Mary Lee Gannon,
CAE
Free
Executive Coaching, Training, Cultural Turnaround, Productivity, and Leadership Expert

Mary Lee Gannon, Quick Facts
- Main Areas
- Executive Coaching, Cultural Turnaround, Productivity, and Leadership
- Best Sellers
- Mary Lee's book "Starting Over - 25 Rules When You've Bottomed Out" is available in bookstores and on Amazon.com.
- Career Focus
- Author, Coach, Speaker, Corporate Trainer, Public Relations
- Affiliation
- www.StartingOve ow.com
Mary Lee Gannon is the president of Gannon Group - a full service executive coaching, training and consulting firm that provides productivity strategies for people and organizations by improving team performance, executive leadership skills, board performance, planning and project execution. Mary Lee’s personal turnaround came as a stay-at-home mother, with four children under seven-years-old, who endured a divorce that took she and the children from the country club life to public assistance from where within a short time she worked out of that to the level of CEO. Her book "Starting Over - 25 Rules for When You've Bottomed Out" is available in bookstores and with online book sellers. Visit her web site at http://www.StartingOve ow.com
Free Articles & Book Excerpts
Begin With the End in Mind and Sketch that Vision on Paper
http://startingove ow.com/files/BEGINW_1.pdf
The Life Balance Chart and Goal Cards
http://startingove ow.com/files/TheLifeBalanceChartandGoalCards.pdf
Set SMART Five and Ten Year Goals
http://startingove ow.com/files/SetSMARTFiveandTe YearGoals.pdf
On an Interview Ask More Questions Then They Ask You
http://startingove ow.com/files/Ona Interview-AskMoreQuestions.pdf
How do I Get Motivated?
http://startingove ow.com/files/HowDoIGetMotivated.pdf
Millionaire Women Look Ahead
http://startingove ow.com/files/MillionaireWome LookAhead.pdf
It's Not Who You Know, It's Who Knows You
http://startingove ow.com/files/It_sNotWhoYouKnowIt_sWhoKnowsyou.pdf
Six Questions to Answer "Yes!"
http://startingove ow.com/files/SixQuestionstoAnswerYes.pdf
Does Your Resume Look Weathered?
http://startingove ow.com/files/DoesYourResumeLookWeathered.pdf
Blog
http://startingove ow.wordpress.com/
Where Can I Find a Job Other Than the Classifieds?
http://www.startingove ow.com/files/Where_can_I_find_a_job_other_than_the_classifieds.pdf
Where is Your 'Success Sketch?'
http://www.startingove ow.com/files/Where_is_Your_Success_Sketch.pdf
Recession Resistant Careers
http://www.startingove ow.com/files/Recessio ResistantCareers.pdf
Free Audio & Video Samples
Mary Lee Gannon, Books
Articles by this expert
SelfGrowth articles and saved writing connected to this expert.
Article
Seven Killer Ground Rules for Effective Meeting Facilitation
We’ve all been in meetings that are engaging and we’ve all been in meetings that were a dreadful waste of time. Most of the time the success of a meeting depends on the meeting facilitator. So if you are facilitating a meeting, be sure to do the behind the scenes work ahead of time so that the meetings will produce the outcomes that you want. Good facilitation of a meeting involves three key components: 1.) Analysis – Sometimes meeting facilitators jump to create a debate over issues of content before an appropriate process is in place.
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Article
Best Careers for 2010 and How to Transfer to Them
U.S. News and World Report has released its list of the Best Careers for 2010. While unemployment hovers at around 10% and 16 million unemployed people face a paltry 2.5 million job openings each month the good news is that productivity is increasing. Productivity is measured by dividing output by hours worked. Does this mean that employers will not replace the jobs that were eliminated? Productivity allows more to be produced with less capital.
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Article
Anxiety is Practicing Failure in Advance
Fear is a useful emotion that is self-preserving. Our intuition tells us to be afraid so that we may arm ourselves from harm. When you see a dog bearing its teeth your fear tells you to stay away. Anxiety is not fear. Anxiety is preparing for a perceived fear that is most likely emotional and not environmental. Anxiety never protected anyone from danger but indeed from doing all the important things that matter in life such as create, take risk, practice, produce, make good judgments and connect with people. Anxiety is practicing failure in advance.
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Article
Preoccupy Your Gremlin and Get “Unstuck”
Most people have hopes and dreams. Most people understand what it will take to get to those dreams. And most people at some point in their lives accept that they probably won’t get there and give up hope. Why? Because they can’t seem to get the issues that haunt them out of the way. The pain of first uncovering the demons, facing them and then knowing how to tame them seems impossible.
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Article
Six Steps to Launch Your Project Over the Horizon
In business most ideas that never make it to completion die in the execution phase. Often this is because a simple plan was not in place from the beginning to insure that the pace of the project stays on track with the projected purpose and milestones. Below are six concrete steps that will help you define a project, evaluate if it is in alignment with your purpose and viable to succeed, define who needs to be involved and the risk at play, and what the measurable outcome will be. Six Steps to Project Management Success
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Article
Time Versus Money – What Sells? What Empowers a Culture?
People have debated the issue of time versus money for centuries. Which one makes people happier? Knowing the answer as it relates to your employees and customers could make and save you hundreds of thousands of dollars. Of course happier employees make for happier customers. Happier customers will then purchase more of your products or services. The answer to the question of time versus money lies in your company’s culture as well as some proven data.
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Article
The Right Rescue Dog for Me – Overcoming Disappointment
Last night my Shih-tzu and I went for the second night in a row to an animal shelter to visit with a very sweet Irish Setter Collie mix. We waited 45 minutes to visit with this beauty the night before and the shelter was ready to close when we got our turn. So after a brief visit, I was asked to bring Coco back for another visit the next night because there wasn’t time to process an adoption anyway. But, my heart was already captured by this charmer with one blue and one brown eye. She was great on the lead and not at all dominant with Coco.
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Article
Feel the Fear – How to Build Confidence
“Inaction breeds doubt and fear. Action breeds confidence and courage. If you want to conquer fear, do not sit home and think about it. Go out and get busy.” ~ Dale Carnegie Self-confidence is a mindset whereby you are certain that you can tackle any challenge for a better outcome because you know how to go about it strategically. Notice this does not suggest that you will always get it right – nor that you will get their without consequence. But you know that you can handle the situation because you have the tools. So what are the tools? Simple.
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Article
12 Steps to Lead a Killer Productive Meeting
How many times have you been to a meeting where everyone got their opinions out on the table but nothing was decided? Or how many recurring meetings have you sat through where you wished you could have been excused because even if you were to express an opinion, nothing would change? We’ve all been there. I’ve worked with managers who have planed for their direct reports to page them out of meetings. I’ve seen telephone conferences purposefully scheduled at the same time as a meetings.
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Article
Change - Here's How!
Nobody said change was easy. That's why most people don't do it. But there is a deeper reason as to why it is hard that if understood, will lead you to action that will bring you new habits and sustainable results. When you evolve and grow as a person you start with: 1) VALUES which create 2) ATTITUDES which create 3) BEHAVIORS. For example, when you were a young child you valued having friends, trusted all people and behaved openly.
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Article
Are You Leading Your Life or an Actor in Your own Drama?
Well, the economy is getting worse. Every night when you turn on the news the lead story is about how bad the economy was today. Viewers could use information on how to make things better for themselves or examples of others who are triumphing during these hard times. But our brains are not wired to show the same level of interest in warm stories as they do in things that frighten us.
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Article
Know Which Glass is Yours and Take a Friend to Lunch
As you make changes in your life and grow, you will want to increase your circle of friends. A great way to do that is to take a friend, business associate, or mentor to lunch. You may be invited to a party, Chamber of Commerce or Rotary meeting or other business networking event that includes a meal. Either way you want to make sure you project the professional person that you are. Bad table manners are inexcusable in business and your personal life. They project a person that has not reached a sophisticated level of accomplishment.
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SelfGrowth-published websites, downloads, and contributor profile websites connected to this expert.
Favorite Quotes & Thoughts from Mary Lee Gannon,
Gannon Group is an executive coaching, training and consulting firm that helps clients lead higher performing teams, re-frame goals and manage personal challenge through Executive Coaching, Organizational Development, Board Development, Training and Productivity in the areas of... Healthcare Consulting Business Coaching Operational Excellence Strategic Direction & Meeting Facilitation Association Management Leadership Development Non-Profit Management Communications, Public Relations and Image Personal Turnaround Sales Executive Coaching: Mary Lee is a graduate of The Duquesne University Professional Coaching Program and was a participant in the Harvard Medical School and McLean Hospital Coaching in Medicine & Leadership Conference 2010 as well as many other education programs. She has worked for 12 years as a president or chief executive officer, working with many C level executives and their teams. Her clients are executives who want to create higher performing teams, clarify career strategy, and overcome personal challenge. Healthcare Consulting: Mary Lee has served as president and CEO of hospital foundations at three hospitals. She has served the for-profit and non-profit side of healthcare and other businesses since she began her career in the Houston Medical Center. As a manager within the Ophthalmology Department of Hermann Hospital she began to understand very early the dynamics of a hospital, its professionals, its patients and their families, its administrators and its vendors. Communications, Public Relations and Image: Later working as a jou
alist for major metropolitan newspapers who covered healthcare and other business, she analyzed opposing sides of issues as they related to the needs of consumers and stakeholders. Mary Lee has served as the public relations director for organizations that include medical services and device companies, service companies, medical offices, school districts, professional associations, and more, scripting executives on key issues and securing media attention. As an experienced CEO and a former model, Mary Lee advises on the style and image that a "C" level executive needs in order to be effective. Sales: As a Sandler trained sales professional selling to companies in the healthcare and other sectors she created solutions that increased business and overcame obstacles. Association Management: Moving on to become the executive director of a trade association and earning the distinction of Certified Association Executive (CAE) she learned to build consensus and advance mission in order to increase trade show attendance by 150% and membership by 40%. She is the past president of the Pittsburgh Society of Association Executives. Leadership and Board Development: Mary Lee has led many teams, fundraising campaigns, programs and boards of directors both in a professional capacity and in a volunteer leadership role. She is a graduate of Leadership Pittsburgh XV and sits on many boards of directors. Personal Turnaround: Mary Lee’s personal turnaround was as a stay-at-home mother, with four children under seven-years-old, who endured a divorce that took she and the children from the country club life to public assistance from where within a short time she worked out of that to the level of CEO. Fundraising Consulting: A strong vision, specific strategies and accountability are what guided her to reinvent her life as a chief executive officer in hospital fundraising. She has served three hospitals in this capacity with demonstrated success as a change agent using the principles of operational excellence. Her last capital campaign raised $12 million across four projects. She is on the Board of Trustees of the Pittsburgh Planned Giving Council. Non-Profit Management: Mary Lee has served in the roles of president, executive director and president and CEO of non-profit organizations with assets of up to $26 million and actively serves on the boards of directors of several non-profit organizations. Strategic Direction/Meeting Facilitation/Consensus Building: Throughout her career in her roles as CEO and president of other boards of directors Mary Lee has facilitated hundreds of meetings, retreats and planning sessions. She has built consensus among staff and volunteers and created and executed strategic plans that have advanced organizations. Operational Excellence - A Culture of Rapid Change: Mary Lee has created programs from scratch and turned around programs that were floundering. Utilizing operational excellence strategies, identifying key metrics and building a team around those metrics has enabled her to create cultures for rapid change. This along with her years of executive leadership experience working with large organizations in healthcare and other industries are what she specifically brings to her coaching. She helps executives and leaders create accountability tools that result in a measurable difference in their own lives and the lives of those they lead.
Contacting Mary Lee Gannon,
Mary Lee Gannon
Executive Coaching, Training, Cultural Turnaround, Productivity, and Leadership
412-874-3918
How to get started
Ok, so you want to make some changes in your life but those changes scare
you a little, invigorate you a lot and the ambivalence can sometimes paralyze
you. You just don’t know if you can make it work but you know you have the
energy to make a difference. What you don’t realize is that you have already
been through this before and succeeded.
Remember the first day of school, the first day of scouts, the first day at camp,
the team try outs, going away to college, and starting a new job? You weren’t
sure if people would like you or your book bag. You couldn’t count on getting
played a lot in every game. You didn’t know if the lonely feeling of standing out
would dissipate to reward.
How you met these challenges head on is exactly how you will overcome any
new challenge. First you taught yourself how to accept the situation. And
once you could cope, you strategized for better success. Acceptance comes
first so that your emotions aren’t in the way when you need to plan. And
planning is imperative for success.
See if the following scenario is familiar.
Meredith and Jessica are third graders who are standing in line at the bus stop.
Michael shows up and cuts in front of them just before the bus opens its
doors. He scales the steps two at a time and beats them to the last seat on the
bus where the girls have sat every day since school began. Michael throws
his elbows up over the seat in front of him, leaning forward with a Cheshire cat
grin. “Got your seat!”
Meredith stands up straight like she’d swallowed a poker. “Bus driver! Michael
Miller just stole our seat.” She stomps her feet to the back of the bus, pointing
at Michael. “He cut in front of us in line and should go to the principal’s office.”
Jessica watched the bus driver sip his coffee from one of those coffee shops
that charges more for coffee than her lunch costs. She slides into the seat in
front of Michael. “Meredith, let’s just sit here today.”
“No way! That is our seat.”
More children file onto the bus and bus starts to pull away from the curb.
Meredith is jostled down in the seat next to Jessica and lets out a sigh that
would have put the big bad wolf to shame. “I hate that Michael Miller and I am
going to tell his homeroom teacher what he did as soon as we get to school.”
He pokes his face between them and bellows, “I’m so scaaaaaaared.”
Meredith starts twisting the key tags on her backpack until one breaks off.
Jessica opens her backpack and starts flipping through her flash cards.
There is a spelling test first period and she kept getting “consume” wrong last
night when she was practicing.
Who do you want to be?
Meredith is not able to accept the situation – she is not able to find peace.
Michael is controlling the situation – playing his own game. The bus driver is
disinterested in the situation – he quit the game early. And Jessica chooses
not to let having to change seats get in the way of what she needs to do –
study for the test. She is the only person peaceful enough to move forward.
Jessica realizes that the energy spent on fighting for a certain seat on the bus
does not have anything to do with where she ultimately wants to be. She
wants to get an “A” on the spelling test. Meredith probably wants that too. But
fighting with Michael is easier and probably fulfills an emotional need that she
has either to control or to be heard. Either way, fulfilling the emotional need is
not going to get her an “A” on the spelling test.
It is very easy to get distracted from your goals with emotions that really do not
have anything to do with where you want to be. People do this because it is
easier than focusing on something that is more intimidating – your own
accomplishments. You can fail at reaching goals. You can’t fail at arguing.
Anger is easier.
Know the difference between your emotions and your goals. Get your own
negative emotions out of the way so that you can get on with success.