Become a Person of Influence With Jo Miller
Rosalie McQuaid Department Head, Cybersecurity Technical Center Welcome Rosalie McQuaid Department Head, Cybersecurity Technical Center
Jo Miller Women’s Leadership Speaker and Founding Editor of BeLeaderly.com Helps emerging women leaders create a roadmap for their career advancement. Has traveled widely in Europe, Asia Pacific, and the Middle East to deliver keynotes and teach workshops for conferences, professional associations, and corporate women’s initiatives. A leading authority on women’s leadership, Jo delivers more than 70 speaking presentations annually to audiences of up to 1,200.
I HAVE SOME UNIQUE KOALAFICATIONS
Are you the best kept secret in the organization? Are you the best kept secret in your organization?
Influence
“In my company, influencing skills are the single most important success factor after knowing your job.” JoAnna Sohovich, CEO The Chamberlain Group
Are influence and power good or bad?
Are influence and power good or bad?
Are influence and power good or bad?
Try to influence a situation Become a person of influence
The Fundamental Truth About Influencing…
Dog Psychology Center
The Fundamental Truth about Influencing… Our behavior teaches people how to treat us.
“You can influence others in every conversation you have “You can influence others in every conversation you have. In a subtle way, we convey our confidence and professionalism in every interaction that we have with co-workers, customers, superiors and subordinates.” Laurie Oare, Division President U.S. Foodservice
Characteristics of an influential role model “Who is a strong, positive influencer that you admire? What qualities or characteristics are the source of their ability to influence so effectively?”
This presentation is available at BeLeaderly.com/mitre
6 Sources of Influence 6. Positional 5. Expertise 4. Resources 3. Informational 2. Direct 1. Relationships
The influence inherent in your job title and role. Positional Influence The influence inherent in your job title and role.
Building positional influence You have an important job – people need to know! Seize all opportunities to educate others about your role, and how you can help Create your 30-second commercial.
30-second commercial Name Job title I am responsible for a, b, c. Come directly to me when you need x, y, z.
I hate to bust your bubble.” “There is a myth that the higher you go in the organization and the more positional authority you gain, that you just have to say “do it” and people get it done. I hate to bust your bubble.” Dr. Cecilia Kimberlin, VP QA, Regulatory Affairs and Compliance, Abbott
6 Sources of Influence 6. Positional 5. Expertise 4. Resources 3. Informational 2. Direct 1. Relationships
6 Sources of Influence 6. Positional 5. Expertise 4. Resources 3. Informational 2. Direct 1. Relationships
Expertise Influence The influence that comes from your background, qualifications, experience and accomplishments.
“It’s not what you know and it’s not who you know “It’s not what you know and it’s not who you know. It’s who knows what you know.” Nora Denzel, Board Director, Ericsson and AMD
Make your expertise visible Early career Work less! Promote your accomplishments Mid-level Volunteer for high-profile assignments Lead committees and task forces Senior-level Build your “personal brand” as an industry leader Speak on panels, at conferences, and in the media
6 Sources of Influence 6. Positional 5. Expertise 4. Resources 3. Informational 2. Direct 1. Relationships
6 Sources of Influence 6. Positional 5. Expertise 4. Resources 3. Informational 2. Direct 1. Relationships
Negotiating the resources you need to do your job well. Resources Influence Negotiating the resources you need to do your job well.
Build your resources influence Early Career Become a good negotiator Learn leading without authority Mid-level Suggest special projects as developmental opportunities for others Understand how finances and budgets work Senior-level Be a mentor, sponsor, and talent scout
6 Sources of Influence 6. Positional 5. Expertise 4. Resources 3. Informational 2. Direct 1. Relationships
6 Sources of Influence 6. Positional 5. Expertise 4. Resources 3. Informational 2. Direct 1. Relationships
Informational Influence Having a finger on the pulse of what is going on in your organization, industry, and in your profession.
Be an informational powerhouse Have some go-to sources of information. Pay attention to new projects, opportunities, re-orgs, personnel changes, resource allocations, budgets, legislation, innovation, market intelligence, etc. Network with other “informational powerhouses”. Filter useful information from gossip or noise.
6 Sources of Influence 6. Positional 5. Expertise 4. Resources 3. Informational 2. Direct 1. Relationships
6 Sources of Influence 6. Positional 5. Expertise 4. Resources 3. Informational 2. Direct 1. Relationships
Direct Influence Being firm, professional and direct when someone’s behavior is detrimental to the team or the organization. (The 1% rule)
Effective use of direct influence Be firm, fair and professional Be direct and concise while delivering tough news Explain what was unacceptable and why Share your vision of their future potential
6 Sources of Influence 6. Positional 5. Expertise 4. Resources 3. Informational 2. Direct 1. Relationships
6 Sources of Influence 6. Positional 5. Expertise 4. Resources 3. Informational 2. Direct 1. Relationships
Relationships Influence The influence that comes naturally with having a network of authentic relationships across your organization, industry, and profession.
The most important asset you will build in your career Your Network (Your “Sphere of Influence”)
Increase your relationships influence Think strategically about who you’d like to include in your network. Build a supportive network of connectors, collaborators, influencers, mentors, sponsors, and advocates.
6 Sources of Influence 6. Positional 5. Expertise 4. Resources 3. Informational 2. Direct 1. Relationships
Self-evaluation What are your strong sources of influence? Which do you want to strengthen? How?
6 Sources of Influence 6. Positional 5. Expertise 4. Resources 3. Informational 2. Direct 1. Relationships
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“It’s not enough to have a bright idea “It’s not enough to have a bright idea. I have seen too many projects led by great, passionate people fail because they tried to be the lone influencer. You have to get the right people in the boat with you. You have to engage the entire human fabric.” Sophie Vandebroek, CTO, Xerox