Saturday, July 23, 2016

Bold and Courageous Leadership

Bold and courageous leadership is increasingly needed to face today's challenges. Increasing self-interest and advocacy for a single point of view is challenging the ability for leaders to find ways of energizing people for a common purpose. People seem quick to criticize and put up barriers to changes. At the same time, changes in our communities, our organizations, our families and within ourselves call for individual and communal courage that forms the heart of leadership.

Leaders need to find the boldness and courage for energizing others into learning and action. These are some characteristics of leaders, followers, and organizations successful in leading needed change:

Find Moral Leadership as Leaders
  • Put service before self-interest – faith communities exist as much to serve the community as a whole as it exists for itself and members
  • Listen first and affirm others – listening authentically is foundational to leadership
  • Inspire trust by being trustworthy – focus on what is right, not popular, be consistent, focus on the well being of others
  • Nourish and build up followers and believe in the uniqueness and value of all to have a positive impact on the world
Develop Followers Who Display Courage
  • Courage to assume responsibility
  • Courage to challenge
  • Courage to participate in transformation
  • Courage to serve
  • Courage to leave
Lead with Courage
  • Face fear of change and challenge with courage so as not to have regrets
  • Accept the responsibility of leading and building up others
  • Be willing not to conform and step in a different direction than the institution and popular direction
  • Push beyond the comfort zone by taking a chance and improve things
  • Give voice to what you think and visualize as a preferred state
  •  Fight for what you believe
Develop Personal Courage
  • Believe in a higher purpose
  • Draw strength from others
  • Harness frustration and anger for good
  • Take small steps

Wednesday, June 29, 2016

Finding and Developing Leaders

Leaders in many faith organizations are typically appointed for a period of time, often three years. This frequently happens once a year and often as a process of seeking people to fill open leadership roles. At Assurance UMC, we seek to grow leaders through an intentional process of identifying, encouraging, equipping, and apprenticing leaders through a year around process. This process combines aspects of leadership succession planning and the apprenticeship process to build a culture of relational discipleship.

Pastor Chris Westmoreland, AUMC's Lead Pastor this past year, believes that "the combination of lay leadership succession planning and apprenticeship has grown leaders and significantly smoothed out the lay leaders nominations process. We are blessed to have leaders identified and developed as leaders for our extensive ministry and administrative teams."  Hope Maske, the Church Council Chair is a product of this on-going and intentional process: "As one of the church leaders, I am constantly in awe of the amazing lay leadership at Assurance. Through my mentor's apprenticeship, I grew spiritually, learned about my passions, and answered calls to co-lead and then lead teams, growing my successors through the same process along the way." 

One of the key leadership development initiatives is in deepening discipleship to develop current and future leaders through intentional identification of apprentices; create candidate pools in order to ensure adequate numbers of equipped candidates; and provide training/equipping opportunities. This LEAD process: ‘L’  Learn Leadership Skills; ‘E’ Encourage SHAPE; ‘A’ Apprentice Others; and ‘D’ Disciple Through Grow & GO.

The process is tied to the church’s singular mission to follow Jesus to “Grow and Go”. Assurance is Growing Disciples (followers) of Jesus Christ so that we can Go serve Christ in the world. In “Growing and Going”, we emphasize the 3 S’s: SpiritServe, and Share. We grow our Spirit in worship, prayer, and small group connections. We grow by Serving others inside and outside the walls of the church. And we Share our gifts and the good News that God loves us all.

These are some key results from this LEAD process:

Identification of Apprentices - We continue to find future leaders to work alongside current leaders through intentional invitation. We explore member gifts through SHAPE, participation in small group and ministry work, and a heart for leadership.

Candidate Pools – We create pools of candidates for leadership positions that have been pre-identified as candidates last year and throughout this year, many of whom have received encouragement and development opportunities during the following year. We believe in co-chairs for our administrative teams for continuity of leadership. We believe ministries we are called to start should have three leaders at their inception: one who is the visionary leader, one who is the logistics and equipping leader, and one who is the inviter/nurturer of volunteers and partners to come alongside.

Leadership Training & Development Opportunities - We continue to develop manuals and training events for our leadership. We believe a leader at Assurance should serve where God has equipped them and have a heart for Grow and Go.

This is what we hope will be accomplished by our year around lay leadership team:

·         Fill the key leadership roles with our church community
·         Discuss and recommend that a new leadership structure be adopted that is more conducive to successful missional and vital UMC congregations
·         Support the future leadership needs of a multi-site church
·         Recommend Leadership Celebration and Development Days
·         Affirm GROW & GO characteristics of Spirit, Serve, And Share as a part of leadership

We seek to build the leadership of the faith community intentionally all year long.




There are so many examples of successful apprenticeship and succession planning successes. Hope provides one such example: 
  • Moved from leading a ministry to apprenticing as a small group leaders to leading the small group
  • Identified a co-leader for the small group and apprenticed her into a leader
  • Moved on to SPRC, apprenticed as a SPRC co-leader, moved to SPRC leader and helped with lay leadership identify a co-leader whom Hope apprenticed
  • Selected to be co-chair of Church Council and apprenticed to become the Church Council Chair, then apprenticed the new co-leader identifed
At Assurance UMC, we seek to grow leaders through an intentional process of identifying, encouraging, equipping, and apprenticing leaders through a year around process. This process combines aspects of leadership succession planning and the apprenticeship process to build a culture of relational discipleship.

If you are interested in more information, please feel free to contact Dave Zietlow. Director - Leadership Development AUMC (dave@assuranceumc.org) or visit his leadership website at www.dpzleadership.com (dave@dpzleadership.com)


Living Out Go Share Jesus

We are a church that lives out its mission to Grow and Go in so many unique and powerful ways. These last two weeks I have been blessed with the opportunity to experience the Go Share piece of this mission. We are equipped and called as individuals and as a faith community to share the Good News that Jesus loves us. We do that in a multitude of ways throughout the year and perhaps most powerfully during the summer months in the community around our two campuses: Northlake and Connections.
Our role, as Christians and active participants in the Assurance community, is to be witnesses for Jesus Christ – spreading the good news of Jesus Christ and God’s love to those who need to experience God’s transforming love. Assurance shares the good news of Jesus Christ in word and deed. “You will receive power when the Holy Spirit comes upon you; and you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem, in all Judea and Samaria, and to the ends of the earth.” Acts 1:8 John Wesley, one of the founders of Methodism,  spoke of this Go Share: “I look on all the world as my parish; thus far I mean, that, in whatever part of it I am, I judge it meet, right, and my bounden duty, to declare unto all that are willing to hear, the glad tidings of salvation.” 
We share Jesus and connect with our community at Northlake through our Vacation Bible School where near four hundred children and their families experience the love of Jesus for a week. Most of those attending are not part of our Assurance Faith Community rather people drawn by God’s grace that calls us to experience Jesus. This Go Share ministry of sharing God’s love has the tangible action of Go serve through the collection of over 4.000 food items that supports two of our Go Serve ministries: Love in a Bag and Micah’s Backpack.
Take a moment to hear about some of the Go Share ministries at Assurance: http://emc.mcpile.com/
These are some of the Go Share God’s love in the community I experienced in the last two weeks:
·         Jammin’ with Jesus – our weekly Tuesday afternoon summer Children’s programming on the Connections community shares God’s love with children through stories of Christ and activities designed to touch the heart of the children and their families.
·         God’s Garden – our summer camp program on our Northlake campus allows us to share God’s love to any families in our community in a safe and fun environment. This is an extension of one of our strong community ministries – our pre-school and after-school programs.
·         Matthew’s Closet – our clothing ministry based at our Northlake Campus has opened a distribution and community engagement day on the last Sunday of the month on the Connections campus where the need is acute. We draw so many families who are not connected with our faith community and allow us to share God’s love. This ministry greatly benefits from our community consignment sales in the spring and fall.
·         SOAR – our summer reading program on the Connections campus allows us to reach children and families in our community through a critical need. This sharing of God’s love continues in the community through our other community activities like Love in a Bag.
·         Mission Guatemala – This annual mission trip allows the Assurance faith community to touch people in another country who long to hear and see God’s love in action. As a year around response a small group called Reach Out shares God’s love throughout the two campus communities as well as other parts of our local community.
·         Love in a Bag – our summer community engagement and feeding ministry allows us to share God’s love in multiple neighborhoods within our community who need a word of hop and love. Both Northlake and Connections small groups support this ministry throughout the summer. During the school year Micah’s Backpack in Northlake supports a feeding ministry.
·         Recreational Ministries – our Tuesday community open gym is a wonderful example of Go Sharing God’s love through sharing a resource He has given us. Our Peace on the Streets basketball ministry bring youth off the streets to compete in opportunities to learn about Jesus.
·         Sharing Gardens – our community sharing gardens on both campuses allow us to connect with the community in a tangible way and share the love of Jesus. They also provide food for the community as part of our Go Serve mission.
All of God’s people are called to Grow in Spirit through weekly worship, daily prayer and small group experiences; Go serve others through our outreach ministries inside and outside our church communities; and Go Share God’s love to others that need Jesus! Contact one of our pastors or lay leaders about how you might live out this community commitment. Contact Dave Zietlow – dave@assuranceumc.org.


Wednesday, March 30, 2016

Building on Foundation of Strengths

The appreciative inquiry process can be utilized effectively as a team building process. One of the key first steps is to establish an affirmative topic such as "Build an effective team" that can be used in a team building effort. The next step in any change process is to develop a current state. In the AI process, the first step is to Discover the strengths of the team members and the accomplishments of the collective team even if dysfunctional.

An excellent process to identifiy and celebrate the strengths of the team is to take the Gallup StrengthFinder evaluation. Tom Rath and the Gallup organization has developed a book that uses the strengthfinders results to speak to speak to leadership and how to leverage different strengths of the team members into a team leveraging those strengths. Strength Based Leadership  Tom Rath

The basis for using these strengths into a team building function comes from the belief: "Although individuals need not be well-rounded, teams should be." Some of the key finding of the book are:

  • The most effective leaders are always investing in strengths
  • The most effective leaders surround themselves with the right people and then maximize their team
  • The most effective leaders understand their followers' needs
Research has shown that there are four domains that group the specific 34 themes inside the domain.
  • Executing
  • Influencing
  • Relationship Building
  • Strategic Thinking
The steps for utilizing the strength finders into a team building process is:
  • Take the evaluation
  • Use the book as a resource
  • Compile the team themes and place in domain
  • Use the data as a foundation to the team building
There have been several different aspects of team building that these steps have led to successe:
  • Senior leadership - the application of strength finders into an AI team building process where the team were senior managers at a location who reported into remote executives resulted in an appreciation for each others roles and developed a common language and bond to work together despite the reporting relationship.
  • Team leadership - used as a team building tool to improve team communication between the leader and the team as well as between team members. Specifically identified that each indivudal had a different lens to the challenges and needed to see the other's point of view.
  • Team building - utilized within a team to improve working together. Specifically allowed the AI process to start from a foundation of strength and celebrate successes together and mutual unqiue contributions to the common good.
  • Strategic planning - strengthfinders also helps form the foundation of a group of different individuals placed together to think about the vision and strategic plan for the organization.


Monday, March 14, 2016

Creating a Shared Vision

The idea of creating a vision for the future and visualizing a preferred future state is a long held basic tenant of effective leadership theory. Leaders use positive change models building on a clear discernment of the current state and asking themselves what they want more of thus creating that vision for the future. In the Appreciative Inquiry Model, one of the powerful models of change, this is the journey from Discovery to Dream. This vision is cocreated between the leader and the followers to be most effective follows these steps:

  • Target a vision for a desired future
  • Cocreate the vision
  • Identify strengths
  • Create an initial picture of the desired future
  • Solicit feedback and create the final vision
  • Share the vision consistently and persistently
Many organizations, leaderships, and followers see this preferred state as progress in what is already so the vision or dream is often an organic progression of improvement. This continuous improvement albeit important and beneficial is not the dream or vision. The dream or vision needs to be what might be rather than what can be achieved.

Khalil Gibran put it this way:

"Progress lies not in enhancing what is, it lies in advancing toward what will be."

Next time your organization talks about creating a shared vision, consider not thinking incrementally rather develop a process to view the preferred future through the eyes of possibilities rather than barriers. Create an organizational sized vision of your preferred future.




Tuesday, March 8, 2016

Enabling Ministries through Stories

We are often asked how to financially resource ministries and a large part of the answer is to tell your story. Jesus patterned his ministry through telling stories of relationships and lives changed. As leaders we search for ways to gain resources to accomplish our ministries and finding measurements of success. We produce metrics to connect with the goals of the team and organization in order to measure and celebrate that success. Often lost in organizations is the sharing and celebrating of stories as a measure of success. These shared stories help shape the organizations and create an environment that sustains success for longer periods of time. The stories also form the reason for the invitation to contribute to the success of the ministry - a story of lives changed.

Let me share some thoughts on telling your story through the lens of a ministry we, here at Assurance UMC, are looking for support to accomplish our God given dream in the area of recreational ministries focused on youth in the streets on our Connections Campus called Peace on the Streets.

A good story has these elements which we will walk through together using the Peace on the Street ministry. Think about the ministry your church wants to enable as we take a journey together:

Why?

Find your God reason for the Ministry. Here is ours as an example: The Assurance faith community is committed to make the mystery of God's presence, peace, and power real in the lives of his people. We recognize that all Christians are called to minister in word and deed wherever Christ would have them serve: healing the broken, setting free those in captivity, clothing the naked and giving drink to the thirsty. We are committed to the inclusiveness of all people. Inclusiveness refers to the openness, acceptance, and support enabling all persons to participate in the community of faith. As such, we are called to be faithful to the example of Jesus ministry to all people. We affirm all persons as equally valuable in the sight of God. Therefore, we work toward societies in which each person's value is recognized, maintained, and strengthened. 

How?

Find your heart for the ministry and path to meeting the need. For Connections one of those ministries is to the youth of the community and here is our example as you think about your how: Peace on the Streets is a recreational ministry partnership between Assurance and the community which focuses on youth growing in Christ. Peace on the Street is a component of the recreational ministries including a summer league for youth on the streets, a competitive church league in the winter, and skill building camps in the Spring.

Who?

Find like minded people, including individuals, faith communities, and corporate sponsors to participate in the journey to reach the youth of the community with you and here is our example: Created TC1C - two churches one cause with a neighborhood church called Zion Wounded Lamb along with a faith partner and community members interested in reaching youth on the streets. 

Where?


Find the community leaders and members of the community to work with you by walking the community and spreading the vision. Create a specific place for the ministry. Name the people to be reached in the community with the ministry. Our example, walking the streets and doing church for a couple years, starting a community gym night for the youth we were targeting, and finding through that community presence a partner to come alongside us on the journey. The church gym became that community place for this ministry.

When?


Create a specific scope of when the ministry takes place. Our vision is a year around six day a week recreational ministry where we meet the needs of the youth in the community and help them to know they are loved and valued so they find Christ's love for them. The specific scope for Peace on the Streets started with a summer basketball league and grew from there.

What?


Create a specific ask of how to become involved in the ministry. Tell the vision and then tell the stories of success over and over again to anyone who will listen. Our ask was for coaches and adults to be involved in the life of the youth, money for uniforms and referees, and prayers for the ministry. It has grown into a winter church league ask and most recently a ask to contribute through donating money to a piece of a new gym floor to build the ministry.

Tell the Story?


Gather and tell stories of lives changed. People whose lives were changed by Jesus through participation in the ministry. In our case, youth gaining respect and discipline, a place to go that was safe, and a concept of team rather than self. 

Ask?

Be specific about the ask and what the need is whether it is in volunteer time or dollars. Break the cost down to manageable chunks and most importantly tell the story of lives changed to balance the costs with the impact of the benefits. We told our story and received our initial funds, now we plan to share our story to put down a new floor to the gym.

To whom?

Tell the story to everyone and often. Lives changed should be celebrated not for what we did individually and collectively rather for what God is doing in people's lives. We start every meeting with: How has God blessed this ministry since the last time we met?

Visuals?

Use pictures and images to share the stories. Impact brings liked minded people to participate in your journey with you.

Stories can have a tremendous influence on people's beliefs, attitudes, and behaviors within an organization. Storytelling goes hand in hand with good active listening skills in a leader. Leaders listen to stories from their supervisors, employees, customers, and vendors to construct what is strong and good about the organization. Stories connect people with the processes of the organization and allow long lasting positive changes to be implemented.

Stories can make sense of complex situations, connecting them together for a common purpose and goal, inspire action, and invoke powerful images of success that improves organizations. Howard Gardner, in his book Leading Minds, says: "Stories are the most powerful weapon in a leader's arsenal." Create a positive organizational culture, one of inquiry and positive stories.

Friday, March 4, 2016

The Challenging Human Resource Role

The workplace is undergoing dramatic shifts in many fundamental aspects. Global organzations and diverse workforces are combining with technology leaps and cultural shifts to put pressure and opportunity on human resource professionals.

The most significant human resource challenges of the next ten year from a SHRM survey cited:

  • recruiting, selecting, retaining and rewarding the best employees
  • developing future corporate leaders
  • creating a corporate culture that attracts and encourages the best employee performance

The role of the human resource professional in the midst of these workforce shifts and major challenges fall into three categories:
  • employee advocate
  • manager/supervisor advisor 
  • organization (senior management / ownership) defender and shaper
Employee Advocate

The HR role of employee advocate has traditionally been predicated on resisting unionization activity and keeping employees focused on the objectives of the organization by sharing their creative cost cutting / improvement ideas. The change in technology, job reductions, and out-sourcing of the talent management has narrowed this employee advocate role leaving many employees feeling like after-thoughts and numbers. 

The role of employee advocate has become counter-intuitively become even more important against this backdrop as employees have become a competitive advantage for world class organization because other competitive factors are closed sooner by globalization and technology. Appreciative Inquiry as a change model and methodology of approaching the employee's challenges through valuing them as individuals is becoming increasingly beneficial to build individual performance along with team building.

Manager/ Supervisor Advisor

The HR role of manager/supervisor advisor has deteriorated within many organizations because of the need to document discipline, constant criticism of actions taken, and a perception that the HR professional are mechanics going through the motions of rigid policies and practices. The pressure of a diverse workforce and discrimination laws along with the negative organizational consequences to violating procedures have pitted in many cases HR professionals with line management.  

There has never been an important time for the HR professional to be a partner with management and supervision in relating to the organization's employees. Appreciative Inquiry as a change model and methodology of approaching the supervisor/manager's challenges through supporting and partnering with them on employee relation strategies is becoming increasingly beneficial to build individual supervisor/manager performance along with team building.

Organization (senior management / ownership) Defender and Shaper

Hunman Resource professional in many ways have embraced this role of defender against the possibility of discrimination claims and shaper of policies & procedures with a great deal of enthusiasm and a choking success. This embracing of the role of defender and shaper has been exagerated by the out-sourcing of human resource roles making the needs for policies to be spelled out and inflexible greater. Technology and HRIS systems has been a great asset to the modern HR organization with the unintended consequence that the Human Resource professional often is seen as little more than a parrot of policies and procedures where judgement and creativity to maximize the employee and supervisor/manager once ruled the HR profession, 

The use of a relational approach to the Human Resource function using Appreciative Inquiry would re-introduce curiosity and potential to the role to be a defender and shaper of the organization. Looking through the organizational prism of strengths, possibilities, and curisoity will provide much greater potential than limiting rigid policies and procedures.






Thursday, February 11, 2016

Introducing a Culture of Dialogue Not Debate

There are times within any organization that communication become stuck or distorted on a lack of mutual understanding, different points of view, and the parties taking a defensive posture by not revealing their true feelings. When this occurs within an organization there is a need to identify an affirmative topic in order to commence the Appreciative Inquiry change process and continue forward. When a team comes together to discuss the change and/or challenge the desire is to focus on abundance not scarcity and look towards possibilities not barriers. This results in the importance of how communications occurs and decisions are made.

Edgar Schein in his work "On Dialogue, Culture, and Organizational Learning" talks about the two paths that communications can be taken:
  • debate and discussion
  • dialogue


Debate and discussion is a straight line conversation which provides a speedy decision with minimal conflict resulting in the following participant characteristics:
  • no time to waste
  • talk more than listen
  • focus on self-interest
  • defensive listening
  • assume self- right answers
  • persuade, sell, rush to decision
Which often results in:
  • retain fixed mindset
  • short-term solution
  • support your position
  • other options suppressed
Dialogue threads together divergent and convergent thinking helps to bring about multiple perspectives, opinions, and answers. This approach often results in the following participant characteristics:
  • slow down and think through
  • listen more than talk 
  • focus on the whole
  • seek common ground
  • many people have pieces of the answer
  • everyone is heard and there for a reason
Which often results in:
  • focus on the bigger picture
  • long term innovative solution priority
  • fix the bigger issues
  • brings all the people on board
The culture of the organization gets shaped by language and the methodology of dialogue or discussion/debate.