Hank Rubin, PhD’s Post

View profile for Hank Rubin, PhD

“…wrote the book on Collaborative Leadership” Award-winning Speaker, Leadership Coach & Bestselling Author. Training & Coaching Public Leaders since 1992. Collaborative Leadership - How To Be An Antiracist Leader

Insight, factual knowledge, and relationships… critical elements of effective leadership.

View profile for Molly Schultz Hafid (she/hers)

Advancing social justice principles through strategic philanthropy

“Research shows that proximate leaders bring distinctive assets to their roles, including relationships, trust, and a strong sense of accountability to their community; outside-the-box thinking; radical imagination; and an inclination to collaborate. All of that is historically undervalued by funders and boards. Importantly, proximate leaders can recognize and leverage community assets that are often overlooked or misunderstood. But they also face unique, compounding, barriers such as being expected to solve problems that existed before they arrived or create change rapidly. A lack of trust regarding fundraising, board engagement, staff management, and organizational policies is also common as are constant questions or challenges around their leadership and decisionmaking.” How Philanthropy Can Help Position Leaders with Lived Experience for Success

Eric Koester

Creating Creators; Georgetown Professor & Founder of Manuscripts

7mo

What a thought-provoking post! It's fascinating to see how proximate leaders bring such invaluable qualities to their roles, yet face unique challenges. The emphasis on relationships, trust, and community accountability is so crucial. I'm curious, how can organizations better support these leaders to overcome the barriers you mentioned? It seems like a shift in how funders and boards value these attributes could make a significant difference. 😊

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