Multiple-choice (10)
1. What are the three connections in Godin's definition of a tribe?
- Past, present, future
- People connected to one another, to a leader, and to an idea ✓
- Money, time, attention
- Charter, bylaws, ritual
2. What are the two minimum requirements for a tribe in Godin's framing?
- A budget and a building
- A shared interest and a way to communicate ✓
- A leader and a follower
- A name and a logo
3. What does Seyranian's social-identity research say is the published function of a leader, in language form?
- Speak in "I" language to take responsibility
- Work in the language of "we" rather than "I", and shape the group's sense of who they are ✓
- Speak in the third person
- Avoid identity language entirely
4. What does Godin claim about the role of belief in leadership?
- Belief is irrelevant; the work speaks for itself
- Belief happens to be a brilliant strategy; the leader who genuinely believes carries the tribe further than the one faking it ✓
- Belief should be hidden until results arrive
- Belief is for religion, not leadership
5. What's the published order of the recipe for building a tribe?
- Mission first, then values, then accountability
- Identify values, get consensus on top 5-7, create shared mission and vision, name the workers, get on with it, mutual accountability, have fun ✓
- Logo, charter, building, members
- Leader, vision, results, growth
6. What are the published constraints on a group Mission-Purpose Statement?
- One paragraph, comprehensive, formal language
- One sentence, 5-15 words, names benefit for whom, durable, memorable ✓
- A bulleted list
- A single word
7. What's the published guidance on writing a group's Vision?
- Bullet points, future tense, kept short
- A short paragraph, written as if you have the outcome now (present tense), with Visual / Auditory / Kinesthetic detail; must be shared with the members, not just held by the leader ✓
- A one-word slogan
- A long manifesto only the leader writes
8. What's the sequencing claim of Maxwell's Law of Buy-In?
- People buy into the vision first, then the leader
- People buy into the leader first, then the vision; build credibility (Levels 2-3) before introducing a vision ✓
- Buy-in is unrelated to leadership
- Vision should be introduced before leadership is established
9. What does Sinek's Golden Circle from Start With Why argue?
- Always start with the product specifications
- Organizations that begin with WHY (purpose, belief) inspire action more than those that begin with WHAT or HOW ✓
- Why questions should be saved for the end
- Strategy and purpose are unrelated
10. What does Senge mean by a shared vision in The Fifth Discipline?
- A vision the leader writes and announces
- A vision the members of the organization carry inside themselves (enrolled, not compliant); compliant visions collapse when the leader leaves ✓
- A vision that all organizations should share
- A vision posted on the wall