Blog
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Blog / Jack Covert Selects
Jack Covert Selects - Playing to Win
By Sally Haldorson
Playing to Win: How Strategy Really Works by A. G. Lafley & Roger L.
Categories: jack-covert-selects
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Blog / Jack Covert Selects
Jack Covert Selects - Top Dog
By Sally Haldorson
Top Dog: The Science of Winning and Losing by Po Bronson & Ashley Merryman, Twelve, 352 pages, $27. 99, Hardcover, February 2013, ISBN 9781455515158 No one wants to be a loser, no matter how unimportant the game. Winning is fun, it makes you feel good, and winning validates the effort invested.
Categories: jack-covert-selects
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Blog / Jack Covert Selects
Jack Covert Selects - Creating Room to Read
By Sally Haldorson
Creating Room to Read: A Story of Hope in the Battle for Global Literacy by John Wood, Viking Books, 320 pages, $27. 95, Hardcover, February 2013, ISBN 9780670025985 Some of us have a hard time turning our desire to “do good” into real action, which is why the option to donate to foundations active in doing good is so beneficial. This same desire to do good is what makes reading John Wood’s new book, Creating Room to Read, energizing.
Categories: jack-covert-selects, narrative-biography
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Blog / News & Opinion
ChangeThis: Issue 102
By Porchlight
The Self-Publishing Revolution by Guy Kawasaki & Shawn Welch “Shelf space for ebooks is infinite, and anyone who can use a word processor can write and publish a book. These changes don’t mean that books are better—no more than a democratic political system guarantees better leaders—but at least the system is more accessible. ” Pause to Lead Forward: The Paradoxical Leadership Breakthrough by Kevin Cashman “Could it be that going faster and driving harder are not the answers?
Categories: news-opinion
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Blog / ChangeThis
Can Business Save The World?
By Joey Reiman
"Business people are the new superheroes. And they are here to save the world. Their super power is purpose. And with it they intend to improve and save billions of lives while putting millions more dollars back into the economy. No force on the planet is greater than purpose, because purpose gives us our reason for being and doing. When you discover your purpose, you become unstoppable. It works the same for business."
Categories: changethis
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Blog / ChangeThis
Pause to Lead Forward: The Paradoxical Leadership Breakthrough
By Kevin Cashman
"The demanding pace for global leaders has never been more challenging. Digitally connected every moment, we are increasingly tied to a 24-hour global clock. This is the 'new normal.' We are expected to perform continually in the face of global crises and multifaceted pressures, including downsizing, mergers and the accompanying stresses and expectations. The list of demands, personal and professional, never ends. Could it be that going faster and driving harder are not the answers? Could there be another way to sustain high performance? Could it be that the source of our real value as leaders might come from different thinking and different choices rather than from perpetuation of the incessant pace we strain to maintain?"
Categories: changethis
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Blog / ChangeThis
The Self-Publishing Revolution
By Guy Kawasaki
"In the old, constrained world, somebody had to select, print, and distribute what was worthy of royalty, shelf space, and killing trees. That somebody was an employee of a traditional publisher; he served as a filter, finisher, and arbiter of taste. Several thousand traditional publishers added this kind of value for hundreds of years. Shelf space for ebooks, however, is infinite, and anyone who can use a word processor can write and publish a book. These changes don't mean that books are better—no more than a democratic political system guarantees better leaders—but at least the system is more accessible."
Categories: changethis
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Blog / ChangeThis
Ninja Innovation: The Secrets of Today's Top Innovators
By Gary Shapiro
"After thirty years in the consumer electronics industry, I have seen my fair share of successes and failures. Applying our idea to the successes, we decided they exhibited characteristics of the feudal Japanese stealth warrior known as the ninja. They are all ninja innovators because they achieve their mission through a set of similar tactics; they all adhere to a code of business ethics; and they are all single-mindedly focused on winning as the only option. They are true business warriors, and here are some of their secrets ... "
Categories: changethis
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Blog / ChangeThis
Being Vulnerable: Business Tips from a Former CIA Officer
By Porchlight
"The typical corporate environment may not be quite as fraught with danger as the realm of spies, but that doesn't negate the value of understanding the impact of emotions on decisions and performance. So, for a moment, let's loosen the ban we tend to enforce on expressing emotions in the workplace. Drop the barricade between the numbers and the feelings. Stop denying those aspects of human behavior that we, as leaders, feel we MUST deny. You can't lead if you're 'soft', right? But you also can't influence what you pretend doesn't exist. Embrace vulnerability, if only to understand why your clients are vulnerable to wooing from your competitor. To see just how vulnerable your boss is to the pressure to give the other guy the promotion, instead of you. To know how vulnerable your best employees are to job offers from other companies."
Categories: changethis
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Blog / ChangeThis
Making the Unconscious Conscious: How Neuroscience Can Empower (and Inspire) Marketing
By Douglas Van Praet
"If we don't understand our own preferences or the true motivations behind our own behaviors, marketers are wasting billions of dollars each year by asking questions in quantitative surveys and qualitative focus groups people simply can't know the answer to. And marketers are using that information as the guiding forces to bring innovation and improvement to the marketplace. Not surprisingly, the success rate is abysmal, as only two of every ten new products launched in the U.S. succeeds. 'Houston, we have a problem.'"
Categories: changethis