Rein E. Valones CE5A The Way Of The Shepherd 7 Ancient Secrets to Managing Productive People AUTHOR: Dr.
Kevin Leman and William Pentak
SUMMARY The Way of the Shepherd presents the story of a young, inexperienced reporter who meets and interviews the most respected CEO in America, and walks away with the lessons of a lifetime the keys to exceptional leadership. In the course of the interview the CEO shares with the reporter seven proven management principles that are ancient in origin but which are nevertheless very applicable in todays fast-paced world. THE BIG IDEA . This excellent book teaches leaders how to lead those around them so that they get to view their work as a calling instead of a mere job. It shows leaders how to infuse work with meaning and how to energize and engage the workforce. The book illustrates an approach to management that is at once timeless (proven across millennia), challenging (it calls for those applying its principles to give their best in order to get the best), and uncommon (it presents unique principles that will inevitably set users apart from other leaders). The book is divided into seven chapters, namely: Know the Condition of Your Flock ; Discover the Shape of Your Sheep; Help Your Sheep Identify with You ; Make Your Pasture a Safe Place ; The Staff of Direction; The Rod of Correction ; The Heart of the Shepherd Follow the status of your people as well as the status of the work. Many managers focus too much on the project at hand and not enough on the people they also have to manage. They may be physically present with their flock but they are more preoccupied with the work rather than with their people. Ones people must never be neglected people are always ones greatest competitive advantage. Get to know your flock, one sheep at a time. People are individuals, and that is how they should be treated. People must never be treated like numbers! One must take a personal interest in each of the people who report directly to one. Know what things impact them at the moment. - Discover their skills and interests. - Know what their goals and dreams are. - Find out what motivates them and what discourages them. - Determine their career ambitions and frustrations.
1. Know the Condition of Your Flock Engage your people on a regular basis. Go out and get among your people regularly. Keep your eyes and ears open, ask lots of questions, and follow through. Be sensitive to employees sentiments. Keep up with whats going on in the lives of your people as best you can. Really care about your people. If you dont really care about the people who report to you, youll never be the sort of leader theyll drop everything to follow; theyll never do their best and they wont stay with you for long. People dont care about how much you know until they know how much you care.
Rein E. Valones CE5A 2. Discover the Shape of Your Sheep Your choice of sheep can make flock management easier or harder. Start with healthy sheep, or youll just inherit someone elses problems. Know the SHAPE of your sheep to make sure theyre in the right fold. Strengths. Make sure each person has the skill set needed to do the job. Sometimes it can be learned on the job, sometimes its needed immediately it depends on the vacancy. Understand the strengths of the people on the team and those who are about to join it. Heart. Strengths reflect abilities; heart reflects passion. It doesnt matter how strong you are if youre not motivated to exercise that strength. Know what your people are passionate about and place them in areas which reflect their .
3. Help Your Sheep Identity With You Keep your people well informed. Eliminate uncertainty that could lead to fear and insecurity. If theres bad news let them hear from you first to eliminate their trust in a rumor mill. Make sure to constantly inform people about their performance. Infuse every position with importance. Do this to counter rivalry within and between departments. People will be less apt to vie for position if they feel that their current positions are significant. Let everyone know from Day One that they are important to the team! Make them feel like you couldnt do it without them! Cull chronic instigators from the flock. Some people in life arent happy unless theyre unhappy; it can take just one such person to destroy the collaborative atmosphere of an entire department.
4. Make Your Pasture a Safe Place Regularly rotate the sheep to fresh pastures. Rotate opportunities among the different members of the flock; that way they wont feel they have to fight for them. Reassure the sheep by staying visible. You cant create a safe place for your workers if they cant sense your presence. Create a safe place where they can work in an undistracted atmosphere and theyll amaze you. People can handle the uncertainty of tomorrow if they can see a leader they are certain they can trust today. Dont give problems time to fester. Act soon enough and deal with individual problems before they become flock problems.
5. The Staff of Direction Give your people freedom of movement, but make sure they know where the fence line is. Dont confuse boundaries with bridles! Establishing boundaries is a matter of practicality and safety, not ego. You cant protect someone whos strayed beyond your reach. This doesnt mean you have to micromanage your staff; make sure your people dont get too far ahead of you, while at the same time avoiding making them feel like theyve been incarcerated. When your people get in trouble, go and get them out. Theyre your staff; be responsible for their well-being and safety. Remind your people that failure isnt fatal. Good leaders dont forget to encourage their people now and then, especially when they make mistakes. Let them know that failure isnt fatal and that they can learn from their mistakes.
Rein E. Valones CE5A 6. The Rod of Correction Protect. Stand in the gap and fight for your sheep. Fight for them against external enemies people outside your own division, or even outside the company. Correct. Approach discipline as a teaching opportunity. Some people can be stubborn and very rebellious and can require quite a bit more persuasion than some others. Approach discipline as an instructive exercise instead of a punishment. If youve protected people, theyll be more inclined to listen and respect you when you correct them. Inspect . Regularly inquire about your peoples progress. You and you alone are responsible for developing them. Call your people in periodically and ask how theyre doing. Chances are the member/s of your team who need help the most will be the least likely to ask for it. If a person never indicates they need help when you inquire about their progress, you havent been trusted enough for them to be honest with you, or you havent challenged them to grow.
7.The Heart of the Shepherd. This approach to leadership carries a high price tag for the leader. It takes a leaders time, commitment, personal energy and involvement in other words himself . Leaders who refuse to pay the price, who do so because the value they put on their people is too low, are hirelings leaders who attend to their people only because they get paid to do so, whose hearts arent in it. What distinguishes a great leader from a mediocre one is that a great leader has a heart for his people. He can focus on both his people and the job in the long run, and will never leave them to fend for themselves. If its greatness you want, its greatness you must give.
Comment: An inspirational book! This book is heart-rending. It's a profound challenge to each of us to take up the cross and follow Jesus. I found it deeply moving. More than just another management book, The Way of the Shepherd relates sound people management practices to shepherding. Basically it takes seven of the most important principles of shepherding and relates them to managing productive people who want to work for you. The seven principles are each set in their own chapter and covered in detail. of Know the Condition of Your Flock, Discover the Shape of Your Sheep, Help Your Sheep Identify with You, Make Your Pasture a Safe Place, The Staff of Direction, The Rod of Correction, The Heart of the Shepherd.