I help teams realise their potential and get back on track.
If you visit my blogs both in Supply Management and here on HRZone, and also read my tweets, Facebook page and Vblogs, you’ll get a great sense of what I’m passionate about ie:
• taking personal responsibility
• having passion for what you do
• aligning values
• understanding others
• communication
• authenticity &
• wellbeing.
It should come as no surprise therefore that when working with teams, and procurement teams in particular, that these subjects feature often when helping teams realise their potential and get back on track.
2012-01-13 09:22 - 242 reads
Earlier this week I tweeted that 'it's in all the ways we can't see that we make the biggest difference'.
2011-08-11 11:02 - 379 reads
Following on from my last blog on not speaking ill of others recent examples of the different ways we can view good and bad had me considering the helpfulness of those terms.
One key conversation was with a friend about being a ‘good person’ vs a ‘bad person.’
2011-07-26 19:38 - 842 reads
Images:
I saw a tweet the other day that said “Don’t speak ill of others – write it in the sand by the water’s edge.” Which I paid attention to for reasons that become clear if you visit the #landscaping your life facebook page which the photo above was taken for.
What interested me on Sunday, as I took the picture and posted it on Twitter, was how apt it was for twitter that day. My twitter feed was full of people speaking ill of those that were making the headlines over the weekend.
2011-07-25 17:53 - 542 reads
Images:
My favourite phrase is by Guillaume Apollinaire and says:
"Come to the edge" he said.
They said "We are afraid"
"Come to the edge" he said.
They came. He pushed them.
And they flew.
2011-07-20 17:32 - 699 reads -
The other week I caught myself blogging “if we spend only 5% of our time doing things we enjoy it shouldn’t come as a surprise if we’re not happy.” It seemed such an obvious statement. I started wondering if there was anything else obvious I was missing? A recent app called Mappiness came to the rescue in helping me determine the blindingly, and yet not so (If I go on what I am and am not doing), obvious.