Posts Tagged ‘Intero’

Thoughts on Leadership: Kevin Moles

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This post is dedicated to my friend and partner, Kevin Moles. He has left us all too soon.

There are a few defining moments in a lifetime, and Kevin Moles has played a pivotal role in more than one of mine. We met in Sunnyvale, CA at Inverness School when Kevin was in the 2nd grade, I in the 3rd grade and Bob Moles was in the 4th grade. We even played on the same Metro Little League team. Kevin taught me a great deal in my early years as a manager for Contempo Realty, and we later became business partners. In the early days of Intero, Kevin led with his own brand of compassionate, cowboy management. In his honor, I offer reflections on leadership lessons learned from Kevin Moles. May they become life lessons for us all.

  1. Loyalty
    The first trait that comes to mind when I think of Kevin is loyalty. Kevin was a loyal friend and business partner, and he engendered a unique loyalty from his agents. Larry Klapow, Intero San Mateo, remembers Kevin as a competitor:  “As a brand new manager for Coldwell Banker in Morgan Hill, I could never recruit from Kevin’s office. And later, when Coldwell Banker acquired Contempo and I was promoted to Regional Manager overseeing Kevin, he treated me so well and so decent.”
  2. Family
    For years, Kevin created a family culture in his office. There have been second generation real estate careers launched through Kevin’s real estate family. As an employee and family member of the Intero Morgan Hill office, Teressa Francis, Intero HQ, spent time over the weekend reminiscing, “No one could keep us together like Kevin – he kept us tight, inspired us, and created a family – he was always there for everyone.”
  3. Courage
    We all have to take leaps of faith from time to time. When Kevin opened the first Intero office in late October 2002, he couldn’t be sure who would come. His loyal following is legendary, but Kevin first had to be the kind of person who would have the courage to make the leap.
  4. Philosophy
    In so many ways Kevin and I were different. However, we bonded over the teachings of Wayne Dyer, Deepak Chopra & Robin Sharma. Kevin was a thinker and a student of human nature. I’ll never forget the time when we had coffee and spent several hours discussing “The Monk Who Sold His Ferrari” by Robin Sharma.
  5. Work Hard/Play Hard
    Kevin had an old school work ethic, and at the same time whenever a humorous diversion was needed, Kevin was first to step up. Jerry Kiss, Intero Gilroy, says “If he ever had a question about a legal issue and didn’t want to speak to an attorney, Kevin always gave the best advice – he always had a solution.” On the flip side, John Thompson, Intero Los Altos, remembers “Back in the day, before Intero, if I was going to any boring, corporate event, I was always hoping that I was sitting next to Kevin. Number one, I would be getting in trouble by doing so, and, number two, Kevin made getting in trouble enjoyable.”
  6. Compassion
    Anyone who has spent time in the Morgan Hill office knew Kevin’s door was open. Ben Bruno, Intero Morgan Hill, remembers Kevin’s generous spirit. “Kevin was always first in line with his wallet, time, and counseling. I was able to come to him for anything, and after he was done, I would walk away with my head held up high. If you were lucky enough to have spent any amount of time with Kevin, he touched you, moved you, and caused you to be a better person because of your relationship with him.” Tom Tognoli, Intero Saratoga, remembers “The best bear hug – Kevin would let you know how one felt.”
  7. Natural Strength
    One of the characteristics I admired most in Kevin was his natural strength. This isn’t something you develop in the gym. It comes from a life lived, with ups and downs. Renee Kunz, Intero Hollister, says “Kevin had the ability to greet you with a smile and his boots; I will always remember him wearing his boots. Those boots did a lot of walking – he was a great man.”

There can be no doubt that Kevin Moles was an original, who has had an impact on so many – family, friends, and colleagues. Smart, funny, resourceful, and tuned in, Kevin will be remembered for his larger than life personality, as a rebel with a quiet strength that encouraged others to stand taller.

I will miss my friend, Kevin Moles.

“Here’s to the crazy ones, the misfits, the rebels, the troublemakers, the round pegs in the square holes … the ones who see things differently – they’re not fond of rules, and they have no respect for the status quo. … You can quote them, disagree with them, glorify or vilify them, but the only thing you can’t do is ignore them because they change things. … They push the human race forward, and while some may see them as the crazy ones, we see genius, because the people who are crazy enough to think that they can change the world, are the ones who do.” – Steve Jobs


Thoughts on Leadership: Winston Churchill and the 7 Steps to Leadership Success

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“We make a living by what we get, but we make a life by what we give.” – Winston Churchill

I have set off for a 10-day tour to promote the Intero brand in England, the Netherlands, Italy and Spain, where I’ll spend some time with my daughter Alex who’s taking a school semester in Barcelona. Since I was in London first, I thought it would be appropriate to devote this week’s Thoughts on Leadership to Winston Churchill.

During my sightseeing of London, I visited a historic museum where I came across a sculpture of Churchill.

As Prime Minister of Great Britain, Winston Churchill guided the nation through World War II with courage and strength. He gave hope to a hopeless nation during the darkest of times, and was instrumental in turning the tides of the battle against the Axis Forces in Europe.

Europe had succumbed to Hitler; the British people wanted “appeasement” to avoid devastation. Britain had experienced some major military defeats. However, Churchill had not yet gained agreement from the U.S. to enter the war. Yet, he inspired a nation, perhaps the world, to continue to endure the suffering and fight on.

Churchill inspired confidence in the ability to win. He inspired people to make unusual sacrifices to achieve his well-communicated vision. His leadership style and skills were brilliant, and exemplified seven steps to leadership excellence:

  1. Elegant and flexible communication. Churchill’s passion and authenticity when addressing parliament and the public are the traits for which he is most remembered.
  2. Coaching and mentoring. Churchill’s team comprised all of Britain in a difficult and dangerous time in history.
  3. Resolving challenges, conflict, complaints and issues. Churchill confronted each challenge that he met with intelligence and a level head. His job was to build relationships, communicate with the people of Britain and creatively solve problems.
  4. Focus. From the beginning, Churchill passionately opposed Hitler and the Nazi philosophy. He maintained unwavering focus on Hitler’s defeat during the war, and every plan and strategy that he put into place reflected this goal.
  5. Beliefs and values. Churchill was able to focus clearly because he deeply understood his own beliefs, values and the philosophy of the Allies and democracy.
  6. Innovation and creativity. Churchill’s strategies were innovative and bold, earning him the nickname, “The British Bulldog,” by the Russian dictator Stalin.
  7. Go for gold. Churchill was as bold as they come. It was aim and aim high for him.

Churchill was the lion who roared when the British Empire needed him most. He was never reckless, especially when the lives of British men were at stake. He was bold, strong and fearless in his commitment to his goal.

Consider the seven principles as you face challenges in your own leadership pursuits. Lead and lead well.

As Churchill said, “Success is not final, failure is not fatal: it is the courage to continue that counts.”


Thoughts on Leadership: Al Davis – The Leader behind the Silver and Black

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“Just win, baby.” –Al Davis

Controversial and combative are two words often used to describe Al Davis, the principal owner of the Oakland Raiders who died Oct. 8. He was much more than that – a creator, a builder and a dedicated believer in his team. His story as he described it was a “tunnel life” focused on football.

“He was my best friend,” said former Raiders Coach John Madden. “It’s Al Davis. Al Davis doesn’t die. Just the shock of it. Even though you could see him and knew he was sick and he was failing, he is a fighter, he fights that, you know he was gonna beat it.”

Davis died a legend, even as he led a struggling organization. His Raiders, a dominant force from the mid-’60s through the mid-’80s, hadn’t recorded a winning season in 10 years. Their last Super Bowl victory occurred when he was a “mere” 54 years old. At 82, many fans and critics felt he’d lost his touch, that he had held on to his power for too long.

Davis led the Raiders for all but three of the team’s 52 seasons as coach, general manager or owner. Under this leadership, the Raiders won three Super Bowls and 15 AFC-West divisional titles. He was an ambitious and driven leader who pushed for greatness, victory and dominance. He could be abrasive and demanding, and always expected blind loyalty. His well-known catch phrase was “Don’t adjust. Just dominate.”

Davis took on the established order, attacking the NFL. He created an image of the Raiders as aggressive, nasty and powerful. He was behind the selection of a pirate logo and silver and black color scheme. Davis is also credited with hiring the first black and Hispanic head coaches in the NFL. He also recently appointed the first female CEO.

As a pro football team owner, Davis was often involved in details and decisions atypical for such a figure. This appeared to some to work poorly later in his career as he was criticized for poor personnel selection, feuding with star players, and an inability to retain head coaches. He was thought by many to be a stubborn, eccentric old man who couldn’t accept that his best leadership years had passed.

Nevertheless, as argumentative as Davis could be, his career as outlined in his New York Times obituary holds lessons for any manager looking for an example of how and how not to lead change.

Leadership lessons:·

  • Be clear in your mission. “Just win, baby!” was the Raider’s motto. Respect was not something Davis craved for his team. He wanted others to fear him, and in part it led him to design the Raider’s colors and logo.
  • Know the game. Davis played football in college and began as an assistant upon graduation. He served as an assistant to the legendary Sid Gilman who coached the San Diego Chargers and from 1963 (except for a short time in 1966 when he was commissioner of the American Football League), he was either coach or owner of the Oakland Raiders.
  • Promote talent. Al Davis was a shrewd judge of football management potential. He promoted John Madden to head coach and he piloted the Raiders to their first Super Bowl title. Such was his push for talent that Davis hired the first Hispanic coach, Tom Flores, and the first black head coach, Art Schell.
  • Stand up for what you believe. Davis was head coach of the Oakland Raiders from 1963 to 1966, but gave it up to serve as the commissioner of the American Football League, which was the upstart to the lordly National Football League. Under his watch, the AFL gathered NFL stars and drove up signing bonuses for college players.

Like all leaders Al Davis was not perfect, and very often his imperfections were more evident, but he built a sustainable football franchise and its value has only risen with the times.

“He was a pioneer,” said Jim Plunkett, who won two Super Bowls with the Raiders. “He did so many things. He was a coach, he was the commissioner of the AFL, became the owner of the Raiders and he ran that club the way he saw fit. He brought in players that everyone else was discarding, including me, and he made it work.”


Thoughts on Leadership: 5 Leadership Skills to Learn from ‘Moneyball’

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Last week I went to see “Moneyball,” a great baseball movie starring Brad Pitt that tells the story of the 2002 Oakland A’s. Pitt plays Billy Beane, the GM of the A’s that led the team to win 103 games, including an unprecedented 20 in a row, the longest streak in American League history, despite having the lowest payroll in the major leagues and a lineup full of cast-offs and undervalued players.

Season after season, Beane would watch teams with deeper pockets steal his star players. When he realized that he couldn’t compete with the New York Yankees’ payroll, he decided he needed to change the way you evaluate talent and change the way the game was won. He needed to re-imagine the game so that it couldn’t be bought and so that he could compete on a playing field that wasn’t level.

What I like most about this movie which is based on a true story, are the leadership lessons, which can be applied to any business:

  • Do not prematurely resolve tension. Billy refused to accept solutions from his scouts and assistants that were based on the old way of doing things. He may not have had his own solutions in the beginning, but he held the tension. He didn’t give up in the face of conflict every time he contradicted the so-called “experts.”
  • Staying in the fire focuses your attention on outside-the-box solutions. Billy met a young Yale economics graduate who was using sophisticated mathematical models to recruit and draft young players. Billy hired him after the young graduate confessed that according to his model, Billy himself got drafted way too high, and got paid way too much as a young major leagues player.
  • It’s not about you. Billy was functioning from a higher principle than ego. He really wanted to change how the players were evaluated and in turn how the game was won.

The start of the 2002 season was an absolute disaster for the Oakland A’s. The team of no-name players constantly lost and took a lot of criticism. Billy’s own team manager refused to follow his directions and repeatedly started their one star player. Reporters, commentators, sports talk show hosts, and fans that called into the shows backed the manager and consistently blamed Billy.

How did Billy get through this rough start? He traded the A’s one star player just before a game, which meant that the manager had to go with the game plan and play the percentages. Then, he fired their head scout who refused to make the necessary adjustments.

  • It’s obvious, but sometimes leaders need to make bold and unpopular decisions, and then stick with them. Very few of us are willing to make these kinds of decisions. This can be a very painful, but necessary, period in a leader’s evolution.

What was Billy’s model? There were many mathematical variables, but the single one he chose to focus on was called “on-base percentage” (OBP). This means that by whatever means, whether by taking a walk, getting hit by a pitch, or hitting singles, the player gets to first base. If you don’t have men on base, there’s no way to score runs. This variable defined the A’s strategy and the one thing they would focus on, given their limited resources.

  • Do one thing very well. Billy hired a pudgy Triple A player who was virtually unnoticed by big leagues. But when they crunched the numbers, this guy knew a ball from a strike and got on base more than anybody else. With this one big thing in mind, they coached every player on how he could improve his on-base percentage (OBP).

Suddenly, the season started to turn around. Everybody was puzzled except for Billy. The A’s began their winning streak that helped them win their division. They lost in the playoffs, but the model had shifted permanently. Billy’s manager got the credit. But it wasn’t about who got the credit. After the season finished, the Boston Red Sox approached Billy with the biggest offer in the history of the game for GMs. He turned it down. It really wasn’t about the money. The Red Sox, who hadn’t won the World Series since 1903, won the World Series two years later using Billy’s method.

So, here’s the question I want to leave you with: If you had to choose one variable, Billy’s equivalent of on-base percentage (OBP) for your business, what would it be?

For my business, what resonated well with me in 2009, after two of the most challenging years in the history of real estate, was that I was faced to reevaluate how we were recruiting and retaining agents. I discovered an equation for this method. I tracked the total closed company dollar from agents recently recruited and the total closed company dollar from agents who had left the company, to arrive at a total net worth company dollar ratio. The end result, recruiting and retaining productive agents was the key to success not the quantity of agents.

So, if you had to organize around a single big thing, coach toward it, take criticism for implementing it, what would it be?


Cool Apps: Penultimate Offers Easier Note Taking on iPad

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Probably the greatest thing about an iPad is the direct hand-to-screen interaction it allows you. It’s why I love stumbling across great apps that really take this ability to the next level and allow me to be more productive.

Enter Penultimate, an app built for iPad that essentially gives your finger the same power as pen and paper, with a few more perks.

For instance, you can import photos and images onto your notebook pages, from your photo library or from your iPad’s camera (if you have an iPad 2). You can move, resize and write on the images.

I see a few great uses for this in real estate:

  • Take notes while touring properties with your clients. Remember the details that your client’s really liked simply by taking a picture and adding a notation. Careful note taking and observation can often help you better figure out how to help your clients find the home they’ve been looking for, rather than continue to see properties that don’t quite match – wasting your time and theirs.
  • Take notes while on broker tour. A picture can capture a home much better than simple notes on a scratch pad. Now imagine being able to take a picture and write down a few details to remember, all in one place.
  • Take notes while on inspection. This is a definite potential wow moment for your client too when you come back and show them pictures and notes to help remember details of specific inspection items that need follow-up.

All this and it’s as an organic experience as using pen and paper to capture your thoughts – except that your odds of losing it are much lower.

Penultimate costs $1.99, and can be downloaded from the iTunes app store.


Thoughts on Leadership: Teaching Others How to Accept Change

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Last week, we looked at how the greatest leaders are those who can adapt to change. This week is a further look at how leaders need to concentrate on having their people go from change avoidance to change acceptance.

A great example is found in the classic book, “Who Moved My Cheese?” Author Dr. Spencer Johnson tells a simple but powerful story about four characters in a “maze” who are obsessed with finding “cheese.” Two of the characters are mice named Sniff and Scurry and two are “little people,” Hem and Haw, who are as small as mice but have a very different approach to finding cheese. The “cheese” is a metaphor for anything we want or desire in life. It could be a great job, a terrific company with flowing profits, or the relationship of your dreams. The “maze,” says Johnson, is “where you look for what you want—the organization you work in or the family or community you live in.”

Change is the only constant in business and in life, yet all four characters in the book see it very differently. The mice expect it, revel in it and actually figure out how to have fun looking for new cheese as the old cheese disappears. However, Hem and Haw seem constantly frustrated, resentful and angry. But the “cheese” they were convinced they earned and owned is no longer where they expected it to be. Johnson explains, “It would all be so easy if you had a map to the maze. If the same old routines worked. If they just stopped moving ‘the cheese,’ but things keep changing.”

The simple story of “Who Moved My Cheese?” reveals profound truths about change that give people and organizations a quick and easy way to succeed when change happens. Change can be a blessing or a curse, depending on your perspective.

I was a co-owner of Contempo Realty in 1997 when we sold our company to NRT, what is now known as Realogy. I was surprised and caught off guard when they announced to us that our new brand would be Century 21. This was an unexpected change and quite frankly stunned most of us as we all presumed the transition would be to Coldwell Banker. Uncertain of this new adventure and what operations would be like moving forward, we knew that wishful thinking was no substitute for a strategic plan. In order to compete as our new brand we had to sharpen our skills and work at a higher level.

Looking back today, I see that it was a blessing in disguise. To help employees accept the big changes that were happening around them, I gave each employee the book “Who Moved My Cheese?” My intent was for each of them to understand the message within the book, that everyone can view change as a blessing if they understand the nature of cheese and the role it plays in their lives. I wanted each one of them to seek out new opportunities and quit the “it’s-not-fair” attitude and instead seek opportunity.

In the story, the characters are faced with unexpected change. Eventually, one of them deals with change successfully, and writes what he has learned from his experience on the maze walls. When you come to see “The Handwriting on the Wall” you can discover for yourself how to deal with change and enjoy more success and less stress in your work and in your life.

Resistance to change is a dead-end street. “Who Moved My Cheese?” provides a simple, powerful message to the person confronted with unwelcome change.

Learn to think more like a mouse. Don’t depend upon the status quo. Realize change happens and circumstances, which may have favored you in the past, will change in the future. Accept that you can’t control change and are not entitled to things remaining the same.

While there’s no single way to deal with change, the consequence of pretending change won’t happen is always the same: The cheese runs out.

“Who Moved My Cheese?” is a rare book that can be read and understood quickly by everyone who wants to succeed in changing times.


Morning Mojo: Be 110% Committed

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If you have ever played a contact sport in your life like football or rugby, you know that a sure fired way to get hurt is by not playing full out. Not going 110%. Not being 110% engaged. In contact sports you are either doing the hitting or you’re getting hit. It is pretty much that simple.

It is really the same thing with most everything in life with the exception being that you can usually at least walk off the field in most other things in life, unlike in contact football or rugby where they cart you off on a stretcher. That is the good thing and the bad thing. The good thing is we can go through the motions giving it a half hearted effort and not really get hurt. Unfortunately we don’t really get anywhere because the pain of not being 110% committed and focused is most of the time not immediately felt. It builds up over time and we get mortally injured slowly and don’t even realize it is happening until it is too late.

Most people just want to dip their toes in the water with things in life when what we really need to do is dive in! You see it every day – people showing up but not going full out. It will be the difference between winning and losing. The good thing is most people go through life only playing half speed. So if you go 110% you will not only score, but you will CRUSH IT and win!!

Week three of the NFL season is in the books, so do like they do in the pro’s with everything you do in life…drop the hammer and go 110%.

Score!!!!


Consigliere Files: Sock Puppeting

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John Mackey, the chief executive of Whole Foods Market, is being investigated for securities violations. He isn’t accused of insider trading. He isn’t accused of stealing from investors. Rather, he is accused of pretending to be someone else online to deceptively bolster his own image and that of his company. He is accused of “sock puppeting.”

Sock Puppeting

Sock puppeting is the act of creating a fake online identity to praise, defend or create the illusion of support for one’s self, allies or company in order to deceive others. The use of a pseudonym is not all that uncommon and it may seem innocent (Mr. Mackey’s online pseudonym was “Rahodeb,” which is a play on his wife’s name “Deborah”). But when it’s done over the internet with the intent to fool the public into thinking that the speaker is someone distinctly different than the actual speaker, the law is evolving to create liability. Free speech laws protect much of what is said over the internet, but there is a difference between advancing one’s own point of view and deceptively pretending to advance the point of view of another in furtherance of personal interests. This distinction is particularly important for everyday professionals to keep in mind as they promote their services over the internet.

For Mr. Mackey, the SEC is trying to determine whether his posts may have unfairly manipulated the market in some way. Mr. Mackey’s sock puppeting posts are hardly market shakers. In one post, he pretends to be a female who finds Mr. Mackey attractive and finds Mr. Mackey’s chief rival less appealing. As innocent as this might seem, the SEC has taken the stance that Mr. Mackey may have broken the law to the extent that he lied to inflate a positive perception of himself and Whole Foods Market at the expense of competitors.

The problem is not that Mr. Mackey promulgated rumors or divulged inside information (although that is being investigated). The problem is that Mr. Mackey was dishonest and deceptive over the internet, and it unfairly harmed his competition.

More on Mr. Mackey can be found here.

Off Wall Street

Sock Puppeting is not new to local communities. Anonymous posts and the use of pseudonyms are relatively common online and throughout open society. But an innocent nickname or anonymous post becomes sock puppeting once the speaker creates a new identity in order to deceive others and gain an unfair advantage over competition. And for that, sock puppeting rules are likely the next frontier of professional governance.

At present, anyone who creates false online identities in order to give praise to himself or to bash his competitors is probably only flirting with humiliation and ridicule. However, I predict that this activity will carry greater liability in the near future.

A good article on the future of sock puppeting can be found here.


Cool Apps: How and Why to Get Your Facebook Subscribe Button

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Last week, Facebook unveiled a new “Subscribe” button to give users the same sort of one-sided following experience they get on Twitter and Google+. This is a new feature that’s not automatically placed on everyone’s page, which is why agents should take a few moments to understand what it is and how to get it.

The “Subscribe” button is very useful for real estate agents who are using Facebook to interact with clients, potential clients and business partners because it enables you to gain subscribers (aka followers) without having to become friends with them. A lot of people on Facebook don’t necessarily want to be friends with someone they may be doing business with, but would love to see their updates and feeds.

If you’re using Facebook as a profile page and not a business page in which followers simply “like” your page to receive updates, then definitely take a few minutes to install this button. It’s free, and potentially opens up more opportunities to network. It’s actually a nice bridge between having a Facebook profile page and a business page – something that comes up often with agents because you are your business in a sense.

To get your Facebook “Subscribe” button, go to https://www.facebook.com/about/subscribe and click on the “Allow Subscribers” button in the top right corner of the page. That’s it!

As Facebook describes it, “Allowing subscribers is a simple way to broaden your conversation on Facebook, while reserving personal updates for people you know well.”

If you’re using Facebook as your personal and business epicenter, there are a million reasons why you’d want to keep a lot of (if not all) your personal updates from your clients and colleagues. Give it a try and see what happens!


Thoughts on Leadership: Stop Fighting Change

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Successful leadership requires many skills, but one of the most important is learning how to deal with change. Change is a funny thing. We all know it is inevitable, but we often resist it. Great leaders, however, look at change and embrace it. They understand that change, though scary and stressful, creates opportunities. Change can offer a challenge to be more creative, flexible and strategic.

When thinking about change, I often turn to Jack Welch, former CEO of General Electric. Mike Ferry originally introduced me to his inspiring leadership traits. Welch is one of the most well known “big businessmen” of his generation and offers a lot of insight into how successful leaders deal with change. Welch is also interesting to me because when he first joined GE in 1960, he worked as a junior engineer in my hometown of Pittsfield, Mass., making $10,500 a year.

Many may not know this, but Welch was almost fired from GE because he once blew the roof off the factory. Then after a year of hard work, he was not happy with the $1,000 raise he was offered. He felt unappreciated and dissatisfied with GE’s strict bureaucracy after learning that everyone in his department received the same $1,000 raise. He almost quit GE at the time, but was talked out of it by a higher-level supervisor.

Welch went on to be named vice president of GE in 1972. He moved his way up the ranks and eventually was named CEO in 1981. As CEO, he took apart a lot of the earlier management team put together by his predecessor, creating real change from day one.

I model my leadership style after Welch because he focused on the principle, “Embrace change; don’t fear it.” Why fear something you know will happen again and again? That’s no way to live, and definitely no way to run a business.

Change keeps everyone alert and on their toes. It’s the reality of business. Welch was able to turn a struggling, slow-moving corporate giant into a dynamic and growing company. The goal may be the same, never-ending growth but he said that the tools and methods were constantly changing. He encouraged his colleagues to never stop thinking about the need for change. Only through “massive change” could G.E. win, something Welch firmly believed in.

The leaders of many organizations refuse to see the handwriting on the wall and just hope that things will get better. Yet, wishful thinking is no substitute for a strategic plan. Lasting leaders not only come up with real solutions and partnerships, but they also constantly motivate and inspire team members to get past their fears of change and rise to the challenge.

Change isn’t easy. We all seek stability and predictability. But today more than ever change keeps hitting us in the face just when we think we can afford to get comfortable. So stop fighting change. It is no use and complaining isn’t a practical option.

Ask yourself: How are YOU leading your team as well as yourself and facing the constant changes in the “maze” of your life?

The following are each great books written by Welch that I recommend all leaders read for inspiration and insight: “Straight from the Gut,” “Winning, Jack Welch and the GE Way,” “Jack Welch and the 4 E’s of Leadership,” “29 Leadership Secrets,” and “Jack Welch Speaks: Wit and Wisdom from the World’s Greatest Business Leader.”