Leadership Excellence
A Model for Sustained Success

By Dr. Philip A. Iannuzzi, Jr.
(Retired Colonel, U.S. Air Force)



Developing Your Leadership Skills - A Model for Sustained For Success By Dr. Philip A. Iannuzzi, Jr. [Retired Colonel, U.S. Air Force]

Developing Your Leadership Skills - A Model for Sustained For Success By Dr. Philip A. Iannuzzi, Jr. [Retired Colonel, U.S. Air Force]



maria iannuzzi and Developing Your Leadership Skills - A Model for Sustained For Success By Dr. Philip A. Iannuzzi, Jr. [Retired Colonel, U.S. Air Force]

While groundbreaking advancements in artificial intelligence, automation, machine learning, and robotics continue to enhance a team’s productivity and efficiency, Leadership Excellence emphasizes that a team’s long-term success continues to hinge on one constant: effective leadership.  
Drawing from a wide range of literature, research, and leadership best practices in business, education, government, the military, and multinational sectors, Iannuzzi introduces The Model for Sustained Leadership Excellence. This comprehensive and integrated framework highlights the core values, enabling attributes, and unifying forces that inform and shape a leader’s decisions, communication, and actions—the instruments of leadership. The model underscores the pivotal role these instruments play in generating the motivation, influence, and inspiration needed to sustain a team’s long-term success. A multi-part implementation strategy provides a path for leaders to operationalize the model’s principles.    
Whether leading a small or large business, multinational team, government agency, educational organization, nonprofit, military unit, or any other team, this book empowers leaders to sustain their success over the long term.

Excerpts from Leadership Excellence

Developing Your Leadership Skills - A Model for Sustained For Success By Dr. Philip A. Iannuzzi, Jr. [Retired Colonel, U.S. Air Force]
By Dr. Philip A. Iannuzzi, Jr.
(Retired Colonel, U.S. Air Force)

A Framework for Sustained Leadership Success

Sustained leadership success takes time, energy, effort, attention, and a commitment to ongoing improvement and development. As discussed in Part I, leadership requires a wide range of physical, cognitive, behavioral, and social skills—capabilities that can be developed and enhanced through observation, study, practice, and experience. What is sustained leadership excellence? It is a leader’s ability to consistently achieve the correct results with their team safely and effectively over the long term. This is accomplished through the leader’s decisions, communication, and actions—the instruments of leadership. Building on this thesis, along with the literature and leadership practices discussed in Part I, Part II of the book introduces the Model for Sustained Leadership Excellence.
The comprehensive model is constructed around three dimensions of leadership—core values, enabling attributes, and the leadership process.

Developing Your Leadership Skills - A Model for Sustained For Success By Dr. Philip A. Iannuzzi, Jr. [Retired Colonel, U.S. Air Force]

Leadership Priorities

Leadership is one of the most observed and least understood phenomena on earth.”
~ James MacGregor Burns


Effective leaders sustain their team’s performance by cultivating a work environment where team members feel proud and enthusiastic about being part of the team. They emphasize the importance and value of the team’s mission and its contributions to the broader goals, objectives, priorities, and vision of the organization. This chapter explores two overarching leadership priorities, people and mission, along with corresponding focus areas aligned to each priority. A leader’s engagement, involvement, and attention to these priorities serve to cultivate an environment in which team members see the leader as trusted and trusting, concerned about the success and welfare of team members, and committed to the team’s mission.

Developing Your Leadership Skills - A Model for Sustained For Success By Dr. Philip A. Iannuzzi, Jr. [Retired Colonel, U.S. Air Force]

Empower Your Leadership
The Model for Sustained Leadership Success

Dr. Philip A. Iannuzzi, Jr.

Leadership

“There is nothing exalted about being an effective executive.
It is simply doing one’s job like thousands of others.”

~ Peter F. Drucker

Over the past 50 years, the volume of books, journals, reports, magazines, internet articles, studies, and other literature on leadership has grown significantly. Each one offers important insights, theories, and lessons about leadership. Much of the literature consists of authors presenting research and analysis regarding the skills, competencies, characteristics, behaviors, and traits of successful leaders. The conclusions drawn from the research serve to advance our understanding of leadership as an art and science. This chapter explores prevalent leadership themes stemming from the growing body of literature, including the leader’s role, a review of the differences between managers and leaders, and a discussion of whether leaders are born or made.

The Leader Role

Leaders come from diverse backgrounds, they serve in all fields, and they hold a wide variety of titles. Their personalities and leadership styles are equally diverse. Despite these differences, however, their role and function in an organization is the same. Whether a leader works in the manufacturing industry or law enforcement, health care or government, university or military, a leader is responsible, first of all, for influencing others to get things done—“the right things,” contends Peter F. Drucker.”
Effective leaders, therefore, make decisions, communicate, and act in ways to motivate, influence, and inspire team members to accomplish the correct job(s), task(s), and mission(s) in pursuit of an organization’s goals, objectives, priorities, and long-term vision. Drucker expresses his view on effective leadership: The foundation of effective leadership is thinking through the organization’s mission, defining it and establishing it, clearly and visibly. The leader sets the goals, sets the priorities, and sets and maintains the standards. He makes compromises, of course; indeed, effective leaders are painfully aware that they are not in control of the universe. But before accepting a compromise, the effective leader has thought through what is right and desirable. The leader’s first task is to be the trumpet that sounds a clear sound. 
The second requirement is that the leader sees leadership as responsibility rather than as rank and privilege. When things go wrong—and they always do—they do not blame others. Winston Churchill is an example of leadership through clearly defining a mission and goals. General George Marshall, America’s chief of staff in World War II, is an example of leadership through responsibility. Harry Truman’s folksy ‘the buck stops here’ is still as good a definition as any. But precisely because an effective leader knows that he, and no one else, is ultimately responsible, he is not afraid of strength in associates and subordinates. An effective leader wants strong associates; he encourages them, pushes them, and indeed champions them. Because he holds himself ultimately responsible for the mistakes of his associates and subordinates, he also sees the triumphs of his associates and subordinates as his triumphs rather than as threats.
A leader may be personally vain—as General MacArthur was to an almost pathological degree. Or he may be personally humble—both Lincoln and Truman were almost to the point of having inferiority complexes. But all three wanted able, independent, self-assured people around them; they encouraged their associates and subordinates, praising and promoting them. An effective leader knows, of course, that there is a risk: able people tend to be ambitious. But he realizes that it is a much smaller risk than to be served by mediocrity. He also knows that the gravest indictment of a leader is for the organization to collapse as soon as he leaves or dies, as happened in Russia the moment Stalin died and as happens all too often in companies. An effective leader knows that the ultimate task of leadership is to create human energies and human vision. 
“As we look ahead into the next century, leaders will be those who empower others.”
~ William H. Gates III
SourceDr. Philip A. Iannuzzi, Jr. (Retired Colonel, U.S. Air Force)

Learn More, Look Inside…

Developing Your Leadership Skills - A Model for Sustained For Success By Dr. Philip A. Iannuzzi, Jr. [Retired Colonel, U.S. Air Force]

Leadership Excellence
The Model for Sustained Leadership Success

By Dr. Philip A. Iannuzzi, Jr.
Colonel, U.S. Air Force (Retired)
About The Author Developing Your Leadership Skills - A Model for Sustained For Success By Dr. Philip A. Iannuzzi, Jr. [Retired Colonel, U.S. Air Force]
Dr. Philip A. Iannuzzi, Jr., a retired Air Force Colonel, business, and educational leader with over 40 years of real-world global leadership experience in the military, business, education, and multinational sectors, from first level to executive. Dr. Philip A. Iannuzzi, Jr., United States Air Force Colonel (Retired).
He served in the Air Force over twenty years in a variety of command, higher headquarters, and operational leadership positions, including assignments as a Major Command Division Chief, Director of Global Flight Operations, International Director and Air Branch Chief for the North Atlantic Treaty Organization’s Joint Force Command in Naples, Italy, Commanding Officer of an Air Force KC-10 Extender Flying Squadron, and Air Staff Program Manager at the Pentagon.
Following his service in the Air Force, he joined The Boeing Company. He holds a doctoral degree in educational leadership and is currently serving as a Workforce Development leader aligned to Boeing’s Defense, Space & Security (BDS) business unit.
Learn more:  YouTuybe – Dr. Philip A. Iannuzzi, Jr. (Retired Colonel, U.S. Air Force)

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