Control-Tower.biz Leadership Profile Packet

Turn leadership style, innovation work, and promotional strategy into an evidence-based profile packet.

Use this guided 15-step workspace to document your leadership style, entrepreneurial decision-making, innovation process, promotional readiness, community awareness, risk judgment, and evidence of business maturity. The Leadership Profile Packet is designed for MBA graduates, entrepreneurs, founders, consultants, and emerging executives who need a structured way to explain how they lead, build, promote, and manage responsible growth.

Blueprint leadership identity
Build innovation evidence
Activate promotion strategy
Manage executive readiness
Profile Area 1

Leadership Identity

Capture the personal values, cultural awareness, skills, and decision-making habits that shape how you lead.

Profile Area 2

Innovation Evidence

Document how you identify problems, develop solutions, manage risk, and convert ideas into structured business assets.

Profile Area 3

Promotion Strategy

Map the public-facing resources, events, partnerships, and communication channels that support market growth.

Profile Area 4

Executive Readiness

Export a plain-text packet for mentors, advisors, investors, MBA portfolios, leadership reviews, or business planning.

Profile Progress
0/15
0
Profile Entries Saved
15
Remaining
0%
Complete

Product Showcase

News and Media

Agentes de ICE detienen a dos personas en las instalaciones de una escuela en Baltimore, lo que provoca una fuerte reacción

Por Cindy Von Quednow, Priscilla Álvarez y Taylor Galgano, CNN

La detención de dos personas por agentes de inmigración a las afueras de una escuela de Baltimore, mientras se llevaban a cabo los preparativos para las ceremonias de graduación de preescolar y jardín de infancia el jueves por la mañana, ha provocado una fuerte reacción por parte de funcionarios escolares y estatales.

Según las autoridades y los testigos, agentes de inmigración perseguían a un inmigrante indocumentado que iba acompañado de su familia y que condujo hasta el aparcamiento de la escuela primaria/secundaria Commodore John Rodgers, donde los agentes sacaron a los padres del coche.

Niños pequeños, algunos tomados de la mano, pasaban apresuradamente junto al lugar con sus coloridas mochilas durante la hora de entrada, mientras agentes con chalecos con las palabras “ICE” y “policía” detenían a una mujer que se encontraba en una camioneta con la ventana rota, según muestra un video.

Luego, la escoltaron con las manos aparentemente atadas a la espalda.

Según otro video grabado por un conductor, los agentes forcejearon con un hombre que estaba en el suelo y lo inmovilizaron. El conductor describió cómo los niños gritaban mientras observaban.

Los educadores corrieron hacia el SUV de las dos personas detenidas y llevaron a dos niños que estaban en el asiento trasero a la escuela para intentar protegerlos, declaró el senador estatal de Maryland, Bill Ferguson, en un video en Facebook, calificando el incidente de “verdaderamente inconcebible”.

Según el Departamento de Seguridad Nacional, los niños se encuentran ahora bajo la custodia de su tía, después de que sus padres tuvieran la oportunidad de contactar con un familiar.

La portavoz del Departamento de Seguridad Nacional (DHS), Lauren Bis, declaró a CNN que el hombre, identificado como Jesús Acevedo-Sánchez, “se negó a obedecer las órdenes legales, se resistió violentamente al arresto y utilizó su vehículo para evadir a las fuerzas del orden, arrastrando a un agente de ICE en el proceso”.

Según Bis, Acevedo enfrenta cargos federales por resistirse a la autoridad, obstaculizar la labor de agentes federales y destruir propiedad del Gobierno.

Bis indicó que ICE ya había tenido contacto con Acevedo en abril. La otra persona que se encontraba en el vehículo enfrenta cargos por agredir a un agente federal.

CNN está trabajando para determinar si Acevedo-Sánchez cuenta con representación legal.

El jueves por la tarde no estaba claro si la familia involucrada en el incidente con ICE tenía algún vínculo con la escuela, según declaró Sherry Christian, portavoz de las Escuelas Públicas de la Ciudad de Baltimore, antes de que el Departamento de Seguridad Nacional identificara a Acevedo-Sánchez. CNN solicitó más información.

“Los responsables de ICE se coordinaron con los funcionarios escolares y la Oficina del Gobernador para garantizar que la situación se resolviera de forma segura y con las mínimas molestias para la comunidad”, indicó Bis.

El gobernador de Maryland, Wes Moore, calificó el incidente de “preocupante” y dijo que su administración había estado en contacto con los líderes del Servicio de Inmigración y Control de Aduanas para saber qué sucedió y por qué ocurrió en las instalaciones escolares.

Según una fuente familiarizada con el incidente, ICE se disculpó con los funcionarios estatales y escolares por el arresto ocurrido en las instalaciones de la escuela, señalando que las circunstancias los llevaron hasta allí.

“Para que quede claro: ICE no tiene como objetivo las escuelas, pero no permitiremos que los delincuentes se escondan en las escuelas de nuestra nación y pongan en riesgo la seguridad de los niños”, agregó Bis.

El incidente ocurrió alrededor de las 8:00 de la mañana (hora de Miami) cuando

Foresters suffer first loss on the young season

SB FORESTERS.00_00_00_06.Still002
Zane Burns pitched 4 scoreless innings in his start for the Foresters

SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (KEYT) - After lighting up the scoreboard for 41 runs in their first four games, the Santa Barbara Foresters were held to just one run on two hits by the visiting Orange County Riptide.

The Foresters 2-1 loss was Santa Barbara's first setback in five games this year.

Santa Barbara's lone run came on a safety squeeze in the fifth inning by Marcus Greis of TCU that scored Addison Klepsch with the game's first run.

But the Riptide answered with 2 runs in the top of the seventh inning to improve to 6-1 on the season.

The post Foresters suffer first loss on the young season appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

San Marcos High School names alum Frann Wageneck as new athletic director

SanMarcosLogoPNG1
Royals alum will lead San Marcos Athletics

SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (KEYT) - Frann Wageneck will feel right at home in her new position as athletic director for San Marcos High School.

She is a Royals graduate (class of 1984) and has spent her entire career in the Santa Barbara Unified School District.

She has been a varsity softball head coach and an assistant coach in girls basketball.

Wageneck is comfortable in leadership roles having served as an assistant principal, a principal and assistant superintendent.

She will lead a San Marcos Athletic Department that won 12 Channel League titles this past school year and the Royals have led all schools in Channel League championships for 12 straight years.

Wageneck replaces Aaron Solis who stepped down after three half years on the job.

The post San Marcos High School names alum Frann Wageneck as new athletic director appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

They survived one of the worst mass shootings in US history. What life looks like 10 years after Pulse

By Elizabeth Wolfe, CNN

(CNN) — Bass pumped through Pulse nightclub in the early hours of June 12, 2016, as more than 300 people packed one of Orlando’s most popular gay bars for a night of Latin music and hastily-mixed cocktails during the excitement of Pride month.

Just before 2 a.m., the din of the club was violently interrupted by the sound of gunfire. Keinon Carter and his friend Antonio Brown emerged from the restroom to investigate the sound, only to be suddenly struck by a line of bullets.

Over several hours, as Carter faded in and out of consciousness on the floor, a 29-year-old gunman killed 49 people and injured more than 50 others before law enforcement breached the club wall with an armored vehicle and killed him. Carter would later learn Brown had not survived.

At the time, the attack was the deadliest mass shooting in US history and the most violent terrorist attack on US soil since 9/11. The attack deeply wounded Orlando’s LGBTQ+ community, as the majority of those killed were young gay and Hispanic men, and the case was investigated by the FBI as both terrorism and a hate crime.

No survivor could have predicted how their lives would change in the months and years after such a traumatic event.

Some, like Carter, were forced by debilitating injuries to confront the reality of the attack every day. Others, like Tiara Parker, suppressed their grief and trauma until the weight of it all finally brought them tumbling to their knees. A handful, including Brandon Wolf, have coped by trying to build a world where such violence would not happen again.

Ten years after the shooting, survivors who spoke to CNN detailed their complicated – and still unfolding – recoveries, as well as their struggles with the guilt of living through the attack that took the lives of lovers, relatives and close friends.

Brandon Wolf, an advocate fueled by a whispered promise

Today, Wolf is living out a career his younger self would not have felt capable of.

In the summer of 2016, Wolf had pulled enough espresso shots and whipped so many caramel-drizzled Frappuccinos that the 27-year-old had been promoted to district manager of several Starbucks in Orlando, including one just down the street from Pulse.

He was steadily climbing the company ladder, well on his way to achieving his goal of working at Starbucks headquarters in Seattle and owning a little house in the suburbs, perhaps with a Subaru parked in the driveway.

He had in recent years become best friends with an effervescent 32-year-old man named Christopher Leinonen, whose nickname was “Drew.”

“He was one of the first people to challenge me to be the most unapologetic version of myself,” said Wolf. “We were inseparable for years.”

The pair became so inseparable Wolf got an apartment two doors down from Leinonen’s. They could burst in and out of each other’s front door like sitcom characters, always able to peek out the window to see if the other was home.

On the night of June 12, Wolf had invited Leinonen and his boyfriend, 22-year-old Juan Ramon Guerrero, to Pulse. He had hoped his friends could act as a buffer between him and his ex-boyfriend, whom he was meeting at the club that night.

In the years since, his memory has vividly preserved some moments from the shooting, while others seem to lie just out of reach. He can still clearly remember where he was when the shooting began: in the restroom, washing his hands. His eyes had rested on a flimsy plastic cup that had been abandoned on the sink, holding ragged lime slices and a slush of ice that was causing little beads of condensation to form on its sides.

What he cannot recall, though, are

Ex-South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol sentenced to 30 years in jail over Pyongyang drone plot

Story by Reuters

Seoul (Reuters) — A South Korean court sentenced former President Yoon Suk Yeol to 30 years in prison on Friday over charges linked to military drones sent over Pyongyang to help create a pretext for his failed December 2024 martial law declaration, Yonhap reported.

The Seoul Central District Court found Yoon guilty of abuse of power and aiding the enemy, saying he had conspired in the October 2024 drone incursion from the outset, the news agency said.

Yoon denied wrongdoing. His lawyers said he neither ordered nor later approved the operation, which they said was unrelated to martial law and instead a response to months of North Korean launches across the border of balloons stuffed with rubbish.

Prosecutors had sought a 30-year prison term for Yoon in April.

The ruling adds to a series of judgements against the ousted conservative leader, once South Korea’s top prosecutor, whose martial law order plunged Asia’s fourth-largest economy into its deepest political turmoil in decades.

In February, a South Korean court sentenced Yoon to life in prison after finding him guilty of leading an insurrection linked to the martial law attempt.

He was removed from office last year after the Constitutional Court upheld his impeachment, triggering a snap election that was won by liberal President Lee Jae Myung.

Yoon, who is already in custody, can appeal Friday’s lower court ruling.

The-CNN-Wire
™ & © 2026 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved.

The post Ex-South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol sentenced to 30 years in jail over Pyongyang drone plot appeared first on News Channel 3-12.


rss_feedRSS
1345678910Last

Console