
Ben Sherwood, drawing on first-hand experience leading Disney|ABC Television Group, shares useful lessons on leadership, management, and winning in the age of disruption.
Ben Sherwood, drawing on first-hand experience leading Disney|ABC Television Group, shares useful lessons on leadership, management, and winning in the age of disruption.
In this broad-ranging interview from The Global Leadership Summit 2019, Bozoma Saint John explained how deliberate authenticity helped her build strong collaborative relationships and successful brands.
In his talk at The Global Leadership Summit 2019, Hollywood producer DeVon Franklin revealed principles for life-changing success.
At The Global Leadership Summit 2019, Patrick Lencioni challenged leaders to consider whether they are motivated by servant leadership or by rewards.
Liz Bohannon challenges leaders to discover their unique calling or dream that is placed inside of them. She offers three paradigm shifts and specific tactics to help us become more courageous, effective and innovative for the long haul.
Danielle Strickland describes two principles of transformational change that helps leaders not just survive change but use change as an agent for transformation in our lives, our communities, and in our world.
At The Global Leadership Summit 2019, Jason Dorsey described the common characteristics of different generational cohorts and outlined specific strategies for leaders to build thriving multi-generational workplaces.
Summit Champion and Life.Church Lead Pastor Craig Groeschel shares how leaders can maximize their impact by seeking higher returns on strategically lower investment.
In 1992, I served on a small staff at First United Methodist Church in downtown Oklahoma City. Somehow, our pastor and leaders heard about a conference just outside of Chicago that would later become known as The Global Leadership Summit. Even though our financial budget was tight, my pastor decided it was a good investment for seven of us to make the trip to see what we could learn. We had no idea how deeply those two days would impact our lives and ministry.
The talk at that conference gave me permission to do more than pastor people, it gave me permission to lead them to Christ.
As a young pastor, I honestly never saw the value of leadership in the church. We thought pastors were supposed to focus on spiritual things. Leadership sounded like a business term—certainly not something helpful to pastors. None of us understood that leading well is one of the most spiritual things we could learn to do.
When I first heard leadership taught at the Summit, it was as if something came alive in my spirit. The talk at that conference gave me permission to do more than pastor people, it gave me permission to lead them to Christ.
After all, that’s what Jesus did. He selected people others overlooked. He trained them. He cast vision for why He came and what they would accomplish together. He delivered on his promise to give His life and rise again. Before going to heaven, He spoke to His small band of leaders and gave them their assignment—to go into the world and spread the Gospel. He gave them what they needed to get the job done, promising they’d always have the Holy Spirit. And He trusted them to get the job done.
That first leadership conference gave me what I now call “the gift of disorientation.” So often when we want to learn something, we look to leaders who are one or two steps ahead of where we are. The Global Leadership Summit exposed me to leaders who weren’t one or two steps ahead, but dozens or hundreds of steps beyond what I’d seen before. Instead of confirming my biases, they shattered all my preconceived ideas of what’s possible. They helped to disorient me—in a good way. I simply didn’t know what I didn’t know.
I can’t think of a better place to light your fire, sharpen your gifts, inspire your vision and empower you to lead.
Year after year and Summit after Summit, I’ve absorbed new truths that have changed the way we lead our church.
So much of what our church is doing today came from moments, talks and ideas absorbed through the years at The Global Leadership Summit.
At the Summit I heard, “You’re a leader. It’s your job to keep your passion hot. Do whatever you have to do. Read whatever you have to read. Go wherever you have to go to stay fired up.”
I can’t think of a better place to light your fire, sharpen your gifts, inspire your vision and empower you to lead than The Global Leadership Summit.
Todd Henry identifies the most important question you need to ask to advocate for your team.
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