How To Embed StrengthsFinder In Your Company After Training – With Murray Guest
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You Did A CliftonStrengths Team Builder, Now How Do You Embed Strengths Into Your Everyday Work Culture?
This week Lisa chats with Murray Guest. They focus on embedding strengths into your company culture after StrengthsFinder training. Instead of just participating in a training, then putting your results and notes away, find ways to sustain the use of strengths at work and home.
Using your strengths will improve your company culture, inspire your team to learn and grow, and increase your bottom line (and it will improve your family life too)!
Murray is a consultant who works with companies and leaders to weave StrengthsFinder into their businesses. He shares this list of four things he addresses when helping people build strengths-based cultures: 1. Systems 2. Physical Environment 3. Leadership 4. Attitudes. He and Lisa also give a ton of easy-to-implement ideas to infuse strengths into your everyday life, most of which are free, so listen in.
Murray's Top 5 Clifton StrengthsFinder Talent Themes: Relator, Futuristic, Individualization, Communication, Responsibility
Lisaâs Top 5 Clifton StrengthsFinder Talent Themes: Â Strategic, Maximizer, Positivity, Individualization, Woo
Resources To Help You Embed Strengths Beyond The Kickoff
You can connect with Murray through LinkedIn, Twitter, Instagram, and his website. Murray also created the Strengths Culture Toolkit to help teams use the Clifton StrengthsFinder beyond their initial team building event. To embed strengths into your leadership culture, you'll like Murray's resource called Leaders Who Give A Damn. It's an online leadership program to help you be a true people-focused leader.
Here's A Full Transcript Of The Interview On How To Embed Strengths
Lisa Cummings: [00:00:10] Youâre listening to Lead Through Strengths, where youâll learn to apply your greatest Strengths at work. Iâm your host, Lisa Cummings, and I gotta tell you, whether youâre leading a team or leading yourself, itâs hard to find something more energizing and productive than using your natural talents every day at work.
[00:00:27] Today your guest is a Strengths expert who I wanted to bring on the show because of a conversation we originally had about sustaining Strengths on your team over the long haul. So both of us had too many experience where we sparked an interest in Strengths in organization with a speech, or the training, or some coaching, but the company didnât have the infrastructure or resources behind it to make it part of the everyday culture. And weâre both making it part of our personal mission and our business models to support leaders in a way that helps them embed Strengths into the fabric of the company and to the everyday culture at work.
[00:01:04] A fun fact about your guestâs uniqueness, we shared a crush on Lita Ford in the 1980s and weâre both drummers. How fun is that? So, Murray Guest, letâs rock this show. Welcome!
Murray Guest: [00:01:17] Woo-hoo. Lisa, so good to be with you today. Iâm excited to talk about Strengths, but also, yeah, weâve got a bit of a love of rock drumming. Iâm learning. Iâm behind you in my skills. I know itâs all about practice, and Iâm loving when we connect and you just encourage me to keep going and keep practicing.
[00:01:34] And, yeah, Iâve a crush on Lita Ford and I got to see her recently play live. And to see someone that was so excited and so happy on stage doing what she loves, and Iâm sure she was tapping to her Strengths while she was doing it too.
Lisa Cummings: [00:01:46] Such a good metaphor for what Strengths do for you when youâre in flow and youâre just totally in your groove at work or on stage, because you love it and it shines through and it makes people want to work with you. Itâs a good reason to embed Strengths into your culture, because you get to experience people like that at work.

Murray In Action - Inspiring Someone's Business Growth
Murray Guest: [00:02:01] Yeah, Iâm so passionate about the idea of people being in the state of flow. Unfortunately, not everyoneâs in that place, and I think Strengths is such a perfect vehicle for people to get in that state where itâs energizing and itâs not, âThank God itâs Friday,â itâs, âThank God itâs Monday.â
Lisa Cummings: [00:02:18:] I saw that in your Instagram, TGIM, and I thought, âYes, that is the kind of movement I want.â So, okay, letâs talk about that from the perspective of loading up listeners with ideas for vetting Strengths into their culture because they take the StrengthsFinder assessment, maybe they do it as a team, and then they donât mean to go back to work and put it in a file and forget about it, but it does happen. We know it does, and itâs sad because we see the spark and they know theyâre going to find their flow with it, and then sometimes it can wane.
[00:02:47] So I want to get into a whole bunch of actionable tips and viewpoints about how people can use this, but I do want to start everyone off by being able to hear your Strengths, so kick us off with your top five first.
Murray Guest: [00:03:00] My top five: Relator, Futuristic, Individualization, Communication and Responsibility. I completed my Strengths assessment back in 2012 so itâs been five years that Iâve really known my Strengths and everyday thinking about how they sharpen and how they apply. But actually, Lisa, so like a bit of a path or a bit of a structure in my top five I just want to quickly explain that. So, for me, Relator is all about building these relationships. Number two, Futuristic, where you want to go as a team or as an organization or a leader and how can we get there.
[00:03:32] Individualization, how can we connect and specifically what it is for you? Communication then is about how we communicate that out for you as a leader or within your business, or if itâs someone running their business, how they market themselves. And the Responsibility, thatâs me and itâs a foundation of how I can continue to serve you as a coach. And itâs a process, I think, thatâs showing up and working for me really well as a coach.
Lisa Cummings: [00:03:56] Just last week, I did a training session and we had cards where they were representing each personâs talent, and this people manager called me over and he said, âI think my Strengths in this order are like a process that I use for how I handle situations or how I think about things.â So as you were saying that I was having a flashback to this guy, and I thought, âWow, that would be really interesting to ask people to see, âDoes this represent like a thought flow or almost like how you operationalize how you work through challenges or situations or something new?ââ Because I bet your talents do reflect an order, not necessarily the order of the Talent Themes number one through five, but an order in how they work in your brain. You might be onto something cool there.
Murray Guest: [00:04:37] Yeah. Well, I love that he identified that in your course last week because I think thatâs such a great awareness and a claiming of his dominant Themes. If thereâs a way that we can think about a lot of what youâre saying about the thought process, or the way we might problem solve, or the way we might organize ourselves, any way that we can connect and really claim those Strengths so that we embed strengths in most of our processes at work.
[00:05:02] In my previous life, I worked for an organization where what we did was psychology-based safety training. So itâs all about building a culture where people go home safe every day. So when we talk about embedding Strengths, Iâm transferring a lot from what I learned from embedding what we call a safe culture where people go home safe, where leaders think about the way they communicate and they lead, and the way that people have an environment where itâs safe to speak up.
[00:05:35] In that organization, I worked with a whole range of companies and about 10,000 people across some very large high-risk organizations, and one of them was a mining organization which employed about 2,000 people. This company had bought from us a couple of million dollarsâ worth of training, of programs and coaching and different sorts of initiatives to develop their culture.
[00:05:58] There was a maintenance team, and you would go into that maintenance team and you would swear that weâd been there only yesterday with our programs. The language, the posters, the way that they would discuss things in their meetings and look after each other, and you would actually see the results of their safety and their performance and their attitudes was actually indicative of that because of how well they were going.
[00:06:23] There was another part, which is the main part of this mining operation, where you would think that we had never been there, we had never run a program, never had a coaching session with the leader, never introduced these models and tools and concepts.
Lisa Cummings: [00:06:37] Same company?
Murray Guest: [00:06:38] Same company. Same site. Quite a large mining operation but same company, same site. Hereâs the thing. The maintenance team, we hadnât actually done any work with them for nearly seven years. The mining operation, weâd actually been there only in the weeks before, and it was critical to how much the leaders were actually living and breathing and embedding and, I would say, just adopting the language in their everyday conversations which kept this concept or these concepts alive.
[00:07:10] In the maintenance team, you had frontline leaders that are there managing these teams, day in and day out, and they had embraced it, and they didnât need us as coaches and facilitators to come back, and you could see then that was keeping alive, day in, day out. And, like I said, we havenât been there for seven years in that part of the business.
[00:07:27] In this other main operation, being there in the weeks before, yet it wasnât being embedded and sustained because the leaders didnât believe in it, and they werenât bringing into their language, they were sending people to the training courses, saying, âYou have to go,â but they werenât having, where I would say, the critical conversations before and after the programs.
[00:07:49] So if there was a key insight out of all that that I really want to share is to get the value from, say, embedding a Strengths culture and thinking about how we actually just make it part of the way we work. We really need to engage our leaders and support them in how they just bring it into part of their everyday language and the conversations theyâre having with their teams.
Lisa Cummings: [00:08:11] And weâve all seen the difference between the compliance training, where the person in the session is rolling their eyes, and saying, âYeah, yeah.â Weâre talking safety, but in reality they just want it faster and cheaper, and out in the field itâs not really going to go down like this. How do you do this with Strengths?
[00:08:08:27] If you translate that, and youâre a manager who is just experiencing StrengthsFinder for the first time yourself, and you donât know the jargon, and you donât know the language, can you help simplify that and just give people an idea of a few things, âHey, youâre an everyday people manager, youâre used to being an ops guy, or a finance person, or a marketing person, or something like thatâ? How do you start embedding this in your daily talk and conversation when you donât know the language yet?
Murray Guest: [00:08:55] I break up the culture into four areas, the culture within organizations: systems, environment, the leadership and their attitudes. To help us have those conversations and make it easy, I think one of the little things we can start to bring into those four areas so itâs really easy to have those conversations. For example, if Iâve got a diary and Iâm going to meetings with my people, what are the Strengths references I can put in there?
[00:09:20] If Iâve got a notice board or a whiteboard in my office or somewhere in that team area, what can we stick up there to remind us of Strengths and the Strengths language? As a leader, how am I investing my time when Iâm not talking to my people to learn about Strengths? So this podcast, youâve got a fantastic podcast, and also things like the Called to Coach that Gallup put out. They are resources that, as leaders, tapping into those when Iâm not in front of my people, traveling to and from work, theyâre great to actually start to learn and get some deep insights around Strengths.
[00:09:52] I also think asking people questions is one of the most powerful tools in a leaderâs toolkit. Asking people about their Strengths, how theyâre showing up, what do they want to get out of knowing about their Strengths? And then once people are starting to experience Strengths, whether itâs through workshops or coaching, ask them how actually itâs helped them, whatâs come up for them, how have their Strengths shown up for them in the past?
[00:10:16] Iâm a big believer, Lisa, that the 10-minute conversation a manager has before a coaching or a workshop event and the 10 minutes after, might be a cup of coffee, itâs those little informal conversations which show that, as a leader, âI care about you, and I want to know what you got out of that training, or that coaching session. How can I help you apply that

Murray Guest with Paul Allen - Top Strengths Evangelists
more?â
Lisa Cummings: [00:10:36] And youâre breaking down those four categories and talking about things like systems. Instantly I thought of things like the HR systems where Iâve seen some people embed strengths into their HRIS.
This is the software where they do performance reviews - and where they have their talent information or talent management system. They can put in their top five talents or they put in some of the career aspirations related to Strengths. Sometimes they link the Strengths conversation into the development plans, and theyâre building it into stuff that already happens in the organization. Now that's a way to embed strengths into the full process at work.
[00:11:06] You know, when you said the diary, my ears perked up. And I know some Americans who are listening their ears perked up because they were thinking of a journal kind of diary, so youâre talking calendar kind of diary, right?
Murray Guest: [00:11:17] Yes, thatâs right. [laughs] Iâm still a writer in, letâs call it, my day-to-day diary or planner, yeah. Not my deep, deep diary, âToday my Strengths showed up like this.â
Lisa Cummings: [00:11:28] [laughs] I had to call that out because I know itâs fun language barrier we have.
Murray Guest: [00:11:31] If youâre doing that and write in your journal thatâs fantastic.
Lisa Cummings: [00:11:33] Could be. A lot of âDear, Diary,â good stuff about Strengths for sure. But even embedding strengths in the calendar, making that part of the system where if you canât remember this stuff as a manager and it seems like itâs just such a heavy load because youâre busy, just having a quarterly meeting that you put on a recurring cycle that is a Strengths one-on-one, and you just had the language showing up on someoneâs calendar thatâs a Strengths one-on-one, that alone holds you accountable to think of a couple of questions, Iâm going to ask them about their Strengths in this meeting.
Murray Guest: [00:12:00] Yeah, and your link to the HRIS, I totally agree. I was with a client earlier this week and weâre talking about their annual performance reviews. I said to him, âHow about we put a question in there which says, âHow have you used your Strengths to achieve your goals?â or, âHow have you applied your Strengths to develop this year? How will you apply your Strengths in the coming year to achieve our strategic plan?ââ Those little prompts in that performance review and those planning guides are just keeping Strengths alive and will get people thinking about it, and not just in that discussion but the preparation and the follow-on as well.
Lisa Cummings: [00:12:35] And maybe help people not dread the performance review season and just think of an outgoing conversation.
Murray Guest: [00:12:40] I bet thatâs a whole lot of conversation.
Lisa Cummings: [00:12:43] I know. That could really derail us into a whole separate interview. Weâll do that one next time. So give me a couple more for managers, because I think, as you mentioned, they are a linchpin in all of this to keep it going. So you mentioned environment, say a little about what you can do to have Strengths around your environment and keep the thought of Strengths alive in peopleâs minds. How can someone embed strengths in a really practical way?
Murray Guest: [00:13:08] One of the best things Iâve seen, and I love this as an initiative, is building a Strengths wall in your team environment. What Iâve seen, Lisa, is the very simple one where itâs just pieces of paper. And Iâve seen some very elaborate ones where people are getting photos taken, theyâve got a board that goes into a frame, and on that board next to their photo theyâve written their top five Strengths and how theyâre applying their Strengths to achieve their goals, or how theyâre using their Strengths to be more successful in their roles or to serve the team.
[00:13:39] And so these Strengths walls have been led by leaders whoâve said, âRight, letâs just keep this alive in our area.â And so whenever anyone new joins the team, they get put up on the wall. If anyone thinks, âHow am I going to work on a project, or who am I going to collaborate with and draw on their strengths?â Hereâs this great wall, the pictures of our team members and their top five and how they can really use them to be successful.
[00:14:06] In the environment, when I say that I mean itâs the physical environment, things you can touch. We can do certificates on the wall, and we can do top five on our desks and things like that, but I think this next level with the Strengths wall provides that deeper understanding about the individuals that make up the team.
Lisa Cummings: [00:14:24] Mm-hmm. I like that a lot. And the deeper understanding point, Iâve seen some of my clients go deeper in a way that was really cool. Like Iâll provide in a training these four-by-six frames that have peopleâs talents so that, beyond the training event, theyâre on their desk and they look nice and they can filter their thinking through them. But then they take it further, and one of my clients, I think itâs really cool, they have started to essentially hashtag their talents when they see it in action.
[00:14:54] For example, this woman had Positivity talent. She needs to put her headphones on and go into her kind of crank it out mode and not be disrupted, but she hates making people feel like sheâs shutting them down, and so sheâs really interruptible because she has Positivity, and itâs fun to have fun at work. And so she made this really clever sign that goes on the back of her chair about how she has her headphones on.
[00:15:17] And then at the bottom of this note about how sheâs in her cave working, it was #Positivity. And then people can remember back to the conversation they had as a team, and that keeps deepening it as well. So itâs kind of like a mix of your ongoing conversations in support of leadership and the physical environment, seeing them around you and going, âOh, yeah, thatâs that one.â
Murray Guest: [00:15:39] I love the #Talent so I think thatâs great. Iâm going to borrow that one. Thereâs assumptions that we make as humans, and hereâs an assumption that I might make that, âOh, because one of my team members had their headphones in that it means X, Y or Z.â But with this little message, and the #Positivity, itâs taking me back to Strengths, but itâs also removing these assumptions. I love it. And I love these little things that we can do in organizations which actually donât costs a lot of money, or it donât costs anything, and they can have such value and such impact in developing the Strengths culture.
[00:16:12] Speaking of leaders, Lisa, one that I really want to share, too, is what I called a Strengths leadership commitment. Leaders taking that time to write down whatâs their commitment to keep Strengths alive, to acknowledge and embrace the Strengths in their team members, and actually signing that and then putting on display.
[00:16:30] But not just putting on display but also communicating that to their team and talking about it, and saying, âHow am I going to live and breathe this and asking the team to hold them accountable for it?â Because when we sign something we make that commitment. Thatâs real. Thatâs like signing a check or signing a contract. So hereâs this contract that Iâm signing now that, âHey, Iâm making my Strengths leadership commitment to you as a team.â
Lisa Cummings: [00:16:53] I love how it speaks to the accountability that youâre putting out there. Iâve never seen anyone do that, and I havenât suggested that one yet, so cool. Thanks. Weâre borrowing all sorts of good ideas from each other. Because, once you put that onto them, of course, then theyâre going to hold you to it, and thatâs why youâre telling them, and putting it out there.
[00:17:09] I have had situations where managers are starting in a way different place, and I would say a lesser way of showing support, where they almost didnât, has come up recently several times, where a company will bring me in and they want a leadership session and they want a session for all. And theyâll say, âOkay, we think all of the people who manage people are going to go to leadership session, and then everyone else will go to this other event.â
[00:17:38] And theyâre not doing it to be unsupportive, they just kind of think, âOh, thereâs this version and that version.â And really talking through the message that sends to someone who is an individual contributor on the team, thinking, âMy manager doesnât even care to hear what I have to say about my Strengths in here. They donât even want to understand what we do when weâre at our best when weâre in the session.â All those assumptions and things that are going on in their head.
[00:18:01] So thatâs been a really useful conversation about embedding them with the message that youâre sending about the interest youâre showing in it. This had no mal intent in the times that itâs come up recently but it does keep coming up and itâs just as a practical âweâre busyâ kind of thought. And they really miss that key point which somebody would think, âOh, gosh, well, they donât even care.â
Murray Guest: [00:18:22] Yeah, and Iâd like to think, Lisa, everyone has good intent. So, as a leader, âI have good intent. Iâm busy. I want my team to do this. I think itâs great. I believe in it. But, hey, Iâm too busy. I want to do other things or Iâve got somebody else, and weâll go to a different program.â So thereâs good intent. However, the way itâs communicated, or the assumptions team members might make might be, like youâre saying, âWeâre not part of the greater team, or they donât really care.â And so breaking down those assumptions is so important.
[00:18:49] Something that Iâve found thatâs really helped is having a leader open the sessions, so come in and explain, âThese are my top five Strengths. This is what I got out of knowing my Strengths. This is what I hope you get out of it, and I look forward to hearing about it, please come tell me.â And having that sort of 10-minute opening has also been really powerful.
Lisa Cummings: [00:19:13] And itâs so practical. Itâs easy for them to take the time. Iâve had a few sessions like that where that company leader, or department leader, or that manager, they kick off and say, âI went through this process. Thatâs why weâre doing it because I believe itâs that powerful. I want to know this about you. Hereâs what I got out of it, and I canât wait to see what youâll get out of it too.â
[00:19:32] Wow! Then people come in with a really open mind and excitement about it, theyâve said it in their companyâs language, and then they take down all those barriers about, âOh, whatâs this? Whatâs this outsider going to tell us about our careers or about our Strengths?â
Murray Guest: [00:19:45] Yes, yes, totally. The other one that, I think, leaders can do is how theyâre embedding Strengths into their meetings. Meetings are such an interesting topic. I think, Lisa, so many people I talk to say, âOh, we have so many meetings, and we have meetings about meetings, and we donât make decisions but we have more meetings, and all of that sort of stuff going on.â
[00:20:06] Yet organizations are going to continue have meetings, itâs just we need to get more effective at them, and I fundamentally believe we need to meet more regularly, for less time, more effectively. But what it would like if every time a team met they started their meeting with a Strengths share, âHow have I seen the Strengths show up in one of my team members? How have I used them on the weekend with my friends or family? How am I using my Strengths currently to solve a problem? Or how are we using them currently to collaborate on a project?â
[00:20:38] And itâs only a very short discussion, but it sets these habits, and once we form these habits thatâs just going to be part of the way we work. So what if that was a standing agenda or item at the start 1of every team meeting?
Lisa Cummings: [00:20:52] Beautiful. And it could five minutes or three minutes, it could even be one personâs one Strengths share and thatâs it.
Murray Guest: [00:20:57] Yeah, thatâs right.
Lisa Cummings: [00:20:59] Oh. Iâve had a client recently do this where they were passing around the responsibility of the opener. They were doing something very similar to a Strengths share but it was more like a, âWhat is the question related to Strengths weâre going to open the meeting with?â And itâs something that would take like 30 seconds to report out each person so that it only took up a few minutes at the beginning.
[00:21:19] And they assigned a new person who would come up with that question each time. So it wasnât just on the manager, and it got everybody really involved in it, and it made each person think about Strengths in a deeper way. I thought that was a clever way to do it, and involve everyone and really embed strengths further.
Murray Guest: [00:21:36] Again itâs another great example and I love that. Itâs just simple, itâs short, itâs effective, itâs building habits, and itâs setting the tone, I think, also for the rest of the meeting. Then, as we talk about other topics or things that we may need to discuss, it sets this tone that Strengths is going to be part of the way we do that as well.
[00:21:55] A team I worked with, Lisa, the culture prior to the team and the leader knowing Strengths, was, well, this person, letâs call her Jane, is always seeing the bad, always seeing the wrong. And then the assumption of, âHey, guess what? Jane is not on board.â So then, after Strengths workshops and some coaching with the leader, itâs actually Janeâs number one Strengths is, guess what, Restorative. She just wanted to fix problems and she had this, âStraight away what could go wrong? And I want to make sure this doesnât happen.â
[00:22:25] So what that turned around in their meetings was, âActually, hereâs the next initiative weâre doing. Hey, Jane, can you tell us what you think could be some of our possible pitfalls and how we can address them?â It just changed the whole dynamics of the meeting and actually how engaged she was in the conversations.
Lisa Cummings: [00:22:43] See Jane run after that. [laughs]
Murray Guest: [00:22:45] I love it. Yes.
Lisa Cummings: [00:22:47] Hey, I think it would be fun if we could do the last two minutes of this episode trying to kind of lighting round out some cheap or free things that weâve seen people use to embed strengths and keep them alive in an ongoing way. What do you think?
Murray Guest: [00:23:01] Yeah, great. Letâs go.
Lisa Cummings: [00:23:02] How about you do one, I do one. You do one, I do one. Weâll just go as fast as we can.
Murray Guest: [00:23:06] Fast as we can. Okay, letâs do this. So I actually think one of the key things is Strengths report swapping. Hereâs just going, âOkay, hereâs mine, hereâs yours. And then catch up at the end of the week for a coffee. What did you think? What did you get to know about me? And letâs chat.â
Lisa Cummings: [00:23:21] Hmm, neat idea. How about virtual meet-ups for remote teams who donât get to see each other in person, once a quarter, totally dedicated to a Strengths chat for one hour, Brady Bunch style show in your camera?
Murray Guest: [00:23:33] Love it. And there are so many remote teams these days. Itâs a great one. Strengths stories in company newsletters. So itâs powerful internally, but itâs also powerful externally about how weâre a Strengths-based culture, how weâre embracing Strengths, and it doesnât just need to be about work. It can be about how Iâve seen this done around other cultural initiatives where people go, âWow! Thatâs absolutely something weâre really living and breathing.â
Lisa Cummings: [00:23:56] And then they start using metaphors like you do about mountain biking, how itâs related to Strengths, yes.
Murray Guest: [00:24:00] Yes!
Lisa Cummings: [00:24:01] Letâs say on-boarding someone new. Assign someone, a Strengths champion or a success coach, so somebody else whoâs already in the company feels accountable to help that person unleash their Strengths at the company.
Murray Guest: [00:24:16] Nice. Love it. Hereâs one that one of my clients did recently where they actually asked everyone in their team to send to a neutral person a song that they love and how it reflects one of their Strengths. Then, at their monthly team meeting, they had a playlist and they played the songs, and people had to guess whose song it was and what Strength it was related to. And they all had a dance in the meeting and then they just went through them quite quickly and had this huge energy.
Lisa Cummings: [00:24:45] Wow! This is going to be good. So now youâre going to challenge me to end on something really fun like that because that would be awesome. Okay. A costume party, so this could be if the Halloween time is near, or a kickoff meeting, or something where people might have an occasion to dress up. So it would have to be an event, and you dress up representing one of your talents.
Murray Guest: [00:25:09] Love it. So what would you be dressed up as, Lisa?
Lisa Cummings: [00:25:12] Hmm, I think what just immediately comes to mind is probably like a big old giant full-body costume sunshine that would represent positivity talent. Thatâs kind of the give-me obvious one. So I might get a little more cerebral and think of something more clever. How about you?
Murray Guest: [00:25:29] Responsibility comes to mind, itâs like a foundation talent of who I am. How I dress up as Responsibility, Iâm not too sure. Maybe goody-two-shoes school student or something doing the right thing, maybe something like that.
Lisa Cummings: [00:25:44] Goody-two-shoes. [laughs] So that would be so fun and youâd be trying to look at the other person and go, âOkay, Iâm sort of getting this vibe. I donât know.â Yeah, that would be a lot of fun if you had to mix and mingle where you could talk about that.
[00:25:58] Well, this is pretty cool. Man, there are so many more ideas, and I know that you have a Strengths toolkit that actually takes people through way more than just these tools and tactics. You cover the whole process of how to embed strengths at a company level. Of course, that includes walking someone through embedding Strengths into your culture. Tell them where they can find your Strengths toolkit and where they can connect with you when they want to see more of your content.
Murray Guest: [00:26:24] Thanks, Lisa, and I loved chatting with you today. So, yeah, Iâve created a toolkit because I, like you, am passionate about people getting the most from any training or intervention and definitely about Strengths. Thatâs been such a powerful thing in my life the last five years and continues to be every day. So if you go to StrengthsCultureToolkit.com thereâs a toolkit of resources you can get there which includes guidelines, templates, facilitator guides, activities, thereâs a conversation template, posters. And the idea is to have that toolkit of resources to help keep Strengths alive in those areas of culture we discussed earlier.
[00:27:03] If people want to connect with me, my business is InspireMyBusiness.com, and you can send me an email there or check me out on LinkedIn, and definitely I think that if we can all live an inspired life through our Strengths every day itâs a very good place we live in.
Lisa Cummings: [00:27:18] Thanks, Murray. Man, you guys, Murray is the real deal. Heâs born to be a guest on the show because his last name is Guest. I mean, how perfect is that? So check out his toolkit. He really knows this stuff inside and out, and is so great on the consultancy side, and has done it. Now, I even get the deeper layer, seeing that you did it for the safety consultancy as well, so wow. Yeah, with that, you guys, go check out the Strengths toolkit.
If you enjoyed my chat with Murray, you'll love Leaders Who Give A Damn. It's an online leadership program to help you be a true people-focused leader.
Carmie is a professional writer and editor at Lead Through Strengths. Having spent 8 happy years with a nonprofit child organization as a storyteller and sponsorship relations team manager, she continues collaborating with others across the globe for the joy of human development and connection. Her days are powered by coffee, curiosities, cameras (film and digital), music, notebooks, and a cat. Where books are home, she’s home. She calls her Top 5 StrengthsFinder Talents “CLIPS” (Connectedness, Learner, Intellection, Positivity, and Strategic)–you know, those tiny objects that hold connected things together. She’d like to think she’s one.