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Coaching for Leaders

243: Your Career Strategy, with Bonni Stachowiak

Coaching for Leaders

Dave Stachowiak

Education, Business, Management, Self-improvement, Careers

4.81.6K Ratings

🗓️ 2 May 2016

⏱️ 39 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Bonni Stachowiak: Teaching in Higher Ed Bonni is the host of the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast, Dean of Teaching and Learning and Professor of Business and Management at Vanguard University, and my life partner. Prior to her academic career, she was a human resources consultant and executive officer for a publicly traded company. Bonni is the author of The Productive Online and Offline Professor: A Practical Guide*. Question from Tiffany Last week I got a phone call offering me a great position. I was not looking for a job, and I had no intentions of leaving anytime soon. But after reading the job description, it really seems like a job I would love. After speaking with them, I learned the position would offer much better pay, benefits, retirement, a year-end bonus, and it's also offering to pay to send me back to college to further my education. Taking into account just what I would gain career-wise, it's a no-brainer. But when I think of the organization I'm leaving behind and what it stands to lose, my heart breaks. I don't want to disappoint all the people I've worked with by leaving so soon. I don't want people to feel I'm abandoning the mission or my values. That said, I am under no obligation to stay. My question to you is this: How can I communicate my reasons for leaving without them viewing me as a sell out? Is it wrong that I feel so much guilt for leaving? In a way, I don't think I should have to disclose my reasons, because it's very personal, but on the other hand I wouldn't have this new opportunity without my time there. Any advice or guidance would be so appreciated. The Empowered Manager* by Peter Block 7 Steps to Take Before You Quit Your Job by Michael Hyatt Finding the Career That Fits You* The Ultimate Guide to Using Your Strengths to Get Hired* Question from Stephen I have been leading a small nonprofit for about 18 months in my first executive role. One of the (many) areas in which I need to improve is in making time for coaching my core staff, rather than having conversations consistently around ongoing tasks, deadlines, etc. I would like to make time (weekly, monthly, quarterly?) where I sit down with them one on one for a set period of time and we talk about how they want to improve, why, and make a plan together for doing so. Can you recommend some resources where I can get advice on establishing a coaching routine and culture, setting expectations to make it fruitful, how often to set the meetings, etc.? Asian Efficiency Do This for a Productive Week (episode 180) The Weekly Review (Teaching in Higher Ed podcast) Question from Lauren I'm a director-level product manager (software) at a large diversified industrial company and I've recently been given an amazing opportunity to build a new vertical business unit with a small team of great folks from across the business. My mentor (and someone who probably had a lot to do with my new opportunity) is a very senior exec and I just found out that he and I are going to meet consultants next week which means I'm going to have a lot of 1:1 time with him. I adore and deeply respect this guy - he's one of those rare leaders who is scary-smart, has accomplished really big things but is also a genuinely nice person. Getting informal time with him is a huge opportunity for me to learn more about the market, the company, and leadership in general. I would love nothing more than to sit there with a notepad and interrogate him, but that's probably not a great idea! Can you offer any advice on good ways to utilize conversations with 2- and 3-level-up executives? I don't want to annoy him, and I don't want to ask questions whose answers he isn't in a position to share, but I feel like it would be ludicrous to waste the opportunity on casual conversation. Question from Sarah I am a department manager for Walmart and going to school for business. Would retail be good on a resume?

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

On this is

0:07.0

Coaching for leaders episode our thoughts on your questions on career strategy coaching

0:05.8

executive relationships and much more this is coaching for leaders episode

0:11.4

243 produced for Leaders, Episode 243.

0:14.0

Produced by Innovate Learning, Maximizing Human Potential.

0:20.0

Greetings to you from Orange County, California.

0:26.8

This is coaching for leaders, and I'm your host, Dave Stahoviac.

0:31.6

Leaders aren't born, they're made and this weekly show will give

0:36.1

you access to the best thinkers, resources, and actions to help you develop your leadership skills.

0:43.8

And speaking of making leaders and leadership development,

0:46.9

dialogue is one of the most important ways to do so.

0:49.7

And that's why we have mastermind groups.

0:52.2

It's also why it's an important part of the broader

0:55.2

coaching for leaders community and why once a month we hand the show over to you to submit your questions

1:01.2

and for us to discuss those in detail on the first Monday of the month here. submit your questions

1:04.0

on the first Monday of the month here and you can submit your questions at

1:06.6

coaching for leaders

1:08.1

dot com slash feedback we have a ton of questions this month in fact we're going to go into next month probably with all the questions we have but don't let that stop you

1:16.7

submitting your question for consideration in a future episode and as I always do I have Bonnie back with me again today to help

1:25.4

tackle some of these questions Bonnie before I actually go into the first

1:29.8

question here from Tiffany I have a very brief announcement first of all I just wanted to say a huge thank you to everyone who reached out

1:36.8

During the recent mastermind applications a certainly to those of you who applied and are going to be part of the upcoming groups who I've talked with, but I wanted specifically to say thanks to those who also just reached out with words of encouragement or a kind email during the application process or said that the mastermind wasn't right for you for whatever reason, but we're so supportive and in fact I got so many of those emails I'm still answering some of them.

...

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