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Telephone: 202-223-8962 ׀ Email: Info@nlrcm.org KNOWING WHEN TO LEAD AND WHEN TO MANAGE Paul Henderson Dominic Perri
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. For Outcomes Provide a Conceptual framework for the difference between leading and managing Offer the opportunity for you to apply these concepts to your ministry Identify 1-2 things to act upon immediately
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Leadership vs. Management Leaders Leaders help their organizations identify vision, mission, values… the future! They focus on big picture and top priorities Managers Managers implement the vision and plan. They follow direction, and focus on operational level.
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Leadership vs. Management What & Why Leaders How & When Managers
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Leadership vs. Management Both leadership and management are essential elements of organizational achievements.
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Do We Have to Choose? The reality is that many pastoral leaders have to be BOTH Leaders and Managers. So the key question is knowing when to wear the Leader hat and when to put on the Manager hat.
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Problems for which we can find the solutions. Requires expertise with necessary know-how and procedures. Operational-Level problems that focus on creating systems, processes, etc. Managers Solve Technical Problems
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Problems not amenable to authoritative expertise/standard operating procedures. Cannot be solved by someone who provides answers from on high. Require experiments, new discoveries, and adjustments from numerous places in the organization or community. Leaders solve Adaptive Problems
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Leadership vs. Management Leaders Shape and share a vision for the future Managers Manage Daily Tasks
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Leadership vs. Management Leaders Change & Movement [Mission-focused] Managers Effectiveness & Efficiency
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Leadership vs. Management Leaders See themselves as promoters of change, as challengers of the status quo in that they encourage creativity and risk taking Managers See themselves as preservers of the status quo
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Leadership vs. Management Leaders Are concerned with doing the right things Managers Are concerned with doing things right
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Leaders Are more concerned with ends, what gets done Managers Are more concerned with means, how to get things done
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Plan and budget Organize and staff Status quo Short-term Controlling Means Builders Envision and direct Align employees Change Long-term Inspiring/motivating Ends Architects Managers Leaders Leadership vs. Management
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Often promoted because they are good at operational tasks Have to shift their thinking to Leader- focused activities – vision, mission, values Many new leaders don’t do this well – they continue doing what they know When Managers Become Leaders
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Micro-manage No common vision articulated – creates silos Disputes go unresolved Focus is on tasks instead of progress When Leaders act like Managers
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Do most of your challenges require leading or managing? What area is more challenging for you? What is one action that you can commit to when you return to your ministry? Conversation/Reflection
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Lead – Manage Matrix LEAD/LEAD PERCENT: LEAD/MANAGE PERCENT: FUTURE: LEAD/LEADFUTURE: LEAD/MANAGE
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Contact Information Dominic Perri DJPERRI@gmail.com 773-318-7837 Paul Henderson pastoralstrategy@gmail.com 301-996-1082
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Telephone: 202-223-8962 ׀ Email: Info@nlrcm.org
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