Thursday 28 January 2010

Tribal Leadership by Dave Logan

Tribal Leadership by Dave Logan, Dean of Marshall Law School of USC. This concept was introduced to me by my friend/mentee via Altitude Monthly Mentor by Eben Pagan about few months ago. It was an interview between Eben and Dave.

Recently, after browsing through amazing and mind blowing videos from TED (for those of you who don't know TED, you are in real treat! TED - Technology, Entertainment and Design, is a small nonprofit devoted to Ideas Worth Spreading for more info please visit www.ted.com), I found a presentation by Dave! Please find below a presentation by Dave that I would like to share with everyone.




In summary, there are five tribal stages;
  • Stage one - 'Life Sucks'
  • Stage two - ' My Life Sucks'
  • Stage three - 'I'm Great'
  • Stage four - 'We're Great'
  • Stage five - 'Life is Great'
We all form tribes.

Leaders need to talk to all five levels (stages) in the society.

You don't leave them where you found them.

Tribes can only hear one stage above or below where they are.

Leaders nudge people and the tribe to the next stage.

Feel free the share you thoughts and experiences on this for the benefits of others. Thank you .

Tuesday 26 January 2010

Visualisation - Burns Supper

Few years ago, if I were being asked to chair a dinner event in Scotland, the immediate thought that came were "Oh gosh, how can I click with the audiences?" As a foreigner from Far East and having very little knowledge on the Scottish history and culture, this seemed impossible.

The recent success in chairing a Burns Supper dinner (a dinner to commemorate Robert Burns, Scottish Poet) for a group of 41 in Scotland made me realised a technique that I sometimes used but didn't pay much attention to.

It is a technique that form the basis for 'The Law of Attraction'.

It is called 'Visualisation'.

So, what did I do?

I would like to share my recent experiences and hopefully I could improve on the this technique to achieve things that seem impossible to achieve in life.

Step 1 - Background Research (two weeks before the event)
The theme for the dinner is simple - its about Robert Burns. So, I need to know more about Robert Burns. I asked myself the following questions: Who is he? What did he do? What's his story?

In order for me to understand Robert in a short time span, instead of borrowing a complete biography on Robert, I went to the children's library to borrow a 60 page mini book to get a summary of his life.

Step 2 - Visualise
After that, almost everyday, I read the same book over and over again. Read out loud and even recorded my own reading.

I also tried to relate my life and things that happen around me with Robert's life.

Step 3 - More Research
Well, the 60 page book is just a rough guideline. Throughout the course of 2 weeks, I went to various websites to read bits of his life that interest me most, listening to some of the music and poems written by him. www.bbc.co.uk/robertburns is a good source for Robert Burns work and provide a good summary on how to run a Burns Supper dinner.

Step 4 - See It, Talk It, Do It
Yes, I talked about Robert's work with friends and colleagues, I asked other's opinion on Robert Burns and I ate haggis nips and tatties pie from Greggs almost everyday one week before the event.

I get myself very excited about the event, and turn the event into something that I really look forward to.

Step 5 - Visualise the Event
Just three days before the dinner, I started to visualised the event with someone who had successfully chaired the event before.

The visual was initially very crude as it was initially not my own visualisation. However, after a few days of fine tuning by adding things that I felt and observed, my visualisation for the event became more real.

Even before the event started, I ran through my visualisation with the catering team provided by the hotel. The process of visualisation kept on running in my head throughout the event and allowed me to adjust any hiccups that happened during the event. To be honest, its actually fun and enjoyable to watch the things that I visualised turned into reality.


So, what's next? Visualising Richard Branson? Start to visualise the life that I really want?




Thursday 21 January 2010

David Blaine - Quote


Watched a presentation by David Blaine talking about his journey for setting a record in holding his breath for 17 minutes 4 seconds in Oprah Winfrey's US TV show in Chicago. At the very end of his presentation, he quoted:

"As a magician, I am trying to show people things that seem impossible.
And I think magic, whether its holding my breath or shuffling a deck of card, its pretty simple:
its practice, its training and its experimenting
while pushing through the pain to be the best that I can be.
And that's what magic is to me." - David Blaine.

Very true and meaningful, that's what life is all about, magic!