Be More Strategic in Business. Diana Thomas

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the vision

       Chapter 6 Factor 3—Engage Stakeholders

       The Governance Board

       Quick and Dirty Takeaways for Factor 3

       Checklist for Factor 3: Engage Stakeholders

       Chapter 7 Factor 4—Build Your Strategic Plan

       Plan, Do, Study, Act

       Ask the Right Business Impact Questions

       Know Your Enablers and Barriers

       Finalize Your Business Impact Questions

       Quick and Dirty Takeaways from This Chapter

       Chapter 8 Create Your Impact Blueprint

       Link Investments to Business Outcomes

       Put Your Blueprint Into Action

       Quick and Dirty Takeaways from This Chapter

       Checklist for Factor 4: Build your strategic plan

       Chapter 9 Factor 5—Execute Your Strategic Plan

       Change

       Use the Rungs of the Ladder

       Build and Lead a Winning Team for Everyday Execution

       Using Data to Show Progress on Your Impact Blueprint

       Update Your Impact Blueprint

       Quick and Dirty Takeaways for Factor 5

       Checklist for Factor 5: Execute Your Strategic Plan

       Chapter 10 Factor 6—Make Decisions to Win

       What Happens When You Stumble?

       Strategic Leadership is an Ongoing Journey

       Quick and Dirty Takeaways for Factor 6

       Checklist for Factor 6: Make Decisions to Win

       Conclusion

       Be In Touch

       Acknowledgements

       Recommended Reading

       About the Authors

       Foreword

      If your goal is to become a powerful leader who fulfills her or his purpose, you will love this book.

      I was honored when Diana Thomas—a long-time student, facilitator, partner, and friend of the FranklinCovey team—asked if she could use a leadership analogy she heard from my late father, Dr. Stephen R. Covey, as the basis for a new strategic leadership model. When I found out Diana was going to turn that model into a leadership book she was coauthoring with Stacey Boyle, I became very intrigued by what they were up to.

      Diana is a highly sought-after visionary and strategic leadership coach; Stacey is an expert in analytics and evaluation, helping companies move the needle on important business measures. While they’re both accomplished professionals on their own, their unique partnership has the potential to teach strategic leadership in a way that’s practical and contextualized in today’s business environment—something that you don’t often find in leadership books.

      As I sat down to read their manuscript, I was struck by just how applicable the book would be for anybody who is coming into a leadership role. Diana and Stacey are giving you the complete picture here—everything from the personal attributes you need to help others perceive you as strategic to the time and prioritization techniques we have taught in our organization to the ways that leaders plan, execute, and show critical results.

      What this powerful pair has done in this book is similar to what I’ve attempted to do with the principles that underlie trust. Just as I’ve sought to help people see that trust is not merely a soft, social virtue, but rather a hard, economic driver that can be learned, Diana and Stacey have taken the vague, elusive advice of “be strategic” and made it into a practical, actionable set of skills that can become habits.

      This isn’t just a book for new leaders. There are many leaders who have been managing organizations for some time, others who perhaps have been passed over for promotions, and still others who are struggling to think strategically and connect their function’s activities to what matters most to the business. The latter have not developed what I call “TASKS”—the Talents, Attitudes, Skills, Knowledge, and Style to strategically affect people and results. Having spent much of my career working with leaders in the human resources space, I know they have unique challenges—and opportunities—when it comes to driving business results. Diana and Stacey grew up in that world, and what they share in this book is all the more valuable because it’s been time-tested in one of the more difficult disciplines to lead strategically.

      Core to my father’s and my personal leadership philosophies has been the importance of being strategic—of leaning your ladder against the right wall of success in work and life. This analogy used in Be More Strategic

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