Question:
What are 3 leadership qualities of Oprah Winfrey?
2009-05-04 16:46:20 UTC
I need to do a speech on leadership about Oprah Winfrey. All I need is 3 qualities that show she is a leader. Any help guys?
Twelve answers:
2009-05-04 18:32:46 UTC
Oprah is a great entertainer and leader. She worked her way to the top. She runs a magazine, a tv show, opened an Academy for Girls in Africa, produces Broadway shows, has a book club (inactive) and knows how to earn money and make it look easy.

She's a leader, coach, talented, can talk about anything to anybody and does it intelligently. She's very influential.
2016-12-29 22:08:15 UTC
Oprah Winfrey Leadership Qualities
mcneair
2016-10-26 12:35:43 UTC
Oprah Winfrey Leadership Style
2015-08-06 19:02:30 UTC
This Site Might Help You.



RE:

What are 3 leadership qualities of Oprah Winfrey?

I need to do a speech on leadership about Oprah Winfrey. All I need is 3 qualities that show she is a leader. Any help guys?
2016-04-08 17:44:22 UTC
For the best answers, search on this site https://shorturl.im/ayjqN



Please, inform you before, Antena 3 is very important channel in Spain, not an obscure little channel, it's very similar to British Channel 4 or ITV. Besides this channel is specialised in this sort of programs of current events. Second, Gerry said they chose them because Spain is close to Portugal and they want to change their image in Portugal and be seen by the Portuguese people how they really are and not how some portuguese press said. Well I thought you were one of those pro-McCanns but your question seems made by an anti, lol.
Farnaz
2013-11-20 09:04:23 UTC
My organization runs a Leadership Qualities blog series discussing leadership qualities of successful business people and we just wrote about Oprah Winfrey. We've got four for you. She is emotionally intelligent, relatable, a humanist, and inspirational. We detail this based on her personal quotes and live decisions in our post.



1. Emotionally Intelligent



Emotional Intelligence (EI) boosts self-awareness, monitors feelings, improves communication skills and increases social awareness. In addition it helps prevent conflict and strengthen mediation skills. This can be easily seen through Oprah’s leadership style. Her awareness of her own vision has led her to achieve big goals while her listening skills and empathy have enabled her to motivate others.



2. Relatable



Oprah once said “I am a woman in process. I’m just trying like everybody else. I try to take every conflict, every experience, and learn from it. Life is never dull.” (Brainy Quote). Though she’s not a doctor or psychologist, people trust Oprah with their darkest secrets and invite her to share in their greatest accomplishments. Personal battles with struggles like weight gain which she has openly shared through the years are issues with which people can identify. People follow leaders who are transparent and relatable.



3. Humanist



Being an empathetic and caring individual, Oprah doesn’t take justice and humanitarian issues lightly. Refusing to hold her tongue or hide in the shadows, her history for philanthropy and fighting for the common good is nearly unparalleled. From initiating the National Child Protection Act in 1991 (Oprah.com) to transforming lives for the better through education with initiatives such as The Oprah Winfrey Leadership Academy for Girls, Oprah has proven the power of one strong leader to positively impact many lives.



4. Inspirational



Oprah is the epitome of leading by example. Her focus on being the best person she can be, translates to the way other people choose to live their lives in response. Sure, Oprah gives advice and offers suggestions to others in hard times, but it is her nature to always be improving professionally and personally that inspires people to take her advice.



Resources:

http://www.centerforworklife.com/oprah-winfrey-leadership-qualities/

http://www.forbes.com/sites/moiraforbes/2012/09/18/oprah-winfrey-talks-philanthropy-failure-and-what-every-guest-including-beyonce-asks-her/

http://www.oprah.com/pressroom/Oprah-Calls-for-Action-Against-Child-Predators
Dave K
2009-05-04 16:53:19 UTC
Positive influence, huge following, respect. Power and money are also acceptable, but I think the best choices are the first three I mentioned.
fifty-plus
2009-05-06 19:06:28 UTC
Pick three:



unbiased

understanding

good listener

compassionate

conscientious

reliable

honorable

respectful

honest

amiable

etc.......,
Kaтie Kiтson™
2009-05-05 19:02:32 UTC
She's extremely like-able (probably due to her generosity to tons of charities), she's real and she is respected (people follow those they respect)
2009-05-04 16:54:52 UTC
1.) She has a lot of money.

2.) She has a lot of money

3.) She has a lot of money.
2009-05-04 17:01:01 UTC
*Shes respected,

*A VERY hard worker,(that's why she so rich she literally went from rags to riches)

*Motivating
2009-05-05 04:41:18 UTC
I am a HUGE Oprah fan here is my answer



Oprah Winfrey

Also known as: Oprah Gail Winfrey, Oprah (Gail) Winfrey

Born: January 29, 1954, in Kosciusko, Mississippi, USA

Occupation: Talk Show Host, Actress, Broadcasting Executive

Ethnicity: African American



Overview





Oprah Winfrey revolutionized the talk show market with her unique and natural style and rose to become the host of the most watched daytime show on television, which boasts 22 million viewers daily (three-fourths of whom are women). She is the first African American to own her own TV studio. The multitalented Winfrey is also a billionaire businesswoman, a talented actress, owner of a movie production company, and committed philanthropist.



Personal Life





Oprah Gail Winfrey was born January 29, 1954, on a farm in Kosciusko, Mississippi. She was supposed to be Orpah, from the Bible, but for some unknown reason, she has been known as Oprah almost from birth. Her unmarried parents, Vernon Winfrey and Vernita Lee, separated soon after she was born, leaving her to be raised by her maternal grandmother. "She certainly wasn't an educated woman, but she taught me the shape of letters, and she taught me my Bible stories," Winfrey recalled in Life magazine. By the time she was six, Winfrey had moved to Milwaukee to live with her mother. During this time, she was sexually abused by a teenage cousin and then by other male relatives and friends. "I was, and am, severely damaged by the experience [of abuse]. All the years that I convinced myself I was healed, I wasn't," she told Redbook. "I still carried the shame, and I unconsciously blamed myself for those men's acts."



Winfrey had a contentious relationship with her mother, often acting out as a bid to gain attention. Once she faked a robbery in her house, smashed glasses, feigned amnesia, and stole her mother's purse, all because she wanted newer, more stylish glasses. It seemed Winfrey was heading down a road of destruction until her mother sent her to live with her father in Nashville at age 14. Winfrey said her father saved her life. He was very strict and provided her with guidance, structure, rules, and books. He required his daughter to complete weekly book reports, and she went without dinner until she learned five new vocabulary words each day. She joined her school's drama club and became a prize-winning orator, winning a $1,000 college scholarship after delivering a short speech entitled "The *****, the Constitution, and the United States" to 10,000 Elks Club members in Philadelphia. She was the first black woman to win Nashville's Miss Fire Prevention title. In 1971 she was named Miss Black Tennessee. In 1976 she graduated with a degree in speech communications and theater from Tennessee State University.



In 1986 Winfrey received a special award from the Chicago Academy for the Arts for unique contributions to the city's artistic community and was named Woman of Achievement by the National Organization of Women. The Oprah Winfrey Show won several Emmys for Best Talk Show, and Winfrey was honored as Best Talk Show Host.



In addition to her numerous daytime Emmys, Winfrey has received other awards. In 1993 Winfrey won the Horatio Alger Award "given to those who overcome adversity to become leaders in their fields," according to Jet magazine. She was inducted into the Television Hall of Fame in 1994 and received the George Foster Peabody Individual Achievement Award, one of broadcasting's most coveted awards, following the 1995-1996 season. Further, she received the IRTS Gold Medal Award, was named one of America's 25 Most Influential People of 1996 by Time magazine, and was included on Marjabelle Young Stewart's 1996 list of most polite celebrities. In 1997 Winfrey received TV Guide's Television Performer of the Year Award and was named favorite Female Television Performer at the 1997 People's Choice Awards. In 1998 Entertainment Weekly named Winfrey the most powerful person in show business. In 2002, Winfrey was given the first Bob Hope Humanitarian Award at the Emmy Awards. In 2004, the United Nations awarded Winfrey for the Global Leadership Award by the United Nations for her work in South Africa, while Morehouse College gave her the first Candle for Lifetime Achievement in Humanitarian Service Award. Other honors included induction into the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People's Hall of Fame and receipt of the International Founders Award of the International Academy of Television Arts & Sciences in 2005.



Winfrey has used her popularity and influence to advocate for political causes as well. In 1991 the tragic story of a four-year-old Chicago girl's molestation and murder prompted Winfrey, a former abuse victim, to propose federal child protection legislation designed to keep nationwide records on convicted abusers. She did this with the help of former Illinois governor, James Thompson. In addition, Winfrey pursued a ruling that would guarantee


This content was originally posted on Y! Answers, a Q&A website that shut down in 2021.
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