WM8C's Team Building Guide

Marine Corps Team Building Activities Section


 

Marine Corps Team Building Activities Navigation


|

Stress and Anxiety Guide Home Page
Tell A Friend about us
Cheap Team Building |
Studentteambuilding Team Work Management Team Building |
Sports Team Building Ideas |
Team Building Technology |
Indianapolis Team Building Community North |
Team Building Books |
Free Youth Team Building Games |
Palm Springs Corporate Team Building Exercise |
Free Workplace Fun Team Building Activities |
Team Building Training Business Training Change Management |
Team Building Program |
Team Building Activities For Students |
Games Childrens Team Building Activities |
Psychology Students And Team Building Exercises |
Employee Mentoring Conflict Management Team Building Bargain |
Conflict Management Team Building Training Bargain Training |
Paintball Tournaments For Offsite Team Building Excercises |
Team Building Training Change Management Sales Training |
Social Team Building |
Business Articles On Team Building |
Athletic Team Building Ideas For Children |
Team Building Activity Indoor |
Team Building Liverpool |
Team Building Event |
Team Building Skills |

List of Team-building Articles
Sitemap



Social bookmarking
You like it? Share it!
socialize it

Main Marine Corps Team Building Activities sponsors


 

Latest Marine Corps Team Building Activities Link Added

INSERT YOUR OWN BANNER HERE

Submit your link on Marine Corps Team Building Activities!



Newest Best Sellers

Full Steam Ahead! Unleash the Power of Vision in Your Work and Your Life, 2nd Edition (Hardcover) newly tagged "team-building"

Full Steam Ahead! Unleash the Power of Vision in Your Work and Your Life, 2nd Edition
Full Steam Ahead! Unleash the Power of Vision in Your Work and Your Life, 2nd Edition (Hardcover)
By Ken Blanchard

Read more...

Shine: Using Brain Science to Get the Best from Your People (Hardcover) newly tagged "team-building"

Shine: Using Brain Science to Get the Best from Your People
Shine: Using Brain Science to Get the Best from Your People (Hardcover)
By Edward M. Hallowell

Read more...

Team-Building Activities for the Digital Age: Using Technology to Develop Effective Groups (Paperback) newly tagged "team-building"

Team-Building Activities for the Digital Age: Using Technology to Develop Effective Groups
Team-Building Activities for the Digital Age: Using Technology to Develop Effective Groups (Paperback)
By Brent D. Wolfe

Read more...

Understanding Other People: The Five Secrets to Human Behavior (Paperback) newly tagged "team-building"

Understanding Other People: The Five Secrets to Human Behavior
Understanding Other People: The Five Secrets to Human Behavior (Paperback)
By Beverly D. Flaxington

Buy new: $10.85
26 used and new from $9.59
Customer Rating: 4.7

First tagged "team-building" by liz
Customer tags: relationships(12), self-help(11), empathy(7), self talk(7), behaviorism(5), disc(5), communication(5), values(3), author(3), book(3), beverly flaxington(2), business(2)

Read more...

The Rules of Engagement!: A Story About How Leaders Can More Effectively Engage Employees (Paperback) newly tagged "team-building"

The Rules of Engagement!: A Story About How Leaders Can More Effectively Engage Employees
The Rules of Engagement!: A Story About How Leaders Can More Effectively Engage Employees (Paperback)
By Rich McLaughlin

Buy new: $15.99
17 used and new from $13.38
Customer Rating: 4.7

First tagged "team-building" by T. L. Brown
Customer tags: employee involvement, team-building, teams

Read more...

 

Welcome to WM8C's Team Building Guide

 

Marine Corps Team Building Activities Article

Thumbnail example. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for further reading, click here.


You may also listen to this article by using the following controls.

Trust Withheld; Micromanagement Unveiled

from: Eileen McDargh



Managers preach empowerment and yet, if the results are not right, who gets the blame?
Micromanagement and lack of trust are cries often heard in today's business arenas. In this age of accountability, downsizing, larger spans of control, complex global competition, and job uncertainty, all managers are faced with getting results through people. Managers preach empowerment and yet, if the results are not right, who gets the blame? And so, I think, the issue of trust resembles a crystal with four facets. The first facet has to do with that term "empowerment". Too often management throws out the term without clarifying what are the limits or parameters in which employees may make critical decisions. When boundaries are not clear employees naturally think the manager is sending mixed messages. When employees feel micromanaged, they're basically saying, "Stop looking over my shoulder I can do this. Stop checking upon me. Why must I report in every step of the way?" Good question. Why? Clarify for yourself first, and then with the employee, what is the performance outcome you need. The more quantifiable, the better. Note the word "outcome". This is not the same as "do it MY way". As long as you get the outcomes and results keep the team and ethics intact, who cares HOW they got the job done. Ask yourself what are your "twitching" points. That's my term for those areas in which you have special sensitivity, where you get a knot in you stomach or the hairs stand on the back of your neck. The sensitivity might be caused by demands which your manager has placed on you. Share these demands and then find out how your colleagues can help you meet them. You might have other "twitching points". For example, I value relationships. Form letters, bored telephone voices, disregard for returning phone calls, and impoliteness drive me crazy. These are all things which I think show a lack of concern for the relationship. If I micromanage in these areas, it could be that I have not either trained my support staff well, have hired wrong, or have failed to explicitly state my sensitivity. Another facet of trust has to do with authenticity. "At the core of becoming a leader is the need to connect one's voice with one's touch," wrote Max Dupree, former chair of Herman Miller. Is what you say and what you do in line? I am constantly amazed at the systems, practices, and behaviors found in corporate America which send mixed messages. ... like the manager who claimed he had an "open door policy" but greeted anyone who entered with the statement "and this better not be a dumb question." ... like the company which touted itself as "innovative" and yet used a one-size-fits-all budget scheme for its diverse operations. ... like the vice president who sent around articles on TQM but refused to allow employees to go for training. ... like the executive who wanted her managers to learn leadership, communication, problem-solving, team-building, and visioning in a two-day training because "learning is important." ... like the vice president who sent around articles on TQM but refused to allow his employees off the job to attend TQM training. And the list goes on. Never, I'm convinced, intentional. And always detrimental. The third facet of trust has to do with fear. Of what are you afraid? What is your worst fear and what's the chance of it really happening? Are there checkpoints or fail safe measures which you and your employees could put into place to short-circuit a negative outcome? And once done, relax and enjoy. As Mark Twain said, "I've had 103 catastrophes in my life, only two of which actually occurred." The fourth facet of trust rests in self-reliance. We all have heard the dictum that a strength overused becomes a weakness. Perhaps our life's experience has taught us that we depend solely by our own wits and wiles. Too many people have let us down. Or perhaps we take great pride in Frank Sinatra's mantra "I did it my way" . Our world is too complicated and interdependent to live solely by our singular guts and brain power. We need the insights and ideas of others. Too much now lies out of our control and coronaries await for those who attempt to do it all. In the final analysis, trust is also a four-letter word; love. When people know we care about them, they respond in kind. Easy to say. Harder to do. Practice in action is the only key and trust blooms as a result.

Eileen McDargh, CSP, CPAE, is an international speaker, author and seminar leader. Her book ‘Work for A Living and Still Be Free to Live’ is also the title of one of her most popular and upbeat programs on Work/Life Balance. For more information on Eileen and her presentations, please call 949-496-8640 or visit her web site at http://www.eileenmcdargh.com.

© 2000 by Eileen McDargh. All rights reserved.

About the Author

Eileen McDargh is founder of McDargh Communications, a consulting and training company specializing in inner and interpersonal skill development for the purpose of improving the life of a business and the business of life. Visit Eileen at http://www.EileenMcDargh.com or http://www.theresilientspirit.com.





 

Marine Corps Team Building Activities News

More News

The American Red Cross is a private, non-profit organization whose mission is to help people prevent, prepare for and respond to emergencies.

Read more...


Recreation & Sports/Recreational

The administrative office for Recreation Activities is located in the basement of Little Hall, Building 2034, Barnett Avenue. The program offers a wide variety of recreational activities designed to help patrons stay in shape and enjoy their leisure time.

Read more...


Marine security cooperation team completes advisor training at MCSCG

FORT STORY, Va. A U.S. Marine Corps Forces, South, security cooperation team graduated from a three-month predeployment training program at Marine Corps Security Cooperation Group aboard Joint Expeditionary Base Little Creek – Fort Story, Va., Jan. 13.

Read more...


Quick APD Action Recovers Truck

REGISTER NOW SENIOR SOFTBALL TEAM: Players age 50 and older sought for team competing in a league th ...

Read more...


Marine returns to alma mater; shares 26 years of military experience with Hampton Roads NROTC students

Dateline NORFOLK, Va. Page Content More than two decades after graduating from Old Dominion University (ODU), Marine Col. Christopher R. McCarthy, commanding officer at Marine Corps Security Cooperation Group (MCSCG) in Joint Expeditionary Base Little Creek – Fort Story, Virginia, returned to his alma mater as a guest speaker, Jan. 26.

Read more...


Avondale, Buckeye Junior Reserve cadets thrive on challenges

ROTC in West Valley a wide-ranging adventure

Read more...


MAY: Sea Cadets, Civil Air Patrol, Young Marines offer youth opportunities

There are paramilitary organizations in Macomb County for young people that offer training, service opportunities, fun and adventure.

Read more...