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Interviews
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#CloreSocialFellowFriday with Hannah Taaffe

Posted By Subah Arora, 02 November 2023

For our next #FellowFriday we are pleased to introduce you to Hannah Taaffe, Girl Voice Lead at Girlguiding and Clore Social Emerging Leader Fellow. Read Hannah's interview which covers her unique leadership journey and some of the projects she is currently working on.

Tell us about your leadership journey to date.

I’m sometimes embarrassed to admit that I grew up largely uninterested in politics – something I now know was a privileged position to be in. But I received a baptism of fire on arrival at a politically active university in the centre of London in the early 2010s, during a wave of protests against tuition fees and austerity. I was lucky to be placed in halls with some amazing feminists who took the time to help me learn and develop my beliefs. Late night (and early morning) debates with them shaped me into the feminist I am today. 
So, freshly inspired and fired up to change the world, I sought out any opportunity to make a difference that I could squeeze between my studies and part-time jobs. I was a steward at protests, did admin work for an anti-austerity organisation, and later became Publicity Officer at the university’s Women’s Network. 
This voluntary experience turned out to be a great launchpad into a career in social impact. During my final year of university, I worked part-time at the Fawcett Society, a women’s rights organisation, and after completing my final exams I worked at Global Citizen, a digital advocacy platform. I learned so much in these roles - from communications and events to campaigns and advocacy. What I love about campaigning is helping people see themselves as agents of change, and inspiring them to take positive action. No action or person is too small to make a difference – everything and everyone can have a ripple effect. 

It wasn’t until I worked at Save the Children UK that I began to see myself as a leader, thanks to an amazing line manager. Her style of line management was all about coaching and finding opportunities to help me grow. She supported me to get involved in projects where I could develop skills and experience in areas I was interested in – such as working with children and young people. 

She encouraged me to apply for the Clore Social Leadership Emerging Leaders (Women and Girls) programme. At the time, I was volunteering with Girlguiding with a group of Rangers (14–18-year-olds) in south London, and was trustee of a small suicide prevention charity called Olly’s Future. But I was in a junior position at Save the Children, so I felt a lot of imposter syndrome when I was accepted into the programme. How could I be a leader, when I didn’t have anything like ‘manager’ in my job title? My time on the programme helped me to see leadership is not about your job title or your place in a hierarchy – it’s about inspiring others around you, which has a ripple effect that can ultimately transform the world around us.

I now work at Girlguiding, where I lead the advocate panel – a group of Girlguiding members aged 14-25 who speak out on behalf of girls and young women across the UK on issues they care about. These young people inspire me every day, and show me that anyone can be a leader, at any age. 

What impact did the 2020 Emerging Leader: Women and Girls Programme have on your leadership journey?

It gave me the confidence to see myself as a leader. It also taught me that wellbeing is fundamental to sustainable social leadership – we must look after ourselves so that we can continue supporting others to create change.
Being part of the 2020 cohort, it’s impossible to think about my time on the programme without remembering the uncertainty and anxiety of early lockdowns. I think that’s what helped us as a cohort to develop such a deep connection – we supported each other through some really difficult moments. This taught me that vulnerability is a huge part of leadership; if you allow others to hold you up, it ultimately makes you stronger. 

What were your takeaways from the Emerging Leader: Women and Girls Programme? 

Many of the tools and resources have come in handy over the years. I often find myself going  back to my Clore Social notebook to help myself or sometimes to share with my partner, who is also a leader in the social impact sector.
But the best takeaway is undoubtedly the incredible network of Clore Social fellows. They’ve been there to support me as I’ve considered career decisions and big life changes. This network has also provided opportunities for collaboration; just recently I’ve worked with another fellow from the programme to plan an event to inspire young Girlguiding members to consider careers in politics.
My work mostly concerns advocacy and external lobbying, but I also support our advocates to feed into internal changes, such as within governance and strategy. I’m always looking for more ways we can bring in the voices of young people into our decision-making. I’ve taken what I learnt on the programme and put it into practice. I’m more confident in making suggestions, challenging constructively, managing upwards and influencing others.

What projects are you excited to be working on in the near future?

I’m currently in the process of two different types of recruitment: recruiting for new volunteer members of the advocate panel, and recruiting a new member of staff who I will line manage. It will be my first formal line management role, four years after I first applied for the Clore Social programme! In that time I’ve mentored and coached junior colleagues, as well as the young people I work with, but I’m really excited to apply my learnings from the programme to this new challenge of line management. As I embark on this new chapter of my leadership journey, I feel lucky to have such a strong foundation through Clore Social. 

What advice would you give to someone considering taking part in the Emerging Leader programme? 

Go for it, and commit to it. It’s a transformative experience. You will learn new skills and tools to apply to your work (or wherever you do your changemaking), and you will be welcomed into an incredible network of Clore Social Fellows which will be invaluable for years to come. But most importantly, you will learn more about yourself and your own leadership style, develop resilience, and learn how to look after yourself – so that you can continue to tackle the social challenges of today and tomorrow.

You can find Hannah on Twitter and LinkedIn.

You can find Girlguiding on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, LinkedIn and TikTok.

 

Tags:  #CloreSocialFellowFriday  community  fellow  interview 

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Steve Sloan for #VolunteersWeek

Posted By Subah Arora, 30 May 2023

This #VolunteersWeek, Steve Sloan shared the great volunteering work he has been doing with young people as a part of The Young Lives Foundation.

Tell us more about your volunteering journey?

I’ve worked with volunteers since 2018 when in a previous role I trained and managed volunteers who were involved in mentoring programmes and education provision in a community centre of a large educational charity. I saw the benefits of volunteering to the young people I worked with, so I always appreciated its impact, and the value volunteers can bring to charities, they really are crucial to making things happen in communities.

I never had time to volunteer because of commuting in and out of London every day for work. However, when I started at Clore Social Leadership our hybrid way of working meant that I had time to volunteer. I wanted to keep connected with the Youth Sector so searched for some charities in Kent that support young people. I found The Young Lives Foundation who do great work with young people in the county. I applied to be a mentor and went through the interview and training process. I eventually started volunteering with a young person in my area in March 2023, the programme matches mentees and mentors together for an initial 6 months, and we’re about halfway through our relationship.
 
Are there any specific details you would like to mention about your volunteering experience?

The Young Lives Foundation were very thorough and considered in their application, interview and training process. Volunteers are important so I feel organisations really care about making your experience and training impactful for not only you, but the beneficiary too.

When me and my mentee get together I pick them up and we drive somewhere and go for a walk, go eat some chips by the river, play football, basketball. I’m just someone who’s there for them for an hour or two every week, they share how their week is going, their past and hopes for the future, it’s nice to feel trusted and connected to a young person. We’re going to go to a golf driving range together next week for a reward for our efforts and commitment to the mentoring programme so far!

How do you think your volunteering work has impacted the community?


It’s hard to think about how volunteering has impacted the community, but hopefully my time spent with my mentee helps them feel guided and supported to make decisions about their future, to handle and respond to challenges that life throws at you every now and again. Those skills and learnings I can hopefully give them might help them, and in turn others in their future. My mentee’s family have shared how they’ve seen a positive change since we’ve started meeting together. It’s great to hear that something so easy to get involved with can have such positive effects on a family, it’s what I always loved about the Youth Sector.

There are youth charities with large waiting lists of young people waiting for support in the charity I volunteer with, and I’m sure it’s the same for many others. If you can spare the time I’d highly recommend getting involved in something locally, it’s a great way to connect with your community and the people who live there!

 

You can find The Young Lives Foundation on LinkedIn, Twitter, Facebook and Instagram!

Tags:  community  volunteering  volunteering week 

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Rachel Gegeshidze for #VolunteersWeek

Posted By Subah Arora, 30 May 2023
Updated: 25 May 2023

This #VolunteersWeek, Rachel shared with us all the lovely volunteering work she has been doing as the Chief Executive of Tempo Time Credits and in her own community.

Tell us more about your volunteering journey?

I am the Chief Executive of Tempo Time Credits. Tempo is a national charity that has spent 15 years supporting communities across England and Wales. We work with a network of charities, social enterprises, corporate partners and local organisations. We work to connect people to the causes close to them – enabling and encouraging volunteering by awarding Time Credits that recognise their contribution.

Whilst in my day job I get to see the amazing things that volunteers give to the community every day I am also very privileged to volunteer in my own community. I am the Secretary for my local community centre, the community centre is run by a small team of volunteers who host the most amazing range of activities and opportunities for local people. From Irish dance classes to a monthly produce market, there really is something for everyone.

In January I set up a Cuppa Club at the centre to address the issues associated with loneliness and isolation. The Cuppa Club has been running twice weekly by a small team of community members and has been making a huge difference to those attending. A slice of toast, hot cuppa, good conversation and the occasional game of cards has been incredibly well received by those that have come along. It’s also created a warm space for those that have been impacted by the cost-of-living crisis.


Are there any specific details you would like to mention about your volunteering experience? 

I love giving something back to my own community. I get to meet the most amazing people and hopefully make a difference to them through the volunteering that I do. I have also been fundraising in my local community over the last year and raised over £40,000 to support the Ukraine crisis as well as for families in my local community. I work in community development daily, volunteering enables me to work in my community and hopefully make a difference to the people and the community where I live.

How do you think your volunteering work has impacted the community?

Through the volunteering that I have been involved with I have been able to bring others together. Through coffee mornings, cake sales, quiz nights and activities at the community centre I have made new friends, developed new opportunities, and provided a range of local activities that brings people together.

Today, with the lingering impact of the pandemic, coupled with the rising prices of everything from food to fuel, the volunteering landscape has changed. Many who used to volunteer now work longer hours – earning to survive – leaving our communities short of the volunteers so crucial to lifeline support services across the country. In short, volunteer recruitment is an issue happening right now, right on your doorstep. At Tempo Time Credits our work helps engage and retain new people, recognising them for their time and skills. In times of austerity, when they’re faced with difficult decisions every day, it’s a huge challenge.

 

You can find Rachel Gegeshidze on LinkedIn and Twitter!

You can Tempo Time Credit on LinkedIn, Twitter, Facebook and Instagram!

Tags:  community  interview  volunteering  volunteering week 

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The leadership development journey of one of our FiMT supported fellows

Posted By Clore Social Leadership, 19 November 2019
Updated: 08 December 2020

Victoria Muir is one of our Forces in Mind Trust supported fellows who completed the Clore Fellowship Programme in 2017. We had the pleasure of interviewing her to learn more about what the experience has meant for her and her leadership development journey in the context of the Armed Forces Charities sector.

Looking back, what are the 3 most important skills you learned? How do you implement these lessons into your organisation?

One of the most important aspects for me was learning from the other fellows. Often, from my experience within the Military Charitable sector, we work very closely with each other but not always across the social sector as a whole so it was extremely beneficial for me to learn how people from different sectors worked. By completing the Clore Fellowship alongside having the validation of FiMT’s support, I have gained confidence in my abilities and learnt new skills. I certainly feel that where I might not have put my voice forward before, I am much happier to add it to the debate.

""If there’s something that is challenging me now, I will go back to the principles I learned through the programme, step back and reflect." 


Did the course help you to become a better leader, and if so, how?

Definitely and one of the areas that I found most helpful was going through processes that I had not been through or was possibly not aware of previously. For instance, I had never taken part in, and was a little sceptical of the Action Learning Sets. I quickly learnt that the process allowed me to really think through situations or challenges and learn that often, I did in fact have the answers, I just needed to take time to challenge myself, reflect and find them. We don’t often get the time to step away from everyday life and everyday work and to be able to take that time to learn more about ourselves and move forward. There were things about myself I may not have realised without going through the Clore process. If there’s something that is challenging me now, I will go back to the principles that I learned through the programme, step back and reflect. This has been particularly valuable when starting a new role.

What would you say are the key leadership issues the Military and Service Charity sector is facing? Can better leadership development address these issues?

The Military sector can often appear to be quite small and a number of people will often move directly from a Service career into working for a Military charity. Whilst it is important to have that knowledge and understanding, it can sometimes mean that organisations don’t always attract people from the wider social sector with the different skills and knowledge that this brings. Having access to and learning from people working in different specialities is certainly something I and my colleagues have found to be beneficial. I think that sharing information and skills both from within the military sector across the wider social sector and vice versa is something that is vital for development. It can often be very easy to stay working within the Military sector which can mean that new skills don’t always come in. Looking at my own experience, once I started working for a Military Charity over ten years ago, rather than moving to a different area of the social sector, I stayed within the military circle albeit it in different areas of delivery.

"Take every opportunity you can to learn from as wide an area of the sector and be completely open-minded about learning new things."


What advice would you give others starting their leadership journey?

Take every opportunity you can to learn from as wide an area of the sector as possible and be completely open-minded about learning new things. I can say this from my own experience as the initial thought of an Action Learning Set was terrifying but it turned out to be one of the most valuable parts of my Clore experience. Sometimes we have preconceptions and it’s important to overcome them and see where that takes us. I know we all have an image of where we want to get to in our careers or leadership journeys and how we think we are going to get there, but, looking at my own journey, I have taken so many unconnected turns. If I look back at myself aged 18 and think about my plans for the future and where I wanted to be compared to where I am now, I would not change anything. If I had followed my original plan rather than taking every opportunity that came my way, I doubt that I would have learnt as much as I have and I certainly wouldn’t be the person that I am today. I think it is important to stay open-minded, and if that takes you off on a tangent, be brave and go where it leads you.

What would you have retrospectively changed in your leadership journey?

I am actually not sure if I would have changed anything. My original plan years ago was to go to University and study Law. For whatever reason, I decided not to and trained at Norland College to be a nursery nurse. This led to working all around the World, followed by volunteering in Bosnia which led to entering the charitable sector and working with the Armed Forces. If I had followed my initial plan, I doubt very much that I would be where I am now. I may not have always made the right career decisions, but I can honestly say that I have learnt from them all and they have brought me to where I am now.

Tags:  casestudy  challenges  community  fellow  interview  skills 

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The power of coaching: Dr Jeremy Hinks shares his insights

Posted By Clore Social Leadership, 25 March 2019
Updated: 23 October 2020
 How often do we take the time to think and understand the beliefs and assumptions limiting us from moving forward? Or to hear our own thinking and get a step closer to turning thought into action? And what role does coaching play in helping us get there? Coaching provides the opportunity to create the time and space to do so, says Dr Jeremy Hinks, a leadership development coach for Find a Coach, our new coach-matching service.

Jeremy’s journey into coaching sprung from his experience as a University tutor when he saw how positively people respond to being trusted and empowered. Witnessing the number of people needing assistance in their middle and senior management roles, he decided to pursue a coaching career to help develop the leaders of tomorrow. He has 36 years experience of using a coaching approach in a leadership setting and has a wealth of experience from coaching a wide range of people working with the social and voluntary, public, and private sectors.

"Coaching is about creating the time and space to think and hear your own thinking."

For Jeremy, coaching is about creating the time and space for you to think and to hear your own thinking. “It’s about having that thinking heard by someone you can trust, and having your thinking and feelings being supported and challenged without judgement,” says Jeremy. “It’s about you seeing new perspectives and then deciding on your own plan to make things happen. My coaching process implies embracing trust, support, challenges, and change - not necessarily in a linear sequence, yet always in alignment with my coachee’s agenda.

“The power of coaching, for someone experiencing it, lies in the opportunity it offers to have the time and space to challenge assumptions and beliefs, especially if they limit them in moving forward, or stop them from building even more effectively from a position of strength. Hearing our thinking is a major step in developing awareness and consciously thinking about habits that might not have been evaluated for years. The responsibility for action, however, always lies with the coachee. Breaking the dependency on background, environment, and challenging a deterministic belief is hugely powerful. “

"Coaching will play a part in the journey from hierarchy and team membership to one of a truer version of collective leadership."

Through coaching, leaders can bring others along on a lifelong journey of learning of development. "Coaching creates leaders who create leaders,” says Jeremy. “It has the capacity to create solution-finding communities whose capability goes way beyond the sum of its parts. It can break the mould related to a model of power and influence that encourages isolation in thinking and fear of failure. It has the potential to deliver lasting benefits rather than quick fixes, as it is an intervention that takes a ’whole of life’ view. With the future of work being one where success depends on relationship building and on shared endeavour, coaching can play a major part in supporting wellbeing as well as being a positive influence on the mental health of the coachee.”

Witnessing the transformative effects of coaching on his clients, says Jeremy, is extremely rewarding. “The longevity of coaching benefits is often ignored. What is satisfying is bumping into clients months or years after coaching and hearing them talk about how they are still practicing the use of the ‘thinking and emotional muscles’ that they had discovered during their coaching. A successful coaching programme can lead to benefits that have a positive influence over a considerable period of time, even a lifetime.”

Considering taking your next step on your leadership journey through coaching? We asked Jeremy to summarise how to approach and what you can expect from a coaching relationship in which you play a full part:

  • Enjoy the time and space to allocate to yourself, without any distraction
  • Appreciate what it is like to be listened to, without judgement
  • Expect to think and feel in equal measure and to reflect on meaning and significance – it can be hard work, but so fulfilling
  • Expect to get a clearer understanding of what makes you tick and how that influences your environment
  • The value of being supported while exploring territory that will need courage and commitment
  • The strength to change habit that are not serving your purpose
  • An appreciation of the power of choice
  • …and all throughout increasing awareness and personal responsibility for turning thought to meaningful action.
Dr Jeremy Hinks is an accredited professional coach with the International Coach Federation, a member of the Association of Coaching and a founding member and coach with Know You More. He is passionate about people development, and is a coach for our Find a Coach pilot initiative.

Tags:  casestudy  challenges  coaching  community  interview  skills 

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