Friday, September 30, 2016

Raise Your Vocabulary By 400 Words Before Christmas (Day 5)

It's day five already and we have gone through twenty words (some peeps better be feeling smarter!). Please do remember that the only way to benefit from this exercise is to use these words at the slightest opportunity. 

And by the time we get to word three hundred and ninety-five, you'll feel like an Harvard or Yale graduate. Also, don't be selfish ( share with your family, friends and even enemies). Just spread  the love.

Enjoy today's words. 

Please share and drop your suggestions/feedback.







Wednesday, September 28, 2016

Why You Should Hire An Introvert Now


Warren Buffett, Chairman of the Board and CEO of Berkshire Hathaway, poses for a portrait in New York October 22, 2013.Photograph by Carlo Allegri — Reuters

Take a second look at Warren Buffett and the other quiet ones.

Are you a fan of the movies? If so, do you like Tom Hanks, Steve Martin, Emma Watson or Audrey Hepburn? If you’re a fan of television, do you like Courteney Cox, Barbara Walters, and do you miss David Letterman? If you’re a sports fanatic, are you an admirer of legends like Michael Jordan or Larry Bird? In the world of business, do you believe that Warren Buffett, Bill Gates and Mark Zuckerberg have been quite successful? Agree that Abraham Lincoln was one of our best presidents?

Did you know all are or were once introverts? It’s true, and yet as introverts, if you interviewed them, chances are you might have opted to remove them from consideration and move forward with more extroverted candidates. The question is, why?

Think about it. Introverts are stereotypically perceived as quiet and shy, people who don’t like to talk or be around others. Some might more severely define introverts as weird, awkward, aloof, or even rude. If you believe even some of these statements, then chances are when interviewing an introvert you might have been disappointed by their short answers and how they may have appeared nervous. In the end, you probably didn’t hire them.

Not hiring them might have been a big mistake. First of all, most of the behaviors associated with introverts are myths that simply aren’t true. Second, and please refer back to the list of introverts at the beginning of this article, introverts are some of the highest performing people on our planet. Not selecting someone based solely on their interview performance will negatively impact your company’s diversity as well as its overall performance. So it’s clear, if you continue to penalize introverts when hiring, you are making a huge mistake.

Although the world is finally beginning to understand that introversion is not synonymous with shyness and introverts can be strong leaders and very effective employees, many employers are still falling far short in terms of getting introverts through the door. That’s because the deck is heavily stacked against introverts in the traditional hiring process.

In-person interviewers still tend to favor people who engage quickly and energetically in conversation, who make connections (even superficial ones), and whose outgoing nature seems to signal confidence, competence and dedication—all ideal criteria for extroverts. The problem arises when employers fail to separate the signal from the noise. They forget to ask: is this candidate actually the right fit for the position—and a good cultural fit at the organization?

Source:Fortune

Raise Your Vocabulary By 400 Words Before Christmas (Day 4)

I will begin today's post with a quote from Napoleon Hill and it says,
The starting point of all achievement is desire
You want anything in life, you need to have desire for it. A desire that radiates a strong wish, will eventually lead to success. There are a lot of learning points attached to this journey of improving vocabulary by 400 words before Christmas.

It's not just about the words, but the process that you and I go through to becoming better at something. And I think that process is the same in all facets of life. Success is Universal and it takes God, perseverance, hard work... You name it.

Enjoy today's words.





Monday, September 26, 2016

6 ways watching the English Premier League makes you a better leader

Written by
Jahda Swanborough, World Economic Forum Global Leadership Fellow





Amidst all the drama, goals, and penalty shouts, if you’ve been paying attention, this remarkable season in the English Premier League just might have made you a better leader.

As a Global Leadership Fellow with the World Economic Forum*, I learn a lot about leadership in all facets of life. For me, like millions of others, this includes my weekly fix of the English Premier League. Here are six ways this season has taught us to be better leaders – whether of sporting teams, in workplaces, or even within our families.

1. Don't shift the goal posts
By now, most people know the Leicester City story – from bottom of the table with 9 games to go last season to champions this season. When Claudio Ranieri was appointed manager in the off-season, he set one goal for his players – avoid relegation.
By the middle of this season, his team were top of the table. Fans and pundits alike starting asking ‘could they actually win the league’? After all, they’d lost just once all season. Ranieri refused to buy into the hype:

"I told the players we need another five points (to stay up)… I put a target of 40 points at the beginning of the season and when we achieve this we change the target.”

Only once that first goal had been reached – and properly celebrated - did he set a new goal for his players.

Ranieri wasn’t lacking ambition; he was providing consistency and predictability. By sticking with the original goal he took the pressure of his players. They knew what was expected of them and what ‘success’ looked like.

2. Leadership is a role, not a status
Club captains play important leadership roles, but often they are not the best player or even the most important one.

This season, the 100 most-used players in the premier league averaged around 30% more playing time than the 20 club captains. Only 8 of the 20 club captains even played enough to be in that top 100.

Whether through injury, age, or tactical fit, the group of club captains played less than many other players. They had to lead wherever they found themselves – on the field, on the bench, in the dressing room, or on the training ground.

A formal ‘leadership’ position doesn’t make you the ‘best’ or ‘most important’ person and it certainly isn’t a determinant of your worth as a person, player, or employee. It’s a role.

3. Cultural ‘fit’ matters
Leadership happens in a broader context or ‘ecosystem’ that usually exists before the leader comes along. In the premier league, it includes the fans, the players, the owners, the sponsors, the staff, the history of the club, and even the city. Together these things form the fabric of the team’s culture.

Successful leaders both understand the culture and are aligned with it.

Think back to Manchester United over the last two decades (Liverpool and City fans, bear with me). It had a history of arrogance on and off the pitch and it was often matched by results. Fans, staff, sponsors, and players bought into that swagger and began to embody it. Sir Alex Ferguson revelled in this culture. Few would say the same about his successors in David Moyes (an understated, no-frills style) and Louis van Gaal (a defence-first, technical tactician). It’s no wonder the club now seems to at odds with itself.

Each season we see a steady stream of player transfers and managerial changes at clubs – most of which go through a rigorous scouting and recruitment process – yet while some are successful, others are ‘flops’.

As a leader, don’t expect to excel everywhere. Find your niche. Some teams and projects will just gel. Others won’t. When you find a culture that fits, you’re more likely to give it your all, be successful, and enjoy the journey.

4. Leadership is about people - and people need trust to perform consistently
Chelsea won the league last year and they were unplayable at times. This year – with mostly the same players – they will finish 9th at best. Several factors contributed to their demise, but at the heart of it all was the fact their manager, Jose Mourinho, (who once proclaimed himself ‘the special one’) lost the trust of his players.

In one incident early in the season he publicly criticised the team doctor for being too quick to run on the field to treat one of their most valuable and important players. Sceptics say Mourinho was just diverting attention away from a poor on-field performance. Regardless, it didn’t go down well in the dressing room. Many players had formed good relationships with their doctor, to the point some attended her wedding even after she was no longer working for the club. A few months later the team was in disarray and performing terribly. Mourinho – one of the most successful managers in the modern game – was fired less than a year after his team won the league.

No matter how good you are or how much success you’ve had - trust matters. In an interview with Harvard Business Review, Gianpeiro Petriglieri, Associate Professor at INSEAD, put it like this:

“When you’re in a powerful position, there are lots of ways you can get things done. You can coerce, manipulate, deceive, threat, force. But unless you have the trust of people who are supposed to follow you, you’re not actually leading.”

5. Good leaders know how to manage both themselves and others
Managing one’s own emotions and biases is essential as a leader - it fosters an open mind and the ability to see opportunities where others cannot. It also helps you avoid common mistakes.

Consider this familiar scenario: a new manager comes in to a team and observes the players, usually forming an initial opinion based on ‘intuition’ or just a couple of interactions. From then on, the manager only seems to see things that reinforce their early judgement (in behavioural economics this is called ‘confirmation bias’). If that judgement was negative, the manager will start treating the player differently (usually subconsciously. Often that treatment will actually push the player into more of the behaviour/mindset the manager doesn’t like. Very soon the player is ‘out of form’ and the team has lost a previously valuable asset.

This pattern has been called the ‘set up to fail syndrome’. It is found in relationships in sporting teams, workplaces, families, and social groups the world over. Overcoming it requires managers who are self-aware enough to catch themselves from perpetuating a dynamic for failure and changing the conditions so the other person can thrive.

6. It’s not about you. Leaders are never bigger than the team
From time to time, leaders will get the glory. But most of the time leadership is a slog. It’s tough. And it’s often thankless. Good leaders understand that they are stewards of the resources, time, and talents of those they lead. They are not the ‘top dog’, but rather the one responsible for ensuring everyone else thrives while moving toward a common goal. They make everyone else better.

Even if the leader happens to be the smartest or most skilled person in the room (or in the stadium), they are rarely the only smart person in the room. Good leaders know this. They draw on the experience, skills, and ideas of the whole team. This is their true skill.

Managers don’t win premier league games, players do.

In the cut-throat world of the premier league, leaders come and go rapidly. This season, 9 premier league managers have been fired or resigned and at least 2 more will change in the off season. Last season it was 11 and the year before that 13. This is out of just 20 teams.
In the world outside of football, our leadership roles may last longer, but none last forever. As another season comes to an end, perhaps it’s a timely moment to consider what we are doing with the leadership roles currently entrusted to us.

Remembering A Tragedy

Written by  Alphonsus Eyinnaya
Image result for Munich Air Disaster
Source: www.express.co.uk

Only days ago, players and officials of Heartland of Owerri were involved in a car accident in Maiduguri on their way to honor a league match. It brought back painful memories of a very similar event that happened on this same month 22 years ago. Ides of September?

It was also a Sunday like this. Glued to our portable Sharp black and white television that late evening, I heard the Newscaster announce on the 7pm News that an aircraft carrying players and crew of Iwuanyanwu Nationale (now Heartland FC) had crashed on their way back from a continental game against Esperance of Tunis which they lost 3-0.

My blood ran cold.

Normally such news items were usually broken first on national news but I don’t know why it was first reported on NTA Channel 8, Enugu. Anyways, the coming days saw the news covered ad nauseam on state and national TV.

Of the 40 souls aboard the ill-fated Oriental Airlines BAC 111, 5 People perished, including 2 players; Goalkeeper Uche Ikeogu and Eghomwanre Omale.

The death toll would definitely have been higher had the pilot, Capt Amaechi Chukwuenyi not ensured that the plane’s fuel was emptied midair before allowing the plane to crash-land at Aguennar airport, Algeria. This ensured that the aircraft didn’t burst into flames when it crashed.

While one is tempted to tow the line of complaining that no monument or semblance of remembrance has been erected for the victims of this unfortunate mishap, 22 years after, there is the wider narrative of sharing our own story.

A similar event involving Manchester United on 6 February 1958 known as the Munich Disaster enjoyed far greater coverage and outpouring of sympathy. There is a site exclusively dedicated to celebrating the lives and times of the 7 players who lost their lives in that crash.

Yet we complain of the way the Western media distorts our stories, telling only our “bad” side without knowing that the West have mastered the art of telling their stories assertively and consistently.

They are quite adroit at projecting a positive image of their peoples and cultures. Even when the news is negative, they still find a way of telling it in a manner that would evoke sympathy and universal compassion. Where are the families of those who lost their lives in that mishap? No journalist has ever thought of going to interview them to at least get their background stories.

Search on Google for this incident and you’d find hazily dark alleys and dodgy dead ends of information pertaining to it. The picture used for this post is that of the Munich Air Disaster as there is no visible documented evidence of the occurrence of the Iwuanyanwu disaster. Maybe it should be named,, the Iwuanyanwu Disaster. Iwuanyanwu Disaster.

Globally celebrated author, Chimamanda Adichie encapsulates this idea of native storytelling brilliantly in a landmark speech she delivered at a TED Event titled The Danger of a Single Story. In it she asserts amongst other truisms that he who tells the best story wins. If we don’t tell our story, no one else will because they are busy telling theirs.

As for the Oriental Airlines BAC 111 crash involving Iwuanyanwu Nationale (sorry I prefer this name to the banal and bland Heartland), there is no Wikipedia page documenting that incident, neither can you find any picture of the plane wreckage, nor the faces of the two unfortunate players that lost their lives in that crash.

Don’t forget that they were on a quest to win the then seemingly elusive Sekou Toure Cup, the African Cup of Champions cup for Nigeria, a trophy finally won by neighbors Enyimba in 2003, thus ending the country’s 39-year wait for the trophy. No government at the federal level has deemed it fit to honor or remember them, nor even the Imo State government. I doubt too if there was any form of compensation to the victims and survivors, except maybe from the then club financier, Chief Emmanuel Iwuanyanwu.

Iwuanyanwu Nationale (now Heartland FC) have won the Nigerian Professional League title four times; (1988, 1989, 1990 and 1993), the FA Cup (1988 and 2009) and have featured in 2 African Cup of Champions cup finals(now CAF Champions League), losing on both occasions to Entente Setif of Algeria (1988) and TP Mazembe of Congo DR (2009). Here is the list of the 35 survivors and 5 victims of the crash. At least if not for anything, to honor their memory;
Victims
1. Uche Ikeogu (Goalkeeper)
2. Eghomware Aimuanmwosa (Defender)
3. Captain Amaechi Chukwuenyi (Pilot)
4. Captain Chinedu Ogbonna (Co-Pilot)
5. Obiageli Ezeh (Air Hostess)
Survivors
1. Mike Onyemachara (Captain)
2. Mike Obi
3. Udeagha Agbrakwe
4. Aliyu Muzambilu
5. Obinna Obiaka
6. Uche Agbo
7. Tanko Saleh
8. Julius Akpele
9. Ating Ating
10. Mba Agbai
11. Ibe Johnson
12. Emeka Lucky
13. Jimoh Okwudili
14. James Enagwuna
15. Tony Nwaigwe
16. Yakubu Umar
17. Christian Chukwu (Coach)
18. Alphonsus Dike (Assistant Coach)
19. Uche Ejimofor (Team Official)
20. Amanze Uchegbulam (Team Official)
21. Ignatius Okehialam
22. Steve Olarinoye
23. Bola Oyeyode
24. Olumide Akande (National Sportslink)
25. Banji Ola (Sporting Champion)
26. Atu Mike
27. Edo Aduba
28. Raymond Emiowele
29. Valentine Ogos
30. Jonathan Nyingida
31. Uzoma Uzodike
32. Edward Ezenwa
33. George Iheanacho
34. Caroline Nwosu
35. Alhaji Abdullahi Matori (Head of Delegation)

THE NIGHT NIGERIA DIED

  Written by Alphonsus Eyinnaya

There was a cacophony of voices on that warm Summer evening in Ibadan. A flurry of movement by men in Military Khaki. The subjects of their activity were three men who had been stripped of every piece of clothing. Each had their hands tied behind their backs with telephone cables as well as their ankles.

Two of those men, Lt Andrew Nwankwo and Col Adekunle Fajuiyi were stripped completely naked while the third man, the huge and intimidatingly bulky Lt Gen JTU Aguiyi-Ironsi was spared such indignity. He was allowed to have just his trousers on. The trio had been badly beaten with horse-whips and the butts of guns that they could hardly stand.

Who was at the head of this execution squad? Lt Col TY Danjuma.

A mutiny, fueled by the to-this-day-disputed but erroneous belief that the 15 January 1966 coup was carried out by the Igbos, had been simmering over the last 3-4 months.

Danjuma had surrounded the Government House, Ibadan with a detachment of troops. The HOS was quartered there. He climbed upstairs and by subterfuge asked the ADC to the HOS to lead him to where his boss was so that he could pledge allegiance to him as there was a coup going on.

Once Danjuma saw the HOS, he was quick to dispossess the big man of what many believed was the source of his power; a crocodile-shaped staff.

Having disarmed him, he proceeded to question him about his role in the January putsch, one which the now subdued Ironsi denied involvement in. Unconvinced, Danjuma arrested his own boss and ordered him to be securely handcuffed. The three men were then thoroughly beaten before been bundled into vehicles to be executed.

10km outside Ibadan, the convoy of cars stopped and the 3 men were pushed out and leathered again with horse-whips by junior officers doped to the eye-balls with Indian Hemp.

As they were marched into the bush to be executed, Col Adekunle Fajuiyi, the kind and loyal host who insisted on dying with his boss, Aguiyi-Ironsi rather than give him up, stumbled and fell. He was exhausted from the torture that had been meted out to him.

Danjuma ordered his execution and a burst of gunfire ended his life. Among those who were in that execution squad that night was a certain Jeremiah Useni.

At that time, Lt Bello, ADC to the now late Fajuiyi signaled Lt Andrew Nwankwo, ADC to Ironsi to run. When that happened, he raised an alarm that one of their prisoners had escaped. He pointed to a direction opposite to where Nwankwo had run to.

Angered that their search for Nwankwo was fruitless, they returned to their only surviving captive; the Head of State and Commander in Chief of the Nigerian Armed Forces, Lt General JTU Aguiyi-Ironsi.

With eyes reddened with hours of marijuana-smoking and hearts darkened by ethnocentric hate, they turned the nozzles of their Machine guns on to their boss and emptied a staccato of hot lead into him.
As his head hit the ground that night of July 29, 1966, there along Iwo Road, miles from Ibadan, Nigeria died.

 

Raise Your Vocabulary By 400 Words Before Christmas (Day 3)

Did you know we only use 10% of our brain capacity. Imagine what you could do with  just 50%.

It's day 3, enjoy today's words.