
By Woody Woodcock
One year ago last month I got to meet leadership guru John Maxwell in Florence, AL. More importantly than just meeting John, I got to hear from him on leadership in a very intimate audience of less than a few hundred people.
The one thing that has stayed with me from John’s message that day is that “good leaders ask great questions.” The path to connection could be more about curiosity than it is about commonality.
In the coaching work that I get to do, we ask a lot of questions to help develop people personally and professionally. Many people have never experienced being asked questions in the intentional way we do. I believe that with every good question comes the journey toward the best answer. It is the internal search and discovery that happens in answering these questions that is empowering to people. Coaching is a process where questions get asked and the search for those answers becomes the greatest teacher.
Right now, many leaders in fraternity and sorority headquarters roles are wrapping up the spring semester. A new crop of staff members will arrive in June eager to learn and help in their new positions. For my headquarters colleagues, I ask you to consider putting these questions on your docket as you reflect on the coming months:
Good leaders ask great questions. Here are a few more go-to questions that can be used for many coaching scenarios, whether for undergraduate leaders, staff members, or volunteers:
Summer is a season of restoration and things happening that are new! Use this time to refresh, reframe, and refocus,
To find more more questions to help you build better teams, check out the blog that inspired this post. Questions two, four, eight, and nine are just a few of my favorites.