1.
Sometimes facing opportunity is like staring at the knees of a giraffe.
Laurie Beth Jones
2.
Nobody wins until we all do.
Laurie Beth Jones
3.
A good leader has a plan that consists of changing simple pictures. Just because a group of people has a bunch of boards, hammers, and nails does not mean that they are building a house or even anything recognizable. Sometimes leaders think they are doing their job just because there is a lot of hammering going on. As a society we like the sound of hammering, but we are uncomfortable with the sound of thinking, which is silence.
Laurie Beth Jones
4.
Leaders identify, articulate, and summarize concepts that motivate others. Most important, they boil concepts down to an understandable idea.
Laurie Beth Jones
5.
Jesus regularly visualized the success of his efforts ... 'I always do what pleases God.' ... Was this conceit? Or was it enlightened creativity and self-knowledge? ...Jesus was full of self-knowledge and self-love. His 'I am' statements were what he became.
Laurie Beth Jones
6.
To have no vision of your own means living the vision of someone else.
Laurie Beth Jones
7.
Perhaps the true mark of a leader is that she or he is willing to stand alone.
Laurie Beth Jones
8.
Forgetting your mission leads, inevitably, to getting tangled up in details-details that can take you completely off your path.
Laurie Beth Jones
9.
A wise person does not fear the edges and fringes, but studies them. Indeed, he or she is often in them, working to make change happen.
Laurie Beth Jones
10.
If you believe you have a just cause, an important message, or a key contribution to make, you will be just as innovative as a college freshman desperate to see his girlfriend six hundred miles away. You will get there any way you can.
Laurie Beth Jones
11.
Belief in oneself is a crucial quality of leadership, because 'a house divided against itself cannot stand.' A leader who fluctuates back and forth sends a very wavery signal. Like the soprano who can shatter glass by finding that high note and holding it, a leader who can hold that high note, without wavering, can shatter walls.
Laurie Beth Jones
12.
A purpose statement is, in essence, a written-down reason for being. Jesus' mission helped him decide how to act, what to do, and even what to say when challenging situations arose. Clarity is power: Once you are clear about what you were put here to do then 'jobs' become only a means toward accomplishing your mission, not an end in themselves.
Laurie Beth Jones
13.
It takes people some time to appreciate that their greater resources are often the people they know.
Laurie Beth Jones
14.
My father was always there for me when I lost. But, then, I never really lost when my father was there.
Laurie Beth Jones
15.
If someone was to tally the number of human hours wasted in business by people trying to accomplish objectives without being given the authority to do so, we would all be appalled.
Laurie Beth Jones
16.
As a leader, it is vitally important that you keep in touch with your boss on a regular, sacrosanct basis. Chances are your boss can provide an aerial view that will make your path more clear.
Laurie Beth Jones
17.
People who succeed speak well of themselves to themselves.
Laurie Beth Jones
18.
Ken & Mark weave a simple, compelling tale that contains profound truths. If only we all knew The Secret.
Laurie Beth Jones
19.
Know more about the situation you're facing than a reporter who is writing a major article would.
Laurie Beth Jones
20.
I have been challenged by the concept of meditation ... I decided recently to accept the invitation of a friend to experience the sheer silence of meditation-undirected prayer. ... I had before only sensed intellectually ... But by going deep into prayer I could almost feel it.
Laurie Beth Jones
21.
Inertia, when first encountered, appears to be an immovable force. We are creatures who like comfort, patterns, and repetition... Yet change is life's only constant.
Laurie Beth Jones