
The Book of Romans offers leadership lessons, timeless wisdom, and valuable insights for leaders across all industries.
The Book of Romans offers leadership lessons, timeless wisdom, and valuable insights for leaders across all industries.
The lessons from biblically led leaders are examples that the youngest and the most senior leaders can apply in their roles.
In order to be an effective leader, you don’t necessarily need a title or position of authority. You simply need to be the example.
Great organizations blend the best for their organization and their people. Without leadership, people fail – as do organizations.
Tactful leadership is an art form that doesn’t come naturally to everyone. Once mastered, it can help you remain engaged.
Ordinary people that take advantage of the opportunities laid before them can make a major impact on the world.
Our power as Christians, and as leaders, comes from God, not from ourselves. Biblical leaders must find strength in God to endure.
We must help our teams strike a balance in perspective between food that spoils and food that endures. We must seek the true purpose of work.
Most leaders can easily point to individuals who helped shape their style and decision-making – my mentor was Jack Coale.
Every executive search is different and every search committee is different. Search committee chairs provide lead in their own ways.
As leaders, it’s our responsibility to set that same example of leadership and faith for those we lead. Is biblical leadership a cliche?
Leaders are servants of those they lead. The only way to truly succeed is to humble yourself and follow Jesus’ example of servant leadership.
Great leaders don’t lead alone. They must surround themselves with people they can trust – other great leaders that can support them.