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Monthly Archives: October 2024
The Farther You Are from a System, the Simpler it Looks
I don’t know if I’ve had a lot of great insights over the course of my career. There are things I’ve figured out, and things that other people have figured out and explained to me, but there haven’t been many … Continue reading
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Actually, the Plural of “Anecdote” _Is_ “Data.” But…
I have a number of pet peeves with the current culture of news reporting. I’m not going to get into all of them here, because this isn’t the venue, but one of my peeves in particular actually does dovetail nicely … Continue reading
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Objection to Change Isn’t Always Fear of Change
One of the most frustrating things for a leader is when it’s clear (to the leader) that some kind of organizational change is necessary, but people in the organization resist accepting and implementing it. Such resistance can take many forms … Continue reading
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Defaulting to Transparency
One of the biggest challenges for a library leader is trying to figure out when to be transparent, and how transparent to be. Sometimes, of course, it’s an easy call. Confidential personnel issues, preliminary information about upcoming university changes, non-public … Continue reading
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What Is the Place of “Loyal Opposition” in an Academic Organization?
Today I want to loop back to an issue I mentioned in an earlier piece: the problem that arises when a library leader finds herself in a state of principled opposition to the position of either the library (if she’s … Continue reading
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Political Capital, Part 3: Alignment
In Part 1 of this series, we briefly discussed a simple visual matrix designed to help us stay focused on the boundaries that define both what’s practically feasible and what’s allowed in our organizations. In Part 2, we compared management … Continue reading
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Political Capital, Part 2: Leadership as a “Meniscus Position”
A former vice president at my current university had a wise and insightful analogy that she used when referring to leaders in management positions: she said that such roles can be characterized as “meniscus positions” because, like the meniscus in the … Continue reading
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Political Capital, Part 1: Big Circles and Little Circles
As library leaders, we’re constantly faced with decisions that require an understanding of the boundaries that separate what’s possible from what isn’t – that define both what’s feasible and what’s allowed. (There’s merit, of course, in thinking about when and how one should … Continue reading
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Leadership 101: It’s not about you.
I realize the title of this inaugural article might come across as a bit… I don’t know… vinegary? But I hope that by its end, the vibe you get will be more encouraging than that – so please read on. … Continue reading
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Welcome to Vision & Balance
This is a twice-weekly newsletter devoted to management and leadership in academic libraries, drawing on things I’ve learned over the course of a 30-year career – sometimes by making mistakes, sometimes by doing things that worked really well, and always … Continue reading
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