The Introvert’s Guide to Academic Leadership: How Introverts and Extraverts Build Successful Teams
Last updated July 31, 2018Course Length
1h
Last Updated
July 31, 2018
The Introvert’s Guide to Academic Leadership: How Introverts and Extraverts Build Successful Teams
Last updated July 31, 2018Table of Contents
Overview
Effective academic leadership requires a deeper awareness of ways both introverts and extraverts are motivated. This goes beyond common generalizations based on talkative or quiet natured professionals.
Join us for this online training and learn the strengths introverts bring to the table and the adaptive skills so that as an introvert, you can lean into your strengths to lead more effectively, or as an extravert, you can be more sensitive to the dynamics of your team.
Who should attend?
Academic leaders who are charged with building and motivating teams, such as department chairs, deans, and faculty aspiring to be academic leaders.
Agenda
Strategy #1| Play to Your Strengths
If you are an introvert, you will learn how you can be most effective. Extraverts will better understand their own biases and will learn to hone-in on the ways introverts can best contribute.
Strategy #2| Learned Extraversion
Introverts will benefit from ways to conserve energy through coping strategies that can prepare them for the often needed extraverted skillset common in leadership roles. Extraverts will find better ways to motivate introverted colleagues ensure they are set up for success.
Strategy #3| Build a Balanced Team
Both introverts and extraverts can apply this set of tactics to ensure their teammates are comfortable, to draw on their strengths, and to compensate for weaknesses of each group, resulting in stronger, cohesive teams and better leadership.
Tagged In
$350