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Seo Master present to you:

Every leader is an artist

The connection between leadership and art has been made many times over, usually as a way to single out certain properties of the arts that carry over to leadership, such as a jazz musician’s ability to create through improvisation. These analogies can be compelling, but my point is more ambitious: leadership is an actual art, not metaphorically an art.
The same attributes that distinguish great from mediocre artists distinguish exceptional leaders from their ordinary counterparts. The best leaders and artists give us perspective on our social condition (good or bad) and greater appreciation of our world, ourselves, and our choices. Moreover, they challenge, excite, comfort, and motivate. They bring us closer together by providing a forum for shared experiences and by forging a sense of community. Leadership and art both animate social encounters. They can change our lives in ways that are as invigorating and real as being hit by a wave.
While people may disagree about the quality of a given work of art, we generally know how to communicate our experience of what we’ve seen or heard. And the same criteria that govern how people respond to particular artworks apply to this other art form, leadership. On the positive side, for example, leadership may be described as inspiring, consistent, creative, unique, passionate, and engaging. Alternatively, leadership may be perceived as unpleasant, phony, inept, unfocused, and pedestrian. Evaluative terms like these serve as the bases for some consensus about what constitutes greatness.
So let me suggest 12 artistic criteria for judging the art of particular leaders. To appreciate their leadership, we should ask about its …
1. Intent. Do they make an express commitment to achieve certain exceptional ends?
2. Focus. Do they highlight certain features of the business environment over others to separate the important from the trivial?
3. Skill. Do they demonstrate mastery or virtuosity in critical aspects of business; do they possess a foundation for understanding people, organisations, and the way work is accomplished?
4. Form. Do they combine their communications, structures, policies, etc. into a unified, coherent whole?
5. Representation. Do they convey meanings, in non-obvious and captivating ways, as opposed to giving simple directives and making straightforward declarations of fact?
6. Imagination. Do they make surprising and unconventional departures from the ordinary that create a new sense of awareness or understanding?
7. Authenticity. Do they present a stylistic distinctiveness that is an honest expression of their individuality and personal beliefs?
8. Engagement. Do they offer complex and challenging information that stimulates intellectual effort and imaginative contemplation?
9. Pleasure. Do they provide emotionally rewarding experiences that are shared among members of a group, promoting stronger bonds and fostering personal fulfillment?
10. Human significance. Do they facilitate personal reflection about who one is, what is most important, what is culturally valuable, and what is possible?
11. Context. Do they take actions that are commensurate with institutional practices, customs, demands, and norms, and communicate in a style that is understandable and appropriate?
12. Criticism. Do they welcome discourse and evaluation from others regarding how well they have performed and the amount of appreciation they should be afforded?
Succeeding on all these criteria is difficult, and not even the best leaders do so routinely. All have their strengths and stand out in unique ways. Leadership deficits become apparent when a person resembles a leadership caricature: when they possess only a couple of criteria to the exclusion of all others.
For example, there are the humanistic types who never miss a birthday, who sponsor team dinners at the house, who go out of their way to make the workplace pleasurable, enriching, and fun. There are the traditionalists who only do what is prescribed by “the book” and would never contemplate deviating from what a businessperson is supposed to wear, say, or do. There are the skilled and bureaucratic technicians who manage numbers and sheets of paper, and who attempt to orchestrate every conceivable employee behaviour through a carefully planned and rigid set of rules, compensation designs, policies, and organisational structures. There are the wildly imaginative but non-directive shape-shifters who hop from one idea and initiative to the next, dragging befuddled employees along in their wake. Great leaders are immensely more complex.
Notably absent from the list of criteria is results. My point is that while, yes, we expect good leaders to win against rivals and have a tangible product to show for their efforts, we wouldn’t appreciate them as leaders unless their process had some identifiable quality that made them and their work worthy of our admiration.
To succeed as an artist, a leader must orchestrate the company’s activities and create a relationship with its people in ways that demand respect for the skill involved. That is, there has to be some evidence that the results were achieved through genuine strengths attributable to the leader.
The 12 criteria I’ve outlined would allow us to differentiate the relentless cost cutter whose exploits over a three-year span dramatically increase earnings from the leader who prudently and artistically reshapes a company while minimising the detrimental effects on its future—and makes money doing so. Where the former creates a wasteland bereft of focused, forward energy and employee engagement, the latter, the leader, shepherds people through the trials of a troubled organisation while enlarging their interests and their capacities to perform.
Corporate managers will always worry about results—and especially short-term results. What is important is that we do not demote the concept of good leadership to the simple question of their attainment. The market doesn’t care how leaders get results as long as they are achieved legally. Meanwhile, making money doesn’t require the same skills as leadership does. It is possible to be a successful businessperson, excellent financier, and marvelous deal-maker without being a very good leader. The connection often made between leadership and bottom-line results is too facile. Making money is not an art. Leading an organisation is!
2013, By: Seo Master
Seo Master present to you:

Icon of ‘Secularism’

Malala Yousufzai, an icon of hope, inspiration and enthusiasm of the female around the world. No need to mention here that she was shot by the miscreants on 9th October 2012 in Pakistan and was sent to UK on 15th instant for better treatment. Her father Ziauddin Yousufzai now visiting Malala in UK hospital where she is improving a lot and described her return to UK as a miracle. Actually, it was a right decision to transfer her for the better treatment in UK hospital. Taliban fundamentalists shot at her due to her campaign for promoting secularism through the social network/media. In an interview with the BBC Malala’s father has thanked all the people all over the world irrespective of age, sex, caste, creed, country for praying her child.
It may be added here that this brutal activity drew the attention of all walks of life around the globe and Malala Yousufzai will be an icon for fighting in favor of ‘secularism’. Finally, I would request the concern to ensure the security of the little girl Malala- the icon of secularism, who will inspire the young generation around the world to raise the voice in favor of secularism no doubt.

 

2013, By: Seo Master
Seo Master present to you:
Secret Security Code of Nokia Phone !

Today we are going to discuss about Nokia phones some hidden codes. Those codes are really working. So lets check it out.



*#30#
displays the ‘private number’ calling you.

*#73#
resets the phone timer and game records (in certain type of phones).

*#7780#
Returns to the factory setting.

*#2820#
Shows the IP address of the Bluetooth device (only for those having the Bluetooth feature).
xx#
Quick access to the contact name/number inside the phonebook. For instance, 20#.
Off button
Simple way to change between profiles
*3370#
activates EFR (Enhanced Full Rate). By accessing this code, your Nokia cell phone will adjust the best sound quality. However, this feature will consume more energy on the battery. Note: this code will not be accessible at Symbian phones.
#3370#
deactivates EFR
*#4720#
deactivates Half rate Codec
*#0000#
Displays the original phone version. The first line shows the software version. The second line shows the software date made. The third line shows the compression type being used.
*#9999#
serves as the alternative code, lest *#0000# does not function properly.
*#06#
Views the IMEI (International Mobile Equipment Identity) number
*#21#
Checks the divert number ‘All Calls’ being used.
*#2640#
Displays the phone security code being applied (if you still apply the standard code, the phone security code will may not be seen)
*#43#
Checks the ‘Call Waiting’ status.
*#61#
Checks the diverted caller numbers when you did not answer them. (only if you activate call divert)
*#62#
Checks the diverted caller numbers while your phone was not reachable (only if you activate call divert).
*#67#
Checks the diverted caller numbers while your phone was busy (only if you activate call divert).
**21*number#
Activates the ‘All Calls’ diversion in the filling number
**61*number#
Activates the ‘No Reply’ diversion in the filling number
**67*number#
Activates the ‘On Busy’ diversion in the filling number
*#67705646#
Changes the operator logo in Nokia 3310 and 3330.
*#746025625#
Displays the SIM Lock status. If your phone is supported by the energy saver feature, then a text saying “SIM Clock Stop Allowed” will pop up on the screen. It means that you will get longer standby times.
*#7760#
Display the manufacturer code (for most of the old type phone version)
*#92702689#
Displays: 1. Serial Number, 2. Date Made, 3. Purchase Date, 4. Date of last repair (0000 for phones which have not been repaired yet), 5. Transfer User Data. In some phones, in order to exit from this mode you have to restart the phone.
2013, By: Seo Master
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