Oscar-Winning Insights from SXSW 2024

I recently got  back from SXSW 2024, where I had the chance to hear from Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert–known as “the Daniels,— who are the creative geniuses behind “Everything Everywhere All at Once.” They talked a lot about an ancient Japanese concept called Ikigai, which basically means finding your purpose. 

Although their panel wasn’t about leadership coaching, it got me thinking about how Ikigai is a phenomenal process for my clients and for all women leaders who crave more impact, influence, and success.  Ikigai can shift you into consistent and intentional creation and action, paving the way for that outcome you really want.

Finding Your Purpose: Ikigai

So, what’s Ikigai (pronounced “ee-kee-guy,) all about? It’s basically your personal roadmap to leading yourself with purpose, and leading others.

Think about it as a blend of four elements : 

  • What you love, 
  • What you’re good at, 
  • What you can get paid for,
  •  & What the world needs. 

It’s about figuring out what truly lights you up and using that to guide your choices. Finding the overlap of these four elements may sound challenging, and while it may take some effort, it is WORTH IT.

By thinking about  these elements and exploring where they overlap, you’re well on your way to leading yourself with a sense of purpose that can keep you very motivated and in action.  That’s MAJOR. 

Leading With Intention

Leading yourself with intention is everything. Discovering your Ikigai means you are no longer drifting aimlessly, you have a clear path in mind and are the sole architect of it. You turn autopilot mode off  and forge a new direction that resonates with your own values and aspirations. By clarifying your purpose, you can make every decision through this lens and easily sync that up with your actions.  No more feeling stuck! Whether it’s pursuing impact, influence, wealth, or any kind of success as you define it, you do so with intention, conviction and consistent action..

Ikigai isn’t just about you though. By leading yourself with purpose, you become a motivating spark for those around you. Your clarity and authenticity motivate others to find their own Ikigai and discover what they are capable of. Together, you create a chain reaction of purpose-driven leaders making a real impact in their world and in the world.  AHHHMAZING!

Taking Action

Ikigai is such a great fit for my coaching clients and all women leaders because it isn’t just about deep thoughts and reflection – it’s about taking action. Armed with your newfound sense of purpose, you’ll have the confidence and drive to pursue your goals with passion and determination. Whether it’s launching a new initiative, founding a company, or mentoring the next generation of women leaders, every action you take is infused with purpose and intent. 

Ready to explore Ikigai? 

Here’s how you can get started:

  • Reflect on what makes you tick – what do you love, what are you good at, what gets you fired up?
  • Explore how each answer aligns with your current role and what you really want to create and do,  as a woman leader.
  • Then, try it out and use your Ikigai as a guiding compass to inform your decisions and actions going forward..
  • Share your journey with others and encourage them to discover their own Ikigai. 

Ikigai in a nutshell:

In his Academy Awards acceptance speech, Daniel Kwan took the opportunity to encourage everyone to tap into this creativity. 

“There is greatness in every single person, it doesn’t matter who they are. If you have a genius that is waiting to erupt, you just need to find the right people to unlock that.,”

As a successful woman leader, exploring  Ikigai can be an incredible tool. By finding your purpose, leading yourself with intention, and inspiring others through your actions, you’ll create a ripple effect of positive change for yourself and everyone around you. 

Inspired by the transformative power of Ikigai? You’re not alone. I invite you to explore the depths of your own purpose and potential with a guide who’s walked this path and helped many women leaders like yourself illuminate their journeys. It is my passion – and profession – to do that with you EVERY STEP OF THE WAY!

Dive deep into the heart of your Ikigai with personalized coaching designed to unlock your unique blend of passion, skill, vocation, and mission. Together, we’ll craft a roadmap that not only leads you to success but also fulfillment and impact. Whether you’re aiming to redefine your career, enhance your leadership, or simply find more meaning in your everyday actions, our one-on-one sessions provide the clarity, strategy, and support you need to lead with intention and thrive.

Get in touch here to learn more about one-on-one coaching and be sure to follow me on Instagram and LinkedIn to be part of a community committed to purposeful growth and leadership.

Stay true to your Ikigai and watch what happens. 

Continue ReadingOscar-Winning Insights from SXSW 2024

Women And Leadership: Ditching Autopilot for the Win

Always in motion, women in leadership roles are usually tackling endless agenda items on a very long to do list. In our extremely fast paced lives, most of us operate on autopilot mode. Our days fly by. Our lives are so busy that we totally forget to check in with ourselves. It’s easy to slip into autopilot mode, but is that truly how we want to lead ourselves and others?

Have you ever stopped to wonder how you got here?

I have thought a lot about autopilot mode and the negative impact of operating this way exclusively. It can come at a very high cost especially for women in leadership roles. Learning why, when and how to turn it off, has a huge payoff.

Understanding Autopilot Mode

Autopilot mode is our brain’s default system—it is a built in tool that allows us to do things automatically and efficiently, without the need for constant conscious effort to function. When you walk, there’s no need to consciously instruct yourself to move one foot in front of the other. This helps us to make snap decisions in everyday life.

Some of those mindless decisions are insignificant. But others have a significant impact over time, on our professional, and personal, lives.

It is extraordinary how much of the day we spend in this way.

Our brain’s autopilot mode is meant to give us more time and energy to devote to more important tasks and to prevent overload. How’s that working out for most of us? Not so well. We aren’t taking advantage of it, if we never look up.

The cost to us is that autopilot mode completely bypasses conscious choice and decision making.

SIMPLE STEPS TO SHUT DOWN YOUR AUTOPILOT AND SWITCH GEARS

“Autopilot is a growing problem,” says Dr. Mark Williamson, Director of Action for Happiness. “It has gone from being an evolutionary protection mechanism that stopped our brains overloading, to our default mode of operating whereby we sleep-walk into our choices. It has seeped into more and more areas of our lives and relationships making us feel out of control.”

So, how can we stop sleep-walking through our choices? Here are three easy steps you can take to shut your autopilot mode off and shift gears into conscious decision-making:

1. Pause and Notice. Dr.Williamson says when people are running on autopilot, they feel trapped by their obligations and routines as if they are living somebody else’s life.

Sound familiar?

“The simple step of encouraging people to notice their autopilot behaviors is crucial,” says Dr. Williamson, “because then you’ve begun the journey towards changing your habits and making more conscious choices.”

Yes, the brain is lazy—it prefers the autopilot setting. No problem! We can train our minds to pause and notice we are operating this way and then switch it off.

2. Ask yourself the right questions. Why am I doing this? Is this what I want to be doing?

In asking these simple questions we step out of autopilot and shift into the present moment. We can see our own autonomy. This is incredibly powerful—these questions connect us to our values and allow us to see, and intentionally make, choices. WOOHOO! We don’t actually have to stay stuck on a treadmill of repetitive behavior any longer. This is leadership from the inside out!

3. Switch on your intentional thinking mode. Thank goodness, our beautiful brains have another operating system. WHEW! Think of it as a more rational and intentional thinking system that is there to help us manage more complex things like critical thinking, problem solving and learning.

It’s not that our intentional thinking mode is better than autopilot.

Your power lies in choosing when to leave autopilot on and when to deliberately turn it off.

THE BIG PAYOFF

Turning off the autopilot mode has SO MANY tangible benefits for women leaders, including:

Boosted Creativity and Innovation: Turning off autopilot encourages fresh ideas, new possibilities and innovative solutions.

Sharper Decision-Making Skills: Women leaders develop stronger decision-making abilities by making conscious choices.

Improved Adaptability: Leaders become more flexible and resilient in navigating challenges and changes.

Power, Purpose and Results: Taking control of actions aligns leaders with their values and goals, driving real progress to desired outcomes.

I CAN – AND WANT TO – HELP!

We each have our own unique autopilot mode that impacts our decisions, and us, in different ways. The key takeaway is to pause, notice what mode you are in and make a conscious choice. That is your power and there is nothing better than that!

So many of my clients are doing this work with me and seeing the ginormous benefits of it.

If you’d like to talk more about how coaching teaches you how to leave autopilot mode behind so that you start leading yourself, and others, more consciously, I’m always here to help.

Continue ReadingWomen And Leadership: Ditching Autopilot for the Win

Goals Are Great. Awareness Comes First.

2024 is well underway. We’ve all made our resolutions. We’ve all made our ambitious declarations. We have big plans for the New Year. Bring it on, we say!

A fresh calendar marks a demarcation line for a fresh start. Opportunity abounds. It’s natural for you to feel the urge to set goals—for yourself, for your business, for your relationship with the world around you.

News flash! In this annual rush, we’re skipping the first step–awareness. Before the resolutions, declarations, and big plans, before all the January goal setting–first take the time to look inside.  

Goal setting.  It’s an inside job.

For years, I took part in the annual goal setting rush. I compiled exhaustive to-do lists—feverishly cataloging the goals I hoped to achieve over the next year.

It didn’t work. But why?  Why did all this goal setting trip me up instead of pushing me forward?

I was building out goals blindly, without first taking the time to look at my own values, behaviors and thoughts, the results I really wanted or the blocks that got in my way of achieving my goals. I couldn’t see how I was getting in my own way because I wasn’t looking.

When I learned this, it changed everything about my goal setting and achievement.

I discovered that I had a tendency to absorb the expectations of others, to define my goals according to perspectives that were not my own. We’re all subject to so many external influences —professional pressures, personal relationships, cultural norms. It isn’t obvious to us that these external influences, and many unexamined patterns of automatic thinking and old stories, are driving our goal creation in the first place.  Awareness allows us to look at all of this for what it is. 

Awareness is so vital to your journey as your own leader and as a leader of others. Once I understood this–and only then–I was able to move on and get down to the business of identifying different goals that I wanted and make different choices to accomplish them, from the inside out.

Step One: Block Out the Noise

Awareness comes out of creating the conditions for it –  muting the noise all around you. And for women leaders, life can be extremely noisy!

At any given moment, your child is texting you for homework help, your aging parent is calling because they still can’t figure out the remote control, and your email inbox is piling up.

Push the “Silence” button on all of it—just for a little bit.

Hear your own thoughts more clearly, notice your feelings, remind yourself of your core values and you can see the results you actually want with your eyes wide open. Let your who and your why drive your goal creation. 

Try it.  

Step Two: Take Stock of Your Core Values

We face unique challenges as women leaders. Awareness plays an especially important role in staking out your own identity, defining your leadership style, and steeling yourself against unproductive, default patterns.

Take stock of yourself. The benefits are considerable including:

  • Improved performance;
  • A clearer sense of purpose;
  • Stronger conviction in your beliefs, values, and identity;
  • A richer relationship with yourself and with others; and
  • An internal compass that guides your decision making and keeps you focused on the right things.

Your core values, your greatest aspirations, the endeavors that give you more energy than stress–identify these things before you set your goals. 

Take a look under the hood before you get on the road.  

Step Three: Shift Your Perspective

So how, as a leader, do you prioritize reflection when you’ve made your success through always rushing into action? It takes a shift, in perspective, mindset, energy – whatever you like to call it.

To quote Marshall Goldsmith, “What got you here won’t get you there.”

I once worked with a client who was reluctant to “waste time” looking “underneath the hood.”  She was in a rush to set goals and take action.  

It was only when we began to look at her core self that she started to make connections. Suddenly, she could give a name to what her gut had been telling her for years. Her thinking shifted. She could see what she really wanted, and could then set goals to get there. 

It was like turning on a light switch. 

Awareness is a Practice and a Journey.

You can tell how I feel about Awareness by this point. It is one of the most important practices you can develop within yourself for your goal setting, your leadership and your life.  I am excited for you to start today in your own practice. Be gracious with yourself and as always, have some fun too. Let me know what you find and how it impacted your January list of goals! 

XX,
Michele

Continue ReadingGoals Are Great. Awareness Comes First.

How to Achieve Big Goals: Celebrating Small Wins for Major Impact on Your Way to  Success

Here’s a revelation that I’ve had in running my own business and coaching clients: celebrating small wins is not just a nice-to-have; it’s a strategic leadership practice with a profound impact on both personal and collective success. For those looking for a leadership hack, recognizing and celebrating the small wins might seem inconsequential, but they can have an impressive ripple effect for both you and your team.

In my work coaching women leaders, we delve into the transformative influence of acknowledging and celebrating these seemingly minor victories. Many leaders underestimate the significance of everyday achievements, dismissing them as inconsequential. Yet, when prompted to pause, recognize these small triumphs, and celebrate them, the results are eye-opening.

Identifying Small Wins: Everyday Milestones Toward Success

What constitutes a small win? The possibilities are vast, encompassing a range of accomplishments, including:

  • Initiating a crucial conversation
  • Sending a pivotal email
  • Embracing something new
  • Crossing off an action item from your list
  • Voicing your opinions in a meeting
  • Providing constructive feedback that is well-received

The list is endless because it’s dependent on so many different factors that are personal to your experience. Embracing these small wins are the building blocks of significant achievement.

How to Achieve Big Goals: One Small Win at a Time

If you’re seriously thinking about how to achieve big goals, know that you have to start thinking about celebrating small wins as more than a feel-good exercise. It serves as a potent catalyst for your personal and professional growth as a leader, with far-reaching effects:

Sustained Motivation: Small victories fuel motivation and positivity, making it easier to figure out how to achieve big goals.

Confidence Boost: Each small win contributes to building confidence, enabling you to approach more significant challenges with self-assurance.

Continuous Momentum: Celebrating small wins maintains energy levels and guards against burnout, ensuring continual progress.

Focused Approach: It helps you stay concentrated on immediate tasks, breaking down the journey into manageable steps.

Positive Mindset: Regular celebrations cultivate a positive mindset, fostering resilience in the face of challenges.

Team Morale: In a team setting, celebrating together enhances morale and encourages collaborative efforts toward overarching goals.

Reflective Learning: Acknowledging wins prompts reflection, fostering continuous learning and personal growth.

Tangible Progress: Ensures a tangible sense of progress, even when the ultimate goal may seem distant.

Purpose Alignment: Celebrating small wins reinforces the purpose behind your efforts, keeping you aligned with your overarching goals.

As you can see, celebrating small wins has the power to redefine your self-perception, expand your perceived capabilities, reshape your approach to challenges, and influence your future actions. It’s a transformative practice that transcends the act of celebration itself. And it’s the first step to figuring out how to achieve big goals.

Making Celebrations Your Own

Your celebrations can be personal, private, and swift or as elaborate as you desire. Keeping a record of these wins allows you to reflect on your journey.

Personally, I vocalize my achievements to my family, while others may treat themselves to a quick coffee, share with a friend, dance in their office, or even throw confetti in the air (like one of my clients). The key is to enjoy the process and discover what resonates with you.

So, how will you celebrate your next small win on the path to greater impact, wealth, and influence?

Coaching For Women Leaders

It’s my passion, and profession, to support women leaders in reaching their big goals in the coming year.

XX,
Michele

Continue ReadingHow to Achieve Big Goals: Celebrating Small Wins for Major Impact on Your Way to  Success

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