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Mercedes Clement Senior Professor/Librarian Chair of Library Services at DSC 1200 W. Int’l Speedway Blvd Daytona Beach, FL 32114 (386)506-3440 ClemenM@DayttonaState.edu Servant –Leadership An Introduction to the Power of Leadership Through Service
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About Mercedes Education MS Library Science – Florida State University MS Education Foundation – University of Florida BS Arts & Science – University of Florida Diploma- Bible Studies – Ecole Evangelique de la Bible, Haiti Experience Areas of responsibility include overall management of library operations, supervision of library personnel, departmental budget management, coordination of planning and assessment for library areas, administrative contact for College Center for library automation. In addition, my responsibilities comprise of management of the library technical services department and supervision of personnel. Furthermore I am one of the 39 Council Member for Florida Virtual Campus. Prior to Daytona State College, I worked at the University of Florida in acquisitions and cataloging departments
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Topics Introduction Foundations of Servant Leadership Characteristics Servant Leadership Paradoxes Companies/Organnizations which practice Servant Leadership Examples/Case study How to become a Servant Leader? Are you a Servant Leader? Additional Resources
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Robert. K Greenleaf Largely considered the father of modern Servant-Leadership Career: 38 Years at AT&T, largely in management training and development 25 Years consulting on Servant Leadership thereafter Coined the term Servant-Leader in 1970’s Founded Center for Applied Ethics (now Greenleaf Center for Servant-Leadership) Inspiration: Hermann Hesse’s short novel Journey to the East in 1960’s Account of a mythical journey by a group of people on a spiritual quest True leadership stems first from a desire to serve Essays: The Servant as Leader (1970) The Institution as Servant (1972) Trustees as Servants (1972)
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Definition Adapted from “The Servant as Leader”: The servant-leader is servant first… It begins with the natural feeling that one wants to serve, to serve first. Then conscious choice brings one to aspire to lead. That person is sharply different from one who is leader first… …The best test, and difficult to administer, is: Do those served grow as persons? Do they, while being served, become healthier, wiser, freer, more autonomous, more likely themselves to become servants? And, what is the effect on the least privileged in society? Will they benefit or at least not be further deprived?"
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Post –Greenleaf Following Greenleaf, a wealth of Servant-Leadership experts emerged Larry Spears: President / CEO of Greenleaf center for 25 years Author of hundreds of publications on Servant-Leadership Founded the Spears Center James Autry: President of magazine group for Meredith Corporation Author of 8 Books Focus on implementation James C. Hunter: 25 Years in Servant-Leadership 2 of the most popular books on Servant-Leadership Consulted many of the world’s most admired companies Others: Ken Blanchard, Stephen Covey, Peter M. Senge, Jim Collins….
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Greenleaf’s Model of Servant Leadership Servant leaders are leaders who put other people’s needs, aspirations and interest above their own Servant leaders deliberate choice is to serve others Servant leader’s chief motive is to serve first, as opposed to lead
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Word Cloud
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The Ten Characteristics of Servant Leadership Listening Empathy Healing Awareness Persuasion Conceptualization Foresight Stewardship Commitment to the growth of the people Building community
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Three Groups of Servant Leadership Relationship-building Actions Listening – (to self and others) Empathy – (understanding) Healing – (search for wholeness of self and others) Awareness – (of self and of others) Future-oriented Actions Persuasion – (building consensus) Conceptualization – (dreams and of day-to-day operations) Foresight – (intuitive ability to learn from past and see future consequences of actions)
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Three Groups Continued… Community – oriented Actions Stewardship – (holding institution in trust for the good of society) Commitment to Growth – (personal, professional, spiritual of self and others) Building Community – (benevolent, humane, philanthropic, to benefit others)
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Libray
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Stewardship “Holding something in trust for another”. Making a positive difference in the future is characteristic of the stewardship mentality.
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Commitment to the growth of the people People have intrinsic value
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Building Community True community can be created by connecting and networking…
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Paradoxes Servant-Leadership, itself a paradox, requires a constant balance… Great Planned Compassionate Be Without Pride Be Spontaneous Discipline RightSay, “I’m Wrong” Serious Laugh Wise Admit You Don’t Know Busy Listen Strong Be Open To Change LeadingServe Enough To
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Examples of Balance Paradoxes are not easy to balance. Here are a few examples… Great Enough to be Without Pride Team gets the credit, you get the blame Compassionate Enough to Discipline Must not be soft – set high expectations and follow through Right Enough to Say, “I’m Wrong” Leaders make mistakes too, admit you are human Wise Enough to Admit You Don’t Know Find out quickly, but do not mislead Busy Enough to Listen Beware the busy manager – they do not lead
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Criteria for companies that practice Servant Leadership Openness & fairness Camaraderie & friendliness Opportunities Pride in work & company Pay & benefits Security
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Companies/Organizations Some of the well respected companies practice Servant –Leadership… Fortune’s 100 Best Companies to Work For: 1/3 of Top 35 10 of America’s Most Admired Companies
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Case Study---Starbucks In 1997, three Starbucks employees were murdered in DC during a botched robbery. The story was told how Howard Schultz, CEO, did not call Public Relations or legal counsel. Instead, Schultz dropped everything, flew to the store and spent the entire week visiting with the families and employees in the area. Dave Olson, Senior Vice President of the Culture and Leadership Development said: Leadership is largely about having courage to do the right thing. Or, as Behar, CEO said: Leading with compassion never stops there is no time off
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Southwest Airlines Perhaps one of the best ways to define servant leadership is to read about what Colleen Barrett, President of Southwest Airlines, said about their leadership philosophy.
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She said: “We do build our pyramid a bit different…at the top of our pyramid in terms of priority is our employees, and delivering to them proactive customer service”.
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Individuals Examples of historic Servant –Leaders… Mahatma Gandhi Jesus of Nazareth Martin Luther King, Jr. Mother Theresa “A genuine leader is not a searcher for consensus but a molder of consensus.” “I suppose leadership at one time meant muscles; but today it means getting along with people”. “Kind words can be short and easy to speak, but their echoes are truly endless”. “For even the Son of Man did not come to be served, but to serve”.
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How Does One Become A Servant Leader? From what we can understand, becoming a servant leader is more a state of mind than a set of directions. Becoming a servant leader does not follow a step by step process. This style of leadership development is an on-going, life-long learning process.
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Become a Servant Leader Continue… Survey shows that 85% of those who become a leader do so because of the influence of other leaders. Great leaders influence and reproduce themselves. The law of reproduction is to identify, prepare, and affirm.
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“Example is not the main thing, influencing others, it is the only thing” Albert Schweitzer
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Are you a Servant Leader?
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Additional Resources Recommended texts… Websites Compilation: www.lichtenwalner.net/servantleaderwww.lichtenwalner.net/servantleader Greenleaf Center: www.greenleaf.orgwww.greenleaf.org Spears Center: www.spearscenter.orgwww.spearscenter.org Consulting / Development: www.JamesHunter.comwww.JamesHunter.com Books Servant Leader (Greenleaf, 1977) The Servant (Hunter, 1998) The Servant Leader (Autry, 2001) Practicing Servant Leadership (Spears & Lawrence, 2004) World’s Most Powerful Leadership Principle (Hunter, 2004)
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References Publications referenced, paraphrased or extracted from include the following: Autry, James A.; The Servant Leader: How to Build a Creative Team, Develop Great Morale, And Improve Bottom-Line Performance. Three Rivers Press, New York, NY 2001. DeGraaf, Don; Tilley, Colin; Neal, Larry; Servant-Leadership Characteristics in Organizational Life. Greenleaf Center for Servant-Leadership. Westfield, Indiana. 2001. Greenleaf, Robert K.; Servant Leadership: A Journey into the Nature of Legitimate Power & Greatness. Paulist Press, Mawah, NJ. 1977, 1991, 2002. Hansel, T. ; Holy Sweat. Word. Dallas, TX. 1987. Hunter, James C.; The World’s Most Powerful Leadership Principle: How to Become a Servant Leader. Crown Business, New York, NY. 2004. Spears, Larry C., Lawrence, Michelle (et al); Practicing Servant Leadership: Succeeding Through Trust, Bravery, And Forgiveness. Jossey-Bass, San Fransisco, CA. 2004 Spears, Larry C.; Diary of Alpha Kappa Psi (article: Servant-Leadership). Gary L. Epperson, CAE. Spring 2008.
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Thank you for your time! Mercedes Clement Chair of Library Services “If your actions inspire others to dream more, learn more, do more and become more, you are a leader.” John Quincy Adams
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