Discussion Forum Faith Integration
Ephesians 2:10 related to corporate communications in that corporate leaders should communicate to employees the best practices to promote good workmanship. In addition, leaders should communicate good works that the organization expect from employees (Farrel, 2013). In this scripture, the central term is ‘good workmanship' which leads to the best results. Leaders should communicate the acceptable standards for corporate operations. Note that in organizational communication, leaders must communicate to employees about the organization vision, plans and strategies (Farrel, 2013). The organization expect employees to do good works but an important point to understand is that for them to do good works, leaders must share professional knowledge. In other words, they should communicate the best practices so that the organization can become successful. Note that the technology and market changes are changing dramatically, and this means that employees need a quality of workmanship that is achieved through best practices. For example, for employees to produce the best brand, they need to understand the processes, structures, tools, and resources (Farrel, 2013).Thus, the leader should communicate these best practices so that at the end of the day, they can appreciate good workmanship.
Another important point to understand is that leaders should be great examples. In other words, they should show good workmanship and do an excellent job, and act as a representative so that employees can become good works (Farrel, 2013). If I were a leader, I could show good work and integrity through pursuing my vision, keeping my word, making fair decisions, communicating honestly, demonstrate integrity in managing employees and customer service. As a leader, I must learn that before communicating the best practices to the employees, I must do the good works by leading by example, and more importantly, by displaying good character and ensure that my actions are open to everyone.
Reference
Farrel, B. (2013). 10 best decisions a leader can make. Place of publication not identified:
Harvest House Pub.