If you can assess your
strengths, you can find evidence of your weaknesses and add other skills to
mitigate these weaknesses. Your weaknesses are often an unintended consequence
of your strengths. If you are strong enough to fix anything, you are also
strong enough to break anything.
I am inner-directed,
not other-directed. I don’t “go along to get along”. I don’t waste time on
anything I regard as trivial.
I believed half the
things I learned in school were wrong and said so in the essays I turned in. I
felt free to disagree with my teachers.
I was a good self-learner and not a doscile follower. I was my own
mentor, but learned a lot from others. Writing job descriptions, job postings
and work processes gave me a handle on the operation. I intervened to solve
problems and improved processes and didn’t stay in my room.
.
But my entire career
required me to work for bosses and customers. I also worked in concert with
other managers and work with my own team. I was an accomplishment-oriented
leader. I did new tasks myself, outlined the processes and delegated the tasks.
I didn’t have consultants do any work. I encouraged employees to be themselves
and do the work they loved to make work fun. I always saw the humor in things.
I was not afraid to be myself.
I knew the down-side
of my strengths and made up for them by responding to problems quickly and
thoroughly. I took jobs with organizations where my style would be compatible.
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody
GA Tea Party Leader
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