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Integrity Leads All Word Searches for Online Dictionary

Released on = December 18, 2005, 7:00 am

Press Release Author = Max Impact

Industry = Small Business

Press Release Summary = When Merriam-Webster assembled their list of most searched
definitions for 2005, the word at the top of the list shows the hunger people have
to restore trust in their leaders at work, at home, and in the government. However,
itegrity can be very hard for us personally, as this article shows

Press Release Body = When Merriam-Webster assembled their 2005 list of most searched
definitions, they could easily reason why certain words would make the list. Levee,
tsunami, filibuster, and refugee were tied to events during the year. Even
\"insipid\" was explainable due to the timing of the hits and comments made by Simon
Cowell of wannabe singers during American Idol. Yet one word, the top word, seemed
to be more wide-spread than caused by a single event. The word: Integrity.

Integrity has slipped away quietly. Customers complaints silenced by uncaring
frontline employees or deaf managers. Leaders isolated from the front-lines of
operations. Employees seeing owners buying new cars while payroll and benefits are
reducing discretionary income.

Failed integrity is often good intentions derailed by business needs. In the
mid-1990s Kmart investors were complaining about slumping market share empty store
shelves. Solution: a vendor report card showing manufacturers late shipments so
supply chain impediments could be identified and eliminated. Red ink began to grow
and making the scorecard a way to generate revenue through penalties. Before long
the program was assigned huge income goals, destroying longtime vendor
relationships.

As revenue pressures built, management wanted to use the scorecard to levy fines. I
resisted and soon upper management spun off the program leaving the training program
under my responsibility while a different team automated and expanded the compliance
program to a nine figure income stream. My continued training duties kept me the
face of the compliance program..

In hindsight, integrity would have taken me down a different road. So it is with
integrity. People do not judge your integrity by motives or intentions, only by
outcomes.

I developed Trust BallT. As in baseball, you go straight to the batter\'s box when
first encountering a new individual/team. If your initial impression conveys
integrity, you move to first base. Specific attitudes and actions allow you to move
around the bases, one at a time, eventually scoring a homerun. If you break one of
the tenets of trust, it constitutes an out and you must return to the dugout. No
longer can you simply go to the batter\'s box, from this point on you must pause in
the on-deck circle before getting back into the game.

When you are faced with a new situation, policy, procedure, or opportunity ask
yourself these questions:
1. How does it apply to my personal belief system?
2. How will others view it in hindsight when the event is over?
3. If something goes wrong or is changed/expanded/shifted in mid-stream, how will it
look in hindsight?
4. What advanced actions will prevent negative impressions during event?
5. Is the price worth it?

Integrity is an essential leadership quality. What are you doing to destroy trust?
Are words consistent with actions? Do you catch others off-guard or do they know
what to expect from you? Master integrity and you will build relationships stronger
and faster than you ever imagined possible.

For more information about building Trust or Trust BallT visit www.getmaximpact.com.

Web Site = http://www.getmaximpact.com

Contact Details = Rick Weaver

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