Leadership • Language • Justice • Purpose

Haitian Creole Legal Language Specialist, storyteller, and community builder helping you communicate clearly, lead confidently, and create meaningful impact.

Tag: leadership

  • I will speak at the CBMP 5th Anniversary Media Leaders’ Summit in Barbados

    CBMP 5th Anniversary Media Leaders’ Summit

    Amaryllis Hotel
    Thank you for agreeing to participate in the Business Session of our 5th Anniversary Media Leaders’ Summit on World AIDS Day, December 1st 2011.

     

    Please note the details below which will provide you with an overview of the session.

    Session Title:                         Business Session & Annual Executive Meeting 

    Session Time:             Thursday, December 1st 2011 at 11:00 AM – 5:30 PM

     

    BUSINESS SESSION: 11: 00 AM – 1:00 PM

    WELCOME: 5 minutes

    Dr. Allyson Leacock, Executive Director, CBMP             

     

    CBMP Annual Report & New Constitution (5 minutes)

    Corletha Ollivierre, General Manger, NBC Radio, St. Vincent and Grenadines 

     

    PSI/C CARISMA II Awards (5 minutes)

    Moira Denman,Regional Programme Manager, PSI/C

     

    GF Workshops (5 minutes)

    Joan Didier, PANCAP RCM & Executive Director AIDS Action Foundation

     

    PANCAP/ RSDU (5 minutes)

    Sarah Adomakoh, Team Leader, RSDU

     

    Haiti (5 minutes)

    Roosevelt Jean-Francois, Executive Director CECOSIDA

     

    UNESCO (5 minutes)

    Dr. Kwame Boafo, Director, Kingston Cluster Office

     

    UN WOMEN (5 minutes)

    Roberta Clarke, Regional Programme Director

     

    Measurement &Evaluation Surveys: Media & Audience (10 minutes)

    Michele Yearwood, Operations Manager, CBMP

    Dr. Livingston White, Programme Coordinator, CARIMAC

  • L’éducation au leadership

    Je suis rentré à Port-au-Prince ce vendredi matin pour participer à la conférence du Sommet Global sur le Leadership organisé par le Centre de Leadership Chrétien au Karibe Convention Center.

    J’étais content de voir que l’aéroport Toussaint Louverture est en chantiers et aussi de constater que les rues (de l’aéroport passant par Delmas jusqu’au Juvénat) étaient sans les tonnes d’ordures qui servent souvent de référence.

    Mon plaisir était tout aussi grand de m’associer à cette initiative qui a rassemblé près de 400 hommes et femmes venus d’horizons divers  pour visionner les différentes interventions présentées à cette assise globale organisée chaque année par le Willow Creek Community Church aux Etats-Unis et diffuse dans 75 pays à travers le monde dont Haïti.

    C’était aussi un moment de joie et de retrouvaille avec mon ancien camarade de classe au Collège Canado-Haïtien, le Pasteur Edner Jeanty Jr, qui coordonne cette activité.

    Je suis le principal intervenant en direct et le thème de mon intervention est l’éducation au leadership.

    Je situe le cadre conceptuel de mon intervention sur le leadership global à travers le temps et l’espace. En ce sens, le leadership qui est l’influence date des temps immémoriaux et n’a pas de frontière géographique.

    Tenant compte du fait que les participants étaient en grande majorité des gens d’église, j’ai utilisé en grande partie des faits de l’histoire de l’église pour asseoir ma thèse que l’éducation des individus au leadership est la base de la construction de la commuanuté et de la création de richesse.

    D’abord, l’éducation au leadership diffère de l’éducation classique, académique et professionnele. Il faut l’éducation de base pour avoir une grande majorité de gens qui savent lire, écrire et compter qui leur permettent d’avoir accès aux idées et d’être des consommateurs d’idées. Ce sont des outils rudimentaires pour être fonctionnel dans la société.

    Il faut aussi l’éducation professionnelle. Ce sont des gens qui ont l’éducation de base, qui savent lire écrire et compter et aussi qui ont un champs de connaissance d’intervention pratique. Ce sont des professionnels, des cadres, des ingénieurs… et des managers qui exécutent  les idées des créateurs et des visionnaires.

    Mais, il faut surtout l’éducation au leadership. Ce sont des gens qui ont l’éducation de base, qui ont un champs de connaissance professionnel et qui s’adonnent à l’étude continue sur l’influence à travers le temps et à travers l’espace. Ce sont des  penseurs, des créateurs, des Hommes d’Etat (Statemen) et des batisseurs qui orientent la société et qui décident de se preparer pour le métier de diriger.

    Chaque génération doit faire face à des défis. Chacun de nous est appelé à un moment ou à un autre à apporter des solutions à des situations de crise et à inover pour créer de la richesse pour notre famille, notre  quartier, notre église, notre entreprise … notre communauté.

    J’ai beaucoup apprécié les questions et commentaires addressés par l’asistance après ma prise de parole et du grand intérêt pour mon dernier livre Leadership Sur le Vif : des idées pour le Changement et la Création de Richesse disponible sur internet à travers le www.leadershipsurlevif.com et dans les librairies.  

     Roosevelt Jean-Francois

    http://www.rooseveltjeanfrancois.com

  • An update from the Global Leadership Summit

    I was very happy to be a live guest speaker   at the The Global Leadership Summit Video Conference last Friday in Haiti. It  was “awesome and inspiring”, according to e-mail update released by this event coordinator, Pastor Edner Jeanty Junior, a long time classmate from College Canado-Haitien.
     This  fith edition gathered approximately  400 pastors, Christian NGO staff, business people, young leaders, educators, media reporters etc. from the city but also from out of town (including Cape Haitian, St Louis du Nord, Pignon, Mirebalais, etc.). 
     The various messages of the day were all well received, especially Bill Hybels’ “Five Critical Questions” and Henry Cloud’s session, “The Fool, the Evil and the Wise”. The other speakers were Len Schlesinger of Babson College (Entrepreurship and Leadership) and Rick Warren (Leadership as Stewardship).
    The translation was easy to understand and the people laughed at the jokes and expressed they understood the insights. The Resource Center attracted many leaders who were happy to find titles they have been wanting to get for some time. Several media outlet came to the Karibe Convention Center requesting interviews about the Summit.  

    At the end of the second day of the Haiti Summit many participants came up to the organizers to say how satisfied and blessed these two days had been. All the talks got high marks in the evaluation form, especially the live talk by Mr. Roosevelt Jean-François, journalist, university professor and author of Leadership sur le vif (www.leadershipsurlevif.com). This was a sweet reunion for Roosevelt and Edner who had not met since graduating high school together in 1983. The facilitator for the day felt the sessions were her special birthday gift and an answer to prayer. The manager of a health program commented that the sessions have put a lot of challenges on her plate. One young married man wanted at least the one session by Andy Stanley on Focused Leadership that stressed “cheating” the work/ministry but not the family. 
    The GLS is offered in Haiti under the umbrella of LEADHAITI, a board representing various Christian individuals and groups committed to leadership training. All the planning is done by the Barnabas Christian Leadership Center.  
     A number of churches and organizations payed directly for many of their partners in Haiti via  www.leadhaiti.com.  Some Christian groups in Haiti sent  their leaders and staff: Compassion, Food for the Hungry, World Vision, Wesleyan Mission, UEBH, Baptist Haiti Mission, Lifeline, The Bible League, etc. And this year, a special collaboration with the Haitian Bible Society was forged. TopEvangelique.com provided a valuable support in getting the word out to its large database.
     
    The next event is the GLS in the South, at Les Cayes, December 15-16. Next step could be in  Cape Haitian  in January.  
  • Je serai au Sommet Mondial sur le LEADERSHIP au Caribe Center

    J’aurai à intervenir sur l’éducation au leadership au cours  du prochain Sommet sur le Leadership qui se tient les 24 et 25 novembre prochains au Caribe Convention Center à Port-au-Prince. Je suis très enthousiaste de cette occasion pour partager mes réflexions et idées sur le leadership. Ce sera également l’opportunité de mettre en vente mon dernier livre Leadership sur le vif qui est aussi disponible en version électronique sur le site http://www.leadershipsurlevif.com.

    Je vous invite à participer à cette conférence. Je publie ci-dessous le programme complet de ce Sommet qui sera retransmis en video-conférence.

    JOUR 1

    Inscription Ouverture

    Session 1: Cinq Questions Stratégiques
    Bill HYBELS, promoteur des conférences « Sommet Mondial sur le Leadership » ; Pasteur de Willow Creek Community Church à Barrington, non loin de Chicago ; auteur de Whisper, Holy Discontent, Axiom, etc.

    PAUSE

    Session 2: Entrepreneuriat et Leadership
    Len SCHLESINGER, doyen de Babson College (Massachussets, USA) ; auteur de Action Trumps Everything. Selon le magazine US News &World Report, l’université Babson College est classée #1 pour l’éducation en entrepreneuriat pendant les 18 dernières années.

    LUNCH

    Session 3 : Le Méchant, l’insensé et le sage
    Henry CLOUD, psychologue, théologien, consultant en leadership ; auteur de Necessary Endings.

    Session 4 : Leadership comme gérance
    Rick WARREN, auteur de Purpose-Driven Life (Une Vie motivée par l’essentiel), Pasteur de Saddleback Community Church.

    Renvoi

    Ouverture

    Session 5: Appels Difficiles
    Wess STAFFORD, président de Compassion International. Auteur de Too Small To Ignore. Ici il raconte l’histoire d’un pasteur et leader éthiopien pendant les années terribles de persécution de l’église dans ce pays.

    4 :30

    JOUR 2

    9:00 9 :20

    10 :45 11 :20

    Mama Maggie GOBRAN, fondatrice de Stephen’s Children, une œuvre caritative en Egypte. Elle est surnommée la Mère Theresa du Caire et aurait été nominée pour le Prix Nobel de la Paix.

    Bill HYBELS présente les histoires de trois leaders ayant accepté des appels difficiles.

    PAUSE

    Session 6: Debout pour sa Communauté
    Cory BOOKER, Maire de la ville de Newark, New Jersey. Né de parents noirs ayant lutté contre la discrimination raciale, M. Booker est diplômé de Stanford University et Oxford University. Sous son administration à la mairie, des progrès remarquables ont été réalisés pour la paix sociale : réduction de criminalité, augmentation des logements sociaux, etc. http://www.corybooker.com

    Session 7 : Education en leadership
    Roosevelt JEAN-FRANCOIS, journaliste haïtien, profes- seur à Florida Atlantic University, auteur de Leadership sur le vif. Sa thèse est que l’éducation au leadership est la base de changement de la communauté.

    LUNCH

    Session 8 : Leadership équilbré
    Andy STANLEY, pasteur de North Point Community Church. L’auteur de Visioneering présente un exposé autour de la meilleure décision de leadership de sa vie.

    Session 9 : Creusez avec foi
    Steven FURTICK, Pasteur de Elevation Church. Auteur de The Audacity of Faith. A partir de l’histoire biblique du prophète Elisée face à des rois désespérés, ce jeune pasteur d’une église florissante intervient pour raviver l’audace de la foi chez les leaders .

    Remerciements et Clôture

  • Leadership Clinton: “back to work”.

    I just read Bill Clinton’s recent book entitled: “Back to work: Why we need smart government for a strong economy”.
    This is an easy read featuring Bill Clinton’s ideas to turn America to the business of business, as Truman stated.
    He said a strong government working hand in hand with a strong private sector will lead to economic growth and jobs creation.
    Clinton, globe trotter in chief, invites Americans to “take off the blinders of antigovernment ideology and focus on what role government must play in America renewal”.
    America was built by people who were idealists but not ideological, Clinton wrote. Idealists are open to evidence while ideologists make evidence,experience and argument irrelevant.
    Clinton thinks the role of the government is to “give people tools and to create conditions to make the most out of their lives”.
    Those tools and conditions include: national security, assistance, opportunity, economic development;
    Clinton also wrote about the US debt crisis. He apologized himself to have left office with a balanced budget and a surplus.
    When he took office in 1993, the debt was 49% GDP (Gross Domestic Product). By 2001, the debt has dropped to 33% GDP, and was projected to be eliminated completely by 2013.
    Contrarily to those who plead in favor of cutting foreign aid to balance the budget, Bill Clinton said foreign aid is less than 1% of the US budget.
    He also pointed out “too much of the money appropriated for foreign assistance, sometimes 50%, never reaches the nations or the people it’s designed to help, largely because it is channeled through US contractors who took a lot of it off the top for overheads and administration costs both in the US and the affected economy”.
    Clinton’s prescription is to put America in the future .
    He detailed his plan  how to do that and to  put ” a lot of people to work now”:
    1.- Put as much of $ 4 trillion now held in the banks and corporate treasuries back into the economy as fast as we can;
    2.- concentrate on areas most likely to create good jobs;
    3.- pass Obama’s jobs act $ 250 billion in payroll tax;
    4.- end the mortgage mess as quickly as possible;
    5.- let people with government guaranteed mortgages who aren’t delinquent refinance their mortgages at the current low interest rate;
    6.- the Federal Reserve should give banks an incentive to lend money;
    7.- give corporations incentives to bring more money back to the U.S.;
    8.- let companies repatriate the cash now with no tax liability it it’s reinvested to create new jobs;
    9.- build a 21st century infrastructure;
    10.- speed up the process for approving and completing infrastructure projects;
    11.- launch an aggressive fifty state building retrofit energy initiative;
    12.- states and localities should have their own retrofit energy initiative;
    13.- get pension funds involved in investments:
    14.- paint the roof to reduce energy consumption;
    15.- re-instate the full tax credit for green technology jobs

    As I said, I read Clinton’s book in a few hours. It’s very informative, technically driven, and economically results oriented. Which is good. But, it lacks some deep thoughts on leadership and philosophical issues on why we are here, and why America and global institutions are in decay morally. Which could have been great.

    My next book will be Jim Collins’s “The choice to be great”.

    Roosevelt Jean-Francois
    Roosevelt Jean-Francois is a Business Radio/TV host, Fulbright Research Scholar, and the best selling author of Leadership sur le Vif. He teaches, consults, writes on global leadership issues.

  • Leaders with Values

    I’m glad to share with you a video blog I just watched on the Harvard Business Review. This is  good  Management thought leaders sharing their ideas on values in business.

    Featuring:
    Arturo Condo, professor, INCAE Business School
    David Rock, founder, NeuroLeadership Institute
    Buie Seawell, professor, Daniels College of Business, University of Denver
    Erin Lehman, senior researcher, Center for Public Leadership, John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University
    Christopher Adkins, director, undergraduate program, Mason School of Business, The College of William & Mary
    Maj. Gen. Frederick B. Hodges, US Army
    Susan Clancy, associate professor, INCAE Business School
    Jonathan Gosling, professor, University of Exeter Business School

    Here is the link:

    http://blogs.hbr.org/video/2011/11/leaders-with-values.html#.TrbbUJ03gJE.email

    Roosevelt

  • Peru and Bolivia have the best environments for microfinance in global ranking

    Peru ranks first followed by Bolivia, Pakistan and Kenya, according to the 2011 ranking, which compares the microfinance sector in countries and regions across two broad categories—Regulatory Framework and Practices and the Supporting Institutional Framework. These are complemented by an adjustment factor for political shocks and stability.

    The strong results for Latin America have been driven by high scores on elements that enable the microfinance business, particularly the existence of credit bureau infrastructures that are relatively well established in the region.

    Other Latin American countries that made into the top dozen include: El Salvador, Colombia, Ecuador, Mexico, Panama and Paraguay. Mexico and Brazil, Latin America’s biggest economies, made important strides in improving the environment for microfinance businesses with both countries now ranked among the top 15 performers.

    The report notes that, as a group, Latin American countries perform less well on the Regulatory Framework and Practices, although top performers—Bolivia and Peru—joined by El Salvador, Ecuador and Panama, hold their own in the overall rankings, placing them in the top 10 worldwide.

  • Latin America and Caribbean weathering global volatility, IDB’s Moreno says

    At a Group of 30 meeting, advises countries to offset risks building up in world economy. Latin America and the Caribbean continue to weather relatively well the problems currently afflicting the global economy, Inter-American Development Bank President Luis Alberto Moreno said today at a meeting of central bankers and finance ministers.

    Speaking to members of the Group of 30, Moreno said: “Indeed for many countries, the external environment has been relatively positive, and the region has made significant and fundamental advances. Still, the region is in a position to advance even further.”

    Progress, however, has been uneven. Countries that are net exporters of commodities to emerging markets or are capable of attracting foreign investment have outpaced their regional peers, Moreno noted.
    Notwithstanding their current performance, Latin American and Caribbean governments need policies to offset risks building up in the global economy.

    Among the most pressing issues, Moreno listed preventing financial contagion in their banking systems, mitigating the effects of declining commodity prices, containing domestic inflationary pressures and addressing structural problems often overlooked due to short-term concerns. Moreno made his remarks at a meeting of the Group of 30, which brought together central bankers, finance ministers, international financial institution leaders to discuss the global economic and financial outlook.

    Formally known as the Consultative Group on International Economic and Monetary Affairs, the G30 is composed of senior representatives from the public and private sectors. In their meetings members and guests examine challenging issues, discuss policy options and analyze the potential impact of their implementation.

    The event, held on the sidelines of the fall meeting of the Boards of Governors of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank, was led by the G30’s chairman, former Bank of Israel Governor Jacob A. Frenkel, and IDB President Luis Alberto Moreno.

    Federal Reserve System Chairman Ben S. Bernanke, European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet, Bank of Japan Governor Masaaki Shirakawa and Singapore Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam discussed current global economic challenges.

    Bank of Canada Governor Mark Carney and Swedish Central Bank Governor Stefan Ingves, who chairs the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, presented their views on financial markets and regulation.

    In the closing panel, IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde, World Bank President Robert Zoellick and Moreno offered comments from the perspective of the Washington-based multilateral financial institutions.

    This is the third time the IDB has hosted a G30 meeting. Over the past 30 years the G30 has produced more than 80 occasional papers and 25 special reports. It has also held 65 plenary meetings and a number of international banking seminars.

  • Paul Allen Idea Man… a must read (via Rooseveltjf’s Blog)

     Paul Allen Idea  Man… a must read I just finished reading Paul Allen Idea Man: outstanding memoir of the co-founder of Microsoft with Bill Gates. Paul Allen is a billionaire philanthropist whose passion goes from technology, science, space, art, music, sport and LIFE. I knew more about Bill Gates. And my reading of Idea Man helped me discover Paul Allen’s greatness in crafting ideas, making things happen in the world you and I are living today.  This book helps me better understa … Read More

    via Rooseveltjf's Blog