Showing posts with label Leadership. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Leadership. Show all posts

Friday, January 8, 2016

Audiobook Review: The Virgin Way: Everything I Know About Leadership

I have completed listening to The Virgin Way: Everything I Know About Leadership by Richard Branson (2014). It is entertaining and rich with leadership and quality customer service lessons. Don't micromanage. PowerPoint culture is boring, ineffective and completely out of hand. Strive to be excellent and atypical. Say what you mean and mean what you say. Get out and kick the tires. Look at your business from the perspective of customers and competitors. Everything can always be improved on.  Luck is what happens when preparation meets opportunity. The harder I practice the luckier I get. One size will never fit all. Hiring the right people is a skill and the most important part of my job. The concept of being over-qualified is nonsensical. It all comes down to attitude and desire. Hire for attitude and train for skill. Provide excellent and plentiful customer service by real people. Profit is a bi-product of good customer-service. If you don't have passion for what you're doing you shouldn't be in a leadership role. Fun is infectious and good for business. Culture eats strategy for breakfast. Nurture your people or someone else will soon be stealing your lunch. In Part IV: New Skills for a New World, Branson champions entrepreneurship and states that it should be nurtured at a young age. He charges the education system with being myopic and detrimental to maximizing one's full potential. Teachers teach what they know and it isn't entrepreneurship. Government and companies should encourage and support entrepreneurship. (I am taken back to my 16 year career with the YMCA, championing entrepreneurship and intrapreneurship.) Very successful people often had the help of a mentor. Lead from the front. Collaboration is essential to success. Face-to-face communication is essential for building trust. Silos are for grain. Tear down the walls. Informal collaboration is key to creativity. Branson quotes Steve Jobs: "Creativity comes from spontaneous meetings from random discussions. You run into someone. You ask what they're doing. You say WOW and soon you're cooking up all sorts of ideas!" Branson's Afterword: Follow your dreams and just do it. Make a positive difference and do some good. Believe in your ideas and be the best. Have fun and look after your team. Don't give up. Listen, take lots of notes and keep setting new challenges. Delegate and spend more time with your family. Turn off your laptop and iPhone and get your derriere out there. Communicate, collaborate and communicate some more. Do what you love and have a couch in the kitchen.  The Virgin Way entertains and educates from beginning to end. 11.5 hours of listening

Thursday, December 10, 2015

Audiobook Review: The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People

I have completed listening to The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People: Powerful Lessons in Personal Change (2004) by Stephen R. Covey. The 20 minute Forward by the author had me enthused that this book was going to be right in my wheelhouse. The book is great but not at all what I expected. This book is almost evangelical with powerful words and intent. The author promised a journey of self-development and personal growth that could result in me being a better spouse, parent, friend, co-worker ..... and he delivered! The book is intriguing, challenging and somewhat intimidating. Live your life with integrity. Integrity is the most fundamental source of personal worth. Personal peace comes when your life is in harmony with true principles and values. What are your personal values, mission and vision? Take ownership. Don't let emotions, impulses and pleasure-seeking subordinate your values. Apply principle-based actions. Be proactive. Make and keep promises. The chapter on your Emotional Bank Account might be the most meaningful and important thing that I have read this year. Habit 5: Seek First To Understand and Then to Be Understood is a crucial life skill which I needed to be reminded of. I need to practice and improve my empathic listening skills. Focus on your circle of influence, the things you can control. Build a better you! Don't blame others or circumstances. You have the freedom to choose how you act and respond. How do you want to be remembered when you have left this planet? Thank you Stephen R. Covey! I highly recommend this book. I wish that I had read it many years ago.

Friday, December 4, 2015

Audiobook Review: The Success Principles - 10th Anniversary Edition CD

I have completed listening to The Success Principles - 10th Anniversary Edition CD: How to Get from Where You Are to Where You Want to Be by Jack Canfield and am now beginning to put much of my learning into practice. PMPs note: I claimed and was granted 21.5 PDUs by PMI for listening to this book. Canfield became successful beyond all imagination with the Chicken Soup for the Soul series of books and being profiled in The Secret. Canfield weaves practical, pragmatic and proven business and success advice with a heavy serving of Law of Attraction belief and methodology. The book is rich with interesting anecdotal stories of individual success and constantly refers to seemingly every popular Law of Attraction, self-help, motivational, personal finance and how-to business management book ever published. The Success Principles is entertaining and packed with life-lessons, applicable guidance and life-skills rules. I particularly like Canfield's explicit emphasis on the need to learn skills, take action and persevere in addition to having positive and affirmative thoughts. The narration is engaging. The leadership and management principles revisit touchstones of dozens of best-selling books. The review and reminders of best practices are affirming and this book pushes my buttons in a good way. I am thoroughly enjoying the motivational stories and legitimate life-lessons. I highly recommend this audio version of The Success Principles to everyone and particularly to aspiring leaders and youth. The audiobook is a 22 hour journey. I suggest listening to it in 15-minute to 30-minute bites.

Audiobook Review: How to Make Friends and Influence People

Just finished listening to audiobook: How to Make Friends and Influence People by Dale Carnegie (1936). It's not perfect but there are some real nuggets here and I wish that I had read the book 30 years ago. Now listening to audiobook: Decisive: How to Make Better Choices in Life and Work by Chip Heath and Dan Heath (2013).