What C Level Execs Really Want

DFN: Interesting prespecitve, if you’re interested in how to sell yourself into an opportunity, the is a must read! Creativity; I equate creativity to being a problem solver, not a problem creator. Find the problem(s), sell yourself as the solution to those problems.

What Chief Executives Really Want
by Frank Kern
Wednesday, May 19, 2010
http://finance.yahoo.com/career-work/article/109596/what-chief-executives-really-want?mod=career-leadership

A survey from IBM’s Institute for Business Value shows that CEOs value one leadership competency above all others. Can you guess what it is?

What do chief executive officers really want? The answer bears important consequences for management as well as companies’ customers and shareholders. The qualities that a CEO values most in the company team set a standard that affects everything from product development and sales to the long-term success of an enterprise.

There is compelling new evidence that CEOs’ priorities in this area are changing in important ways. According to a new survey of 1,500 chief executives conducted by IBM’s Institute for Business Value (NYSE: IBM – News), CEOs identify "creativity" as the most important leadership competency for the successful enterprise of the future.

That’s creativity—not operational effectiveness, influence, or even dedication. Coming out of the worst economic downturn in their professional lifetimes, when managerial discipline and rigor ruled the day, this indicates a remarkable shift in attitude. It is consistent with the study’s other major finding: Global complexity is the foremost issue confronting these CEOs and their enterprises. The chief executives see a large gap between the level of complexity coming at them and their confidence that their enterprises are equipped to deal with it.

Until now creativity has generally been viewed as fuel for the engines of research or product development, not the essential leadership asset that must permeate an enterprise.

Needed: Creative Disruption

Much has happened in the past two years to shake the historical assumptions held by the women and men who are in charge. In addition to global recession, the century’s first decade heightened awareness of the issues surrounding global climate change and the interplay between natural events and our supply chains for materials, food, and even talent. In short, CEOs have experienced the realities of global integration. The world is massively interconnected—economically, socially, and politically—and operating as a system of systems. So what does this look like at the level of customer relationships? For too many enterprises, the answer is that their customers are increasingly connected, but not to them.

Against that backdrop of interconnection, interdependency, and complexity, business leaders around the world are declaring that success requires fresh thinking and continuous innovation at all levels of the organization. As they step back and reassess, CEOs have seized upon creativity as the necessary element for enterprises that must reinvent their customer relationships and achieve greater operational dexterity. In face-to-face interviews with our consultants, they said creative leaders do the following:

Disrupt the Status Quo. Every company has legacy products that are both cash—and sacred—cows. Often the need to perpetuate the success of these products restricts innovation within the enterprise, creating a window for competitors to advance competing innovations. As CEOs tell us that fully one-fifth of revenues will have to come from new sources, they are recognizing the requirement to break with existing assumptions, methods, and best practices.

Disrupt Existing Business Models. CEOs who select creativity as a leading competency are far more likely to pursue innovation through business model change. In keeping with their view of accelerating complexity, they are breaking with traditional strategy-planning cycles in favor of continuous, rapid-fire shifts and adjustments to their business models.

Disrupt Organizational Paralysis. Creative leaders fight the institutional urge to wait for completeness, clarity, and stability before making decisions. To do this takes a combination of deeply held values, vision, and conviction—combined with the application of such tools as analytics to the historic explosion of information. These drive decisionmaking that is faster, more precise, and even more predictable.

Taken together, these recommendations describe a shift toward corporate cultures that are far more transparent and entrepreneurial. They are cultures imbued with the belief that complexity poses an opportunity, rather than a threat. They hold that risk is to be managed, not avoided, and that leaders will be rewarded for their ability to build creative enterprises with fluid business models, not absolute ones.

Something significant is afoot in the corporate world. In response to powerful external pressures and the opportunities that accompany them, CEOs are signaling a new direction. They are telling us that a world of increasing complexity will give rise to a new generation of leaders that make creativity the path forward for successful enterprises.

Frank Kern is senior vice-president of IBM Global Business Services.

“I’m NOT a recruiter”

I’ve been networking for almost ten years; in that time, I’ve had 15 consulting ‘gigs’ and two ‘real’ jobs. One of the things I’ve tried to do is to facilitate other people’s searches. I have helped recruiters or hiring managers find candidates, or I’ve helped job seekers find openings that may not be advertised. I do not get paid for this, nor am I’m seeking compensation for this activity. I’ve discovered that via this facilitation of other people’s successes, opportunities do come my way, though its rarely a direct path.

Doug

Why You’re Not Getting Hired

DFN: Good tips on why you may not be getting the job offer for a position you’re really well qualified for.

7 Little-Known Reasons You’re Not Getting Hired
Karen Burns, On Wednesday May 12, 2010, 11:08 am EDT

If you’re job hunting you’re surely aware of the most egregious and common no-nos: showing up for the interview ten minutes late; answering your phone during the interview; handing over a resume riddled with typos; using a silly-sounding E-mail address; failing to demonstrate you’ve researched the employer; bad-mouthing your last boss; neglecting to follow up. You’re not doing any of that, are you? Of course not.

[See 15 essentials to getting hired.]

But you may not have considered some of the less-discussed, under-the-radar issues. Give this list a look and ask yourself, "Do any of these sound like me?"

1. You have unreasonable expectations. Everybody wants the perfect job. But if your criteria are too high, if you’re being too demanding, you may well remain unemployed. Nobody wants to be told to compromise, but the fact is that much of life involves just that, at least temporarily. Analyze your wants and needs. Which are must haves? Which are negotiable? Which can be put on hold?

2. You’re relying too much on one search technique. Maybe you are only applying online, or only networking, or only using employment agencies, or only approaching companies that you know are hiring. Don’t limit yourself to just one job-search method. Try them all. Cast a wide net, continue to build your connections, get creative.

[See 10 new rules for today's job hunt.]

3. You use the word "I" too often in your cover letter. The most effective way to endear yourself to potential employers is to put the focus more on them than on you. Show you’ve done your homework and understand what your target companies are seeking. Then tell them how you can fill those needs.

4. You are not demonstrating long-term potential. We get caught up in the moment. We need a job now. But employers, the good ones at least, tend to think long term. They want to know not only how you will contribute today but in the future, too. That "Where do you see yourself in five years?" question is not just for drill. They really want to know.

5. You are unknowingly repeating mistakes. After interviews, are you taking the time to review and analyze them? Many times the reason you don’t get a job is beyond your control, and, in fact, has nothing to do with you, but not always. Trying to understand why the answer was "No" may help you to fine tune your approach.

[See the topics you can't discuss at work.]

6. You have not rehearsed. You may hesitate to rehearse answers to the most common questions. You don’t want to sound canned. You want to be yourself. But consider the benefits of creating great answers to those questions you hear the most–short, vivid, three-sentence answers brimming with examples and facts–and practicing them until you can speak with conviction and confidence.

7. You put your job search on hold while waiting to hear back. Don’t we all fall into this trap at one time or another? You’ve had a super couple of interviews with your dream employer. You just know you’re going to get "the call" any day now. You think, I’m going to hold off until I hear back; after all, I deserve a little break. Well, no doubt you do deserve a little break–but don’t. Keep on networking, applying, interviewing, and researching until you have a firm job offer in hand.

Looking for work is an enormous project. In many ways it’s more difficult, and takes more energy, than even the most demanding job. So, in the midst of it all, find a way to nurture yourself. Keep on fine tuning and strengthening your approach. And hang in there.

Karen Burns is the author of the illustrated career advice book The Amazing Adventures of Working Girl: Real-Life Career Advice You Can Actually Use, recently released by Running Press. She blogs at www.karenburnsworkinggirl.com.

8th Annual Career and Leadership Summit

DFN: To register (FREE): http://jc2010summit.eventbrite.com/?ref=elink; additionally, we serve a continental breakfast and snacks throughout the event (FREE).

The 8th Annual Career and Leadership Summit

Saturday, June 5 9:00a
at Community Presbyterian Church, Danville, CA

ABOUT the 8th Annual Career and Leadership Summit :
The 8th Annual Career and Leadership Summit, is an educational conference and networking event for individuals who wish to enhance their professional and personal skills while in transition or seeking career advancement. This exciting half day event, featuring nationally known career and leadership speakers, would normally demand a ticket price of $100, but is being offered at no-charge through the assistance of corporate sponsorship, and support by Job Connections and its volunteer membership. read more

Age Suitability: None Specified
Tags: conferences, job connections, putting the bay, career and leadership, putting the bay to work, cpc career conference, job connections summit

ABOUT the 8th Annual Career and Leadership Summit :

The 8th Annual Career and Leadership Summit, is an educational conference and networking event for individuals who wish to enhance their professional and personal skills while in transition or seeking career advancement. This exciting half day event, featuring nationally known career and leadership speakers, would normally demand a ticket price of $100, but is being offered at no-charge through the assistance of corporate sponsorship, and support by Job Connections and its volunteer membership.
Summit attendees will have the opportunity to network with up to 2,000 participants, corporate sponsors and career organizations at the event. Business casual attire is recommended and attendees should bring business cards to exchange.

Date: Saturday, June 5 from 7:30am-2:00pm
Location: Community Presbyterian Church, 222 W. El Pintado Rd. Danville, CA.

Featured keynote speakers :

Patrick Lencioni is founder and president of The Table Group, a firm dedicated to providing organizations with ideas, products and services that improve teamwork, clarity and employee engagement. He is an internationally recognized best-selling author of eight books, including the critically acclaimed The Five Dysfunctions of a Team. As a consultant and keynote speaker, Mr. Lencioni has worked with thousands of senior executives and leadership teams in organizations ranging from Fortune 500s and high tech start-ups to universities and non-profits. For more information, visit www.thetablegroup.com .

Amilya Antonetti is an award-winning entrepreneur and founder of SoapWorks, a green business pioneer. As a media personality, advocate and best-selling author, Amilya has been featured on Oprah, CBS This Morning, Extra, The Big Idea with Danny Deutsch, and now appears weekly on “Fox Strategy Room”. Ms. Antonetti’s “Smart Choice Mom” lifestyle and organization tips can be read in Parent and Child and Family Circle Magazines and her latest book, The Recipe, a fable on leadership and teambuilding, will be released in April 2010. For more information, visit www.amilya.com .


Doug

Madison Dearborn Misses Goal

DFN: I work at NextG Networks.

Madison Dearborn Misses Goal, But LPs Say $4.1B Nothing To Sneeze At
By Keenan Skelly
http://blogs.wsj.com/privateequity/2010/05/04/madison-dearborn-misses-goal-but-lps-say-41b-nothing-to-sneeze-at/#

After 28 months of raising capital for its latest fund, Chicago-based firm Madison Dearborn Partners LLC has finally closed Madison Dearborn Capital Partners VI LP.

The fund closed on $4.1 billion, far below its initial target of $10 billion, set back in relatively sunny December 2007. That target was revised lower to $7.5 billion in the summer of 2008.

Past limited partners who chose not to reinvest include California Public Employees’ Retirement System, California State Teachers’ Retirement System, Makena Capital Management and Ireland’s National Pensions Reserve Fund.

Madison Dearborn faced multiple problems on the fund-raising trail. In addition to the financial crisis, which has hurt firms’ ability to raise capital across the board, Madison Dearborn saw pointed questions from LPs about the performance of its predecessor fund. That $6.5 billion fund, which closed in 2006, put capital to work very quickly in large deals such as Univision Communications Inc. and CDW Corp. at the height of the buyout bubble, and had few realizations to show when the firm returned to market.

Madison Dearborn defends the Fund V acquisitions, saying it invested in dominant businesses with strong free cash flow when the credit markets were robust. The fund is showing some signs of recovery, valued today at 85 cents on the dollar, compared to 70 cents on the dollar as of June 30, 2009.

Across the entire portfolio, companies’ Ebitda has grown 21% since acquisition. Additionally, the companies have reduced their leverage by 20% since being acquired, said people close to the firm. A spokesman for Madison Dearborn declined to comment.

Despite the tough fund-raising campaign, investors say $4.1 billion is nothing to sneeze at in this environment. “The fact is they’ve raised a significant amount of capital,” said one longtime LP. “One may say that they had some missteps in the most recent fund, but they now seem to be in a position to do well enough. They have a history of doing well even after they’ve made some missteps.”

Investors who did choose to continue with the firm include Yale University, Harvard University, Northwestern University, Lehigh University, Pennsylvania State Employees’ Retirement System, Abbott Capital Management, Portfolio Advisors, Montana Board of Investments and Pathway Capital Management.

Some of them say one reason they reinvested is because the firm seems to have refocused on what it does best: making growth-oriented investments on a proprietary basis. In light of this, some LPs are pleased with the smaller size of the fund.

“It doesn’t disappoint me at all that they didn’t raise nearly what they set out to. I would have been happy with just [the] $3 billion [first closing],” said another longtime investor. He said the firm’s expertise has always been in the middle market. “Their returns there are phenomenal.”

All of Madison Dearborn’s four most recent deals – for BWAY Holding Co., TransUnion LLC, Weather Investments SpA and NextG Networks Inc. – were done outside of an auction process. People close to the firm say that Madison Dearborn chose to take less debt than was offered by banks for two of the deals.

Madison Dearborn has committed $260 million of its own cash upfront – as compared to the practice of funding the GP commitment via deferred management fees that is practiced by a number of buyout firms. The firm is the largest investor in Fund VI.

Since inception in 1992, Madison Dearborn’s gross performance on fully realized investments is 2.5-times invested capital, said people close to the firm.


Doug

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