Becoming a Mature Leader 3-4

Pepper de Callier

Last week we discussed the importance of knowing yourself, getting out of your comfort zone and learning new skills, willingly accepting responsibility, and delivering more than is expected of you if you want to begin the process of becoming a leader. I want to once again emphasize the word process as it relates to becoming and to being a leader. Leadership is not a destination one reaches at a certain point in one’s career. To committed leaders who are dedicated to excellence it is a constant journey of learning and experience, of stretching one’s self and of relating to others.

Do You Have the Potential to be a Leader? 1-4

Pepper de Callier

What skills and abilities do you need to master in order to become a leader today in the Czech Republic and, as important, in a global economy? Why are certain skills and abilities important today? What are the moral aspects of good leadership? What advice do experts have for young professionals in the Czech Republic who want to grow professionally? These questions and more will be answered in this four-part series on leadership as it relates to the Czech Republic and the global economy.

Goethe on Your Career

Pepper de Callier

Time is a great evaluator of people and their impact on things. Too often, especially in this age of instant, always-on information, after the test of time, we find that someone who was revered for something turns out to be much less impressive than we originally thought they were.

Mentoring: Some Observations

Pepper de Callier

I was in the United States recently to attend my older son, Case’s, wedding. Being there, seeing friends and family whom I hadn’t seen for, in some cases, more than twenty years, and seeing my son, now a grown man, marry a wonderful young lady set the stage for some major reflection about life and its transitional events and the people with whom you experience those events.

How to Become Indispensable

Pepper de Callier

At one time or another every young, ambitious professional dreams of becoming so sought after, so recognized for their ability, that they become indispensable—their contribution is so valuable that people, especially people in power with the ability to impact their future career path and their earning potential, find it difficult to imagine what things would be like without them. It’s not intelligence, connections, appearance, or talent that makes one indispensable. It’s a combination of common sense, observation skills, and some old-fashioned hard work. There’s no magic to it.

The Crucible of Leadership

Petr Kavalíř

One of today’s foremost authorities on leadership is Warren Bennis, Founding Chairman of the Leadership Institute at the University of Southern California and author of 27 books and more than 2,000 articles on leadership. In his book, On Leadership, Dr. Bennis states that, after many years of observing and interviewing leaders, they differ from other people in very distinct and identifiable ways. First of all, they have a constant appetite for knowledge and experience—as their worlds widen and become more complex, so too do their means of understanding.

Shibboleths: What Do They Say About You?

Pepper de Callier

Many centuries ago, how one spoke was a matter of life or death. The word shibboleth comes from ancient Hebrew and this is how it came to be. Two of the twelve tribes of Israel, the Ephramites and the Gileadites, were having what we would today call a feud. It was virtually impossible to identify members of the different tribes by looking at them, especially if they wore clothing similar to the other tribe. But, one’s life might depend upon knowing who was approaching you in the desert.