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    My Jewish Coach – Deborah Riegel

    What I Learned about Motivation on My Summer Vacation

    I’ve just returned from a two-week vacation in Israel, Jordan and Spain – and I am writing this email saddled with incredible jet lag, some squishy new love handles made from gelato, falafel and Manchego cheese, and many beautiful memories to last a lifetime.Deb_Jacob_Camels

    What made this trip so special for me? My sole travel companion was my 15-year-old son, Jacob.

    I knew that we would both enjoy sampling the local cuisines (luckily, gelato is always a local cuisine), taking history tours, shopping, swimming, and just wandering around. And I also knew that this trip would benefit from planning beyond flights, excursions, and lodging. It would require us to shift from a task focus (the what, where, when, and how of getting the trip off the ground) to a relationship focus (the who we were — separately and together – and why we were choosing to do this together.)

    Admittedly, it’s that kind of focus that busy, driven people who are motivated by getting things crossed off their to-do lists often neglect — and the costs of that neglect include the loss of connection, collaboration, ownership, engagement, and meaning.

    I didn’t want to look back on this trip and only be proud of what we did, where we went and how we got there. I wanted to look back on this trip and be proud of who we were and what we built together.

    Can you think of a partnership or team you work on (or live with) that could benefit from a little more of that?

    Here are 10 questions I asked my son and myself before our trip that you can bring to your next staff meeting, board meeting or Labor Day vacation.

    1. What’s our purpose for doing this?
    2. What could we do that would have each of us jump out of bed in the morning with excitement to get started?
    3. What would make each of us want to crawl back into bed and say, “I’ll pass”?
    4. What have we done in the past that we want to make sure we repeat?
    5. What have we done in the past that we want to make sure we don’t repeat?
    6. What do we each want to learn/get better at/get smarter about?
    7. How might we veto something that one of us really doesn’t like/doesn’t want to do?
    8. How should we let the other person know when we’re feeling stressed/sad/tired/overwhelmed/frustrated?
    9. How should we ask for personal time/space without it feeling “personal”?
    10. What would we want our sound bite about this [project/task/challenge/opportunity/trip] to be a month after? Six months after? A year after? 10 years after?

    38 Ways to Say No (and Still Preserve the Relationship)

    1. I’m not available then, but could be available on (insert date)no buttonWould that date work?

    2. Oh, I will be so disappointed to miss this!

    3. While I would love to do that for you, [insert type of priorities] preclude it. I hope you understand.

    4. I am so flattered that you asked but unfortunately cannot do that. Can I help you brainstorm someone who might be available?

    5. Normally, I would say yes, but I have already committed to ________ at the same time.

    6. Right now, I am saying no to all invitations (on this topic, at this timeframe, etc.).

    7. I need to decline, but warmly request that you keep me in mind for future meetings/events. Would you please reach out again?

    8. I try very hard not to make commitments I will likely need to cancel, and because of the timing here, I would likely need to cancel at the last minute, leaving you in a last-minute scramble to find someone else. Because of that, I will need to say no.

    9. That sounds like a fantastic event/opportunity/cause, and I know that I will be sorry to miss it.

    10. I cannot attend in person, but I wonder how I can help in some other way. Should we brainstorm ideas?

    11. I don’t feel that this is the right fit for me. Can I share with you the kinds of project or priorities that DO feel like a good fit for you to know for down the road?

    12. I am so grateful for the opportunity and for you thinking of me. However, I am in demand at the moment with appointments made months ago. I can also recommend x and y and z, who would be great

    13. I can’t, but let me take a look at who might be available to fill in for me.

    14. My schedule is completely booked for the next {insert timeframe}. Would you please reach back out after then?

    15. I am so sorry to decline but I have a prior engagement. Here’s what I’d like to do, though: let me put a note in our files indicating that I needed to turn this request down so that next time, I can move your request to the front of the line.

    16. Right now, I am only accepting requests related to X priority. Since this request seems to be about Y priority, let me put you in touch with someone who handles Y.

    17. I have reached my [weekly/monthly/quarterly/annual] quota for [speaking engagements, consulting, meetings, panels, rallies, etc.]. Things should open up again by [insert month]. Please reach back out to me then.

    18. I hate to admit this but I have already said yes to two events that day, and will need to cancel at least one of those. I don’t want to cancel two.

    19. I have recently had some unexpected events come up and so I won’t be scheduling anything new at this time.

    20. I will be out of town.

    21. I don’t do X, as a rule.

    22. I’m good at X, but not great at it. Let me suggest some people who are great at it.

    23. It sounds like our budgets aren’t in the same ballpark. If you have flexibility, terrific. And if not, I completely understand and know that you’ll find someone great within your price-range.

    24. I will need more information to make a decision. Can you please send me….?

    25. I adore the cause, but simply can’t commit right now/I need to decline.

    26. I don’t know and I don’t want to hold you up so feel free to ask someone else.

    27. You’re so kind to think of me. Thank you. Sadly, I need to decline.

    28. Not this time. When’s the next opportunity available for something like this?

    29. If only I had a clone then I could be in two places at once!

    30. I am heads-down on a project right now, and won’t be coming up for air for the next [insert timeframe].

    31. When do you need to know by? I ask because if it’s in the next {week/month/quarter], I will need to say no.

    32. Right now, I am only saying yes to very select opportunities that fall into [insert area of focus], and unfortunately this doesn’t meet the criteria.

    33. I’m not available for that, but I know someone who is working on a common agenda/goal/objective. Let me connect you!

    34. Others have made similar requests, and I have said no to all of those.

    35. X is my top priority right now, so I am devoting all of my time to that.

    36. With x # of this type of request coming in every month, I have had to limit the number of acceptances in order to make time for other business. I am at my limit.

    37. I have committed to my clients that X would be my leading priority this year. For that reason, I will need to say no to this invitation in order to make good on my commitment.

    38. Thank you so much, but no.
    …and just for fun…

    10 Things NOT to Say

    1. You’re joking, right?

    2. I have commitment issues.

    3. This request is below my pay grade.

    4. I wish I had the luxury of entertaining such a whimsical request.

    5. What do I have to say to get you to understand that NO means NO?

    6. I no longer commit to causes that make me feel like a hypocrite.

    7. As if!

    8. Sure, at half-past never.

    9. Yuck!

    10. N to the O.

    The Power of a Six Word Ask

    Hand arrange wood letters as Six word

    By Guest Maven Alina Gerlovin Spaulding

    It is legend that Hemingway was challenged to write a novel in just 6 words… to which he responded: “For Sale: Baby shoes, never worn.”

    There’s a terrific story about Earnest Hemingway, which, like most stories about him, begins as a bar brawl.

    Years later, Smith Magazine challenged readers to write their memoirs in 6 words.  Nearly overnight, there were so many compelling responses, that they published a book called: Not Quite What I Was Planning.

    A dear friend and fellow philanthropist and fundraiser, Alison Lebovitz, ran a program by which I was completely taken.  In a room full of female leaders, she said: “everyone has a story, what’s yours?”  She challenged us to introduce ourselves, in just six words.  Although nearly every person in the room was a friend of mine, I learned more in the brevity and intention of those six-word introductions than I may have ever learned in years of friendship.  The most important aspects were distilled and communicated.

    I started using this technique with other groups… I asked a group of day school heads to capture the mission of their school in 6 words: “Keep climbing, the view is awesome.”  And for a new, low-cost private school, in New York, we heard “It’s affordable, go have another kid!”  When I asked a group of teen leaders to tell me a 6-word story about how they intend to change the world, one teen said: “I don’t now where to start.”  Someone who did this project with Dr. Ruth said that her story was: “I wish for everyone, great sex!”

    I know a very quick thinking, impatient rabbi who said, “I got it in 5”.  These two made me smile: “My life made my therapist laugh” and “fourth choice to prom, still overcompensating”.

    Here are some other examples that might resonate:

    The work we do is sacred.

    We help Jews, wherever they are.

    My community is a global one.

    Why Federation? I can give directly.

    LOVE the J! Ask me Y!

    Another generation, hanging at the JCC.

    Thank G-d for non-Jewish members!

    There’s something magical about the ease and brevity of this task.  Now, when I start working on a development project, I ask the team or the leader to give me the mission of the project in 6 words.  They always laugh, but when they actually get it, it opens a new dimension.  What’s the story of your passion?

    If you’d like to learn how to create critical messaging for different types of donors and prospects, become more comfortable (and successful) at asking, and learn how to steward your donors for the long haul, join me for my four week online Maven Class: Donor Development Strategies for Breakthrough Results starting this spring. Early-bird registration now available!

    A Great Way to Use $10,000 That You Don’t Have

    By Guest Maven Beth Steinhorn

    As a nonprofit leader, you likely know many people who are passionate about your mission. You hopefully also know that passionate people are more likely to share their time and talent (not to mention their treasure) with your organization.

    How can you best tap into that passion so that these individuals can be involved in ways that are truly helpful in addressing organizational needs?

    Start by generating a list of organizational needs. What skills or talents would benefit you and your department in achieving your highest priorities?

    If that question is difficult, then try this “$10,000 Question”:

    Imagine that an anonymous donor just contributed $10,000 to your department for the sole purpose of hiring a part time contractor for one project or activity over the next 12 months. Whom would you hire?

    Amazingly, that question really gets the ideas flowing! And, what’s more amazing is that 95% of the time, there are passionate, skilled volunteers in your world who have the skills and interest to take on one of those tasks. Furthermore, they won’t require the $10,000 – though they will require an investment of time and support in developing and nurturing a successful staff-volunteer partnership.

    Here are a few roles that volunteer partners can fulfill:

    • Consultant: Provide professional skills and/or content expertise
    • Coach/Mentor: Share wisdom, advice, and support in a specialty area
    • Trainer: Impart knowledge and understand adult learning
    • Evaluator: Assess results and impact for the purpose of quality improvement
    • Project Manager: Facilitate a process from beginning to end
    • Team Leader: Volunteers leading volunteers and creating team culture

    What type of partner could help you achieve your goals, build your capacity so your job is easier, and make a difference for your organization and community?  Reimagine what partnership can look like… and the possibilities are endless.

    Are you registered for our “Powerful Partnerships: Creating High Impact Staff-Volunteer Partnerships” class?

    If you work with volunteers, you know that the relationship is only as good as your expectations, communications and celebrations. But how much time are you putting into making that work? Whether your answer is “not enough!” or “too much!”, this online course will help you be more strategic and thoughtful in creating mutually satisfying partnerships that last.

    Classes start March 30 reserve your spot by clicking here NOW!

    What Makes a True Partnership?

    Partnerships between staff and volunteers have the potential to be powerful, productive, and prosperous. And, we also know that they can be taxing, tiring, and totally not worth the effort. What makes a real partnership?

    A real partnership is one in which both parties bring something to table, share in the work, and make a tangible contribution to the outcome. Partnerships do not have to be 50/50 in order to be productive. There are many ways to divide and conquer the work. But, ultimately, both parties need to understand their roles, know the rules of engagement, and share the same vision for success.

    Think of a project in which you partnered with someone else and it didn’t go as well as you would have liked. Whether the project failed or it was successful, but simply wasn’t an easy road to get there, chances are more than likely that one of the following vital steps was overlooked or shortchanged. Here are the three important topics to discuss and address with any potential partner before solidifying the working relationship.

    1. Clear Roles
    • What are our primary responsibilities as a team and as individuals?
    • What special skills and talents do each of us bring to the table?
    1. Rules of Engagement
    • What is the most effective way for us to communicate?
    • How often will we check in and share progress?
    • How will we handle it if our agreements aren’t met?
    1. Vision for Success
    • What is our vision for success?
    • How will we measure success?
    • When and how will we evaluate and learn from our successes and challenges?
    • How and with whom will we share our learnings and successes?

    Next time you launch a partnership, take the time to discuss and come to agreement around each of these three vital issues as part of your preparation. By addressing these, you and your partner are setting yourselves up for a successful partnership.

    Is There Ever a “Perfect Partner”? By Guest Maven Beth Steinhorn

    partnership_mc_blogImagine that you’re a staff person in a non-profit organization.

    Imagine that you have an exciting role and responsibilities to share with a committed volunteer.

    Imagine that you want to find just the right person for the job.

    Where do you begin?

    Ensuring that you find the right person is not just about finding someone with the right skills. It also depends on finding the individual who has the motivation to do the work and the right fit with you. Very likely, you or another staff or volunteer already knows the perfect person for the job. But how do you find him or her?

    Here’s a handy checklist of considerations to help you identify individuals with leadership potential – whether they know it or not!

    Volunteers who are ready to move up and move the organization forward often:

    • Express aspirations
    • Take initiative
    • Ask great questions
    • Offer solutions
    • Problem solve well
    • Follow through
    • Care about meeting and evaluating results to make sure they’re on target
    • Take on progressive responsibility—and handle it well
    • Improve after feedback

    Use this list to help you identify a current volunteer, donor, program participant, or advocate who may be your perfect partner. Share the checklist with colleagues and other volunteer leaders so that they can be on the look-out for future partners as well.

    Once you have a list of possible volunteers, reach out individually to let them know how much you value their insights, their commitment, and/or their suggestions, and discuss the opportunities for leadership roles. Remember to be specific about what inspired you to contact each of them. In doing so, you’ve not only stacked the deck so that you have a great pool of candidates to choose from, but you’ve also personally connected with individuals who have already shown that they care about the organization… which can only inspire them to build their support, whether they become your partner at this point or not. It’s a win-win.

    Want to learn more from Beth about creating Powerful Partnerships between professionals and volunteers? Visit her at Maven Class

    What’s Your Capacity for Tenacity?

    tenacityWhen I was eight years old, my mother was interviewed on the local news in New York City for her impressive track-record of asking for – and getting – what she wanted from customer service. It didn’t matter whether it was a product, service or something else – once my mom had decided that something wasn’t quite right, she didn’t stop until she righted that wrong. And 9 times out of 10, she got what she asked for.

    The word that the reporter used to describe her was “tenacious”, meaning “tending to keep a firm hold of something; clinging or adhering closely” or “not readily relinquishing a position, principle, or course of action; determined.” She liked that word a lot. (He also described her as “comely” – meaning “pleasant to look at; attractive” – which she also appreciated.)

    Whether you’re a professional or volunteer leader, being tenacious is part of the job. Sticking to a mission, a vision, a set of values or a course of action is critical to overcoming obstacles. Of course, you might need to course-correct or consider new factors as they arise in order to be context-savvy, relationship-aware, flexible and resilient, but being able to say “I said I would do it”, “I did it” and “what’s next?” are hallmarks of the kind of leader that others want to follow.

    So, how tenacious are you in getting done what you’ve committed to?

    Continue reading

    What to Do When You’re Having a Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day

    Businessman deciding which door to useLast week, I had a terrible, horrible, no good, very bad day — and yet I made a terrific decision.

    I woke up on the wrong side of the bed. I was cranky, weepy and surly (sounds like some bizarro Disney dwarfs) and I just KNEW it was going to be a bad day. Everything I considered, said or touched went through a filter of bad energy. I just knew that I was far from at my best, and that there could be consequences to my decisions and actions if I didn’t do something about it. And “making myself feel better” just wasn’t an option.

    So what did I do that made an awful day better?

    I decided that for the entire day, I wouldn’t make any decisions. I mean, I decided what to have for lunch and what outfit to put on – minor issues – but I decided that any decision that could have lasting impact, big or small, would have to wait. Throughout the day, whenever I had a moment of wrestling with “Should I do A or B?” or “Do I lodge a complaint?” or “Do I say yes or no?” I remembered that I had made my only big decision of the day: not to decide anything.

    Let me tell you, when I woke up on the RIGHT side of the bed the very next day, I was very relieved that I had no messes to clean up, relationships to repair or decisions to un-decide.

    Having a bad day, my friends? Decide not to decide. It was one of the BEST decisions I made!

    Four Boundaries You Need to Set to Get Anything Accomplished

    During a year-end coaching call, I was thrilled to celebrate one particular client’s 2015 victories: a long-awaited promotion, carving out more quality time on weekends to spend with his family, and a new exercise habit.

    “Mazel tov!” I said to my client.

    “And how do you think you did on your goal of making time for planning in your new role?”

    He replied: “Yeah…that one didn’t happen.”

    “Any chance,” I offered with a smile, “you mean that you didn’t do what it takes to make it happen?”

    He smiled back, somewhat sheepishly. “Yes. I guess I mean that.”

    “And what do you want for 2016?” I asked.

    “To do what it takes rather than waiting for it to happen.” He responded.

    And so we began…

    boundariesOf course, as we all know, doing what it takes to set aside time for something that feels important (rather than urgent) is easier said than done. Somehow, I can always find the time to read the new Entertainment Weekly and binge-watch “Making a Murderer” and yet, finding the time I need to write my new book or get my office organized seems not to “happen”. Why? Because “hoping it will happen” won’t get it done. Making the time to do it AND setting four types of boundaries to honor that time will.

    In her research paper, “Positive Psychology and Work-Life Integration: The Mutually Satisfying Relationship”, The University of Pennsylvania’s Katharine E. Comtois suggests that we need to set the following boundaries in our work and lives in order to focus on what matters most:

    1. Temporal – Being clear about what you will do and won’t do, and when.
    2. Physical – Setting a specific place and space for certain tasks and activities.
    3. Behavioral – Acting consistently in ways that are designed to get you what you want.
    4. Communicative – Letting people know your priorities and expectations, and sharing how they can help or might hinder the process.

    In January 2015, I decided that I was no longer going to travel more than 25% of the time, which would effectively cut my travel schedule in half. It was something that I wanted, but wasn’t “happening”. Of course it wasn’t happening – I hadn’t set any boundaries to support it. With that aha! top of mind, here are the boundaries that I created:

    1. Temporal – I will be from home no more than 7 nights a month, period.
    2. Physical – Any activity that I could do virtually rather than in-person, I did (like webinars for teams and organizations when on-site facilitation wasn’t needed).
    3. Behavioral – I actively sought out work opportunities that kept me sleeping in my own bed, which lead to a great teaching gig at Wharton Business School.
    4. Communicative – I told my clients, “I’ve used up all of my business travel for March and April, but I can travel to you in May. Would that work for you?” (And if it didn’t, I was happy to refer someone else!)

    I couldn’t be prouder of how the boundaries I set – and continue to honor. I also found that setting these boundaries felt scary (what will happen to my business? Who will I be disappointing?) and living by them feels exceptionally safe and satisfying.

    Here are some questions to help you strategize how you can use boundaries to stay focused on shifting what you “hope” will happen to actually and practically making it happen:

    • How can you leverage other people to support you in honoring your boundaries?
    • What technology can you rely on to help you set and keep boundaries?
    • What decisions do you need to make that honor your values? (These can include decisions about what to do and what to stop doing).
    • What habits can you implement that make honoring your boundaries automatic?
    • Where can you create a physical boundary to separate the different roles you have?
    • How can you use tangible items (like different phones or email addresses) to separate your work, life, self and community domains?
    • What do you need to communicate to your stakeholders to establish boundary expectations?
    • What can you plan (like a massage or vacation) so that you can take a short-term break from managing boundaries?
    • Where will you allow for “fuzzy” boundaries?
    • How will you handle boundary violations when they occur (because they will)?

    Feel free to share any responses with me at headcoach@myjewishcoach.com. I’d love to hear them!

    Are you committed to make Work-Life Integration a priority for 2016? Get a head start by downloading our insightful, informative and inspirational one-hour webinar here.

    Hooray! Now What?

    Now WhatBy all accounts, 2015 has been a satisfying year for me, personally and professionally. In addition to taking a wonderful family vacation to Israel, getting two kids off to high school, and cutting my work-related travel in half, I accomplished three goals that, as part of our family tradition, warranted a Carvel ice cream cake:

    • I began teaching Management Communication at Wharton Business School.
    • I was published in Harvard Business Review.
    • I lost 25 lbs. (Trust me: I get the irony of celebrating this goal with cake).

    What do all three have in common? Yes, they’re all impressive – but that’s not what I mean. And yes, they’re all the result of hard work – and that’s not what I mean either. What these three things have in common for me is that within 24 hours of reaching each of these goals, I thought to myself, “Now what?”

    I gave myself a day (and probably only a few hours, if I’m being honest) to enjoy the achievement, and then had a sudden dip in interest, motivation and satisfaction as my mind began to scramble for what new goal I was supposed to be setting next. What could I do to get the next buzz? How could I top myself? What would make me happy next?

    And all of a sudden, it hit me: The only thing that would “make me happy next” was slowing down my goal-driven behavior long enough to actually experience being happy. I knew what yearning felt like, and what accomplishing felt like, and what adrenaline felt like, but I had very little experience living with what just being satisfied felt like. For a professional coach who helps clients discover and lean into what’s already working well in their lives, and for a seasoned mom who teaches her kids to be grateful for what they have rather than always wanting more, I realized that I was out of alignment with my own integrity.

    Eleanor Roosevelt said,

    Happiness is not a goal. It’s a by-product of a life well lived.

    My goal for 2016 (scratch goal, replace with plan) isn’t to want more, do more or have more.

    It’s simply to be happy with what I already, blessedly have.

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    “Deb has been a respected speaker and facilitator for a number of our JCC conferences over the past few years. While I've heard about her energy, hard work in preparing, and meaningful content, it took her recent keynote speech at our annual JCCs of North America Professional Conference to make me realize what an incredible asset she is. Watching her present a content-filled, energetic, and personalized session -- without using any notes -- was very impressive. Deb is a multi-talented, serious, and impactful presenter."

    – Allan Finkelstein, Past President and CEO, JCC Association of North America

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