Valentine’s Day is an Opportunity

By | February 14, 2016

[February 14, 2016]  I surprised my wife with a bouquet of pink carnation flowers for Valentine’s Day today and she’s been all smiles since.  But Valentine’s Day is more than just another holiday to purchase something; it means that all of us have an opportunity to do something good for someone we love. “A heart is not judged… Read More »

Good Habits #20: Forget Perfection

By | February 13, 2016

[February 13, 2016]  Having worked with military and civilian engineers nearly all my life, I can attest to the fact that perfection is one of their most important goals.  Getting any calculation wrong can mean the difference in project failure or success … and that means a lot.  Once I finished my first year in combat with military… Read More »

Who is Simon Wiesenthal?

By | February 12, 2016

[February 12, 2016]  It is my belief that what we do echoes across history and that we are, in the final analysis, responsible for our actions.  People today and in the future will look to judge us as good or as bad … and that is acceptable and we should offer no excuses for our failings.  As another… Read More »

Leadership: Turning Losers into Winners

By | February 11, 2016

[February 11, 2016]  In the style of the American football coach George Allen, turning losers into winners is something truly remarkable to witness.  Some leaders have it, others don’t.  Here at theLeaderMaker.com, it is a key principle that leadership is learned and therefore all of us have the ability to take our teams across the finish line and… Read More »

Profile: Julius Caesar

By | February 10, 2016

[February 10, 2016]  A recent discovery of ancient bones, weapons, and other combat gear from the First Century B.C. has shed new light on Julius Caesar’s conquest of what today is northern Europe.1  Gaius Julius Caesar was a Roman statesman, general, author, and dictator.  His conquests on the battlefield and his subsequent political successes have made him famous… Read More »

Leadership: Ready, Aim, Fire

By | February 9, 2016

[February 9, 2016]  These pages could easily be filled with anecdotes of leaders who made a major decision without fully contemplating the requirements to do so.  Those failures, and sometimes successes, can be spectacular much like General Armstrong Custer’s decisions and subsequent massacre at the Battle of the Little Bighorn.  The lesson for leaders is: ready, aim, fire.… Read More »

Denver Broncos Win

By | February 8, 2016

[February 8, 2016]  Winning in professional sports, like most other activities, means having a great team, a well-developed plan, and in-synch leadership.  The Denver Broncos won Super Bowl 50 last night where it all came together for them and defense played a dominate role in the outcome.  But it also showed the difference in quarterback leadership styles; one… Read More »

Turning Boys into Men

By | February 8, 2016

[February 8, 2016]  If we look back to the time when the American Indian was strong in what is now the United States, they can be found devoting much of daily lives turning their young children into good men and women.  Turning boys into men was a particularly important affair since they would become the protectors of the… Read More »

Physical Courage and Leaders

By | February 7, 2016

[February 7, 2016]  It is rare that anyone of us today would find ourselves in such a situation that physical courage was necessary.  We normally think of it in the context of soldiers in wartime or of police and firefighters containing a dangerous situation.  And yet, having to willingly decide between death, injury, danger, and pain, many people… Read More »