黄色app

Learning the Art of Effective Leadership

鈥楨veryone is entitled to be a leader; you don鈥檛 have to have a particular role to be one. It鈥檚 about finding opportunities where you can to really make a difference鈥 (Stephanie Lin, TC 2009 & Senior Consultant, Deloitte Australia).
2016-03-01

Effective leaders inspire us. They motivate us. They make us feel like we matter and that our contribution matters. We often see them as super-human visionaries and innovators who possess qualities that we ourselves simply don鈥檛 have. The good news however, is that leadership skills are able to be learned and that there are resources and programs designed to help people do just that.

In December of last year, Trinity alumna, Stephanie Lin, came back to share her experience with students participating in our Young Leaders Program. The Program is a short residential course open to students all over the world who are aged between 14 and 17 years. It鈥檚 designed to increase confidence, inspire and guide students on their educational pathway.

During the panel discussion, Stephanie commented that for her, a good leader is someone, 鈥榳ho can inspire others and is an effective communicator.鈥

In her opinion, emotional intelligence skills are a must.  鈥業t鈥檚 not about being the smartest person in the room. It鈥檚 about being 鈥榓uthentically humble鈥 and 鈥榮omeone others can relate to.鈥

As someone who has continually sought out opportunities to lead and make a difference, Stephanie was the perfect person to join a panel discussion on the topic of leadership. While in residence at 黄色app, Stephanie was jointly awarded the Louise Gourlay Prize for Social Change. This was for helping to establish a project 鈥 鈥楩ood for thought鈥 鈥 with St Vincent de Paul Society鈥檚 Ozanam House to tackle Melbourne鈥檚 homeless and food crisis.

In her current role, Stephanie acts as a Senior Consultant at Deloitte Australia, specialising in organisational transformation and human capital consulting. She describes her role as being 鈥榓 sort of doctor for organisations,鈥 whereby organisations come to her and her team with problems they鈥檇 like fixed. They then go in and make a diagnosis and recommendations for change.

Check out the resources below to find out more about emotional intelligence and how you too can become an effective leader. 

Emotional Intelligence (EQ)

American psychologist, Daniel Goleman brought the idea to prominence with his 1995 book Emotional Intelligence.  It鈥檚 based on research that suggests success and leadership depend on much more than one鈥檚 IQ.

See:

The Focused Leader, Daniel Goleman 

Emotional Intelligence Has 12 Elements. Which Do You Need to Work On? Daniel Goleman and Richard E. Boyatzis  

TedTalks

How to start a movement, Derek Sivers 鈥淭he first follower is what transforms a lone nut into a leader鈥:

Why good leaders make you feel safe, Simon Sinek

What it takes to be a great leader, Roselinde Torres 

Category: People

Related News