Leadership Development Plan II

This
is the second of two times that you will submit this assignment
throughout the course. As the course continues, you will modify and
enhance your own leadership development plan. Refer to and develop the
document you submitted for M1: Leadership Development Plan I.

Consult the Personal Leadership Development Plan: Overview and Timeline page for additional information on this semester-long project. Refer to How to Create a Personal Leadership Development Plan for information and step-by-step instructions for developing your own Leadership Development Plan.

Personal Leadership Development Plan: Overview and Timeline

A person leading a group of people through a crosswalk

Think about what words you want people to utilize when it comes to
describing you and your leadership. Are they the same words they
actually utilize? If not, how can we get the words used by colleagues
aligned with the words you aspire to be described with?

The answer is by being on purpose. Creating and monitoring the impact of purposeful
actions, as well as cultivating a network that recognizes these
actions/impacts because they are important aspects of what they do,
need, or want are paramount to a leaders’ success.

What does this mean? It means as leaders of self first, we must
develop goals, strategies, and actions to get to what we want. Very
similar to your Performance Management approach – in fact, if you were
to work the leadership development approach up to the TAP plan, you
could insert the Performance Management plan and ask yourself, “what
else would I need to do to accomplish what I want for myself with
respect to leadership within this plan?” You will immediately see:

  • Places you can enhance your performance
  • Places where you did not think about your leadership, only about your actions
  • Some things you may have ignored, which is something that happens to everyone

This is the key to the work of thinking before doing: You get to be better. The purpose of Development Plans is to be better on purpose.

Expected Review: Weekly Review, Weekly Additions, Individual Tracking Expected.

For our program, you will be asked to develop your leadership plan at
the beginning of the course. We encourage you to review your plans each
week. Where can you enhance your plan based on new information? Did you
gain a perspective or a piece of advice from your leadership interviews
you want to incorporate into your plan so it becomes a habit?

You will not be expected to submit these enhancements weekly.
Leadership is not about micromanaging actions, nor is this aspect of the
program. The goals are yours. The outcomes are yours. Our goal is to
provide you the tools for success.

Certainly, at the end of the course, we encourage you to review your
plan and determine what your next steps are. Leadership success happens
due to clarity of focus, engagement of a functional network, and the
actions taken lead to impact. This impact is valued and noticed,
resulting in bigger opportunities for leadership.

How to Create a Personal Leadership Development Plan

Image of a Hand Drawn Brain Containing Leadership Terminology

Successful leaders come in all shapes and sizes. No two workplaces,
situations, crises, or scenarios are the same, and no two leaders are
the same. And while it’s fine to say that servant leadership is the most effective type of management style (Links to an external site.)Links to an external site., that doesn’t explain how a manager can become an effective manager. That’s where the personal leadership development plan comes into play.

The idea of developing a personal leadership development plan might
seem a bit wonky, especially if you’re already in a leadership position.
But having a plan — more specifically, a written list of leadership
development activities — is important.

Here’s why:

On the most basic level, you want your personal leadership
development plans to be readily accessible as both reminders and
guidelines for the goals you’ve set for yourself. We’ve all made mental
to-do lists — and promptly forgotten everything on them. Same goes with a
leadership plan.

Not sure where to start? Follow this step-by-step guide and you’ll have a leadership development plan in no time.


Step 1: Define What Generally Makes a Great Leader

The best way to make a leadership development plan is to draw
inspiration from today’s great leaders. To start, make a leadership
skills list of qualities that you think make up the traits,
competencies, abilities, and experience of a good leader.

Three samples (Links to an external site.)Links to an external site. of skills you might put on your list:

  • Honest, ethical behavior
  • Being able to clearly and succinctly communicate a vision
  • Using creativity and intuition to navigate difficult and unpredictable situations

Step 2: Take a Self-Assessment

Next you want to identify your core characteristics. These are
personality traits like “adventurous,” “observant,” and “impulsive.” To
do this, take a test like the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI) (Links to an external site.)Links to an external site. or StrengthsFinder (Links to an external site.)Links to an external site..
Or, rally a group of friends, peers, colleagues, and family to write
down words they’d use to describe you. The course provides others –
capture all these results.

By breaking down your personality traits and strengths, you’ll have
more insight into your personal style and be able to better answer the
“Who am I?” piece of the personal leadership development process, which
we’ll get to later.


Step 3: Identify Your Core Values

Now that you’ve identified your core characteristics, it’s time to
get into the nitty gritty details and identify your core values.

Core values are the principles you use to make decisions and define
integrity and ethics. They are the things that help you weigh choices in
life, and are typically unwavering.

To help you identify what your core values might be, we’ve listed a
few below. Choose 8–12 of the following values that are most important
to you: (there are other lists within the course)

List of Core Values
  • Achievement
  • Advancement
  • Adventure
  • Affiliation
  • Affluence
  • Authority
  • Autonomy
  • Balance
  • Challenge
  • Collaboration
  • Community
  • Competency
  • Competition
  • Courage
  • Creativity
  • Duty
  • Economic security
  • Enjoyment
  • Fame
  • Friendship
  • Health
  • Helping others
  • Humor
  • Influence
  • Inner harmony
  • Integrity
  • Knowledge
  • Loyalty
  • Personal development
  • Responsibility
  • Self-respect
  • Spirituality
  • Wisdom

From your selections, identify 3–5 as your main core values.


Step 4: Write a Personal Vision Statement

A personal vision statement (Links to an external site.)Links to an external site. reflects your personal traits and core values. It seeks to answer the question, “Who am I and what is my higher calling?”

To narrow this broad objective, focus on the following things:

  • What you want to be (in terms of character traits – refer to your self-assessment!)
  • What you want to achieve or contribute
  • The principles/values you use to make decisions, big and small

The personal vision statement will become your personal constitution —
a physical reminder for you to see where you’ve been, where you are,
and where you want to go. By outlining your vision, you will have
something to look back on when it comes time to develop your goals and
write an action plan.

To give you an example of what this could look like, here is dailyworth.com founder Amanda Steinberg’s (Links to an external site.)Links to an external site. personal mission statement:

“To use my gifts of intelligence, charisma, and serial optimism to
cultivate the self-worth and net-worth of women around the world.”

After you’ve written your personal statement, ask yourself the following questions:

  • Does this represent the integrity I stand for?
  • Are direction, purpose, and motivation signaled in this statement?
  • Is this an accurate portrait of who I want to be?
  • Does this inspire me?

Remember: nothing is set in stone. Your personal statement will — and
should — evolve over time. It should reflect where you are now and
where you hope to go.


Step 5: Analyze What Others Think of You

You’ve done a lot of soul searching up to this point. However, being a
great leader isn’t just about what you think makes an effective leader.
Other people — your industry, peers, and those you lead — need to also
think you’re effective.

To check if the personality traits, core values, and personal mission
statement you settled on align with what others currently think of both
you and leaders in general, answer the following questions:

  • What do you want your employees and coworkers to say about you when you are not in the room?
  • Now, what do they actually say? (You might realistically know the answer to this already. If not, ask a trusted peer.)
  • More generally, how do others currently perceive you?
  • Do you care about others’ perceptions of you?
  • What are the expectations for professionalism and leadership in your field?
  • If your personal assessment doesn’t align with the answers to these
    questions, are you capable of changing your image and are the benefits
    worth the costs (cognitive, psychological, emotional, physical effort)
    to change? Do you even want to change?

The answers to these questions should serve as a checks and balance
to all the work you did prior to this step. By identifying holes in what
you want to be vs. what people already think you are, you’ll be able to
pinpoint exactly where you need to improve, which will help with the
next step.


Step 6: Identify Current and Lacking Leadership Skills

You now have in writing leadership qualities every leader should
possess; your own personality traits, core values, and personal vision;
and a list of what other people think of you. All this reflection allows
you to accomplish this next step: Expanding on and further defining the
skills needed to become your definition of an ideal leader.

  • First, identify the skills you already have. Skills are different
    than traits: Skills can be taught (e.g. Excel, communication,
    delegating, etc.). Traits are natural abilities that last a lifetime
    (e.g. thoughtful, risk-adverse, introverted, etc.).

    • Writing a resume can help identify these skills. Or, draw inspiration from these types of skills:
    • Personal skills: Developing self-awareness, managing personal stress, solving problems
    • Interpersonal skills: Coaching and counseling, other supportive communication, influencing and motivating others, managing conflict
    • Group skills: Empowering and delegating, building effective teams and teamwork, managing change
    • Technical skills: Making presentations, making policies, personnel management, budgeting, project management
  • Once you’ve made your list, mark each item with an “S” if it is one
    of your strengths or a “D” if it’s something that needs development. If
    you’re unsure, ask a mentor, friends, and/or colleagues to offer their
    insights.
  • Lastly, cross reference the skills you identified with the lists you
    made of “skills all great leaders have” and “the skills others think I
    have (or lack).” Ask yourself, “Are there gaps in which I need to
    improve?”

Remember, you do not need to embody every trait a great leader may
have. You also don’t need to improve on every single skill others think
you need. Narrow down which ones you should focus on by
cross-referencing them with your core values and personal mission
statement. If the skills don’t align with these, deprioritize or bag
them altogether.

Once you have a list of skills prioritized in descending order by
“need development” and strengths, it’s time to make some goals.


Step 7: Set Goals

Here’s where all this prior self-analysis and research come into
play. Using the prioritized personal leadership skills list you
developed in step six, write 2–3 stretch leadership development goals
(goals that are challenging) and 1–2 manageable goals (goals that are
“SMART”) that will help you achieve each of your reach goals.

A good example of a leader who used this model is Jorgen Vig Knudstorp (Links to an external site.)Links to an external site.,
who took over as the CEO of LEGO in 2004. The family-owned business was
not in good shape, but over the next five years, Knudstorp turned the
company around. His stretch goal: To improve the company in every area.
The SMART steps he took to get there: building better relationships with
employees and customers, empowering employees to make decisions at all
levels of the hierarchy, and introducing tight fiscal controls.

SMART goals are:

  • Specific: Ask who, what, where, when, why, and which
  • Measurable: Establish concrete criteria for measuring
    progress; ask “How much?”, “How many?”, and, “How will I know when it is
    accomplished?”
  • Attainable: Just about any goal can be attained when
    you plan steps wisely and establish a realistic time frame; ask yourself
    what conditions would have to exist to accomplish the goal
  • Realistic: Goals should be things you are willing and
    able to work toward — things you believe can be accomplished and that
    you actually want to accomplish
  • Timely: Goals should be grounded within a specific time frame

Step 8: Write an Action Plan

You have your goals, now it’s time to make an action plan for achieving them.

The action plan lays out the specific steps you’ll take, resources
you’ll use, and the support system you’ll build to reach your stretch
and SMART goals. If paper isn’t your thing, tools such as Trello (Links to an external site.)Links to an external site. are available to help you keep track of everything.

Stretch goals are just that – goals that will require you to do more,
maybe utilize existing skills in a different way or create a new
network or use your existing network and skills in a new market or a new
way. Stretch is just that – causing you to grow and develop.

Don’t forget to learn new skills – reading, training programs
(including Youtube video and TED talks), and podcasts (look at success
magazine podcasts) all will help you acquire new skills.

Include conferences and meetings in your development plan and action
them. Remember the details to getting to the conference or meeting (
e.g. being prepared, preparing presentations, etc.). Each component is
part of the action planning process.

Organize your stretch and SMART goals in the following format:

  • GOAL #1: (Enter goal here)
    • SPECIFIC ACTIONS TO TAKE: (Pro tip: Start with a verb to incite action!)
    • RESOURCES TO ASSIST DEVELOPMENT: (Including any training you may need)
    • TIMELINE:

Then, put them in order of importance and/or the time it will take to
achieve said goals. You now have a roadmap for achieving your goals and
becoming the leader you want to be! Remember: your finished personal
development leadership plan represents where you are now and where you
hope to go. Revisit your plan often, updating it and tweaking it as
needed, so that it reflects where you are on the road to becoming a
great leader.

Create the TAP Plan to go with the Goals

Tactical Action Plans include the details: 1) what needs to be done
(list the things – not projects) and 2) breaking things down into the
individual actions will help you move forward. Often we put projects on
our to-do list and that project is made up of actions – failure to list
equals procrastination at it’s finest.

After identifying what needs to be done, identify when it
needs to be done. Some things can be done independently of others and
some are dependent – identify these items. How long will it take to
complete each task? Think about uninterrupted time – this will help with
calendaring the task. Do you need anyone’s support/assistance/actions?
If so, who and by when will you contact them? How will you contact them
and how will you follow up (creating this plan is key to monitoring and
moving ahead)?

Do any of the actions have a cost other than
time? If so, identify that cost. Do you need to buy software or other
tools? Do you need to organize a meeting – will there be food or room
cost or technology costs or is it within the existing budget? When you
add up the budget and compare to your goal/outcome – ask yourself – is
it worth it (cost) for this outcome (benefit)?

Calendar the Items

It is a good idea to discuss your development plan with all those you
would like to invite to be part of your development team – your
manager, your co-workers, other executives inside and outside your
organization.

Development plans for your Leadership Growth are different than your
performance plans for your job – think of them as a subset however the
most important part of your leadership growth will help you move your
career forward faster than anything else – remember, performance is
expected. Adding value to your performance is about Leadership!