God knows where you need to take your business, or how you need to lead your department, so seek his wisdom.
We should not ignore weaknesses, but it's easy to get bogged down attempting to fix all the problems at once.
While church growth has its share of critics, I’ve rarely met a church leader who didn’t want his or her church to grow.
I wish every pastor in America would make a solemn vow to never speak these words again and that they would correct church members who long for a return to the status quo.
In his book The Real Life MBA, Jack Welch has a great chapter called “Overcoming a Whacking.” Here are my notes after reading it.
The problem with building the plane while flying it—or lack of planning—is that it puts the church in reactive mode rather than engagement mode.
From a prison yard I had dreams to evangelize the whole world.
Does tradition rule your church?
When leaders embrace the power of God in the most challenging times, here they find comfort and peace.
Excellent leaders and followers alike are to be people of influence.
Here’s what the Bible reminds us about the abundance of God.
I’ve curated the most recurring weaknesses with suggested improvements for leaders.
What makes this time unique is it disables our opportunity to minister in person.
Here’s what can be done.
Finding the balance between personal opinion and collective response is a challenge.
Discover more about servant leadership from author Tom Harper in his new book, Servant Leader Strong: Uniting Biblical Wisdom and High Performance Leadership.
For most leaders, that’s a massive change…a change no one prepared them for.
Here is what leaders can do about each.
Here’s where honesty and humility meet.