LEADERSHIP COLLABORATIVE
DEFINING THE LEADERSHIP COLLABORATIVE
The Leadership Collaborative focuses on three areas:
- Personal leadership: leading yourself first
- Organizational/productive leadership: leadership competency
- Reproductive leadership: lasting leadership
The process looks like this:
- Gatherings
- Conference calls or Google Hangouts
- Monthly peer coaching call with questions provided
CONNECTING WITH EACH OTHER
In small groups, discuss the following questions:
- Where were you born?
- How many siblings did you have?
- What impact did these two things have on your life?
- What is the most interesting or difficult challenge you had before you turned 18?
UNDERSTANDING PERSONAL LEADERSHIP
Personal leadership: leading yourself before you lead others
1 Corinthians 9:25-27
“Athletes exercise self-control in all things; they do it to receive a perishable wreath, but we an imperishable one. So I do not run aimlessly, nor do I box as though beating the air; but I punish my body and enslave it, so that after proclaiming to others I myself should not be disqualified.”
Thomas Watson, CEO of IBM from 1914 to 1956:
“Nothing so conclusively proves a man’s ability to lead others as what he does from day to day to lead himself.”[1]
Robert E. Lee, Confederate Army general during theAmerican Civil War:
“I cannot trust a man to control others who cannot control himself.”[2]
Omar Bradley, commander in the U.S. Army:
“The greatness of a leader is measured by the achievements of the led.”[3]
YEARLONG FOCUS
- Introduction
- Spirituality: How are you deepening your relationship with God?
- Physicality: How are you caring for your health, intellect, emotion?
- Life focus: Where has God called you?
- Values: How will you journey?
- Priorities: Where will you focus your energy?
- Relationship: Who will journey with you?
- Accountability: Are you connected with a coach or network?
- Growth: Where and how do you need to grow?
- Obedience: How will you follow Jesus?
SHARING CALL STORIES
Os Guinness:
“Calling is the truth that God calls us to himself so decisively that everything we are, everything we do, and everything we have is invested with a special devotion and dynamism lived out as a responseto his summons and service.”[4]
Call: a sense of purpose in life to which you can’t help but respond.
- How did God call you?
- What did God call you to?
There are two kinds of calls:
- Inward call
- The moving of the Holy Spirit in the heart and life of a leader
- Example: Isaiah
- Outward call
- Confirmation of other leaders, affirming the inward call
- Example: Eli in the life of young Samuel
Consider your call:
- Know: How well do you know Jesus?
- Be: How does your life (and your job) show you as a radical revolutionary for Jesus?
- Do: How does what you do flow out of your sense of call, out of your relationship with Jesus, out of your gifting and passions?
Study John 13:1-17:
- Identify as many leadership principles as possible in this passage.
- Reflect on v. 15: “For I have set you an example, that you also should do as I have done to you.”
- Identity: Jesus knew where he came from. Jesus knew where he was going.
- How has God shaped us?
- What is God calling us to do?
CLARIFYING LEADERSHIP FOCUS
Ask yourself:
- What kind of leader do I want to be three years from now?
- What kind of leader do I want to be 15 to 20 years from now?
- What do I hope is my leadership legacy?
- What phrases describe me and my leadership?
Leadership development plan
- Purpose and vision statement
- Learning options
- Strategic alignment
- Blind spots
- Coaching
Consider Luke 7:36-50:
- What is your alabaster jar of perfume?
- What would cause you to weep in the presence of Jesus?
- How is your view towards sinners more often like the Pharisees than like Jesus?
- What can you do in your area of influence to welcome all?
- Greeting
- Acceptance
- Forgiveness
- How can you deepen your love for Jesus? How might you love much rather than little?
- How will your loving Jesus help you live and love like him?
LOGISTICS
1.Conference Calls
2.Coaching pairs
3.Future in-person dates
[1] Thomas Watson. Quoted inLeadership Gold: Lessons I’ve Learned from a Lifetime of Leading, by John C. Maxwell (Nashville: Thomas Nelson, 2008), 17.
[2] Attributed to Robert E. Lee. Quoted in Dictionary of Military and Naval Quotations, by Robert Debs Heinl (Annapolis, MD: U.S. Naval Institute, 1966), 59.
[3] Omar Bradley. “Leadership,” Parameters, Vol. 1, No. 3, 7–8. Quoted in Leadership Statements and Quotes (Washington, DC: Headquarters Department of the Army, 1985), 3.
[4] Os Guinness, The Call: Finding and Fulfilling the Central Purpose of Your Life (Nashville: Thomas Nelson, 2003), 4.