The 10 traits of great leaders
(from The Centre for Creative Leadership)
1- Honesty
2- Ability to delegate
3- Communication
4- Sense of humor
5- Confidence
6- Commitment
7- Positive attitude
8- Creativity
9- Ability to inspire
10- Intuition
Which one of those do you think is most important?
telling the truth or able to be trusted and not likely to steal, cheat, or lie:
ReplyDeleteDelegation skills describe your ability to assign tasks you're accountable for to team members. They typically involve transferring a task's responsibility to individuals you lead and directing them on the completion steps.
ReplyDeleteCommunication is the act of giving, receiving, and sharing information -- in other words, talking or writing, and listening or reading. Good communicators listen carefully, speak or write clearly, and respect different opinions.
ReplyDeleteA person's ability to perceive humor or appreciate a joke.
ReplyDelete"she has a great sense of humor"
What Is Confidence? Confidence means feeling sure of yourself and your abilities — not in an arrogant way, but in a realistic, secure way. Confidence isn't about feeling superior to others. It's a quiet inner knowledge that you're capable.
ReplyDeleteMaking a commitment involves dedicating yourself to something, like a person or a cause. Before you make a commitment, think carefully. A commitment obligates you to do something. Some commitments are large, like marriage.
ReplyDeleteHaving a positive attitude means being optimistic about situations, interactions, and yourself. People with positive attitudes remain hopeful and see the best even in difficult situations.
ReplyDeletecreativity, the ability to make or otherwise bring into existence something new, whether a new solution to a problem, a new method or device, or a new artistic object or form.
ReplyDeleteThe Inspirational Leadership competency is the ability to inspire, to guide people to get the job done, to bring out their best. With inspiration, you can articulate a shared mission in a way that motivates, and offer a sense of common purpose beyond people's day-to-day tasks.
ReplyDeleteimmediate apprehension or cognition without reasoning or inferring. 2 : knowledge or conviction gained by intuition. 3 : the power or faculty of gaining direct knowledge or cognition without evident rational thought and inference.
ReplyDelete