Solutions for Our Times

  For further information and to receive complete copies of any of the white papers you
  see here,
Contact
  Al Uretsky, Managing Partner
  Estrella Partners Group, LLC
  Tel.: (623) 594-9283
  auretsky@estrellapartners.com
Sustainability: Leaders & Leadership
Considerations for Leaders and Workplaces
By John Blattner PhD
Introduction
Think about a leader as someone who exercises the role of inspiring other individuals by
demonstrating alignment to a cause, idea or belief.  Leadership has never been easy to
define, although your own definition of leadership is easily recognizable when you see it.
You recognize it because it touches you, inspires you and eventually moves you.
Leadership has many faces. Consider the Eastern and Western cultures and their
differences in how leadership is viewed and exercised.  Looking at the faces of leadership
around the world it is clear that the external representation of this fundamental role
depends on cultural and personal beliefs and that is why different people identify
leadership in different situations and people.
So, if leadership can be perceived so differently why are some leaders recognized
nationally or globally? I would suggest these leaders understand the collective needs of
others and have a greater capacity for understanding themselves. It might be that those
leaders are more than role models for action and that they are a role model for how to live.
The ability to inspire people is a virtue that can be used at different levels and for many
different directions.  While human beings can be persuaded, and also manipulated, by the
ability of inspire, lasting inspiration differs from sparking passion: inspiration is stronger
when you perceive in the leader the alignment he or she has with the beliefs he or she is
holding. Therefore, I propose that a sustainability leader is someone who perceives and
exercises the role of inspiring other individuals by living and actions according to their
beliefs.
The concept of sustainability during the 21st century has gained not only nationally but
globally. More and more pertinent information is being published and discussed. More
conferences continue to evolve. We have also witnessed a significant increase in
businesses adopting sustainable practices. We have seen a dramatic awareness around
sustainable business practices. So, as we hear and learn more about sustainable
practices for organizations there is a void and need to grow and develop future
sustainability leaders. Sustainability has gained great momentum during the 21st century
with global scale discourse and publications, as well as conferences geared towards
sustainable business practices. This growth has accentuated the void, and need to develop
future sustainability leaders.


For further information and to receive complete copies of any of the white papers you
see here,
contact  Al Uretsky.