Documents pour «Berrett-Koehler Publishers»

Documents pour "Berrett-Koehler Publishers"
Affiche du document Servant Leadership in Action

Servant Leadership in Action

Renee Broadwell

2h34min30

  • Gestion et management
  • Youscribe plus
  • Livre epub
  • Livre lcp
206 pages. Temps de lecture estimé 2h34min.
Edited by legendary business author Ken Blanchard and featuring contributions by authors like Simon Sinek, Bren Brown, Stephen M. R. Covey, and Marshall Goldsmith, this collection offers expert advice on how to implement an increasingly popular and highly effective approach to leadership.Servant leadership is the secret behind the success of some of the world's leading organizations. Succinctly put, serving leaders lead by serving their people, not by exalting themselves. Through the stories and reflections of leading businesspeople, bestselling authors, and spiritual leaders, this collection offers tools for implementing this proven but radical leadership model. The book is organized into three sections: -What is Servant Leadership? describes different aspects of servant leadership -Models of Servant Leadership focuses on people who have been identified as classic servant leaders-Putting Servant Leadership to Work features firsthand accounts of how servant leadership has been implemented in various organizations and the difference it has made in both results and human satisfaction.Foreword by John Maxwell 9Introduction: Serve First and Lead Second by Ken Blanchard and Renee Broadwell 11Part One: Fundamentals of Servant Leadership 141. What Is Servant Leadership? by Ken Blanchard 162. Characteristics of Servant Leaders by Larry Spears 253. Servant Leadership is Conscious Leadership by Raj Sisodia 324. Servant Leadership at the Speed of Trust by Stephen M. R. Covey 415. Great Leaders SERVE by Mark Miller 526. Servant Leadership: What Does it Really Mean? by Mark A. Floyd 587. Servant Leaders Create a Great Place to Work for All by Michael Bush 678. The Leader as Shepherd by Holly Culhane 769. The Evolution of Servant Leadership by Simon Sinek 84Part Two: Elements of Servant Leadership 9410. One Question Every Servant Leader Should Ask by Marshall Goldsmith 9611. In the Service of Others: When Leaders Dare to Rehumanize Work by Bren Brown 10412. Servant Leaders Celebrate Others by Tom Mullins 11213. A Servant Leader's Focus by Jim Ferrell 11914. What You See Determines How You Serve by Chris Hodges 12715. Compassion: The Heart of Servant Leadership by Craig Groeschel 13316. Why Ideal Team Players Make Great Servant Leaders by Patrick Lencioni 13817. The Servant Leader Identity by Laurie Beth Jones 14318. The Four Corners of the Leader's Universe by Henry Cloud 156Part Three: Lessons in Servant Leadership 14919. Finding Your Voice by James M. Kouzes and Barry Z. Posner 15820. A Lesson From My Father: Washing Feet by Phyllis Hennecy Hendry 16621. The Puddle Is Not the Problem by Neal Nybo 17022. Five Army-Tested Lessons of Servant Leadership by Jeff Foley 17523. A Baptism of Leadership by Erwin McManus 18424. Little Things and Big Things by Jon Gordon 19125. In Praise of Followership by Margie Blanchard 195Part Four: Exemplars of Servant Leadership 20326. Jesus: The Greatest Example of a Servant Leader by Ken Blanchard 20527. Andrew Young: Partner in Servant Leadership to Martin Luther King, Jr. by John Hope Bryant 21528. Pat Summitt: Steely Eyes, Servant Heart by Tamika Catchings 22029. Dallas Willard: The Smartest Man I Ever Met by Tony Baron 22930. Henry Blackaby-a Lifelong Servant Leader by Richard Blackaby 23631. Frances Hesselbein: To Serve Is to Live by Jim Dittmar 24232. Charlie Tremendous Jones: A Sermon Seen by Mark Sanborn 251Part Five: Putting Servant Leadership to Work 25633. Treat Your People as Family by Colleen Barrett 25834. Developing and Using Servant Leadership in the Military by Robin Blanchard 26635. Leading Is Serving by Dave Ramsey 27536. Serving from an HR Perspective by Shirley Bullard 28037. It's How You Treat People by James H. Blanchard 28738. How Servant Leadership Has Shaped Our Church Culture by Miles McPherson 299Part Six: Servant Leadership Turnarounds 30639. Out of the Flames, Into the Light by Art Barter 30840. Serve the People by Cheryl Bachelder 31641. Waste Connections: A Servant Leadership Success Story by Rico Maranto 32542. Don't Mark My Paper, Help Me Get an A by Garry Ridge 337Final Comments: The Power of Love, Not the Love of Power by Ken Blanchard 346References 347
Accès libre
Affiche du document Invisible Martyrs

Invisible Martyrs

Farhana Qazi

1h40min30

  • Sciences humaines et sociales
  • Youscribe plus
  • Livre epub
  • Livre lcp
134 pages. Temps de lecture estimé 1h40min.
“This is an extraordinary book, written by an extraordinary woman. Qazi is a master storyteller, capturing the emotion as well as the subtleties of what she wants to communicate. And as the first Islamic member of the U.S. Counterterrorism Center, there is a lot that she wants to tell readers about.” –Anna Jedrziewski, Retailing InsightFarhana Qazi draws on her background as a pioneering counterterrorism professional and a devout Muslim to offer an insider's view of what drives girls and women to join radical Islamic movements and how we can keep them from making this terrible choice. The first Muslim woman to work for the US government's Counterterrorism Center, Qazi found herself fascinated, even obsessed, by the phenomenon of female extremists. Why, she wondered, would a girl from Denver join ISIS, a radical movement known for its mistreatment of women? Why would a teenage Iraqi girl strap on a suicide bomb and detonate it? From Kashmir to Iraq to Afghanistan to Colorado to London, she discovered women of different backgrounds who all had their own reason for joining these movements. Some were confused, others had been taken advantage of, and some were just as radical and dedicated as their male counterparts. But in each case, Qazi found their choices were driven by a complex interaction of culture, context, and capability that was unique to each woman. This book reframes their stories so readers can see these girls and women as they truly are: females exploited by men. Through hearing their voices and sharing their journeys Qazi gained powerful insights not only into what motivated these women but also into the most effective ways to combat terrorism—and about herself as well. “Through them,” Qazi writes, “I discovered intervention strategies that are slowly helping women hold on to faith as they struggle with versions of orthodox Islam polluted by extremist interpretations. And in the process, I discovered a gentle Islam and more about myself as a woman of faith.”
Accès libre
Affiche du document Communicate Like a Leader

Communicate Like a Leader

Dianna Booher

1h45min45

  • Gestion et management
  • Youscribe plus
  • Livre epub
  • Livre lcp
141 pages. Temps de lecture estimé 1h46min.
When it comes to leading, there is a critical difference between communicating as a boss and communicating as a bully. Celebrated communicator Dianna Booher explains why a leader’s success depends on knowing how to communicate strategically with audiences in an organization at their level of interest and relevancy.Draw Them In, Don't Drive Them Away!People often get promoted to leadership positions without knowing how to communicate an inspiring strategic vision to the people who report to them. So they focus on what they know: tactics, not strategy. As a result, they become stuck in micromanagement mode. Dianna Booher wants to prevent micromanagement before it happens by providing you with the right leadership communication skills. Grounded in extensive research, this book offers practical guidelines to help professionals think, coach, converse, speak, write, meet, and negotiate strategically to deliver results. In thirty-six brief chapters, Booher shows you how to communicate effectively to audiences up and down the organization so you can fulfill your most essential responsibilities as a leader.Contents Introduction The challenge of leadership communication IPart 1Strategic Leadership Think Long-term investment in people and payoff chapter 1 Communicating as a leader and as a manager 11chapter 2 have a ready answer for THIS one key question-- always 15chapter 3 Make sure the team knows the deliverables 18chapter 4 Build a Culture of Trust 24 chapter 5 Hire Based on Core Character and Competency 27 chapter 6 Nix Micromanaging and Other Negatives 32 chapter 7 Squelch the Urge to Hoard 36
chapter 8 Guide With Strategic Questions 39 chapter 9 Dislodge Log-Jamming Directives 42chapter 10 Become a Coach, Not a Critic 45 chapter 11 Give Kudos That Count 49 chapter 12 Fire People to Be Fair 52 chapter 13 Energize Rather Than Demoralize 56 chapter 14 Course-Correct Quickly After Bad Decisions 60 chapter 15 Develop Your People 64 PART 2 STRATEGIC CONVERSATIONS Connect With Intent chapter 16 Be Intentional About Your Communication Standards 73 chapter 17 Be a Leader Who Laughs 78
chapter 18 Respond Promptly in the Age of Twitter 83 chapter 19 Learn to Apologize or Pay the Penalty 86 chapter 20 Keep Your Networks Active 89 PART 3 STRATEGIC NEGOTIATIONS Look for Mutual Opportunities chapter 21 Determine Your Goals, Value, and Walk-Away Point 97 chapter 22 Adopt Strategic Negotiation Practices 101 chapter 23 Aim to Do the Second Deal 105 PART 4 STRATEGIC SPEAKING Persuade Minds and Win Hearts chapter 24 Increase Your Executive Presence 111 chapter 25 Dump Your Data to a Storyline 117 chapter 26 Engage With Great Stories 121
chapter 27 Be Brief or Be Dismissed 128
chapter 28 Prepare for Off-the-Cuff Comments 131 PART 5 STRATEGIC WRITING Write to the Point chapter 29 Let Them See How You Think 137
chapter 30 Trust the TA-DA TemplateTM 142
chapter 31 Use Social Media Strategically—Don't Spray Paint 146 PART 6 STRATEGIC MEETINGS Deliver Results When You Meet chapter 32 Consider a Meeting Before the Meeting 155 chapter 33 Plug Power Into Your Agenda 157
chapter 34 Make Little Meeting Matters a Big Deal 160 chapter 35 Meet Like You Mean Business 164 chapter 36 Know Your Meeting ROI 169Next Steps 173 Notes 175 Acknowledgments 179 Bibliography 177 Index 181 About the Author 189 How to Work With Dianna Booher and Booher Research 191
Accès libre
Affiche du document Humility Is the New Smart

Humility Is the New Smart

Katherine Ludwig

1h33min00

  • Gestion et management
  • Youscribe plus
  • Livre epub
  • Livre lcp
124 pages. Temps de lecture estimé 1h33min.
Smart machines are replacing more and more jobs. Edward Hess and Katherine Ludwig show how to develop abilities that machines don't have so we can thrive in this Smart Machine Age. Underlying them all is a sense of personal humility: honestly recognizing our limitations and working to mitigate them. In nearly every industry, smart machines are replacing human labor. It's not just factory jobs-automated technologies are handling people's investments, diagnosing illnesses, and analyzing written documents. If we humans are going to endure, Edward Hess and Katherine Ludwig say we're going to need a dose of humility. We need to be humble enough to let go of the idea that smart means knowing the most, using that information quickest, and making the fewest mistakes. Smart machines will always be better than we are at those things. Instead, we need to cultivate important abilities that smart machines don't have (yet): thinking critically, creatively, and innovatively and building close relationships with others so we can collaborate effectively. Hess and Ludwig call this being NewSmart. To develop these abilities, we need to practice four specific behaviors: keeping our egos out of our way, managing our thoughts and emotions to curb any biases or defensiveness, listening to others with an open mind, and connecting with others socially and emotionally. What all these behaviors have in common is, again, humility-avoiding self-centeredness so we can learn from and work with other humans. Hess and Ludwig offer a guide to developing these NewSmart abilities and to creating organizations where these qualities are encouraged and rewarded.Contents Introduction: Why You Should Read This Book 1 Part 1 A New Mental Model for the Smart Machine Age 1 The Smart Machine Age: A New Game Requires New Rules 15 
2 NewSmart: A New Definition of Smart 35 
3 Humility: The Gateway to Human Excellence in the SMA 59 
Part 2 NewSmart Behaviors 
4 Quieting Ego 79 
5 Managing Self: Thinking and Emotions 95 
6 Reflective Listening 115 
7 Otherness: Emotionally Connecting and Relating to Others 123 
8 Your NewSmart Behaviors Assessment Tool 133 
Part 3 The NewSmart Organization 
9 Leading a NewSmart Organization 153 
Your NewSmart Organizational Assessment Tool 183 Epilogue: Our Invitation to You 187Notes 189Recommended Reading 201Acknowledgments 205Index 207About the Authors 212
Accès libre
Affiche du document How You Learn Is How You Live

How You Learn Is How You Live

Kay Peterson

1h38min15

  • Efficacité professionnelle
  • Youscribe plus
  • Livre epub
  • Livre lcp
131 pages. Temps de lecture estimé 1h38min.
This book takes a systematic approach to learning that has been long revered in the education field (approximately 75,000 educators take the Kolb Learning Style Inventory each year) and makes it accessible to any reader who wants to be a lifelong learner.What's Your Learning Style?Being a lifelong learner is one of the secrets to happiness, success, and personal fulfillment. But what's the best way to become one? Kay Peterson and David Kolb have the answer. They offer deep, research-based insights into the ideal process of learning and guide you in identifying your dominant style. You'll discover how knowing your learning style can help you with all kinds of everyday challenges, from remembering someone's name to adding a crucial professional skill to your repertoire. This book is a guide to awakening the power of learning that lies within each of us.Contents Foreword xiiiIntroduction xviiChapter One The Learning Way 1Chapter Two I Am a Learner 11Chapter Three My Learning Style, My Life Path 33Chapter Four Building Style Flexibility 77Chapter Five Learning Flexibility and the Road Ahead 103Chapter Six What's Next? Deliberate learning for life 121Notes 137Reference 141Appendix A The KLSI, The Kolb Learning Style Inventory: 149Why you should take the inventory to define your style Appendix B The Style Sheets: The Nine Styles of Learning at a Glance 155
Accès libre
Affiche du document Crunch Time

Crunch Time

Judd Hoekstra

1h26min15

  • Efficacité professionnelle
  • Youscribe plus
  • Livre epub
  • Livre lcp
115 pages. Temps de lecture estimé 1h26min.
High-pressure situations can make us panic—but if we can change our perspective, what seemed impossible can suddenly become doable. Legendary pitching coach Rick Peterson is a master at this kind of reframing. He and bestselling author and leadership expert, Judd Hoekstra make this skill available to everyone.Be Your Best Under Pressure!Learn how elite athletes like Michael Jordan, Sandy Cofax, Tom Glavin, and Pedro Martinez, deal with pressure. In his 15 years as a major league pitching coach, with "Moneyball" Oakland A's, NY Mets, Milwaukee Brewers and Baltimore Orioles, Rick Peterson has coached Hall of Famers, Cy Young winners, and many other elite athletes. In this book, he and bestselling author and leadership expert, Judd Hoekstra make this skill available to everyone. From an insider's perspective, learn how you too can become a Crunch Time performer and perform your best in all situations. With fascinating behind-the-scenes examples from some of the top names in sports and business, Rick and Judd offer six powerful reframing strategies to help you see a pressure situation with a new perspective so that it shifts from a threat that can make you panic to an opportunity for you to shine. With a Forward by "Money Ball”, Billy Beane, EVP, Oakland Athletics.Table of Contents Preface.xiii Foreword xvii Introduction: Rick and Izzy 11  Reframing—The Shortest Path from Threat to Opportunity 72  Why Reframing at Crunch Time Is Necessary 193  Reframing from Trying Harder to Trying Easier 374  Reframing from Tension to Laughter 555  Reframing from Anxiety to Taking Control 696  Reframing from Doubt to Confidence 857  Reframing from Failure to a Learning Moment 101 8  Reframing from Prepared to Over prepared 121 
Final Thoughts 139A  Index of Stories 141B  Try This 145
Acknowledgments 151About the Authors 155Endnotes 159Index 167
Accès libre
Affiche du document Theory U

Theory U

C. Otto Scharmer

3h19min30

  • Efficacité professionnelle
  • Youscribe plus
  • Livre epub
  • Livre lcp
266 pages. Temps de lecture estimé 3h19min.
Access the deepest source of inspiration and visionWe live in a time of massive institutional failure that manifests in the form of three major divides: the ecological, the social, and the spiritual. Addressing these challenges requires a new consciousness and collective leadership capacity. In this groundbreaking book, Otto Scharmer invites us to see the world in new ways and in so doing discover a revolutionary approach to learning and leadership.In most large systems today, we collectively create results that no one wants. What keeps us stuck in such patterns of the past? It's our blind spot, that is, our lack of awareness of the inner place from which our attention and intention originate. By moving through Scharmer's U process, we consciously access the blind spot and learn to connect to our authentic Self-the deepest source of knowledge and inspiration. Theory U offers a rich diversity of compelling stories, examples, exercises, and practices that allow leaders, organizations, and larger systems to cosense and coshape the future that is wanting to emerge.This second edition features a new preface in which Scharmer identifies five transformational trends and describes U process case stories around the world. There are also eight color drawings by Kelvy Bird that capture U journey applications and illustrate the concepts in the book, as well as new resources for applying the principles and practices.Color Insert Images by Kelvy BirdPreface to the Second EditionForeword by Peter SengeAcknowledgmentsIntroductionPart I Bumping into Our Blind SpotChapter 1 Facing the FireChapter 2 The Journey to “U”Chapter 3 Fourfold Learning and ChangeChapter 4 Organizational ComplexityChapter 5 Shifts in SocietyChapter 6 Philosophical GroundingChapter 7 On the ThresholdPart II Entering the U FieldChapter 8 DownloadingChapter 9 SeeingChapter 10 SensingChapter 11 PresencingChapter 12 CrystallizingChapter 13 PrototypingChapter 14 PerformingPart III Presencing: a Social Technology for Profound Innovation and ChangeChapter 15 The Grammar of the Social FieldChapter 16 Individual actionsChapter 17 Conversational actionsChapter 18 Organizational actionsChapter 19 Global actionsChapter 20 Catching Social reality Creation in FlightChapter 21 Principles and Practices of PresencingEpilogue u.school: awareness Based Systems ChangeGlossaryNotesBibliographyIndexAbout the AuthorAbout the Organization
Accès libre
Affiche du document The Leadership Genius of Julius Caesar

The Leadership Genius of Julius Caesar

Phillip Barlag

51min00

  • Gestion et management
  • Youscribe plus
  • Livre epub
  • Livre lcp
68 pages. Temps de lecture estimé 51min.
The Leadership Genius of Julius CaesarModern Lessons from the Man Who Built an Empire“Brilliantly crafted to draw leadership lessons from history, this is one of the finest leadership books I have read.”—Doris Kearns Goodwin, bestselling author of Team of Rivals and The Bully PulpitLeaders are always trying to get better, which is why there is an enormous and growing collection of literature offering the latest leadership paradigm or process. But sometimes the best way to move forward is to look back. Philip Barlag shows us that Julius Caesar is one of the most compelling leaders of the past to study—a man whose approach was surprisingly modern and extraordinarily effective. History is littered with leaders hopelessly out of touch with their people and ruthlessly pursuing their own ambitions or hedonistic whims. But Caesar, who rose from impoverished beginnings, proved by his words and deeds that he never saw himself as being above the average Roman citizen. And he had an amazing ability to generate loyalty, to turn enemies into allies and allies into devoted followers. Barlag uses dramatic and colorful incidents from Caesar's career—being held hostage by pirates, charging headlong alone into enemy lines, pardoning people he knew wanted him dead—to illustrate what Caesar can teach leaders today. Central to Barlag's argument is the distinction between force and power. Caesar avoided using brute force on his followers, understanding that fear never generates genuine loyalty. He exercised a power deeply rooted in his demonstrated personal integrity and his intuitive understanding of people's deepest needs and motivations. His supporters followed him because they wanted to, not because they were compelled to. Over 2,000 years after Caesar's death, this is still the kind of loyalty every leader wants to inspire. Barlag shows how anyone can learn to lead like Caesar.
Accès libre
Affiche du document Leading with Character and Competence

Leading with Character and Competence

Timothy R. Clark

1h28min30

  • Gestion et management
  • Youscribe plus
  • Livre epub
  • Livre lcp
118 pages. Temps de lecture estimé 1h28min.
Leading with Character and CompetenceMoving beyond Title, Position, and Authority “Leadership is an applied discipline, not a foamy concept to muse about,” says three-time CEO, Oxford-trained scholar, and consultant Timothy R. Clark. “In fact, it's the most important applied discipline in the world.” The success of any organization can be traced directly to leadership. And leadership can be learned. But too many books and development programs focus exclusively on skills. In reality, performance and ultimate credibility are based on a combination of character and competence. As Clark puts it, character is the core and competence the crust. He shows how greatness emerges from a powerful combination of the two, although in the end character is more important. A leader with character but no competence will be ineffective, while a leader with competence but no character is dangerous.Clark spotlights the four most important components of character and competence and offers a series of eloquent, inspiring, and actionable reflections on what's needed to build each one. Fundamentally, he sees leadership as influence—leaders influence people “to climb, stretch, and become.” You need character to influence positively and competence to influence effectively. This is a book for anyone, no matter where he or she is on the organization chart. Because today employees at all levels are being asked to step up, not only can everyone be a leader, everyone has to be. Clark's insights are profound, and his passion is infectious. “Leadership” he writes, “is the most engaging, inspiring, and deeply satisfying activity known to humankind. Through leadership we have the opportunity to progress, overcome adversity, change lives, and bless the race.”
Accès libre
Affiche du document Online Marketing for Busy Authors

Online Marketing for Busy Authors

Fauzia Burke

57min45

  • Marketing et communication
  • Youscribe plus
  • Livre epub
  • Livre lcp
77 pages. Temps de lecture estimé 58min.
If You Want People to Read Your Book, Writing It Is Only the BeginningThere has truly never been a better time to be an author. For the first time, authors have direct access to the public via the Internet—and can create a community eagerly awaiting their book. But where do new authors start? How do they sort through the dizzying range of online options? Where should they spend their time online and what should they be doing?Enter Fauzia Burke, a digital book marketing pioneer and friend of overwhelmed writers everywhere. She takes authors step-by-step through the process of identifying their unique personal brand, defining their audience, clarifying their aspirations and goals, and setting priorities. She offers advice on designing a successful website, building a mailing list of superfans, blogging, creating an engagement strategy for social media, and more. By following Burke's expert advice, authors can conquer the Internet and still get their next manuscript in on time.IntroductionIn my twenty years of promoting books online, I have worked with bestselling authors, celebrity authors, longtime authors, first-time authors, and some self-published authors. While the challenges may differ from book to book, all authors have a similar concern: how to spend their time effectively promoting their book and expanding their brands online while writing the best book possible. Whether you're writing your first book or you write three books a year, you are probably very busy and you must make every minute count.Together, we will figure out the best use of your time and the best way to engage with your specific readers. I hope to make the marketing process meaningful and fun for you. I am not going to tell you that if you follow my advice, your book will be #1 on Amazon (that would be a great sales pitch, though), but what I can tell you is that if you follow my advice, you will create meaningful interactions with your readers and build a long-term, successful personal brand online. Having visibility online is not just about selling a book, it's about building a career.I have written this book to help you do just that. I think it would be helpful for you to read this book once in its entirety before doing the actual worksheets. It will give you the big picture before you take the deep dive. This is an introductory book with a strategic look at online marketing for authors. There is a lot of information to absorb here, so I have made the book interactive. You'll find worksheets and checklists, as well as bulleted lists, tips, quotes, and advice from book publishing professionals, throughout the book.Some of the information in the book is available on the web and even in my own blogs, but I find that having a clear road map is really important so you don't spend a lot of time chasing down information without having a plan to implement the ideas. I've organized the book in three phases to help you digest a process that feels overwhelming to most authors. In the first phase, we dig right into understanding what personal branding is and why it is important for you. We work on your motivations, dreams, and goals, and on understanding your readers. This is an important step, because it will help you make choices about where to spend your valuable time. We end with a priority list in chapter 6. This list does not have the coolest options (such as the newest video creation tool), but it does have the options that have produced the best results for my clients.In phase 2 of the book, we'll focus on turning your priorities into action. Because it can take a couple of years to see the fruits of your labor, we work on creating a sustainable online marketing plan. I offer advice on designing a successful website, on building a mailing list of Super Fans, on blogging, and on creating an engagement strategy for social media. I also cover DIY online publicity tips and ideas you can use to create visibility for your book. All of these activities will help you establish a strong digital footprint and online brand.Phase 3 is called Staying the Course and offers tips and ideas to continue this work without feeling the burnout experienced by many authors. One of the key concerns that my clients share is what to post on social media. By the end of the book you should not only know what to post but when and where as well.The old saying that you can't be all things to all people is more true today than ever. Be a specialist as you build your community. There is only one you! Your online brand will serve you in everything you do, and it will help you in magical ways by opening doors to unexpected opportunities. It has done that for me, and for many of my clients. I can't wait to hear how this work helps you.Foreword by S.C. Gwynne Introduction Phase 1: Getting Organized 1 Personal Branding 101 2 You Gotta Dream Big 3 Know Thy Reader 4 Get Real With Your Goals 5 Best Advice in the Business 6 Your Priority ListPhase 2: Turning Your Thinking Into Action 7 Your Online Marketing Plan 8 Building Your Website 9 Mailing List of Fans 10 To Blog or Not to Blog 11 Social Media and Social Networking 12 DIY Online Book PublicityPhase 3: Staying the Course 13 Promote Without Being Promotional 14 Monitor and Adjust Some Parting Advice Acknowledgments Index About the Author
Accès libre
Affiche du document Humble Consulting

Humble Consulting

Edgar H. Schein

1h32min15

  • Emploi et carrières
  • Youscribe plus
  • Livre epub
  • Livre lcp
123 pages. Temps de lecture estimé 1h32min.
Consulting in Complex and Changing TimesOrganizations face challenges today that are too messy and complicated for consultants to simply play doctor: run a few tests, offer a neat diagnosis of the “problem,” and recommend a solution. Edgar Schein argues that consultants have to jettison the old idea of professional distance and work with their clients in a more personal way, emphasizing authentic openness, curiosity, and humility. Schein draws deeply on his own decades of experience, offering over two dozen case studies that illuminate each stage of this humble consulting process. Just as he did with Process Consultation nearly fifty years ago, Schein has once again revolutionized the field, enabling consultants to be more genuinely helpful and vastly more effective.Preface This book brings together various insights and ideas I have acquired over fifty years of research, teaching, and consulting and, at the same time, reflects how the kinds of problems that organizations face in our rapidly changing world have forced the evolution of those ideas. As I began my career as a human relations trainer and part-time consultant in the 1960s, I evolved the model of Process Consultation (introduced in my books Process Consultation, 1969; and Process Consultation Revisited, 1999), which emphasizes the need to involve the client in the process of figuring out what is wrong and what can be done about it. After several decades of working with this model and updating the book, I began to realize that the model we were using for organization and management consulting really had broader applications to all kinds of helping relationships, resulting in the 2009 book Helping. Analyzing the helping process from a sociological point of view also revealed how much our cultural norms influenced what we thought should be both the client's role and the consultant's role in the helping process. In my own experience as a helper, it seemed crucial that the client really be able to tell what is bothering him or her and be able to be open and trusting in doing so. I then discovered that the major inhibiting factor to clients' being open and trusting is the cultural force in the United States toward telling as being the heroic model, which led helping and consulting models to be structured in terms of the formal professional stages of diagnose and then tell as recommendations. My management consulting friends told me that “this is required if you are really doing your job,” which, to my dismay, I found many clients passively believed. I recognized that the obsession with telling was a broader characteristic of the US managerial culture, which led me to write the book Humble Inquiry (2013) to point out how much potential harm was done in making subordinates feel psychologically unsafe in upward reporting if they saw safety or quality issues in how work was getting done. In my own consulting efforts, I found that telling did not work and, furthermore, that the clients who called me in for consultation often had previously experienced the formal approach with other consultants and did not find the diagnose and then recommend approach terribly helpful. The formal process often missed the real problem or recommended things that could not be implemented for a variety of reasons that the consultant evidently had not considered. At the same time, the problems that confronted leaders and managers became more complex to diagnose and even more difficult to “fix.” I also learned through several experiences that will be discussed in the cases in this book that sometimes just the earliest questions, comments, and puzzlements that I expressed in the initial contacts with a client proved to be very helpful in enabling the client to perceive and think about the situation. This often led to immediate next moves that the client could think of that were seen by both helper and client as immediately beneficial. All this led me to go beyond the previous models and write about what I experienced—real help can be fast, but it requires an open, trusting relationship with the client that the helper Preface xiii has to build from the very beginning. Because of the difficulty and complexity of the problems, and because the client's own view of what is going on is so important in the relationship, this also requires a great deal of humility in the consultant. So in this book I will describe the new kinds of problems, the new consultant–client relationship that will have to be built, and the new kinds of attitudes and behaviors that consultants will have to learn in order to be really helpful. I think of this as an evolution in my thinking. Many of these ideas may have been implicit in earlier works, but they are only now coming into consciousness both as insights and as new principles of what has to happen if we really want to help on complex, dynamic “messy” problems and if we want to do it fast because, in many cases, clients need to do something adaptive right away. Where Does This Fit into a Larger Historical Context? Humble Consulting draws on elements of many prior models that deal with complexity, interdependence, diversity, and instability. Almost every theory of helping refers to the concept of relationship, but few of them talk about levels of relationships and what is involved in negotiating them. One exception is Otto Scharmer's Theory U (2007), in which he explicitly differentiates levels of conversation in his analysis of how to reach the deepest level within ourselves and in our relationships to find the true sources of innovation. The theories and models that are most relevant to understanding these kinds of problems and developing workable next moves were initially best articulated in the study of highly reliable organizations by Karl Weick with his concepts of “loose coupling,” “sense making,” “embracing errors,” and “resilience” (Weick and Sutcliffe, 2007). On the sociological side, I have always found Erving Goffman's analysis of interaction and “situational proprieties” to be an essential model for understanding how relationships are formed, maintained, and repaired when damaged (Goffman, 1959, 1963, 1967). Closely related are the systemic models of “organizational learning” (e.g., Senge, 1990) and family therapy (e.g., Madanes, 1981). The work on “mindfulness” (Langer, 1997) is crucial in what I see to be the new skills that will be needed. The change programs that rely on so-called lean methods, based on the work of Deming and Juran that evolved into the Toyota Production System, are relevant if they are well executed and involve the employees who actually do the work (Plsek, 2014). Open sociotechnical systems approaches to problem identification and solution as evolved by the Tavistock Clinic have provided much more helpful ideas than standardized methods of measurement, analysis, and problem solving. Perhaps most relevant of all is what Bushe and Marshak (2015) have identified in the last decade as “dialogic organization development,” as contrasted with “diagnostic organization development,” in highlighting what leadership theorists like Heifetz (1994) also emphasize—that the complex problems of today are not technical ones that can be solved with specific tools. The best we can do is to find workable responses or what I am calling here “adaptive moves.” This will involve new kinds of conversations of a more dialogic, open-ended variety. The emphasis on the concept of “moves” is important in this context because it implies action without necessarily having a plan or solution in mind. In the end I fall back on much of my learning in running sensitivity training groups in human relations labs for the National Training Labs in Bethel, Maine, where the key operational concept was “spirit of inquiry” and accepting Preface xv that we did not always know where our learning process would take us (Schein and Bennis, 1965). Building a relationship that enables the client to “learn how to learn” was then and becomes now more than ever one of the crucial goals of Humble Consulting. The spirit of inquiry is best exemplified nowadays in the concept of “dialogue” as propounded by Bill Isaacs (1999) and in Barrett's hugely insightful book Yes to the Mess (2012), which shows us brilliantly how the skills of improvisation as exhibited in the jazz combo provide some of the most important clues as to what helpers and leaders will have to be able to do in the future. How the Book Is Organized Chapter 1 lays out the basic problem—the complex messy problems of today and the future require a new model of helping, coaching, and consultation. Chapter 2 lays out the new elements or components of the model of Humble Consulting. The following chapters then explain and exemplify each of those components. Chapter 3 explains the concept of a Level Two relationship. Chapter 4 shows how that relationship has to be built from the moment of first contact with the client by adopting a certain attitude that hinges on maximizing curiosity. Chapter 5 explores the whole concept of personalization as key to the new consulting model. Chapter 6 highlights that the consulting is almost always more helpful on the processes that occur between client and consultant as they explore how to make adaptive moves. Chapter 7 then explores the concept of adaptive moves in more detail and in terms of the innovations that are required to make them helpful. The book closes with some conclusions and challenges for the future.Contents1. I Am the consultant and I Don't Know What to Do!2. What Is New in Humble Consulting?3. The Need for a Trusting and Open Level Two Relationship4. Humble Consulting Begins with the First Conversation5. Personalization: Enhancing the Level Two Relationship6. The Humble Consulting Focus on Process7. The New Kinds of Adaptive Moves Concluding Comments: Some Final Thoughts on How to Be Really Helpful
Accès libre
Affiche du document Breaking the Trust Barrier

Breaking the Trust Barrier

Jv Venable

1h23min15

  • Gestion et management
  • Youscribe plus
  • Livre epub
  • Livre lcp
111 pages. Temps de lecture estimé 1h23min.
Build Extraordinary Trust and Lead Your Team to a Higher Plane For former US Air Force Thunderbirds' commander and demonstration leader JV Venable, inspiring teamwork was literally a matter of life and death. On maneuvers like the one pictured on the cover, the distance between jets was just eighteen inches. Closing the gaps to sustain that kind of separation requires the highest levels of trust.On the ground or in the air, from line supervisor to CEO, we all face the same challenge. Our job is to entice those we lead to close the gaps that slow the whole team down—gaps in commitment, loyalty, and trust. Every bit of closure requires your people to let go of biases and mental safeguards that hold them back. The process the Thunderbirds use to break that barrier and craft the highest levels of trust on a team with an annual turnover of 50 percent is nothing short of phenomenal. That process is packaged here with tips and compelling stories that will help you build the team of a lifetime.IntroductionTrust. No team or organization can excel over the long haul without it, and for many leaders the path to establishing it is anything but clear. Trust is the willingness to put yourself or your team at risk with the belief that another will follow through with a task, in a role, or with a mission. Expressions of trust that lack an element of risk are merely expressions.Because you picked up this book, I will make some assumptions about you. You are a leader who cares about the performance and well-being of your people, but you sense that something—maybe gaps in trust or communication—are holding you and your team back. The good news is that you've taken a great step toward increasing the cohesion and performance of your team by just reading the introduction to this book. With each successive page, you will learn a bit more about a predictable, repeatable process for building trust within your team—a process that begins with an individual's desire for commitment from you and ends with his or her trust in you. Once you have finished the last page, you will see the process everywhere you turn and in every facet of your life.I will warn you right now that there are no shortcuts or quick solutions offered herein. As a matter of fact, I will ask you to take risks and move to engage your team in ways others might consider idealistic or unnecessary, but I promise you will be rewarded for your efforts.Biases: The Barrier to TrustWhom do you trust, and what made you cross that threshold? Whom don't you trust, and what keeps you from believing in that person? Very often the decision comes not just from what we see but from the events and experiences stored in the processors in our heads and our hearts. Any relationship begins with an introduction, and that first impression is lasting for reasons that are often hard to understand. Consciously or unconsciously, some facet about that person matches something inside of us—something that was coded in us during adolescence or that we absorbed (or coded in ourselves) along the path of our adult lives. Call them predispositions or intuition if you'd like, but, right or wrong, biases reside in all of us.biasesInternal layers of protection that help us resist putting our physical, emotional, or financial well-being at risk.Biases are internal layers of protection that help us resist putting our physical, emotional, or financial well-being at risk. How you dress, act, and sound fit an internal mold in another's mind—a mold cast by a whole host of characters and events, good and bad, in their lives. Where you were raised and your culture, dialect, manners, and mannerisms match biases that directly or unconsciously shape how you view others—and how others view you. Biases form the barrier to trust we are up against as leaders.Breaking the Trust BarrierThe challenging thing about biases is that you may never fully understand what they are in your own mind, much less in the minds of your people. With that as backdrop, there is little use in dwelling on the indicators, or rationales, for biases—we can leave them to people who study behavior. Our job as leaders is to overcome biases by building a portfolio of seamless actions and engagements that inspires our people to write new code—code that will incrementally entice them to close the trust gap.We will talk a great deal about gaps in this book, but the critical thing to remember is that closing the gaps on trust relies on the whole you. It begins with your commitment to the individuals on your team—your willingness to actively engage and listen to the people you lead—and then your moving on the interests and passions you discover within those engagements to foster loyalty.The effort you spend building commitment and loyalty will take you to the threshold, but closing beyond the trust barrier relies on pulling your team forward with your integrity and your deeply seated principles (see Breaking Through).This book steps you through the process of closing gaps by introducing a new system of leadership called drafting. You have seen the aerodynamic phenomenon at work through the V formations of migratory birds, a train of speed skaters, stock car racers, and the likes, where the efficiencies and effects of teams are magnified with proximity.Breaking Through: First Commitment, Then Loyalty, and Finally TrustScreen Shot 2016 06 20 At 12.10.06 PmMy two years on the point of the Thunderbirds offered some incredible insights on trust—and the real effects and power of drafting. It was that experience—and that incredible team—that served as my inspiration for writing this book. Through 26 years of service and two tours of combat duty, I can say without reservation that every team I flew with or served on relied on trust. But as you read through each chapter, you will discover what I did about Thunderbirds: that our mission required a level of trust that few organizations will ever know or enjoy—it really was something else.Our process for building and sustaining trust is laid out here for you and your team. Read on, take hold of the reins, and break your barriers to trust.CHAPTER 1Draft Your Team to TrustIt was a gorgeous day in the middle of the Thunderbirds' show season, and we were flying over some of the most breathtaking countryside I had ever seen. The radios were crisp, and from the moment we released brakes we were hitting all the marks in a compressed maneuver sequence we had been perfecting for months.The four of us completed our reposition behind the crowd line and then stabilized for just a second. The moment we passed over those 40,000 people, I pulled the trigger on the next maneuver. The 4 G* pull that started our trail-to-diamond cloverloop stabilized, and just as we approached the vertical I called the three jets behind me to move from their trail position to our signature diamond.At the start of training season, the distance between jets was the same as we had flown throughout our operational lives, but now the formations were so tight—and the gaps between us so small—that I thought I could feel a shift as the left and right wingmen moved into position. So far as I knew, the surge that came with Rick “Chase” Boutwell and Jon “Skid” Greene moving into their respective formations was emotional, but it felt like they were literally lifting the wings of my jet.As each accelerated into position that day, a very subtle shift took hold of our trajectory. The pressure came on as if a giant hand were pushing up on my left wing. The ensuing right turn began to take us away from a pure vertical loop, and, almost unconsciously, I countered with the call for “a little left turn” and the slightest amount of pressure on the stick to bring us back on plumb.From the crowd's perspective, this would be one of the best demonstrations of the year, and most spectators would leave with a level of pride that matched the wave of exhilaration we were riding as the last jet touched down. And yet the blemish of that trail-to-diamond cloverloop was still lingering in the back of my mind. I knew I hadn't consciously turned the flight, but I was at a loss as to how the maneuver had gone wrong. After I watched the video recording of our demonstration in the debrief, I noticed a small difference.My left wingman was more aggressive on his move forward, and he tucked into position a bit more quickly and closely than the jet on my right—and he stayed there. He was so close that he caused my left wing to become more efficient, to produce more lift than my right wing. Efficiencies—it was aerodynamic efficiencies! It wasn't just a feeling that I was being carried by the team around me; the surge brought on from their proximity was real. That thought would change the way I looked at everything: we were drafting.The Phenomenon of DraftingThe aerodynamic phenomenon of drafting was discovered in the late 1950s by stock car racers who figured out that two cars running close together, nose-to-tail, could sustain a faster speed than either car could achieve on its own. Over time they figured out the cause of the effect: the lead car was taking on the wall of air for both, while the trailer was close enough to the leader's bumper to relieve it from the drag it created as it moved down the track (see Aerodynamic Drafting).Aerodynamic Drafting: Closing the Gap Benefits Both Team MembersWhile the effects are mutually beneficial, they are a little lopsided—at least at first. When a car speeds down the track, its movement plows a path through the air to create a vacuum of sorts that can help pull a trail car forward when it is still several car lengths behind the leader. And if the trailer elects to close on the leader's bumper, the pull becomes more significant with every foot of closure on the leader's car.But, funny enough, the leader gains no relief from its drag until the trailer is within a single car length. As the trail car closes inside that distance, the leader's drag begins to transfer from its bumper to that of the trailer. When the gap closes, the collective effect allows the team of two cars to accelerate to a speed that neither car could achieve on its own. It is closing the distance—the gaps between elements on a team—that makes drafting work. The more I thought about it, the more I could see drafting's effects on the Thunderbirds everywhere I turned.Every unit within our organization, from accounting and finance to maintenance and public affairs—literally every shop—was minimally staffed, and each relied on the others to help it execute its role. Those amazing people were lined up, bumper to bumper, taking the weight—the drag—off the individual or element in front of them while they sustained the draft for those behind them.Drafting, in teamwork, is a phenomenon that replicates the aerodynamic benefits of bodies moving closely together. It requires leaders to inspire closure between individuals and entities to deliver cohesion, unity of effort, and team acceleration.drafting(aerodynamics) The phenomenon whereby two objects moving close together sustain a faster speed than either object could achieve on its own. (teamwork) The phenomenon inspired by the aerodynamic property of bodies moving closely together; it requires leaders to inspire closure between individuals and entities to deliver cohesion, unity of effort, and team acceleration.Think about that in terms of you and your team. How many folks are snuggled up against your bumper, taking the drag off your efforts, and how many are sitting two car lengths back, smoking a Lucky while basking in the warmth of your draft? It is absolutely up to the folks in your wake to close the distance—you cannot make them close. It is up to us as leaders to set the conditions that will make them want to close the gaps. By incrementally building mutual commitment, then loyalty, and finally the kind of trust that will further the momentum of the whole team, we maximize the effects of drafting.Closing the Gaps with Commitment, Loyalty, and TrustTrust comes through a series of methodical actions that begin and end with the leader. No pilot begins the first day of his tour with the Thunderbirds flying inches away from another's wing. That kind of proximity relies on trust that is built over time. Closing those gaps must be done incrementally, through a methodical process that, more than any other facet, relies on you.Before we go into the process of building trust, let's clear up one possible misconception right up front: the Thunderbirds are not all that different from your team. Certainly, some aspects of our mission made us unique, so let's get them out of the way now.Differences from Team to TeamThe Thunderbirds' flight-training program taught pilots who had never flown formation aerobatics everything from basic formations to the entire jet demonstration sequence. We started in mid-November, flying two jets, side by side, executing one maneuver over and over, 1 mile above the desert floor, with 3 feet of separation between jets. As the training progressed, we would methodically add jets and maneuver elements, lower the maneuvering floor until we had all six F-16 fighters flying maneuvers 400 feet above the ground. By the end of the training season, the gaps between aircraft were as small as 18 inches.In mid-March the team packed up and went on the road for the next eight months to fly airshows all over the world. With the deployments, practices, airshows, and redeployments home, we flew six days a week through the middle of November. The day after we finished the last airshow, we started the team-building process all over again.While the differences may seem stark between our operation and yours, the parallels and personalities are an absolute match. Without question, the mission of the Thunderbirds was unique and the expectations for precision were very high. But the makeup of personnel in our hangar was very similar to the composition of your team right now.Similarities from Team to TeamAny industry in the world includes tens, hundreds, even thousands of organizations that perform the same basic task, build the same kind of equipment, or deliver the same service. Some of those organizations deliver the gold standard and always produce the very highest levels of quality within their industry. Other organizations produce solid, reliable results, and still others struggle to deliver a competent service or reliable product on time.The difference between high-performing organizations and those that fall short of the gold standard is not just talent but how well leaders develop their team's draft with the talent they have. Your role in that process is critical, as you will not only plow the path for the people behind you to follow but also set the conditions that will compel them to close the gaps between individuals, elements, and teams—the gaps that slow you down.Drafting Is All about Closing the GapsTo harness the effects of drafting and bring trust to bear within your team, you need to focus on closing the gaps. As mentioned, a gap is physical or emotional distance caused by a lack of competence, a lack of confidence, or an unmet social need that degrades performance. Left unaddressed, gaps are momentum killers that will thwart any hope of trust.gapPhysical or emotional distance caused by a lack of competence, a lack of confidence, or an unmet social need that degrades performance.The explanation for team members' gaps varies with both tenure and competence. A new hire will sustain his or her distance until a level of traction—technical competence and social acceptance—makes it safe to close. The reasons for gaps in more seasoned individuals take longer to figure out. Even after their needs are met, the smart ones will take their time closing because, as in our demonstration, distance gives them the reaction time they need to preserve their well-being.Proximity Narrows FocusWhen flying, the closer you get to the lead jet, the greater the demand on your eyes and reflexes to keep you out of harm's way. The more you close, the quicker you must shift your eyes—your crosscheck—between the leader, the other jets in the formation, and the threats to your well-being, such as the ground. When you are 50 feet back, your crosscheck can be slow and methodical and still allow you to sustain safe separation from the leader throughout some pretty aggressive maneuvering. Close some of that distance, however, and your focus must intensify because the area you can cover in your crosscheck narrows. Close a bit more and you'll gain some of the aerodynamic benefits from the jet in front of you while preserving just enough reaction time to get out of Dodge if things go south.crosscheckTaking stock of your immediate environment by shifting your focus between two or more objects.You have lived that distance when moving at speed during rush-hour traffic. Your focus on the bumper in front of you gives you little time to check the status and intentions of the cars to your left and right, but, in your mind, your quick reflexes will allow you to react in time to avoid hitting the car in front of you if conditions deteriorate in a hurry.During one maneuver in our demonstration, the distance between our jets was often less than that from my elbow to the tip of my fingers. If you were driving that close while clipping along at 65 miles per hour, your focus on the car in front of you would take all of your concentration—while you hope that the car you're trailing holds its speed. Flying that close maximized the effects of our team, but it also reduced reaction times to the point where the pilots on my wing could not save their own lives if I made a catastrophic mistake. Making a living flying that close to a jet moving in all three dimensions—400 feet off the ground at 500 miles per hour—takes much more than faith or concentration; it requires the deepest levels of trust.Our Thunderbird team spent hundreds of hours together methodically developing every reinforcing input we could collect on one another to close the gaps in our formation. The whole time we were flying over the practice range, a supervisor on the ground was grading our every maneuver. I also knew that there were five other sets of eyes flying alongside me that were watching my every move—watching not just how I executed the maneuvers (my job) but also every other insight they could glean in the air (and on the ground) to see how I added up. They needed to know they could trust me before they closed the gaps to the point where they put themselves at risk on my wing.The Real Benefits of ClosureThe bigger the gaps between you and your followers, the more weight you will carry. Trailers who continually show up late for work, who greet initiatives with antagonism, or who consistently meet deadlines with disappointment can thwart every effort to accelerate your team. Getting those individuals to close the gap of commitment will take that administrative weight off your plate. Draw them further forward into loyalty, and you will have solid performers who serve as advocates that positively shape the attitudes and mind-sets of the team around them. Close the gap of trust, and your empowerment of key players to handle significant efforts will give you more energy and bandwidth to elevate the trajectory of the organization behind you.How do you close that distance? How do you get your followers to let go of whatever is holding them back? To get them to close those gaps to the point where you realize the surge of drafting, you need to develop a plan to fulfill the needs, the wants, and unfulfilled elements of their working lives. The first step in that plan, the first thing they will look for, is commitment—your commitment to their place on the team.Drafting's First Step: Closing the Commitment GapThe Thunderbirds had 130 team members from 24 different job specialties and career fields throughout the Air Force—and every one of them arrived with his or her own tribal mind-set. We had all been in the Air Force prior to joining the Thunderbirds, but we had never been required to work together in a single hangar. Getting people who identified themselves as fighter pilots, engine mechanics, videographers, public affairs professionals, and the like to shed their stove-piped mind-sets and meld together as a team required a concerted effort. The first step in that process was building commitment, and we did that through our onboarding program.The impressions that new hires take from the first days and weeks on your team are lasting and will affect their commitment to you and your draft throughout their tenure with the team. The single biggest factor in their long-term commitment is how much their new team values them—how much time and effort you are willing to invest to get them settled in, socially integrated, and technically qualified.In some ways the more experience a team member has, the more challenging the first steps to commitment might be. Not everyone will fight new goals or course corrections, but even your hardest-working folks crave stability, and getting your people to commit to a different path can be challenging. Even military leaders holding the kind of authority their subordinates have sworn to follow face the same challenges you do in compelling their people to align on a new direction.People will not always move based on logical reasoning, like the promise of more responsibility or a bigger compensation package, but they will always close on emotions. Your challenge lies in figuring out which emotions to tap to get your followers' commitment, as well as on your making first contact with the elements and obstacles that slow them down. My efforts to engage every aspect of that challenge began the first week of an individual's onboarding.Being genuinely curious about the people behind you and showing interest in their challenges, goals, and dreams will get them to close on the emotion of hope—the hope that you will do something for them in the future. Follow through with one or two of the things you learn along the way, and you can get them to close into the lane of loyalty.Drafting's Second Step: Closing the Loyalty GapLoyalty is cohesion within a relationship—the kind that can be built only on the foundation of commitment. Once your trailers know that you are committed to their well-being, they will open up and, with a little encouragement, shed their outward personas—their overt positions—and tell you about their real motivations and genuine passions.loyaltyCohesion within a relationship—the kind that can be built only on the foundation of commitment. It is fostered by a leader's willingness to go the distance to support his or her team without the expectation that they will respond in kind.Most people have several foundational elements or pillars within their lives that drive their actions. At times the important pillars are obvious; at other times they are well masked. With just a little forethought, you can find a trove of information that will help you motivate your people more than any other tangible benefit you can offer. Remember, however, that the performance—and loyalty—of others is often tied to growth in areas that are not directly related to work.The opportunity to give individuals a leg up or to bolster another central element or pillar in their lives can be a very powerful motivator. Discovering those passions and then helping individuals further them can help bring more of their potential to bear for and within the team. Once you know their passions, you will know how to reach into their chests and begin pulling them forward on their wants and needs. Do that and you'll instill a sense of your confidence in them and bring on a feeling of unity you'll both revel in. Only you, the leader, can initiate this action—and you do not want to miss it.Building respect Moving with the talents, and on the judgment of the people who work for you, is the first step toward empowering them to handle some of your responsibility. In the quest for opportunities to increase the exposure of the Thunderbirds to the public, our team came up with several novel ideas. While public affairs would be the central hub of our efforts, we wanted to get the entire team involved. One of the best ideas actually came from a member of our maintenance team.Each jet had two cameras that captured spectacular cockpit footage throughout our demonstration. The cameras were there for safety, but if we could figure out a way to share that live footage on the Internet and with local television and airshow audiences, there was potential to increase the number of folks who saw any and every one of our demonstrations.With a few guiding thoughts and no budget for the project, I asked our maintenance officer to flesh out the idea. Within a few weeks, his team had designed a system around the components of obsolete data-link equipment designed for another aircraft. Giving him my backing to move on a solution his team had dreamt up was an unmistakable sign of my confidence in him.Once you show your key players that they have your confidence, they will shift their focus from the performance of their roles to how you execute yours. They will watch for your willingness and ability to move others on the goals you claim to hold dear. Like every other aspect of their development, your team's respect for you needs to be consciously developed. Inspire and reinforce that respect, and you will chamber the kind of loyalty that will last well beyond their time on the team—the kind that will pull them right up to the line of trust.Drafting at Full Throttle: Breaking the Trust BarrierEvery year our training season culminated at the end of February. In the weeks leading up to our graduation from training, we were flying an entire 36-maneuver demonstration package 500 feet above the ground with all six jets. That altitude, coupled with the training spreads (gaps) between jets, gave every pilot enough reaction time and space to recover from an errant maneuver—but we were about to move beyond that threshold.The conscious decision to fly even tighter formations at lower minimum altitudes—the ones we'd be flying during airshows—relied on every bit of faith and confidence we had built in one another; we knew the risks went way up from here. Closing the gaps to airshow spreads and lowering our target minimum altitude to 400 feet meant the pad was gone. If I made a catastrophic mistake in the lead aircraft, the peripherals would not allow the wingmen to recognize pending ground impact in time for them to save their own lives. Closing the final gaps and dropping down to airshow altitude required the highest levels of trust.Trust was a big deal on the Thunderbirds. Since the team's inception in 1953, 19 men have died flying the demonstration; our lives really did depend on the other team members. Trust may just as well have been written on the inside of our visors—as we looked for it everywhere, constantly taking in every insight, every nuance, that would reinstill our belief in one another.During our seemingly endless hours over the practice range and through the execution of thousands of maneuvers, we were slowly writing new code on one another—programming code about the people around us that we would use as the basis of trust. Every time I executed my role correctly, or fessed up after I didn't, I was shaping their insights into my character—consciously pulling them toward trust. Although we made those assessments in the air, the same thing was true for the team members on the ground.Building trust If it isn't already clear, your actions as a leader initiate the process of drafting, and the effort required (and the scrutiny you'll receive) is significant—but the benefits and pride that emerge when you pull your team in tight are extraordinary. This is when your people are close enough to take the weight from your wings and when the efficiencies of drafting are highest. When key members of your team are empowered, you give them your authority to take big efforts off your desk, freeing you up to plan and then elevate the trajectory of the entire team. You will move faster and accomplish more together than you ever could have done on your own.Developing the kind of trust that leads to a Thunderbird-level of closure can be very powerful. Feeling those jets tuck in to position was as much emotional as it was physical. There is nothing more powerful or electrifying, nothing that will accelerate your team faster or make them want to stay with you longer, than building an effective draft. The secrets, techniques, and lessons that will help you lead your team to that kind of closure are detailed in the chapters that follow. Read on.ContentsPart I: Are There Gaps on Your Team?1. Draft Your Team to TrustPart II: Commitment2. Close the Traction Gap3. Close the Engagement Gap4. Plow the PathPart III: Loyalty5. Close the Passion Gap6. Close the Confidence Gap7. Close the Respect GapPart IV. Trust8. Close the Integrity Gap9. Close the Principle Gap10. Close the Empowerment Gap
Accès libre
Affiche du document Shakti Leadership

Shakti Leadership

Raj Sisodia

1h43min30

  • Gestion et management
  • Youscribe plus
  • Livre epub
  • Livre lcp
138 pages. Temps de lecture estimé 1h43min.
Unlocking the Source for True LeadershipToo many people, men and women alike, have bought into a notion of leadership that exclusively emphasizes traditionally “masculine” qualities: hierarchical, militaristic, win-at-all-costs. The result has been corruption, environmental degradation, social breakdown, stress, depression, and a host of other serious problems. Nilima Bhat and Raj Sisodia show us a more balanced way, an archetype of leadership that is generative, cooperative, creative, inclusive, and empathetic. While these are traditionally regarded as “feminine” qualities, we all have them. In the Indian yogic tradition they're symbolized by Shakti, the source that powers all life. Through exercises and inspirational examples, Bhat and Sisodia show how to access this infinite energy and lead with your whole self. Male or female, leaders who understand and practice Shakti Leadership act from a consciousness of life-giving caring, creativity, and sustainability to achieve self-mastery internally and be of selfless service to the world.Prologue A CRISIS OF CONSCIOUSNESS AND LEADERSHIPDo we really need another book on leadership? Bookshelves the world over are groaning under the weight of a neverending flow of leadership books. But the stark reality remains: the way we lead isn't working nearly as well as we need it to. Our current one-sided notion of a leader's power is a root cause of a host of contemporary problems, including social breakdown, environmental degradation, epidemics of stress and depression, and corruption in business and government. Men and women alike have been conditioned to value leadership qualities traditionally considered masculine: hierarchical, individualistic, and militaristic. The consequences have been dire for too long, and we can ill afford to continue to suffer them much longer. The origin of the problem is crystal clear: societies around the world have consistently and egregiously devalued qualities and perspectives traditionally deemed feminine. For all of recorded time, the wisdom and unique perspectives of over half of humanity have been largely excluded from influencing how we live and work. How can this not lead to severe dysfunction? Seeking to reclaim feminine power and restore the long-lost balance of masculine and feminine energies for men and women alike, this book charts a new path based on timeless wisdom. Reaching into ancient spiritual and mythical teachings, we revive a feminine archetype of leadership: regenerative, cooperative, creative, and empathetic. In the Indian yogic tradition, these qualities are associated with Shakti: the source of creation, sustenance, and transformation that powers the cycle of life. We all need the primordial power and energy that is Shakti—creative, tireless, and restorative. Leaders who understand and practice Shakti Leadership operate from a consciousness of life-giving caring, creativity, and sustainability to achieve self-mastery internally and be of selfless service to the world. When leaders of both sexes learn to embrace this mindset, we can restore sanity, elevate humanity, and heal the planet by evolving joyously and consciously together. SO MUCH HAS CHANGEDWe're living at a critical time. Humanity appears poised on the precipice of a great shift in our evolution. After millennia of incremental growth as a species, we appear to have reached a mutation point where our development could take a quantum leap to a whole new level in a remarkably short amount of time. The human journey of growth and evolution certainly did not stop when we got up on our two legs, as evolutionary charts depict. In fact, we are changing and evolving at a faster rate than ever before—by orders of magnitude. One of the factors driving these rates is the rapid aging of many societies. Driven by a combination of sharply declining birth rates and steadily increasing life expectancy, the median age has been rising in most countries around the world. In 1989, the United States reached a demographic tipping point: it was the first year that there were more adults over the age of 40 than below it. The age of 40 is a significant threshold in human life; it marks the passage into midlife and is often accompanied by a crisis of meaning and purpose. Many people come to the realization around this time in their life that the values and priorities that drove them in the past no longer feel personally relevant. They are consumed with questions such as, “What is the purpose of my life? What kind of legacy will I leave behind?” Many people come to the realization that life cannot be just about their own material success; there has to be more to it. The year 1989 was also when we crossed another threshold: there were more women holding college degrees in the United States than men. Women now comprise nearly 60 percent of college enrollees and, on average, get higher grades than men. It is simply a matter of time before women dominate virtually every white-collar profession. This numerical rise of women will inevitably bring about a shift toward more feminine values in the workplace and in society at large. It will mark a fundamental shift in the world, as nothing like this has ever remotely existed before. A little-known fact is that we human beings are rapidly becoming more analytically intelligent, as measured by IQ tests. Intelligence researcher James Flynn looked at IQ testing data going back for about 80 years. The data gets normalized to 100 every 10 years, so that the average IQ in society is always 100. Flynn looked at the raw data and found a startling pattern: humans are collectively becoming more intelligent at the rate of 3 to 4 percent every decade. Compounded over eight decades, this suggests that the average person today would have had an IQ of 131 and been in the top 2 percent of intelligence in the year 1935! This pace of change is unprecedented; we are simply not supposed to evolve at such a rapid rate. But we are.1 We are also on a journey of rising consciousness. The entire human journey on this planet can be seen as one of gradually waking up—both to the world around us and to our own extraordinary potential as human beings. As more of humanity has moved beyond a survival mode, we have been able to take off our blinders and see the bigger picture. Instead of just being focused on our short-term survival, we are now able to see how our actions have consequences beyond our immediate surroundings, and how we in turn are impacted by the actions of others. Once we become aware of the consequences of our actions, we also have a fi ner sense of what is right and what is wrong. Things that were acceptable in the past are no longer acceptable. The pace of change has been mind-boggling. Consider the following: • 150 years ago, slavery was legal and commonplace in many countries. The United States fought a brutal civil war to end this degrading and inhuman practice, and many other countries also outlawed slavery around that time. But if you go back in human history, you find that slavery was an integral part of every major civilization. Most people, including many slaves, saw nothing wrong with it. Today, it is hard to imagine living in such a world. • 100 years ago, hardly any women on this planet had the right to vote. In 1893, New Zealand became the first country in which all women could vote in parliamentary elections. Women attained the right to vote in the United States in 1920. In Switzerland, women did not gain the right to vote until 1971; in 2010, Switzerland swore in its first female majority government. • 75 years ago we still had colonialism, which can be seen as another form of slavery. India was still a British colony.• 50 years ago, there was still legally sanctioned racial segregation in many parts of the United States. • 30 years ago, child labor, animal abuse, and environmental degradation were still common and legal in many places. • 22 years ago, there was still apartheid in South Africa. • Until 2004, same-sex marriage was not allowed anywhere in the United States; as of this writing, it is legal nationwide, as well as in almost 20 other countries. Clearly, a lot has changed in a very short amount of time. As Abraham Lincoln said, “The dogmas of the quiet past are inadequate to the stormy present. As our case is new we must think anew and act anew.” We are by no means done making radical changes—there is a lot more still to come. Just as the nineteenth century was about the end of slavery and the twentieth was about the end of totalitarianism, the greatest story of the twenty-first century will undoubtedly be about the end of relegating women and feminine values to second-class status.ContentsPrologue: A Crisis of Confidence and Leadership1. Seeking Shakti2. Leading with Shakti3. Presence—the Master Key4. The Heroic Journey5. Becoming Whole6. Cultivating Flexibility7. Achieving Congruence8. Promise of Shakti Leadership—a Fulfilled and Free WorldEpilogue: Shakti Speaks
Accès libre
Affiche du document The Laws of Lifetime Growth

The Laws of Lifetime Growth

Dan Sullivan

50min15

  • Développement personnel
  • Youscribe plus
  • Livre epub
  • Livre lcp
67 pages. Temps de lecture estimé 50min.
Written by Dan Sullivan, the acclaimed speaker, author, consultant, and coach to entrepreneurs, this book provides refreshingly simple laws that will instantly shift your perspective to help you fully realize your personal and professional potential. Growth is a fundamental human need. It is at the root of everything that gives us a feeling of accomplishment, satisfaction, meaning, and progress. Yet many people find their growth stalled at some point. In The Laws of Lifetime Growth, Dan Sullivan and Catherine Nomura offer ten simple laws that everyone can use to keep a fresh, innovative perspective on their lives and the world around them. These laws are the distillation of Sullivan's years of coaching successful people, paying attention to what motivates them and what unlocks their greatest abilities. Each chapter is devoted to exploring one of the ten laws in detail, including stories of people from all walks of life who exemplify the law in action, common pitfalls that people often run into trying to apply the law, and practical strategies for getting past those obstacles. This second edition includes new examples, a self-assessment to measure your progress, and access to an interactive online tool. Once you start to integrate these laws into your life, you'll never outgrow them, they'll never become obsolete, and they will continue to lead you to greater happiness and fulfillment.Introduction The Desire to Grow Growth is a fundamental desire of all human beings. No matter what kinds of goals you have or what you strive for, whatever you want to see in your life that's not there now is a sign of this desire. Growth is at the root of everything that gives us a feeling of accomplishment, satisfaction, meaning, and progress. It is making your future bigger than your past. Yet sometimes people do stop growing. We all have images we can call to mind. The movies and literature are full of them, as is real life. Been to a school reunion lately? There are people who haven't changed much in the last 10, 15, or 20 years. Depending on where you're at, this may be comforting or shocking. You may be familiar with the retiree who's driving his wife crazy because he suddenly doesn't know what to do with himself; the addict whose life has become solely focused on whatever it takes to find the next fix; the man who is still treating women the same way he did 40 years ago and doesn't understand why they don't respond the same way; the person whose life consists of clocking in and out day after day at a dead-end job, going home, sleeping, and then doing it all over again. There are examples all around us of people who for some reason have stopped growing, either temporarily or indefinitely. If you've picked up this book, chances are you don't want to be one of them. Maybe you're feeling a bit stuck. Maybe you're in the midst of a particularly challenging period of growth, so you're looking for insight, encouragement, or direction; or maybe you just want all the resources you can get on your side as you pursue your own growth path. Most of us struggle with issues related to growth at various points in our lives, because as much as we desire it, growth is often not easy. The entrepreneurs we work with at Strategic Coach are some of the most successful and internally motivated people on the planet, and yet they face just as many challenges in their growth as anyone else does. In a world where technology continues to speed up change exponentially, the ability to keep growing has become a basic necessity for anyone who wants to consistently thrive. The good news is that those who master it have access to unprecedented abundance. The road to such mastery lies in cultivating a growth mindset so that you naturally choose growth more often than not in the countless opportunities that life presents us every day. The ten laws in this book are like mirrors you can use to reflect your behavior so you can see if it's supporting or undermining your growth. Use them as you would a hallway mirror on your way out the door-do a quick check to make sure everything looks good, adjust if necessary, and then carry on. Or take a longer, more studied look to reveal areas that might take more work to transform. The laws are useful for this purpose because it's often hard to tell whether you're on the right path just by how you feel. Every once in a while, we can all use a mindset reset (as one of our team members calls it) when it comes to growth. Harvard professor Rosabeth Moss Kanter has wisely observed that, everything looks like a failure in the middle. Sometimes growing pains can feel like failure -and sometimes failure is a part of growth. Successful entrepreneurs know this well. Most of them fail before they succeed. Dan refers to his experience of going bankrupt and getting divorced on a single day in August 1978 as market research. That doesn't mean these events felt any less like failures at the time, but instead that the lessons he took out of them were essential to building the growing multimillion-dollar company he and his life partner, Babs Smith, run today. Checking in with the laws can help you to stay on course or renew your commitment when growth is difficult. In many of the examples in this book, challenging or seemingly less-than-ideal situations offered people rich opportunities to grow their way into much better circumstances. The laws can help you to extract the maximum value from experiences you might otherwise try to avoid or forget. It also pays to check your behavior against the laws when things are going well. Getting what you want or achieving your goals can make you feel good, but it won't necessarily keep you on the path to further growth. In fact, it can often lead to growth traps. Things like money, applause, rewards, comfort, and even a brilliant past can be quite seductive. If these means to growth begin to overshadow purpose, performance, contribution, confidence, and the sense of a bigger future-things that drive growth-they can quickly undermine your ability to keep growing in the future. These laws come from our observations about what makes growth happen. If the word law makes you uncomfortable, try thinking about this message on a tongue-in-cheek T-shirt we saw recently in the neighborhood: It had a picture of a policeman holding up his hand, accompanied by the caption Obey gravity! It's the law. Of course, natural laws operate whether you obey them or not. If you disregard gravity and jump off a rooftop, it won't be the gravity police that get you. Likewise, no growth police are going to come after you if you don't follow these laws. You'll just find that you probably won't grow as much. You might want to imagine each law as being prefaced by You will continue to grow if . For example, you will continue to grow if you always make your future bigger than your past. That's the way life works. You can rely on it. By understanding these principles, you can more consciously and predictably keep yourself growing, just as scientific laws help us to predict the outcomes of actions in the physical world. Aligning your behavior with these laws gives you more control over your own future, which allows you to increase your freedom and self-determination. It also places the responsibility for your growth squarely on your own shoulders. You can choose to engage with life in this way, or not. Growth is not always easy, but its rewards are great. Life presents us with opportunities to grow almost constantly, so when you make growth a central goal, life will always appear to be full of opportunity. As you become more growth oriented in your behavior and thinking and as you begin to experience how this impacts your life and the lives of others, it becomes increasingly clear that the rewards of maintaining a growth mindset greatly outweigh the challenges. The desire to grow is nothing less than the love of existence-a passion for being here and a deep desire to fully explore life. When you commit to aligning your actions with the principles embedded in these ten laws, you also commit to making the most of the life you've been given-all of it. And, after all, what greater gift could you possibly give to yourself, or to the world, than that? PrefaceIntroductionLaw One: Always Make Your Future Bigger Than Your PastLaw Two: Always Make Your Learning Greater Than Your ExperienceLaw Three: Always Make Your Contribution Bigger Than Your RewardLaw Four: Always Make Your Performance Greater Than Your ApplauseLaw Five: Always Make Your Gratitude Greater Than Your SuccessLaw Six: Always Make Your Enjoyment Greater Than Your EffortLaw Seven: Always Make Your Cooperation Greater Than Your StatusLaw Eight: Always Make Your Confidence Greater Than Your ComfortLaw Nine: Always Make Your Purpose Greater Than Your MoneyLaw Ten: Always Make Your Questions Bigger Than Your AnswersThe Decision to Grow
Accès libre
Affiche du document When Money Talks

When Money Talks

Derek Cressman

1h39min45

  • Politique
  • Youscribe plus
  • Livre epub
  • Livre lcp
133 pages. Temps de lecture estimé 1h40min.
Special-interest money is destroying our democratic process. But now that the Citizens United decision has thrown out campaign spending limits as abridgments of free speech, Americans want to know what they can do about it. Derek Cressman gives us the tools, both intellectual and tactical, to fight back. There's nothing inherently unconstitutional in limiting the amount of speech, Cressman insists. We do it all the time—for example, cities control when and where demonstrations can take place or how long people can speak at council meetings. Moreover, he argues that while you choose to patronize Fox News, MSNBC, the New York Times, or the Wall Street Journal, political advertising is forced upon you. It's not really free speech at all—it's paid speech. It's not at all what the Founders had in mind when they wrote the First Amendment.Cressman examines how courts have foiled attempts to limit campaign spending, details what a constitutional amendment limiting paid speech should say, and reveals an overlooked political tool concerned citizens can use to help gain the amendment's passage. Seven times before in our history we have approved constitutional amendments to overturn wrongheaded rulings by the Supreme Court—there's no reason we can't do it again.Chapter 1Enough Is EnoughHow and Why We Have Limited the Duration, Volume, and Location of SpeechI rise on behalf of the vast majority of the American people who believe money is not speech, corporations are not people, and government should not be for sale to the highest bidder. We demand that you overturn Citizens United.—Kai Newkirk, addressing the Supreme Court, which promptly shut him upThe Supreme Court had never seen anything like it. On February 26, 2014, a young man in the audience stood up and had the temerity to speak his mind to all nine justices. The Court bailiffs promptly arrested Kai Newkirk—they silenced his speech so that other people could be heard. And they were right to do so.The Supreme Court strictly regulates who is allowed to speak before the Court and how they must do it. It's not enough to be a lawyer. An attorney must be recognized as a special member of the bar of the Supreme Court of the United States. Attorneys must be nominated by another member of the bar and confirmed by the Court itself before they can utter a single word. Regular citizens are forbidden to speak.Kai Newkirk was breaking all the Court's rules. He wasn't a lawyer and he wasn't representing anyone in the lawsuit before the Court. He was a visitor in the audience, which had been explicitly told it could not speak during the proceedings. Further, somebody videotaped Kai's speech and put it on the Internet—the first such incident in the history of a secretive chamber that prohibits any video recording of its proceedings.Although court bailiffs were right to enforce the rules limiting speech in the Supreme Court chambers, Kai was surely right to speak out against the tyranny of a court that refuses to limit the paid speech of billionaires while telling Kai and the rest of us to shut up. In the Citizens United case, and many others, the Supreme Court has mistakenly held that limiting the money people and organizations can spend to purchase speech violates the First Amendment. In fact, our everyday experiences demonstrate that limiting each person's speech is necessary to ensure a full and free public debate. Let's consider some examples of how and why this is done.Why We Limit the Duration of SpeechCourts impose strict page limits on the briefs that lawyers submit prior to hearings. Just ask the multinational oil company BP (formerly British Petroleum). During litigation surrounding its unprecedented oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico in 2010, the company submitted a brief that appeared to be within the thirty-five-page limit set by the court. However, district court judge Carl Barbier noticed that the company had slightly adjusted the spacing between lines to squeeze in the equivalent of six more pages than what was allowed. Judge Barbier warned that if BP continued such tactics, he would strike all future briefs from the company, saying “The Court should not have to waste its time policing such simple rules. … Counsel are expected to follow the Court's orders both in letter and in spirit.”20 If courts can limit corporate speech defending itself in litigation, why can't we limit corporate spending on elections that only indirectly affect corporate interests?It is not just the city council in Richmond, California, or federal courts that limit how long a person can speak. We limit speech all the time. Turn on C-SPAN and you'll notice members of Congress pay close attention to just how much time they have to speak on the floor. They'll often ask the chairperson to allocate more time, or “yield back” the balance of their time to other members to speak. But if they exceed their time limit, the chairperson's gavel comes down, limiting their speech so that others may be heard. Similarly, during a debate for any office, from president down to state legislator, there are strict rules limiting the amount of time each candidate has for opening remarks and to answer each question.Nobody seriously believes that these limits on the duration of certain political speech violate the First Amendment, which says that Congress shall not abridge the people's right to freedom of speech. In fact, these limits protect the First Amendment by ensuring that the people, and our representatives in Congress, can hear from opposing points of view and make informed decisions about self-government.Why We Limit the Timing of SpeechMy first summer job during college was going door-to-door on behalf of a grassroots campaign for an environmental organization. Police sometimes picked up canvassers on our team, telling them that door-to-door solicitation wasn't allowed in a particular community. It turns out they were wrong. Although courts have upheld bans on door-to-door solicitation for commercial purposes (such as the famed Fuller Brush man of long ago who knocked on doors selling cleaning supplies), the Supreme Court has specifically rejected bans on door-to-door solicitation for political speech.21 Similarly, courts have upheld so-called “do not call” lists for commercial telemarketing even while allowing political campaigns to call voters uninvited. However, courts have upheld limits on the hours that you are allowed to knock on a person's door or call him on the phone—in many cities this is banned after nine o'clock at night. That limit on speech is justified because it balances the listener's right to privacy in his own home with your right to speak.We also limit the timing of speech in public spaces. Just ask the activists of Occupy Wall Street. After holding signs and chanting “we … are … the 99 percent” for hours, the protesters decided to sleep in Zuccotti Park near Wall Street rather than heading home to the comfort of their beds. Other protesters joined them in solidarity in similar demonstrations across the country.Months into the protests, police fell back on curfews as justification to storm the public parks and eject protesters using tear gas and sometimes violence. Thousands were jailed. In this way, police limited the duration of the protesters' speech by acting against alleged violations of the timing of that speech (in the form of curfews). This approach perhaps would have been reasonable if there were other people who wanted to use those same public spaces to speak about other issues, or even to simply enjoy some silence. But in this case, it's not clear that the protesters were preventing anyone else from speaking or disturbing the peace enough to lose their right to free speech, and the crackdowns were widely condemned.How I Was Arrested for Speaking Too MuchIn the summer of 2014, I joined Kai Newkirk and hundreds of others during the final day of a march on the California state capitol. Kai and others in the group 99Rise walked all the way from Los Angeles to Sacramento over thirty-seven days, enduring temperatures as high as 110 degrees in California's Central Valley.March organizers had acquired a permit to protest on the steps of the capitol. But we wanted to continue our protest for longer than the permit allowed—long enough so that legislators would hear us when they came to their offices the following morning.At 10:30 that evening, police informed us that our permit to protest had “expired”—as if there is an expiration date in the First Amendment. When we didn't leave, we were arrested, handcuffed, and taken to the county jail. The government had decided to limit the duration of our speech. It shut us up.Had there been four other groups of people wanting to speak on the steps of the California state capitol at 10:30 that evening, then limiting our speech would have promoted First Amendment values. There are four sets of steps to the capitol—one on the east, west, north, and south. Occasionally, there are times when different groups are actually using each set of steps for a protest, press conference, concert, wedding, or other event. During those times, government permits enhance the ability of people to speak by ensuring that every group has a chance to use the limited forum of the capitol steps. The permits also prevent hecklers and other saboteurs from hijacking another group's event.But if government limits on one person's speech are not enacted specifically to allow another person to speak, the limits don't further the First Amendment. Perhaps that is why the prosecutor declined to bring charges against me and the twelve other protesters who were detained that night.This concept—that limitations on speech promote the aims of the First Amendment if they enhance the ability of other people to speak—is the core lesson we must apply to money in politics. The refusal to apply this simple principle is the Supreme Court's key failing.Why We Limit the Volume of SpeechBesides limiting the duration and timing of speech, government also limits how loud we can be. In many states, it is illegal to drive a motorcycle that exceeds ninety-two decibels, even if the motorcycle is part of a political parade.22 Some cities have ordinances that regulate amplified sound, even if it is coming from a political sound truck.23 Your neighbors simply don't want to hear your views about abortion, war, or the minimum wage blasted at the volume of a rock-and-roll concert.“This concept—that limitations on speech promote the aims of the First Amendment if they enhance the ability of other people to speak—is the core lesson we must apply to money in politics.”Police can arrest people for speaking too noisily. A dozen people from the Christ Fellowship Church were arrested for protesting too loudly outside a fund-raiser for a pro-gay marriage organization in North Carolina. Police claimed that the protesters were violating the city of Greensboro's noise ordinance.24 If there were no limits on noise, anyone could silence speech they opposed by simply outshouting the speaker.In addition to noise ordinances, most jurisdictions authorize police to arrest citizens for “disturbing the peace.” Although this can be done for legitimate purposes, it can also quite literally mean that the government can shut you up when it thinks you should be quiet and peaceful. During protests across the United States in the wake of several police killings of unarmed African Americans in Ferguson, Missouri, and elsewhere, thousands of people were arrested for “disturbing the peace” because they were disrupting the normal flow of life in an attempt to make their views known.25Police can and do silence protesters when they block traffic on highways or sidewalks, disturb shoppers, or otherwise make too much of a nuisance of themselves. Why? Because when one constitutional right conflicts with another right or interferes with our ability to govern ourselves, there's a legitimate reason to enforce limits. The principle at stake in the examples above is that one person's right to use her property (be it a motorcycle, a loudspeaker, or a protest sign) cannot violate another person's right to enjoy quiet on his own property or to drive down a highway unimpeded by protesters. When your freedoms trample on my liberties, we need to balance rights—including those espoused in the First Amendment.Why We Limit the Location of SpeechOnce when I was working on a campaign to increase recycling rates, some of the volunteers thought we should hold a large banner on a freeway overpass. Thousands of cars that drove below us would then see our message.The highway patrol told us this was unsafe because motorists might be distracted by our political speech and could get into an accident. The government was limiting the location of our speech in order to protect the safety of motorists. That's a reasonable balance between First Amendment rights to free speech and the constitutional duty of government to promote the general welfare. It would be even more reasonable—and credible—if the government applied the same logic to billboards. Had the volunteers on my campaign been able to raise tens of thousands of dollars, we could have put the exact same banner on a billboard that the same motorists would have seen in a way that the highway patrol didn't view as distracting.When more than ten thousand Tea Party activists descended on Washington, DC, in 2009 to protest the Affordable Care Act, ten of them were arrested for protesting inside the Capitol building. The police considered the protests “disorderly conduct” and quite literally silenced those protesters even while allowing many more to say the exact same thing outside the building.26 Again it was the location, not the content, of the speech that the government was limiting.Courts have similarly upheld limits on the location of speech outside polling places or abortion clinics. There is a legitimate question as to whether fifty feet, or five hundred feet, or five thousand feet is an appropriate balance between the free speech ideals of the First Amendment and the privacy rights of someone casting a vote or making an important decision without being harassed by someone screaming just inches away from her face. The challenge here is not whether there should be any limit on the speech, but what the limit should be.Should We Ever Limit the Content of Speech?Government rules on where we speak, when we speak, and how loudly we speak are less troubling than limits on what we say. Any regulation on the content of speech runs a great risk of limiting freedom of conscience and violating the First Amendment. But even when it comes to content regulation, many Americans agree some limits are justified.Our government prohibits people from speaking about classified information that protects national security, for example. It is illegal to tell a foreign government, a terrorist organization, or even the general public information that could jeopardize the lives of Americans. Bradley Manning was sent to prison for revealing secret video footage that showed, among other things, US troop movements in Iraq.Nonetheless, it is dangerous to allow the executive branch alone to decide what is secret and what is not. There is a difference between treason and legitimate whistleblowing or political dissent that presidents and their inner circle of advisors may not see in the fog of war. It is far too tempting for the government to label serious political opposition as jeopardizing national security. For instance, the administration of President Barack Obama attempted to ban the release of videos showing force-feeding of prisoners at the Guantanamo Bay detention facility, arguing it would harm national security because enemies of the United States might use the footage for propaganda. A judge disagreed with the notion that propaganda was a legitimate security threat and rejected the government's limit on the content of this speech.27One of the reasons we need a judicial branch is to check the power of the executive branch. When President Richard Nixon tried to prosecute Daniel Ellsberg for leaking the Pentagon Papers during the Vietnam War, a judge ultimately refused to convict Mr. Ellsberg. Ellsberg had violated government limits on his speech by giving classified documents to the New York Times for publication. But the judicial branch concluded that those restrictions were not justified by our national security interests. A jury might, or might not, come to a similar conclusion about Edward Snowden if he is ever brought to trial for violating limits on speaking about the National Security Agency's warrantless surveillance of American communications.Some people believe there should be no government secrets. Projects such as WikiLeaks intentionally violate government limits on speech by leaking classified information to the news media and to citizens directly. But even WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange concedes that some information should be kept secret; he just believes that secrecy shouldn't be used to cover up government abuses.28Whether or not you agree with Assange or Snowden, most Americans believe that at least some information should be classified. How to decide what types of speech to limit for national security purposes and what to make public is an important debate that is beyond the scope of this book. Nonetheless, even those citizens who think there should be absolutely no limits on the content of speech should think seriously about distinguishing that issue from whether we should limit the duration, timing, and location of speech—let alone the amount that billionaires may spend on political advertising. Similarly, we should separate the issue of regulating content of speech from limiting the amount of money that any person or group can spend to promote that speech in a political campaign.29How Much Can One Person Hear?Beyond legal limits on location, duration, volume, and even content of speech, the combination of our growing population and the information explosion of the past few decades has created an even more significant limit on everyone's speech—the limit on how much information each listener can absorb.It is simply impossible for the president to listen to each and every one of the 320 million residents of the United States. A single member of Congress could not listen to everything that every constituent wanted to say, even if she spent all day doing nothing else. So, who will they listen to?Here's how former senator Paul Simon put it: “In my last campaign, I spent $8.4 million running for reelection. It has a corrupting influence on all of us.” Simon went on to explain what happens when he arrives at a hotel at midnight and finds twenty messages waiting for him, with nineteen from people he doesn't recognize and one from someone who has given him a $1,000 campaign contribution: “At midnight, I'm not going to make twenty phone calls. I might make one. Which one do you think I'm going to make?”30Senator Bill Bradley was even more blunt: “Money not only determines who is elected, it determines who runs for office. Ultimately, it determines what government accomplishes—or fails to accomplish. Under the current system, Congress, except in unusual moments, will inevitably listen to the 900,000 Americans who give $200 or more to their campaigns ahead of the 259,600,000 who don't.”31Similarly, a voter does not have enough hours in the day to listen to everyone's opinions of how he should vote. Even if none of the government-imposed limits on time, place, and duration of speech existed, the real world imposes limits on how much any person can hear.Yet if we want to govern ourselves thoughtfully and effectively, we need to hear various and opposing viewpoints about public policy options. So the question becomes: How do we decide which speech to listen to? And perhaps more importantly, who will choose?Self-Government in an Age of Information OverloadAt the founding of the United States, and indeed throughout most of world history, information was scarce. It simply wasn't possible to bombard citizens with more information than they could absorb. Limited technology, dispersed populations, and low literacy rates prevented the type of information overload we experience today.In contrast, today's New York Times contains more information in a single issue than an ordinary citizen of the seventeenth century encountered during his entire lifetime.32 Researchers estimate the average American consumes twelve hours of information a day.33 This double-counts hours spent multitasking, such as checking e-mail while also listening to the news on television, but nonetheless the researchers estimate that we spend three-quarters of our waking time at home consuming some form of information. Yet try as we might, we can't come close to listening to everything that everyone has to say.Behavioral scientists believe the average human brain can retain five to seven items in short-term memory.34 Each additional piece of information above that physical limit quite literally displaces another piece of information in our brain. Speech competing for our attention, therefore, approaches a zero-sum game.Marketing experts know that advertisements from one product, or one entire market sector, can crowd out advertisements for other products and sectors.35 After a certain point, our brains become saturated and we start tuning out new ads for similar items.Cognitive psychologist Herbert Simon tells us thatin an information-rich world, the wealth of information means a dearth of something else: a scarcity of whatever it is that information consumes. What information consumes is rather obvious: it consumes the attention of its recipients. Hence a wealth of information creates a poverty of attention and a need to allocate that attention efficiently among the overabundance of information sources that might consume it.36To deal with information overload, we limit what we pay attention to, including political speech.When Less Is More: An Abundance of Limited SpeechThis concept—that strict limits on speech enable more people to be heard—is the essence of the social networking service Twitter. By limiting each message to 140 characters, Twitter not only forces speakers to be concise but also allows listeners to follow the speech of hundreds, even thousands of fellow citizens.Information sources recognized the need to limit speech long before the Internet age. Most newspapers impose strict word limits on letters to the editor, opinion columns, and even news stories by reporters. Just as there is only so much information that can fit in a person's brain, there is only so much news and opinion that can fit in a newspaper. In choosing which letters to print, opinion columns to carry, and news stories to cover, editors serve as information filters. They help readers decide which information is worth their time and which is not.Because decisions about what speech to include involve political judgment, indeed a bias, it is important for readers to select news providers that they trust to limit speech in an appropriate and responsible manner. Self-government is best served when a citizen is exposed to differing political viewpoints, so most mainstream news editors provide an array of opposing views within one broad publication. Others provide information primarily from one political viewpoint. Both approaches are important and legitimate. What matters most is that readers know the biases, and ownership, of news outlets and can choose from a broad diversity of different news sources.Social media, blogs, and the explosion of other online information sources have made it easier for citizens to create their own information filters. With Twitter and Facebook, you can decide who to “follow” and with blogs, you can choose which to read—you are not at the mercy of an editor. This opportunity to be our own editors offers incredible potential to expand political dialogue and engagement and reduce the concerns about powerful media conglomerates controlling which speech is heard and which is silenced.Information expert Clay Shirky has noted that technology has already given us the tools we need to deal with the challenges of our information society. “There's no such thing as information overload,” Shirky notes, “only filter failure.”37 The ability to have filters with integrity has become key to our success as a nation.Advertisements (which I'll explore as paid speech in the next chapter) cause filter failure. Advertisers selling products and services have information and opinions that no news editor would deem worthy of news coverage, so those advertisers pay the newspaper to run an ad. Advertisers who want to speak to people who are not following them on Twitter or Facebook can pay those companies a fee to have “sponsored” tweets or posts interrupt the information “feed” that the user has chosen to receive.Advertising, by design, corrupts and distorts our marketplace of ideas—our chosen limits on speech. It takes the decision about which speech to include out of the hands of an editor (who the reader entrusts to play that role) and puts it into the hands of whoever has money to pay for it. Because we all have limited capacity to absorb speech, an advertiser not only pays to promote its own message but also to displace other speech that the listener might have listened to instead. Advertisements shut you up by drowning you out.What you can do: Write the editorSubmit a brief letter to the editor of your local newspaper calling upon Congress to overturn the Citizens United ruling with a constitutional amendment. If they don't print it, get five friends to submit similar letters and see if one of you can break through the editor's filter.ContentsForeword by Thom HartmannIntroduction: The Crisis of Broken PoliticsWhy We Must Fight1. Enough Is Enough: How and Why We Have Limited the Duration, Volume, and Location of Speech2. If Money Is Speech, Speech Is No Longer Free: The Difference between Paid Speech and Free Speech3. Stupidity, Inequality, and Corruption: Three Good Reasons to Limit Paid Speech4. Who Broke Our Democracy? How Courts Have Struck Down Limits on Money in Politics Ready for Action? Let's Go5. Repairing Our Republic: How the People Can Overturn the Court6. Magic Words: What Should a Constitutional Amendment Say?7. Instructions for Mission Impossible: How to Pass a Constitutional Amendment When Incumbents Don't Want One8. Halfway Home: We're Further Along Than You Think Epilogue by Miles Rapoport
Accès libre
Affiche du document Collaboration Begins with You

Collaboration Begins with You

Ken Blanchard

1h00min45

  • Gestion et management
  • Youscribe plus
  • Livre epub
  • Livre lcp
81 pages. Temps de lecture estimé 1h1min.
Collaboration Begins with YouEveryone knows collaboration creates high performing teams and organizations—and with today's diverse, globalized workforce it's absolutely crucial. Yet it often doesn't happen because people and groups typically believe that the problem is always outside: the other team member, the other department, the other company. Bestselling author Ken Blanchard and his coauthors use Blanchard's signature business parable style to show that, in fact, if collaboration is to succeed it must begin with you. This book teaches people at all levels—from new associates to top executives—that it's up to each of us to help promote and preserve a winning culture of collaboration. The authors show that busting silos and bringing people together is an inside-out process that involves the heart (your character and intentions), the head (your beliefs and attitudes), and the hands (your actions and behaviors). Working with this three-part approach, Collaboration Begins with You helps readers develop a collaborative culture that uses differences to spur contribution and creativity; provides a safe and trusting environment; involves everyone in creating a clear sense of purpose, values, and goals; encourages people to share information; and turns everyone into an empowered self-leader. None of us is as smart as all of us. When people recognize their own erroneous beliefs regarding collaboration and work to change them, silos are broken down, failures are turned into successes, and breakthrough results are achieved at every level.CHAPTER 1A Troubling Conversation“It was the worst shareholder meeting I've endured in years. The worst! Everybody could see the numbers plain and clear: the Primo project produced no profit. No profit! Zero. Zip. None!” Jim Camilleri, CEO of Cobalt, Inc., punctuated the point by slamming his fist on his desk.Dave Oakman, the division head in charge of the Primo project, had never seen his boss this angry before. It was making him nervous. He kept his mouth shut to give Jim time to blow off more steam.“The whole point of this project was to put some distance between Cobalt and our competition. The idea, in case you missed it, was to generate some revenue for capital investments and to reward shareholders. The fundamentals were great. There was absolutely no reason we couldn't have made money on this thing—other than lousy project management.” Jim leaned forward and looked Dave in the eye. “Can you give me a better reason? What happened here?”“It's a long story, Jim.”“Let's hear it.”“We had departments operating in silos. A lot of people were trying to protect their own interests rather than make the project a success.”“Why don't you break that down for me, Dave. What are you talking about?” Jim's mouth was a straight, grim line.Dave hesitated. Should he tell the truth, or should he bend it? He knew exactly what the problem was. What he didn't know was whether it was safe to divulge. Considering Jim's current mood, telling the whole truth could get him fired.Dave decided he should fudge it, or at least try to. It was what he usually did—and it usually worked.“Primo had some great moments.” Dave began with an air of confidence—but he knew he was flying by the seat of his pants.“Great moments? Not from where I'm sitting,” Jim said.“As you said, the fundamentals of the Primo project were solid. We just encountered some hiccups.”“Bleeding money is not a case of hiccups. Quit trivializing this! I want some straight answers.” Jim's eyes were steely.Dave recognized that fudging was not going to work this time. He had to come clean.“The truth is, Jim, the group didn't really work as a cohesive unit. Rival departments undermined the project. As long as they got their job done on schedule and their department made a profit, they didn't care what happened to Primo.” A bead of sweat on Dave's forehead betrayed his uneasiness.“Can you be specific?” Jim asked.“For example, I asked for a few of our newer associates to join the project. They had great energy and ideas, but they kept getting sidelined by the department heads who wanted all the glory. Some of our best people were kept off this project by their own leaders.” Dave could hear the desperation in his own voice.“Any leaders in particular?” Jim asked.Dave thought about Wayne Lundgren, the veteran manager of the research and development department. Just last week Dave had witnessed Wayne brushing off a helpful suggestion made by Sarah McKenzie, a young engineer in his department.“I'd rather not name names,” Dave said at last. “Besides, it's not the people who are the problem. It's the whole culture around here.” The words were out of his mouth before he had weighed them. Now he wondered if he'd said too much.“Names don't matter, anyway,” said Jim impatiently. “You were in charge of Primo. You should have fixed it!”“It's not that simple, Jim. Certain department heads around here have a lot of power, and they don't hesitate to use it to their advantage. You know Cobalt is riddled with politics.”Jim shook his head. “Politics is a way of life. It's part of the environment we live in. I expect my top managers to know how to navigate through the obstacles. And that includes you.”He's not getting it, thought Dave. Doing his best to keep the defensiveness out of his voice, he said, “Jim, I'm telling you about a problem that's beyond my scope to manage. This is about Cobalt. The company is made up of all kinds of self-serving silos. We offer no incentives that encourage people to work together toward organizational goals. Managers get promotions and bonuses based on their own individual success and the success of their siloed groups—regardless of the success of the projects they work on or the company as a whole.”There, he'd said it. He caught his breath, feeling relief and fear at the same time.Jim got up from his desk and began to pace. “I need time to think about what you're saying here. In the meantime, remember that as the division vice president, you're expected to fix these issues you're complaining about. You should be coming to me with solutions, not problems.” He shook his head. “How many times do I have to—” He left the sentence unfinished.Dave held his breath. Is Jim going to fire me?A long silence followed. Finally, Jim walked to the door and opened it, making it clear the meeting was over.As Dave walked out, Jim said quietly, “I want a full report about what went wrong with Primo, along with your recommendations, on my desk in two weeks.” He paused. “I'll just leave it at that. I need to do some thinking, too.”Part I: A Journey To Collaboration1 A Troubling Conversation2 A Well Timed Visitor3 A Sensible Start 4 Utilize Differences5 Nurture Safety and Trust6 Involve Others in Crafting a Clear Purpose, Values, and Goals7 A Step Backward8 Talk Openly9 A Bit of a Breakthrough10 Empower Yourself and Others11 Collaboration at Work: A Real World Example 12 Getting Things Done13 A Turnaround—and a Plan14 Three Months LaterEpiloguePart II: Tools and Resources to Create CollaborationSelf Assessment: How Collaborative Do You Think You Are? Collaboration: Best PracticesAcknowledgements About the AuthorsServices Available
Accès libre
Affiche du document The Daily Edge

The Daily Edge

David Horsager

1h37min30

  • Efficacité professionnelle
  • Youscribe plus
  • Livre epub
  • Livre lcp
130 pages. Temps de lecture estimé 1h37min.
Wall Street Journal bestselling author David Horsager frequently hears executives lament that their hands are more than full trying to balance the barrage of tasks they face on a daily basis. While he never set out to be a productivity expert, Horsager realized that over the years he has developed and adopted dozens of extraordinarily practical time- and energy-saving techniques that could help today's leader. The key objective is to become so effective in the little things that you have enough time for more meaningful interactions. In The Daily Edge, you'll learn strategies such as identifying the key Difference-Making Actions on which to focus your efforts. Perhaps it is time to set a personal or even company-wide “power hour,” during which you do not attend meetings, answer the phone, or reply to emails, creating the time and space to really focus and get things done. The thirty-five high-impact ideas Horsager introduces in succinct, quick-read chapters are easily implemented and powerful on their own. Taken together, they form a solid wave of efficacy that enables you to get more done, keep your energy up, and make sure that you're able to honor all your relationships, both personal and professional. Tip 190-Day Quick PlanEighteen years ago a man challenged me to not complain for 90 days straight. I couldn't complain about anything, not food, not the weather, nothing. That changed my life. Some people say you can change a habit in 21 days. I question whether that is long enough. While 21 days may be too short, an entire year is too long. Think about it, most people can't keep their New Year's resolutions for even two weeks. People often think, “I have all year to get going on that.” 90 days is a sweet spot. It is a short enough time frame to stay absolutely focused, and yet it is long enough to get more done than most people get done in a whole year. When I lost my weight, the first 90 days were the most important. In those three months, I lost thirty-three pounds, but more importantly, my thinking about food, exercise, and how I spent my time was transformed. Everything changed in 90 days.Most strategic planning is done at an off-site retreat, yet provides little momentum toward action. Instead of an annual planning session, try making a 90-Day Quick Plan. Every 90 days we encourage everyone on our team to create a 90-Day Quick Plan. It gives leaders and teams an actionable framework that provides clarity and leads to tangible results both personally and professionally.Here's how to make it work. Pick an area of your business or life that you'd like to address, and then ask six questions. The plan should take less than 30 minutes to create.Question 1: Where am I? If you do not know where you are today, you cannot know where you would like to be in the future. (If you are doing a 90-Day Quick Plan as a team, ask, “Where are we?” and use “we” in the following questions as well.) Ask this question and you will be able to quickly identify strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats. For example, where am I in my relationship with my kids? Where am I in my health? Where am I in comparison to expected sales? Where are we as far as the number of people we are reaching with our message or product?Question 2: Where am I going in 90 days? Remember, it is not one year or five years like many strategic plans. Thinking about your answer in question 1, where would you like to be in 90 days? Write a clear, quantifiable (numerical if possible) goal. You will likely accomplish more than you thought in just 90 days!Question 3: Why am I going? If the “why” is strong enough, the plan does not need to be perfect. If a building is burning and my kids are in it, I don't need to know every detail—I'm going in because my “why” is so strong. When your team is motivated and unified, they'll do the little things differently. They'll stay passionate and focused, and they'll finish.Question 4: How are we going to get there? How? Keep asking how? until your team commits to taking specific actions.Question 5: How are we going to get there? I press people to ask how? until they have come up with a specific action they will take starting today or tomorrow at the latest.Question 6: How are we going to get there? I have found people must ask how? at least three times before they are clear enough. It may take asking how? seven times in order to get enough clarity. The point is don't stop asking how until you or your team has decided on a specific action that will be taken starting today or tomorrow.Making It HappenI remember when I really got this idea of asking “how?” three times. I was training and consulting with one of the biggest heath care organizations in North America. They needed change! They were losing funding and patients. We were toward the end of our Trust Edge Experience. One hundred fifty top people including the CEO and senior leadership team were all seated at round tables. Each table had defined a specific challenge they were going to tackle. I remember asking one table full of top leaders about what they needed to take action on in order to grow and be more trusted. The table leader said, “We need to be clearer.”I said, “How will you be clearer?”After brainstorming with his group, the table leader said, “We are going to communicate more.”I said, “How?”After more brainstorming, he said, “We are going to hold each other accountable.”I said, “How?”The table, seated with bright minds and fine leaders, had to be pushed three times in order to realize they needed a more specific action plan. They worked together to create a plan for communicating more often and more clearly. An important piece of their plan was how they were going to hold each other accountable to this effort. They were able to start following their plan the very next day.On a personal level, when I decided to lose weight, I kept asking “how?” until I went from “eat less and exercise more” to defining fifteen specific actionable ideas I could implement on a daily basis.With greater clarity around your 90-day plan, you will gain the trust of your team and bottom-line results will follow.Tip 1. 90-Day Quick PlanTip 2. DMA's: Difference-Making ActionsTip 3. Power HourTip 4. FocusTip 5. Decide NowTip 6. SEEDS FirstTip 7. Manage Your EnergyTip 8. Log ItTip 9. Excellence, Not PerfectionTip 10. Plan Tomorrow TodayTip 11. EnergizeTip 12. Go ReadyTip 13. Efficient E-mailTip 14. Phone HabitsTip 15. Maximize MeetingsTip 16. Flight PlanTip 17. Wake UpTip 18. Clear DeskTip 19. Automate
Tip 20. To-Do List ABCsTip 21. Master FasterTip 22. Mind MappingTip 23. Back UpTip 24. Go PaperlessTip 25. ShortcutsTip 26. Don't Go GadgetTip 27. Don't Get HookedTip 28. OptimizeTip 29. BundleTip 30. Get UnstuckTip 31. Stock UpTip 32. Say NoTip 33. ReflectTip 34. Habit ChangeTip 35. People First 
Accès libre

...

x Cacher la playlist

Commandes > x
     

Aucune piste en cours de lecture

 

 

--|--
--|--
Activer/Désactiver le son