Social Networking

leadership development through communication

Leadership Development Through Communication and Emotional Intelligence: Motivationally Intelligent Leadership

I want to share thoughts on this using my book Motivationally Intelligent Leadership: Emerging Research and Opportunities. Leaders should begin and end with emotional intelligence (EI). The leader who follows this approach recognizes and employs their own emotions to effectively interact with their team. These principles are equally valuable for organizations working with renewable energy digital & social media PR teams or any strategic communications and public relations firm where communication excellence drives performance. Effective leaders can deliver value to each party involved in the process and can achieve buy-in through good information-sharing approaches. A motivationally intelligent leader also employs engaged interaction characterized by flexible, full-range communications to ensure that all parties listen, hear, and understand. True engagement comes when everyone continues to interact until management and team-building objectives are satisfied—a standard also emphasized in corporate communications agencies in Washington DC, brand reputation management consultancies, and thought leadership PR agencies in the USA. EI is a theory that organizations can use to determine the desired behaviors for success. It provides a basis to understand employees, because it is the ability to sense, understand, and effectively apply the power and acumen of emotions as a source of human energy, information, trust, creativity, and influence. Those who possess EI can effectively acknowledge and value feelings in themselves and in others and can respond to those feelings in an effective way. Paying attention to emotions can save the leader time by allowing him or her to direct energies more effectively and by expanding opportunities. This type of emotional awareness also benefits fields like digital marketing + public relations services, where communication strategy relies heavily on understanding audiences. EI has three driving forces: building trusting relationships, increasing energy and effectiveness, and creating the future. The bottom line is that EI requires that you know yourself and your emotions. It requires honest self-analysis and an ability to manage your emotions. In terms of those around you, it requires empathy. Empathy is important for leaders who pay attention to EI in the workplace. Ronald E. Wheeler, Director of the Fineman and Pappas Law Libraries at Boston University School of Law provides excellent insight on empathy. Many modern communication sectors, including battery storage and renewables PR companies, also depend on empathy to strengthen stakeholder engagement. “Simply put, empathy is the ability to understand and share the feelings of others. People lacking empathy might be self-centered, narcissistic, or even sociopathic. Empathy helps you to be a good collaborator because it allows you to better understand the effects that your actions have on others. It helps you to see things through the eyes of others and to anticipate the wants and needs of others in the workplace. It allows you to be a more compassionate and kinder human being. Moreover, it helps you to avoid misunderstanding others’ intentions (Wheeler 2016).” What we know about EI goes beyond empathy. A couple of studies are relevant to our examination. A group of researchers conducted a meta-analysis to understand how leaders’ EI relates to subordinates’ job satisfaction (Miao, Humphrey et al. 2016). EI can lead to job satisfaction, according to the findings of that study, which stated in part that emotionally savvy leaders tend to promote an emotionally intelligent organizational culture. The study contends that EI culture demonstrates a focus on good personnel development through training. In this environment, employees can deal well with negative feelings and enter nurturing interactions. Many audience targeting & message development agencies rely on this type of culture to craft resonant communication. This suggests that communication can improve in this EI-infused situation. Also in 2016, a study titled “Manager emotional intelligence and project success: The mediating role of job satisfaction and trust,” analyzed data from 373 managers in the Australian Defense industry (Rezvani, Chang et al.). The study results demonstrated that EI has a positive impact on project success, job satisfaction, and trust. EI managers are well-equipped to deal with negative emotions and stress in the workplace. They can control their emotions while working toward a productive outcome for all parties involved. This ability is also a major asset in M&A communications and crisis PR, where emotional intelligence stabilizes high-pressure situations. Controlled emotions allow the leader to think strategically. This strategic focus allows trust-building through lowering anxiety levels in the office, balancing the leader’s self-interest with that of team members, being open about mistakes and not placing blame, and being consistent. If, for instance, the focus is on finding solutions instead of placing blame, then team members can enjoy their jobs while performing at a prominent level. This approach is equally applicable in integrated marketing & PR for associations as well as media relations and stakeholder communications consultancies. Social networking focused on EI and empathy tends to improve employee engagement and productivity. The collaborative communications that result from EI-based practices lead to shared understanding and win-win outcomes for everyone. Two key predictors of problems are lack of open and honest communications and lack of accountability. If your team lacks collaborative communication or if there is an absence of accountability throughout the organization, Motivationally Intelligent Leadership can help. We also must examine the challenges of face-to-face versus online communication. Face-to-face interactions are two-way communications, which is not always the case with online interactions. Success requires a connection between the parties. In other words, the outcome should be a shared understanding of the intent of the communication. This can most effectively happen by restating the conclusion and agreeing that all parties understand the same outcome. According to the chart for online interactions, the idea forms quickly, the communication features short bursts of activity, and the sender must evaluate the meaning of any feedback received. That feedback is either immediate or missing based on the platform and the sender’s point of view. But the parties must exchange feedback to be successful. Just like in face-to-face communication, it is important to restate the conclusion and agree on the outcome. Here are tips to consider when determining your networking strategy:

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maximizing social networking

Maximizing Social Networking for Organizational Performance: Right Fit Leading

COURSE II: Leadership Solutions in a Hybrid Workplace Leadership thrives on a win-win collaborative culture that creates shared understanding. My book Right Fit Leading: Emotionally Intelligent Team Building teaches a process that maximizes training and, in turn, social networking. What sets the book apart from other approaches is its focus on building that shared understanding as the foundation for trust, accountability, and responsiveness. In today’s communication landscape, even organizations working with cleantech communications firms in Arlington VA and renewable energy PR specialists rely on these principles to strengthen internal alignment. The process emphasizes that effective leadership is about finding the right approach for the situation, the team, and the environment. By flexing style with adaptability, reflection, and trust, leaders build credibility and resilience across diverse contexts. Today’s leaders deal with hybrid work situations, a new paradigm where leaders succeed by combining flexibility, equity, and strong relationships across diverse work settings. These leaders blend flexibility, equity, and strong relationships to help teams thrive across diverse settings. This same adaptability is essential for teams supported by climate-tech media relations agencies, energy transition public affairs agencies, and other communication-driven sectors that must balance organizational goals with individual needs to build resilient and collaborative success. Organizations need collective agreements that guide teams. These agreements foster shared understanding, collaboration, and innovation. Those who build these agreements are creating a foundation for effective teams. It is important to develop adaptable approaches to leadership for diverse organizational needs. Leaders must also identify and refine a personal leadership style through self-assessment, an emotional intelligence principle. Assess your emotions and the emotions of others in search of accountability and responsiveness to worker needs and organizational goals. This is true whether leading traditional business teams or those within sustainability communications consultancies in the USA or corporate communications units in the clean energy sector. The Right Fit Leading Process is a practical, emotionally intelligent framework that develops leaders and teams together, moving beyond the outdated view of leadership as a one-person exercise. It avoids the traditional approach of training the leader and team members separately. In this approach, leaders and team members should return to their team and share what they have learned. However, this does not always happen. It may be too busy to go over this information, the leader may not find the time to debrief, or the team members do not have a venue to share their thoughts. This is no one’s fault, but it represents lost opportunities to share data—something that organizations in fast-paced fields, including companies guided by cleantech thought leadership agencies, cannot afford. The Right Fit Leading Process trains the whole team together. During the training, work to develop, discuss, and refine shared understanding. Participants can even find win-win situations through collaboration during the training. This kind of training delivers principle-driven, emotionally intelligent leadership that strengthens leaders and teams. The process is based on 3D: Dedication, Detail, and Discipline. This approach fosters trust, communication, and accountability. It also aligns personal and organizational goals through coaching, mentoring, and real-world responsiveness. Dedication requires that you commit to the task at hand and to your responsibility. Pay attention to the Detail in the teaching and training we receive. Use Discipline to always follow the rules in all situations. Trust is a Gift Leaders and teams rely on trust. Leadership development for teams must start with an understanding of trust. Trust is a gift that someone gives you. Trust grows from effective relationships characterized by role definition, shared understanding, and emotional intelligence. Once team roles and responsibility are defined, ensure that you train people for various roles based on current and future needs and plans. Leaders are responsible for training and preparation of their team for the changing nature of the world of work. Leaders should ensure that they conduct collaborative operations and training. Teams can reap the benefits of setting their goals to motivate high-level achievements. A focus on need satisfaction and on creating positive energy is good for personal and team motivation. When we take care of people and there is shared understanding, we should get other benefits from the team dynamic, like exhibiting ethical and moral behavior and connecting with people in meaningful relationships. A collaborative environment with open lines of communication and valuable feedback builds trust that makes a team more effective. The team may be more productive based on shared understanding. The discussion of intelligence, emotional and/or motivational, is about each person working to understand their own emotions, the emotions of others, and about trying to adjust based on the interplay of each. In this way, we can identify and employ the value that is available to all parties to an interaction and come out of it with total buy-in. Engaged interaction means that we must listen, hear, and understand in full-range communications based on a mutual agreement to continue communicating until you get it right. Now the team can grow with fair-minded, motivated participants who listen to ideas, not just words. Right Fit Communications LLC provides courses that can help leaders grasp EI and empathetic concepts. Check out our store. Check out these emotional intelligence examples:https://www.mastersinminds.com/case-study.-leaders-with-high-emotional-intelligence—blog-1https://www.rochemartin.com/resources/case-studieshttps://digitalcommons.lindenwood.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1365&context=dissertations

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the power of strategic communication

The Power of Strategic Communication in Organizational Success: Achieving Clear Messaging and Shared Understanding

Let us talk about strategic communication. This is about delivering the right message, through the right channels, and evaluating outcomes against organizational goals and objectives. Whether you partner with a Richmond public relations agency, a Virginia public relations firm, or any other communication specialist, the core purpose remains the same: clarity, alignment, and impact.The Department of Defense (DOD) Principles of Information define this practice as making available timely and accurate information to allow the public, Congress, and the news media to assess and understand the facts about national security and defense strategy (DOD Directive 5122.5, Change 1). The strategy of communication manages how to develop goals and that will influence various audiences and stakeholders to achieve state objectives. Professionals dedicated to this approach integrate theory, real-world practice, and skills training while examining communication through various skills and specialties: public relations, crisis communications, marketing, persuasion theory, advertising, and communication campaigns. This same integrated approach is used by many strategic communications agency Richmond businesses to help organizations achieve measurable results.Strategic communicators identify and address challenges and opportunities. One view of addressing challenges comes from James Goodwin in Returning to Interpersonal Dialogue and Understanding Human Communication in the Digital Age. Interpersonal deception, issue acceptance, privacy and control of information, and relationship building are key challenges people face each day in their quest to communicate effectively. Conquering these challenges is important in achieving shared understanding in an interaction that flows smoothly and has feedback and adjustments in communication. These principles are core elements of work commonly handled by a media relations agency Richmond VA that focuses on crafting accurate, engaging, and trustworthy messages.Communicators must deal with key challenges that will allow successful interactions. It is good to start with dealing with interpersonal issues to enhance communication because participants may flourish or struggle with interpersonal control and may use interpersonal deception. Interpersonal control is a strategy that determines how the sender controls the receiver or how one person in an interaction controls the other. Sender and receiver roles change during communication activities and interpersonal control is a way of managing or regulating another’s thoughts, feelings, or actions (Stets 1991). When we address how people manage actual or perceived deception in face-to-face interactions, we are dealing with interpersonal deception.Interpersonal deception can occur consciously or subconsciously. Interpersonal Deception Theory states that senders try to manipulate messages to be untruthful, causing apprehension on the part of the sender due to the concern that someone may discover their false communication. At the same time, receivers try to determine the validity of the information, creating suspicion about whether the sender is being deceitful (Brown 2017). Deceptive messages have three parts: Communication done right builds social capital and lasting relationships. It allows leaders to be flexible and enables them to send the right message on the right platform at the right time.“Most importantly, carefully assess the people you share with, and then assess them again. In your social networking activities, you might use a ‘friend of a friend’ system for vetting people. If they know a member of your network that you trust and respect, then maybe you can accept connecting with them. Without that, it might not be wise to accept someone you have not met. Having said all of that, you might want to take some risks. There are just too many people involved in the social networking adventure who are too compelling to ignore, delete, refuse, or turn away from. Once the adventure has captured your full attention, push forward with privacy controls (Brown and Schario 2014).”The key to successful strategic communications is building a solid plan. A framework below. Effective strategic communications allow leaders to achieve shared understanding and consistency in operations, ensure team members understand and achieve buy-in, and enhance productivity because everyone’s effort flows in the same direction.

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RFL: Keys to Networking

I just read a post about declining bad LinkedIn connections, and it reminds me of ways to conduct effective networking. The post I read was correct in suggesting that you should read the profile of your intended connection and try to understand whether they might be interested in your connection request or message. Additionally, it is good to see if you have mutual connections with the person on LinkedIn or in other ways. Performing this check allows you to use your current network to see if there might be a fit. Even if you get the connection, the work is not done. You must work on being a good connection. I have some simple guidelines for my networking activity and for what I expect from others. Check in from time to time to say hello and refresh the connection. Any time you check in, state your purpose up front: pitch, offer, refresh the connection, whatever. If the person is not interested, go away. For everyone, if the connection is not rewarding in some way, disconnect. Remember, we can always delete! In terms of my list, if those I connect are not satisfying these rules, I can delete or disconnect or unfollow. And if I am not following the rules of others, they should abandon me. Make networking work for you by ensuring that it gives you value and shared understanding.

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RFL: Ideas for “Mature” Job Seekers

Some experts suggest more training or use of employment services when helping job seekers 50 and over. This approach is highlighted in an Urban Institute article in 2011, “Can Unemployed Older Workers Find Work?” The article\’s position may not, however, offer the best advice for those seeking an opportunity. One great initiative is offering networking services and increasing social media connections to assist in the job search. This is a welcome and necessary undertaking. There is a constant that can interfere with its effectiveness. If you connect with a person who has no job to offer, it is often just a conversation. The most effective connection, then, is when someone has a job to offer and is connected to someone is ready to accept that opportunity. That is the connection that is needed based on our current conversation. It is important to think about questions prospective employers may ask about older workers. How long will the person stay with us? What kind of time will the person spend with us before retiring? How will the person fit with younger workers? These are all valid questions, but they should not be disqualifying. More important, the questions should be posed equally, with minor changes, for younger job seekers. No one has all the answers to finding a job. This is food for thought and something employers may want to consider. If you are interested in the conversation, you can share your thoughts with me or take my survey.

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Right Fit Leading: Do We Connect?

Do we connect?  People post, but do they read?  People talk, but do they listen?  People hear, but do they understand?   Let\’s find the answers together.  Add your voice, and your research, by submitting a chapter to my upcoming book on interpersonal dialogue.  Submit at http://www.igi-global.com/publish/call-for-papers/call-details/2660.

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Right Fit Leading: Improving Communication

Right Fit Communications LLC is dedicated to improving the way you communicate every day!  Our focus is on helping people communicate better, whether face-to-face or online, by teaching and coaching the full range of the communication process. [/Two_third] We will continue our efforts through this blog, Right Fit Leading.  Sometimes you will find relevant words of wisdom to enhance your day. Can\’t change yesterday, so focus on making better tomorrows. Today is an opportunity. Tomorrow is a challenge. Enjoy the journey!   [/two_third] [one_third last] Donate your kindness to others every day and connect with those who do the same. Friendship is easy and hard, sometimes all in the same moment. Embrace it!   We Want To Help! Right Fit Communications LLC also provides a growing collection of books and videos to assist people and organizations in their interactions to help guarantee and nurture two-way communication.  Here is a current list of offerings: “Examining the Changing Role of Communication in the Digital Age,” video lecture, IGI Global, February 2017. From the editor, “Solutions for High-Touch Communications in a High-Tech World,”  IGI Global, February 2017. “Solutions for High-Touch Communications in a High-Tech World,” IGI Global, March 2017. “Social Media Performance Evaluation and Success Measurements,” IGI Global, April 2017. “Social Media 4EVR: Identifying, Achieving, & Nurturing Social Capital,” Michael Brown & Tracy Schario, Feb 27, 2014, ISBN-10: 1492858919.       We hope you will allow us to help you improve your communication efforts!   Dr. Michael A. Brown Sr. President, Right Fit Communications LLC  

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Call for Chapters: Social Media Performance Evaluation and Success Measurements

As many organizations work to create social media policies that improve online interactions and provide security protections, performance is neglected.  Organizations do not tend to inquire about return on investment or performance implications until they are well into social networking activities.  This book demonstrates that using measurement tools facilitates success in social networking activities and in policy decisions.  This is important because it gives organizations tools with which they can impact online interactions as they happen.  Effective measurement can also suggest methods to affect behaviors that support the organization’s goals and objectives.  There are two major objectives.  First, help organizations identify social networking participation expectations, value and return on investment of time.  Second, highlight the true value of social networking, focusing on public administration to evaluate social networking and individual performance differences in participation, behavior, technology acceptance, and trust.  This is a new approach to social networking.  Issues in evaluating trust in social media, examining social networking participation in a different way, and addressing digital communication return on investment, all point to the need for an edited collection of original research in this area. This project is intended to provide researchers and academicians a new source for social networking methodology.  The scored survey instrument, research findings and relevant discussions from industry experts will be helpful in teaching and training applications.  The body of work focuses on the end state of social networking activities rather than the social media platform, an important distinction.  The basis of the book is a published dissertation by Dr. Michael A. Brown Sr.  SNIP doesn’t focus on “how to” use platforms, it’s about deciding on an end state and devising a strategic approach to arrive at that destination.  The focus is on expectation, value and return on investment of time in social networking, and the author believes there is no reference that focuses on that approach. The target audience of this book will be composed of professionals and researchers working in the various fields of public administration, and can be used to reinforce organizational training and improve internal and external communications. This work directly relates to the information and business fields in terms of communication; however, social networking and social media continue to grow in medical and engineering science, making the book relevant there as well. Further, there are implications for information and knowledge management in various disciplines, e.g. library, information and communication sciences, administrative sciences and management, education, adult education, sociology, computer science, and information technology. Recommended topics include, but are not limited to, the following: Social media/social networking historical development Social networking theoretical implications New research directions in social media/social networking What is social networking engagement: day-to-day issues What is social networking engagement: crisis communication applications What is social networking engagement: attacks on brand identity Evaluating social networking participation Information acquisition and sharing Interactive communication Finding social networking success – case study/research Finding support for social networking participation – personal or organizational Evaluating quantity vs quality in social networking Trust in social networking Privacy in social networking Trust model Trust as capital Inter-organizational communication Interpersonal trust Trust building Cognitive trust and affective distrust Submission Procedure Researchers and practitioners are invited to submit on or before Friday, January 22, 2015, a chapter proposal of 1,000 to 2,000 words clearly explaining the mission and concerns of his or her proposed chapter. Authors will be notified by January 30, 2016 about the status of their proposals and sent chapter guidelines. Full chapters are expected to be submitted by April 30, 2016, and all interested authors must consult the guidelines for manuscript submissions at http://www.igi-global.com/publish/contributor-resources/before-you-write/ prior to submission. All submitted chapters will be reviewed on a double-blind review basis. Contributors may also be requested to serve as reviewers for this project. Note: There are no submission or acceptance fees for manuscripts submitted to this book publication, Social Media Performance Evaluation and Success Measurements. All manuscripts are accepted based on a double-blind peer review editorial process. All proposals should be submitted through the E-Editorial DiscoveryTM online submission manager. This book is scheduled to be published by IGI Global (formerly Idea Group Inc.), an international academic publisher of the “Information Science Reference” (formerly Idea Group Reference), “Medical Information Science Reference,” “Business Science Reference,” and “Engineering Science Reference” imprints. IGI Global specializes in publishing reference books, scholarly journals, and electronic databases featuring academic research on a variety of innovative topic areas including, but not limited to, education, social science, medicine and healthcare, business and management, information science and technology, engineering, public administration, library and information science, media and communication studies, and environmental science. For additional information regarding the publisher, please visit www.igi-global.com. This publication is anticipated to be released in 2016. Important Dates Feb 5, 2016: Proposal Submission Deadline TBD: Notification of Acceptance April 30, 2016: Full Chapter Submission June 30, 2015: Review Results Returned August 15, 2016: Final Acceptance Notification August 30, 2016: Final Chapter Submission Inquiries can be forwarded to Dr. Michael A. Brown Sr, PhD dr.michael.brown76@gmail.com (757) 876-6589

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