Leadership In Practice
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This is a weekly class for Leaders who 'in practice' spend majority of their time having to lead meetings, coach bottom/top/middle performers and much more. However, most of us have had little to no formal training/ rarely given any instruction in what takes 80-90% of our time. WFH (work from home), distributed workforces, who now have to manage dual spouses WFH, homeschooling children, while worrying about everyone’s health and safety…magnifies the leadership challenges and makes the job 10x harder.
Please note—this class is part of a series. Classes may be attended out of order, but prior concepts may be referenced. To catch up on previous classes simply search “Leadership in Practice†in the Video Hub.
Please note—this class is part of a series. Classes may be attended out of order, but prior concepts may be referenced. To catch up on previous classes simply search “Leadership in Practice†in the Video Hub.
Charlie
Kim
Kim
Meghan
Messenger
Messenger
32 classes available
Leadership in Practice #32: How to HELP Someone Who is in SHAME
21
34
1hr 18mins
Nov 19
Leadership in Practice #31: HOW TO: Train the Tightest OODA-Loop
30
1hr 12mins
Nov 12
Leadership in Practice #30: Why People Don’t Action Their Ideas
30
1hr 20mins
Nov 5
Leadership in Practice #29: Does a Limitless Pill Exist?
47
58mins
Oct 29
Leadership in Practice #28: Decision Science - The Art of Decision Making
1
1hr 17mins
Oct 22
Leadership in Practice Series #27: The Safer Choice is the Worse Choice
23
1hr 20mins
Oct 15
Leadership in Practice #26: How Leaders Screw Up Their People (Unintentionally)
20
1hr 18mins
Oct 8
Leadership in Practice #25: The Art of COACHING (Institutionalizing Elite Performance)
40
1hr 16mins
Oct 1
Leadership in Practice #24: Untangling Complex Emotions
53
1hr 08mins
Sep 24
Leadership in Practice #23: Foundational Skill to be Great at Strategy & Innovation
52
1hr 09mins
Sep 17
Leadership in Practice #22: Live Situational Workshop
33
1hr 10mins
Sep 10
Leadership in Practice #21: Why We Need Renewed Motivation (6 Months into COVID)
53
1hr 07mins
Sep 3
Leadership In Practice #20: How To Build Emotional Intelligence
42
1hr 02mins
Aug 20
Leadership In Practice #19: Top 2 Indicators Of Low Vs. High Performing Teams
40
22
1hr 04mins
Aug 13
Leadership In Practice #18: How NOT To GIVE Feedback
35
51
1hr 08mins
Aug 6
Leadership In Practice #17: Connection Between Frustration & Expectation
42
25
1hr 13mins
Jul 30
Leadership in Practice #16, TP: Training Partner
46
1hr 04mins
Jul 23
Leadership in Practice 15 of N: What’s the Cost of our Imbalances?
72
1hr 02mins
Jul 16
Leadership in Practice: #14, Why Office Space Matters
52
26
1hr 08mins
Jul 2
Leadership in Practice: #13, Brilliant in the Basics Part 2: Weekly Rituals
74
24
1hr 00mins
Jun 25
Leadership in Practice: #12, Challenges Navigating BLM
143
57
1hr 13mins
Jun 18
Leadership in Practice: #11, Brilliant in the Basics Part 1: SKILLS
190
34
1hr 13mins
Jun 4
This is a weekly class for Leaders who "in practice" spend majority of their time having to lead meetings, coach bottom/top/middle performers.
Leadership in Practice: #10, Understanding Metrics & Measurement
66
21
1hr 19mins
May 28
Leadership in Practice: #9, Weekly Battle Rhythm
92
58
1hr 19mins
May 21
Leadership in Practice: #8, How to Accelerate Judgment Training
93
38
1hr 24mins
May 14
Leadership in Practice: #7, How to Work Smarter (vs. Harder)
299
14
1hr 05mins
May 7
Leadership in Practice: #6, How to Get on Fire
145
18
48mins
Apr 30
Leadership in Practice: #5, WFH Protocol
386
25
1hr 16mins
Apr 23
Leadership in Practice: #4, 100 Year Change
278
11
1hr 09mins
Apr 16
Leadership in Practice: #3, OJT: On-the-Job-Training
491
1hr 08mins
Apr 9
Leadership in Practice: #2, What's Different about WFH
3,456
26
54mins
Apr 2
Leadership in Practice: #1, Effective Meeting Strategies
1,159
53mins
Mar 26
About this Class
Leadership in Practice #32: How to HELP Someone Who is in SHAME
This is a weekly class for Leaders who 'in practice' spend majority of their time having to lead meetings, coach bottom/top/middle performers and much more. However, most of us have had little to no formal training/ rarely given any instruction in what takes 80-90% of our time. WFH (work from home), distributed workforces, who now have to manage dual spouses WFH, homeschooling children, while worrying about everyone’s health and safety…magnifies the leadership challenges and makes the job 10x harder.
Please note—this class is part of a series. Classes may be attended out of order, but prior concepts may be referenced. To catch up on previous classes simply search “Leadership in Practice†in the Video Hub.
Please note—this class is part of a series. Classes may be attended out of order, but prior concepts may be referenced. To catch up on previous classes simply search “Leadership in Practice†in the Video Hub.
Currently there are no Upcoming classes available.
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About the teachers
Charlie Kim
Charlie Kim, Founder & Co-CEO of Next Jump. Charlie founded Next Jump in 1994 in his college dorm room. He grew the business to 150 employees in the first dot-com boom, soon to be followed by the dot-com bust, bringing the Company down to 4 employees before building back up. Next Jump proves the combination of caring for your employees and helping them grow as human beings is possible while making money and helping the world become a better place. Next Jump believes this is a pre-requisite in today’s human capital economy and calls it Better Me + Better You = Better Us. In addition to building a $2 billion technology company over 25 years, Next Jump was recognized by Harvard as one of the best run companies in the world. Simon Sinek featured Next Jump in his TED Talk for their no-fire policy. Thousands of leaders have gone through Next Jump’s Leadership Academy and experienced their developmental culture. Charlie is often invited to speak and share lessons learned from training the leadership across every industry including business (Fortune 500), sports (Olympic teams), medicine, education, military, CIA, etc.
Meghan Messenger
Meghan Messenger, Co-CEO of Next Jump. Meghan started as a door to door sales intern for Next Jump in 1998 and now serves as the Co-CEO. She credits her success to the consistent practice of leading with authenticity. We are what we practice, however the #1 thing we practice is LHF (“lying/hiding/fakingâ€), managing other people's impressions of us, trying to look good. In addition to building a $2 billion technology company over 25 years, Next Jump was recognized by Harvard as one of the best run companies in the world. Simon Sinek featured Next Jump in his TED Talk for their no-fire policy. Meghan is often invited to speak about how individuals and organizations fail in the 21st century.
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