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Scott Barron

Scott Barron
Scott E. Barron is the founder of Yabwi. As entrepreneur, author, and educator, his passion is helping people and organizations achieve greater purpose and joy.
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Recent Posts

How Do the Best School Leaders Compete?

Posted by Scott Barron on Apr 28, 2014 8:51:36 AM

Growing a school in today's innovation economy requires some strategy adjustments: Listening to families in your target market is even more important, using your school as a platform to establish trust throughout the community, and finding new ways to add value. The best schools are redefining their relationships with students and families to build proactive collaboration, enabling them to thrive within this new economic reality where trust is the valued currency.

Below are three strategies you can use to listen, build trust, and innovate.

Overtly Define Success

What would happen in your school if the board, administrators and teachers understood that they win only when the students win? Student success has to be defined so clearly that everyone at every level of leadership knows how to win. Social media and personal feedback allows you to rapidly listen and responsively improve the school's processes and results. Your reputation for excellence and trust is dominated by the voice of student and parents who will rave about your genuineness or disparage the lack of concern. As the school leader your challenge is to overtly define success so that you are truly building your school instead of that of your predecessor(s). It's hard for the other people in the school to know what you want when your directions are vague and lack purpose.

Embrace Collaboration

For a variety of reasons the culture and economy has shifted toward collaborative problem solving. School designers have to think of their students, parents, and especially teachers as interactive partners who want a real voice in decisions and plans. When they are actively encouraged to share stories, ideas, feedback, and aspirations, they become intrinsically motivated to contribute their valuable resources toward the goals of the school. This shift to collaborative design requires a more developed emotional and interpersonal intelligence among the adults involved, which also serves as a powerful model for students.

Flexibly Adapt

For the first time in the history of the world, people can learn anything without a teacher or a school. Once you get your head around that idea, it makes more sense that the school model as you know it is changing. As a school designer your organization is more likely to grow as you implement processes and systems to adapt more quickly to the needs and opportunities of your target community. Find unique ways to differentiate your program in terms of personalization, depth of experience, and autonomy over how time is used. It is likely that your school will have to find a balance between being a learning destination (comprehensive curriculum that is self-contained) and a learning portal (providing access to both local and wired learning resources with credit given based on demonstrated mastery).

The school board and administration must be prepared to manage conflict and fear as the school/district responsibly and intelligently experiments with new school designs. Obviously expectations will remain high for results, and performance assessments will need to be carefully prepared in order to communicate accurately. Common language will be key to overcoming the risks, especially in an over-politicized environment where the adult issues are prioritized over the needs of students. Dialogue and discussion will be critical to building momentum, with focus on the guiding principles rather than polarizing positions that emphasize "right" and "wrong."

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Board Policy to Support Innovation

Posted by Scott Barron on Apr 22, 2014 8:25:57 AM

Board policies directly impact the school’s ability to innovate and compete in today’s marketplace. The leadership modeled by the school board influences the administrations ability to continue to innovate and improve the school or district.

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Fundraising Wisdom from an Expert

Posted by Scott Barron on Apr 17, 2014 4:42:31 PM

Today I had the privilege of interviewing Terry Axelrod, Founder and CEO of Benevon. Her company offers a sustainable system for fundraising that we have used and highly recommend. With Terry's many years of experience and success as an adviser and coach, she is more than qualified for guru status when it comes to fundraising wisdom.

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Topics: Fundraising, Board Culture

Preserving School Traditions While Still Innovating

Posted by Scott Barron on Apr 9, 2014 9:39:14 PM

 

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Topics: Communication, Administration

4 Enrollment Growth Strategies that Work

Posted by Scott Barron on Apr 9, 2014 9:33:57 PM

Keeping families and students committed and loyal is important for every school, just like companies who sell to schools want to keep their customers close. I recently heard about a company that is threatening to sue schools that opt for a competitor's service. Not smart! Limiting a client's ability to choose the best available option is a not an advisable customer relationship strategy. Instead, you might want to try a combination of the following enrollment building methods.

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Topics: Enrollment

Successful School Innovators are Experts at Connecting the Dots

Posted by Scott Barron on Apr 9, 2014 9:04:52 PM

“The magic of connecting dots is that once you learn the techniques, the dots can change but you’ll still be good at connecting them.”
- Seth Godin

School Innovation is about connecting the dots to create higher value. Schools are learning organizations--we should be the best innovators! Too often, though, school leaders get bogged down by “the way we've always done things.” How can you start building a culture of connecting the dots and focusing on the market that you want to serve? That’s the goal of The Ultimate Innovator’s Guide webinar series that we are sharing in March and April.

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Innovation Planning vs. Strategic Planning

Posted by Scott Barron on Apr 9, 2014 8:59:52 PM

Is your school prepared to keep pace with other organizations in your community, as a pace-setter and learning organization?

Moving from strategic planning to Innovation Planning is the path to accelerated school improvement. What's the difference?

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The Innovation Clock: School Improvement at the Right Time

Posted by Scott Barron on Apr 9, 2014 8:55:00 PM

Innovation is critical to improving school design. Competition - for funds, students, faculty, market share - makes innovation today even more important. Schools are trying to figure out:

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The Sad Life of the Overloaded School Leader

Posted by Scott Barron on Apr 9, 2014 8:52:32 PM

Have you spent any time with a school administrator lately? Stressful isn't it? Too often he or she hurries from place to place, talking to lots of people but connecting with few. Living in a constant state of overload and chaos, the goal is more survival than vision.

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Topics: Administration, Personal Reinvention

Microsoft is Having a Peter Pan Moment - Should You?

Posted by Scott Barron on Apr 9, 2014 8:49:49 PM

“We had this theory about a year ago, which we called ‘Liberating Innovation.' Our mission is to get new products out to the market every day.” --Microsoft Bing VP Derrick Connell

People at Microsoft are trying to re-learn how to innovate. Sounds like the challenge from the movie, "Hook," when Robin Williams' as the grown up Peter Pan can't remember how to fly. Bangorang, Microsoft!

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Topics: School Design

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