Author: CB Bowman

  • What is Leadershum?

    What is LeadersHum?

    LeadersHum is a free community that enables global leaders, thinkers, and coaches to voice their opinion through blogs, videos, ebooks, etc. We now have 10,000+ leaders shaping their skills through our platform.

    With the ‘Power List of the Top 200 Biggest Voices in Leadership in 2022’, LeadersHum celebrates distinguished leaders whose contributions to leadership coaching and strategy have made it what it is today.

    Click here for more information:
    https://www.leadershum.com/blog/power-list-of-the-top-200-biggest-voices-in-leadership-in-2022?contentId=61e184a816bd686e4fd735df

  • COVID-19 Terminology

    COVID-19 Terminology
    All of our vocabularies have been extended with the emergence of the 2019 novel coronavirus so AFM has worked on defining some of these new words for you:

    • Asymptomatic: Someone who is showing no signs or symptoms of COVID-19. This does not mean they are not infected
    • Community spread: When the source of someone’s coronavirus infection is unknown and travel is not a factor
    • Contact tracing: The process of identifying, assessing and managing people who have been exposed to COVID-19 to prevent the spread
    • COVID-19: The name of the disease that the novel coronavirus causes. It stands for “COronaVIrus Disease 2019.”
    • Flattening the curve: An attempt to slow the spread of COVID-19 and prevent a dramatic increase of infected individuals to not overwhelm the health care system
    • Incubation time: The amount of time it takes an infected person to start showing symptoms. For COVID-19, this is between two days and two weeks, with an average of five days
    • Isolation: A strict 7-10 day period of no contact for people who are sick until they have been symptom-free for at least 72 hours
    • PCR testing: A testing protocol to identify if you’ve contracted the SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus. This test works by identifying the virus’ DNA through a process called PCR, or polymerase chain reaction. The PCR test looks for telltale markers distinct to this viral strain. The sample can be obtained through a throat or nasal swab.
    • Personal Protective Equipment (PPE): The medical-grade gear health care workers and first-responders wear to protect themselves from getting infected. This includes goggles, face shields, gowns, gloves and masks or N-95 respirators
    • Physical (or social) distancing: Keeping physical distance from others to avoid catching and spreading COVID-19
    • Quarantine: A 14-day period of distancing for people who are not sick, but may have been in contact with someone who was
    • SARS-CoV-2: The official name for the 2019 novel coronavirus virus
    • Safer at home order: The next step in Governor Polis’s plan to “open” the Colorado economy. Polis has detailed a phased approach to re-opening non-essential businesses, restaurants, schools and more with social distancing at 60% – 65%. Check it out here.
    • Shelter-in-place (stay-at-home) order: While this can vary, generally you should stay home except for essential duties like shopping for groceries or prescriptions and minimize contact with others. In Colorado, the recommendation for social distancing was 75% – 80%.
    • Telehealth/virtual visits: Telehealth, or a virtual visit, is a visit type that is done virtually via a computer, phone or tablet
    • Viral shedding: The period of time after the virus has replicated in the host and is being emitted
  • Selling via social media + newsletters

    How to sell online without an online store?

    Selling via social media + newsletters 

    Contents:

    1. 3 ways of selling on Facebook – as an individual +  when you have a business page (Facebook Shop) 
    2. Selling on Instagram

    [SPOILER WARNING: This is a monster-long emails. For more readable Blog versions of this post with screenshots see below:

    Selling via Social Media
    Selling via Newsletters 

    Due to the corona crisis – a lot of business owners who used to sell through a physical store suddenly had to switch to selling online.

    This has proved daunting to a lot of us

    😨

    Setting up an online store is expensive, time-consuming and – unless you’re really tech-savvy – pretty much impossible.

    But worry not –  you don’t have to do it!

    😁

    HOW TO SELL ON FACEBOOK VIA THE FACEBOOK STORE? 

    If you have a Facebook profile (which basically means you’re alive

    😉

    ) and Facebook business page— you can set up a FREE Facebook store to sell your products!

    Yay! There are some conditions you need to meet though:

    • You are allowed to sell physical goods from your Facebook store only — so no digital goods, no downloadables (e.g. ebooks, PDFs – but a physical book is ok ) no courses, and no services
    • You need to have a payment method: a PayPal account, Stripe Account or a bank account you can link to your store
    • If you’re in the US, you need to have a Federal Employer Identification Number (EIN) / Tax ID Number
    • You need to agree to Facebook’s Merchant Terms

    If you’re meeting those conditions, here’s how to set up your Facebook store in steps:

    1. Go to your Facebook business page
    2. Find ‘Shop’ on the tab on the left.
    3. Click on it and then click on ‘Add Product’.
    4. This takes you to a pop-up where you can fill in your product info.
    5. Fill in the popup with relevant information about your product. In the ‘Checkout URL’ field you can put e.g. your PayPal.me link (the link to a personal payment ‘landing page’ that’s connected to your account, takes two clicks to create, and is FREE! How good is that?)
    6. Now simply click “Add Product.”
    7. You can only sell your merchandize locally (and need to ship within 3 working days, and make sure it reaches your customer within 10 working days – via a registered mail or a shipping service that offers tracking – like DPD or TNT.)
    8. If you’re a US seller – you will need to provide which state you’re based in and provide your EIN number.

    And that’s it! You’re all set to start selling on Facebook via your own store!

    Now – in order to make it successful, you still need to do some marketing to drive customers to your Facebook shop.

    This is taken away by the ‘Marketplace‘ feature – where people in your area are actively looking for things to buy from local sellers!

    HOW TO SELL ON FACEBOOK VIA THE FACEBOOK MARKETPLACE

    Facebook Marketplace is the online equivalent of a street market/ local flea market – think London Portobello Road market taken online

    Here’s how to sell on FB marketplace:

    1. Go to the ‘marketplace’ tab on Facebook.
    2. Click on the ‘sell something’ button.
    3. Now, list your product on the marketplace.
    4. You can list the same product in several marketplaces/ share it in relevant groups at the same time!

    HOW TO SELL ON FACEBOOK SIMPLY USING…FACEBOOK POSTS.

    OK, what if you offer services or digital goods which can’t be sold in a Facebook shop or on marketplaces? You can simply offer them in Facebook groups!

    Search for local groups offering corona-related help or simply local buy-and-sell groups, and offer your services there.

    You can arrange to deliver your services online and collect payments via PayPal.me

    HOW TO SELL ON INSTAGRAM VIA INSTAGRAM SHOP
    *(DISCLAIMER: YOU NEED TO HAVE INSTAGRAM BUSINESS ACCOUNT TO DO IT!)

    Here are a few simple steps you need to take:

    1. link your Instagram business profile to your Facebook business page. To do it, go to Instagram >> settings >>“Linked Accounts.” and follow IG’s instructions.
    2. Wait for Instagram’s approval of your store. It may take a few days.
    3. Select the Facebook shop you want to link your Instagram profile to. Go to Instagram >> business settings >> click “Shopping” and select the Facebook shop you want to link.
    4. All your products from FB should sync with your IG shop automatically!
    5. Activate the “Shop” tab on your Instagram profile. You’ll need to post one Instagram shop post at least.

    And that’s it! Your Instagram shop is open for customers now as well! And that’s all for now

    )

    👉 Don’t forget our corona support package with FREE tools and resources for affected businesses!
    …and our Facebook support group!

    Best wishes,

    Emilia
    Postfity Community Manager

    Original Article Appears Here: https://postfity.com/sell-social-media/

  • Widespread hit to profits from COVID-19 signals slow recovery

    The COVID-19 crisis has enormous implications for US corporations. As part of The Conference Board CEO Confidence MeasureTM, CEOs identified the largest impacts the pandemic was having on their businesses. All said they are shifting as many workers as possible to working remotely and drastically reducing business travel. The overwhelming majority, nearly 90 percent, have had their sales and profits negatively affected. This lost revenue will have repercussions on investment activity and productivity, and the impacts could very well endure post-crisis. At the lower end of the scale, 43 percent of CEOs cite cash flow issues as a major concern. If pandemic containment measures are extended beyond May, more businesses may need to address liquidity issues.
  • How to Lead in Time of Crisis: This is the Ultimate Time for Empathy

    By: Urs Koenig Here is what I learned from interviewing 15 leaders over the last 5 days on how to best lead teams and organizations during this time of crisis. What is your take away? What might you add? I would love to hear from you!

    Original: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XAVAoxUp3Pk&t=

  • It is both scary and enlightening that a software guy predicted the Coronavirus virus five years before it happen, yet we never listened. Why?

    It is both scary and enlightening that a software guy predicted the Coronavirus virus five years before it happen, yet we never listened. Why?

    The next outbreak? We’re not ready | Bill Gates

    How we must respond to the coronavirus pandemic| Bill Gates

  • How to keep quarantine from ruining your marriage

    Within hours, I was getting texts. And FB messages. And then a call from a quasi-terrified sounding former student: “Any articles or books you can suggest about how my spouse and I spend the next many weeks together in our tiny apartment without offing each other?”

    Then, as if on cue, my husband of 28 years walks into our kitchen with the mail. Without so much as a wash of the hands or a spray of disinfectant, he casually places the pile — as our pre-pandemic ritual would dictate — on our stainless steel kitchen island.

    “WHAT IN THE HELL ARE YOU THINKING?!” I yelled at him.

    A new chapter in my marriage — and in so many other people’s relationships — is suddenly, and without warning, upon us.

    Hello, quarantine; goodbye, routine.

    Hello, life now filled with work-from-home mandates, surreal new stressors, makeshift computer stations, evaporating personal space, and new negotiations about, well, almost everything.

    It’s clear that there is indeed a new reality for all of us. And it’s not an easy one — marriages and partnerships in practically every country around the world are now under stress.

    But there is hope. Stress doesn’t have to result in a complete systems failure. As a marriage researcher and social scientist who studies and teaches about the micro-dynamics of thriving marriages, I’m happy to share some evidence-based insights that can help you and your partner navigate the weeks and months ahead as your relationship calibrates to this new normal.

    No matter your age, stage of life or length of marriage, we must acknowledge this fact: We’re all experiencing losses at the moment. You are. Your partner is. For some of us, the losses are immediate and frightening, even grave. People are losing their jobs. Their businesses. And some have lost loved ones, friends, neighbors or colleagues.

    For many, the losses in our lives may not be as tangible, but they still hurt. All pain is real pain. In fact, take a moment in the next day, if you can, and ask your partner: “What do you miss most from life ‘before’ quarantine?” No matter their response, you have just one job: Listen with an open heart, do not offer a fix-it response, and then reach out and hold them tight in a big, 60-second-plus embrace.

    The strongest theme emerging among the many couples I’ve talked to the past few weeks is the widespread, unsettling undercurrent of all of these ambiguous losses in our lives. Even the happiest of couples are feeling the weight of financial shifts, dwindling space, and a yearning for the return to old rituals and routines. For many couples, the mundane moments of life “before” have become attractive, almost nostalgic: regular bedtimes, morning commutes, coffee in to-go mugs, end-of-day greetings, day-in-review dinnertime conversations, built-in daily autonomy, and even the predictable irritations of living as a couple. We didn’t know how much we loved how boring it was — and now that we can’t have it, we want it.

    The good news: Once we acknowledge our losses, there is a lot that a couple can do, proactively, to not only survive quarantine but actually thrive through it.

    It starts by shifting your perspective. What if we tried to embrace this new, weird time together as an opportunity or a reset? What if we saw this as a chance to intentionally develop new and improved ways of being with each other? I’ve studied this kind of co-creating in my own research with couples.

    One of the findings is that when you and your partner recognize that you are creators of your own relationship mini-culture — your rituals of connection form the pillars of this culture — then you are more likely to choose, build and sustain them.

    What is a ritual of connection?

    According to researchers like William Doherty, therapist, professor and author of The Intentional Family, a ritual of connection is any way that you and your partner regularly turn toward each other. It could be emotional, physical, spiritual, you name it. They might be so mundane that many couples wouldn’t even call them rituals. It could be the way you greet each other at the end of the day when you reunite after work; the midday text to coordinate kid-pick up; the little prayer you say together before you drift off to sleep; and even the little phrases you use that have private meaning just between you and your spouse. Even a nickname is a tiny verbal ritual; it says to your partner “I know you in a way that no one else does.”

    Research reveals that strong and meaningful rituals build strong marriages. They stitch couples together, giving them a sense of “we have each other’s back” and we’re in this together. And because rituals are rooted in a sense of predictability they are quietly comforting, they can reduce fear and counter stress both on the average day and in times of great uncertainty. Which is precisely what we have at the moment.

    As a relationship ritual researcher myself, it’s been thrilling to hear the way many couples have been using this time as an opportunity to creatively grow new rituals.

    A couple I’ll call Chad and Shawn have established a new rule or “ritual” to help them navigate living and now working in their small apartment. And it’s brilliant. Each spouse has chosen a special sweatshirt — and wearing it comes with a rule. When the other spouse sees you in it, they have to pretend you are invisible. No talking to them, no looking at them, no asking a question. It’s the marriage version of an invisibility cloak, a creative way to build in distance without having to verbally request it.

    Another couple, like some others, are mourning the loss of their old morning routine, now that days/nights/work/leisure blur together without clear boundaries. So after a week or so of angst, they began a new practice. They get dressed in their work clothes, pack their lunches, and kiss each other goodbye. Then each of them walks out the front door, around the block (separately), and then back in the door (separately), ready to begin their work days. They do the same later in the day to mark the end of work and the beginning of family time.

    Many couples are navigating quarantine with school-age or adult children who’ve come home to shelter. Two families separately shared they have instituted “themed dinners” once a week in their homes, with everyone “required” to dress the part. Hawaiian pizza and mai tai, anyone?

    Then there’s this idea, one that I’m strongly suggesting to my own husband we promptly steal. This couple has made two laminated copies of a “one free pass today” card, and it expires at 11:59PM every night. Once a day, you hand it over to your spouse when you’ve done something stupid, said something mean, or forgotten to do something you promised.

    One couple shared a beautiful new ritual that’s emerged since entering quarantine; they call it their “reconciliation walk.” After their workday is over and before they sit down for dinner, they take a stroll around the neighborhood, apologize for “any missteps we had with each other, and then hit reset for the evening.” It works. In fact, in the words of one spouse in this marriage: “by the end of the walk, we are no longer maintaining appropriate social distancing.”

    Another couple has turned to the past for their ritual. They’ve decided to go back and re-read 15-years’ worth of their annual Christmas letters. They said: “We have gone back to when we first got married, and are reading them out loud to our kids who weren’t even around during that time. We laugh, and they ask questions about what things were like.” This same duo has dug out a box of the husband’s grandfather’s letters: “Bob’s grandfather wrote Bob a letter every week for 10 years. We read those as well. His grandfather was a preacher and an incredible man. His letters are uplifting and so wise.”

    Similarly, another couple has pulled out the stash of children’s books — the favorites from when their now-grown children were toddlers. They pick one a night and read it out loud to each other but with a twist. They discuss how the characters in the book are similar to characters in their current, actual lives. What a great, creative conversation-starter — and a great way to learn more about some of the dramas in your spouse’s work life.

    If you don’t have a box of letters or a shelf of kids’ books, no worries. You can invent your own ritual that incorporates a sense of humor and playfulness. Take the couple who has picked a random household object (I wish they had told me what it is; I’m picturing a tiny plastic squishy pig?) and invented a new game. They hide it somewhere in the house each day. If your spouse doesn’t find it, they’re on call to make the cocktails that evening.

    The last example is one that I’ve told my own spouse we are absolutely adopting. Like so many others, this couple found that conflict in their marriage has increased during quarantine, and their own emotional reserves have decreased. So they’ve created a list — a place to “hold” all of their complaints. Their plan is to review the list each weekend. So far, most things on it are being waitlisted for post-quarantine times, but they predict many of these items will be irrelevant and long-forgotten by then. The list is a powerful bit of problem-solving that also gives them somewhere they can safely place their frustrations.

    Couples: What will you do with this weird new time in your life? The research suggests that the tiny things we do can often have a big, positive impact. While you can’t control the world, you can stay home, stay safe and focus on what you can: Each other.

    About the author

    Carol Bruess (rhymes with “peace”) is professor emeritus at the University of St. Thomas, Minnesota; resident scholar at St. Norbert College, Wisconsin; and forever passionate about studying and improving relationships. She is fluent in emoji, loves parentheticals (it’s what all the cool kids are doing), and is happy-dancing her way through empty-nesting (although don’t tell her kids; they think she’s all weepy). Check out her five books and sewing/design shenanigans over at www.carolbruess.com

    Original Appears here: https://ideas.ted.com/how-to-keep-quarantine-from-ruining-your-marriage/?utm_source=recommendation&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=explore&utm_term=ideas-blog-1

  • Two Principles for Leading Your Organization Through the COVID-19 Crisis

    Business leaders are in the midst of a global crisis.

    The challenges facing organizations, employees, and communities are unprecedented, the stakes are high, and certainty is nowhere to be found. Under such staggering circumstances, it is only natural for leaders to feel unprepared to lead capably, nimbly, and honorably.

    “You’re feeling worry, fear, anxiety, pressure, and stress. And these feelings completely overwhelm you. And as a result of basically becoming overwhelmed, you almost become incapacitated,” says Harry Kraemer.

    Kraemer is a former chairman and CEO of the $12 billion global healthcare company Baxter International. In addition to being a clinical professor of leadership at Kellogg, he also is an executive partner with the private equity firm Madison Dearborn. Over the years, he has led through crises small and large—including a tragic crisis involving faulty dialyzers and patient deaths.

    In his view, there are two main things leaders need to understand in a crisis—two mantras, if you will, that offer a calm way forward, no matter what the situation. And, as he has been cautioning boards and management teams repeatedly in the past few weeks, COVID-19 is no exception.

    “Almost every crisis is different. So there’s not a game plan for solving the crisis. However, there is a game plan, in my mind, for how you should approach the crisis,” he says.

    Mantra 1: You’re going to do the right thing, and you’re going to do the best you can do.

    It sounds deceptively simple, so say it again. And again. You’re going to do the right thing. You’re going to do the best you can do.

    After all, that’s all you can do.

    Of course, that’s much more difficult than it sounds, Kraemer acknowledges. You don’t have to figure out what “the right thing” is all on your own. Nobody is smart enough or superhuman enough for that. Instead, surround yourself with people whom you trust and whose values align with yours and with those of the organization. Collectively, you will all determine the right thing—and then do your best to act on it.

    Picture your absolute worst nightmare, he says. For him, it would be learning that a member of his family had become critically ill with the virus; for others, it might be something quite different. Regardless, the way forward is clear: “I’m going to do the right thing, and with a lot of people’s help, I’ll do the best I can do,” he says. “I try to repeat this over and over again. Worry, fear, anxiety, pressure, and stress can be significantly reduced.”

    And by the way, he says, if you start off trying to do the right thing and it turns out it’s the wrong thing, you can adjust. Ego should be removed from the decision-making process; changing your mind is encouraged! “As I told a board earlier today, we’re not trying to be right; we’re trying to do the right thing,” says Kraemer.

    So what does following this mantra look like in practice—particularly when an organization’s values around, say, serving the community, prioritizing safety, and practicing fairness might conflict?

    “Say I’ve got a company with 100 employees,” says Kraemer. “And 50 of them are in cubicles, but 50 of them are literally making the product and they’re on an assembly line on the plant floor. Then COVID-19 happens. What’s the right thing?”

    For the 50 people in cubicles, you may send them home, even if it isn’t strictly fair: it will protect them and make the people on the assembly line safer as well. For the other 50 employees, the decision is harder. Do you need to continue to manufacture at all? If so—perhaps you’re making masks or hospital supplies or other essentials—then are there ways to make the process safer, perhaps by extending the manufacturing line so people can work further apart?

    “That may mean we don’t make as many products. Maybe that means we’re not as efficient. Maybe that means our costs go up. But that’s something we should do because we want to protect our people,” he says.

    Above all, be upfront about these trade-offs, as well as the risk to your employees. “I think what a value-based leader does is not only acknowledge that there is an elephant in the room,” he says. “They turn the floodlights on so everyone can clearly see the elephant.”

    Mantra 2: You’re going to tell people what you know, what you don’t know, and when you’ll get back to them to discuss what you didn’t know before.

    As the contours of the crisis become clearer, the exact communications will obviously change. But the general format will look the same: You’re going to tell people what you know, what you don’t know, and when you’ll get back to them to discuss what you didn’t know before.

    The first part, telling people what you know, is pretty straightforward. For COVID-19, this might require gathering data about your own operations, as well as learning as much as you possibly can about the virus, and the federal, state, and community responses to it. Then, share this information as simply and honestly as you possibly can, even if it is not what people want to hear.

    The second part—letting people know what you don’t know—tends to be even more difficult for leaders. “People will say, well, I don’t know if I want to get everybody together and let them know what I don’t know,” says Kraemer.

    But telling people what you don’t know is the key to building credibility with your stakeholders, he explains. Omit this step, and customers, employees, and others will recognize you aren’t being upfront with them and might assume that you can’t be trusted or the truth is more nefarious than it really is.

    “You’re not giving the people an understanding of what you’re doing and why, so it looks like you’re just jerking everything around and you lose all credibility.”

    Finally, you will need to tell people how quickly you’ll get back to them with any outstanding questions they may have. “We don’t know the answer to that issue yet, but here’s what we’re going to do: we’ll have another conference call or we’ll send out an email tomorrow with an update on what we didn’t know yesterday,” says Kraemer.

    Adhering to this mantra isn’t just about helping others, either, says Kraemer. It’s a good strategy for protecting your own reputation and that of your organization. Without this level of communication, “you’re not giving the people an understanding of what you’re doing and why, so it looks like you’re just jerking everything around and you lose all credibility. And that lack of trust creates chaos. [People] will start to think, ‘Either I’m being lied to, or the people in charge are idiots.’”

    Beyond reputation, the mantra also offers an organizing framework to keep the entire organization on track. “The process, I think has an enormous impact on how you operate as an organization and how you help the organization not get frozen in place with everybody running around like crazy,” he says.

    A failing during the current crisis, in Kraemer’s view, is that too many leaders, including many in the government, haven’t been upfront about the nature of the crisis: exactly what they know, all the things that they don’t, and how they plan to seek additional information and provide citizens with updates in the future.

    The worst-case scenario, he says, is one where people are truly surprised by how events are unfolding. You can’t eliminate surprise, of course, but with strong communication and follow-through, you can minimize it.

    Putting it all together

    Leaders who follow these two mantras closely stand the best chance of emerging from the current crisis with their conscience—and their organization—intact.

    There are some companies and industries that are already handling the crisis in ways that will reflect well on them in the future, says Kraemer. The airlines are bending over backwards to allow people to cancel or change flights without incurring fees, for instance, while Major League Baseball clubs have pledged $30 million dollars to the thousands of ballpark employees who will lose income while the league is on hiatus.

    “It may hurt your profitability in the short term, but the long-term impact is going to be very, very positive because they did the right thing,” says Kraemer.

    This post was originally published in Kellogg Insight here.

    ABOUT THE WRITER
    Jessica Love is editor in chief of Kellogg Insight.

    Photo by Erik Mclean on Unsplash

    Original article appears here: https://harrykraemer.org/2020/03/23/two-principles-for-leading-your-organization-through-the-covid-19-crisis-article/