Got Stress? Here are 8 Tips for You

Today marks the end of this year’s National Stress Awareness month.  Over the years, the Center for Creative Leadership has provided leaders with resources in managing their stress levels.  In 2006, they surveyed a number of leaders, seeking to answer the question “How does stress impact leadership?”  Their typical respondent was a lot like me:  male between the ages of 41 and 50, representing upper-middle management or the executive level, who said the following:

  • 88% reported that work is a primary source of stress in their lives and that having a leadership position increases the level of stress.
  • More than 60% cited their organizations as failing to provide them with the tools they need to manage stress.
  • Physical exercise was the most commonly cited method leaders use to manage stress, yet only 10% indicate their organizations provide access to gyms.
  • More than 90% said they manage stress by temporarily removing themselves, either physically or mentally, from the source of their stress.

Fortunately, that survey data is old, and things have changed, right?

Well, not so fast…  So, on this last day of April—Stress Awareness Month—let’s take a closer look at how we can reduce our stress, and I’ll offer my perspectives of what’s worked and what hasn’t worked for me.

Click here to learn 8 tips for Stress Reduction

4 Principles of Values-Based Leadership

From Values to Action Book

Weeks 16 & 17 of the NIV Leadership Bible focus on Values…crucial to a leader’s credibility and success.  As I’ve studied these daily devotions, I’m reminded how fortunate I’ve been to work for leaders with strong values over the past 20 years.

Values-based leadership is important for any leader seeking to shoot for the stars.  Three years ago, Harry M. Jansen Kraemer Jr. published From Values to Action: The Four Principles of Values-Based Leadership.  Drawing from his first-hand experiences as the former chairman and CEO of Baxter International (a global health care company) and from the popular classes he taught at Northwestern University (where he was voted as Kellogg School of Management’s professor of the year in 2008), Kraemer offers current and aspiring leaders a framework to adopt four principles of values-based leadership that will help them improve their organizations.

Click here to learn about the 4 principles