Showing posts with label Global Responsible leadership initiative. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Global Responsible leadership initiative. Show all posts


Global Responsible leadership initiative

 

What is Global leadership

Globally responsible leadership begins with the guiding principles of justice, freedom, honesty, humanity, tolerance, openness, responsibility, solidarity, and sustainability. In order for a company to be successful and have good reputation, it must be both profitable and a decent corporate citizen at the same time. A new set of frameworks, laws, and business models are needed to keep up with global changes and fulfil financial commitments to provide both private and public advantages.

 

Model for Global responsible leadership

Short-term profitability, constant innovation, and long-term growth are the three pillars of value that today's corporate leaders must produce in order to succeed in today's economy.

q  When making choices, it's important to put own-self in the shoes of our stakeholders and create an inclusive workplace where everyone has a voice and feels like they belong.

q  Unlocking commitment and creativity through being authentically human and displaying compassion, humility, and openness via emotional and intuitive expressions such as empathy.

q  Our main goal is to help the company and its stakeholders see long-term success as a goal.

q  Innovating responsibly means using evolving technology to create new organizational and social benefits.

q  The goal of intelligence and insight is to find new and better ways to get things done by always learning and sharing information.

Communication

The art of leadership is to inspire, communicate, empower, and persuade others to embrace a new vision of sustainable development and the corresponding changes that are essential. Moral authority is the foundation of leadership. Credibility as a moral leader requires a combination of principles, character, and ability. Great leaders owe some of their influence to their personal traits, maybe more so than to their academic or technical abilities, as anybody who has taken part in action knows.

Example of Global responsible Leadership

          Roger McClendon, Green Sports Alliance

Since the beginning of this year, Rogre has served as the organization's executive director. After 14 years at Yum! Brands, he left to join the niche realm of green sports because, "My origins are in sports." Even during my time at Yum! I was aware that sports might play a significant part in sustainability. Corporations and sports organizations, according to him, naturally collaborate. They can both grow their businesses and instill the right values if they work together. Stadiums, have a lot of complicated procedures and food to deal with. When working with large corporations like Aramark, the Green Sports Alliance ensures that the food supplied is of high quality and sourced sustainably, as well as keeps tabs on the supply chain. In order to avoid waste, they must also keep costs down and his leadership is working for this objective.

Main competencies

 

q  Leadership: Executives in major businesses are required to develop their own self-awareness and emotional intelligence as part of their growth plans. While these intra-personal abilities are important, they are not enough for global leaders since they must also be able to adapt to novel circumstances and to cope with conflicting demands from numerous stakeholders.

q  Leaders need to develop their interpersonal, group, and social integration abilities as top-down, hierarchical management methods are being replaced by more bottom-up, globally dispersed management systems. The worldwide job of a leader necessitates that the leader learns how to function and establish authority in fluid, loosely organized, frequently leaderless task groups.

q  Cultural intelligence—the ability to grasp how various people think and feel and how society's cultures are founded on distinct philosophical, religious, and historical foundations—is also important. There has been a shift away from hierarchical divisions to cross-functional types of cooperation across nations and cultures in the workplace. To address this, we need leaders who are capable of strategizing and adopting a variety of perspectives.

 

                               About Author-Deepika Singh

 


  Academic and Technical writer with passion for technology . infovision.deepika@gmail.com