Leadership Management-Business

Servant Leadership: A Journey into the Nature of Legitimate Power & Greatness

When observing the world, many see that true leadership does not reflect positions of power; rather, it reflects a quality of personal character. Robert Greenleaf looked at 1970s America and the 1970s world and observed a lack of leadership. We had educated talent out the wazoo, but lacked people able to usher in lasting, good change. He wrote this book to cultivate such leadership qualities in its readers. Leadership, to him, was of a servant’s…

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Leadership Management-Business

The Power of Going All-In: Secrets for Success in Business, Leadership & Life

This book’s conclusion encourages readers to reread this book again at a later time. At the beginning of the book, I would find that admonition a bit pompous; even halfway through, I would have laughed at the suggestion. However, the book finishes much stronger than it begins, and in that light, I can see the value of rereading it for several reasons. First, this quick read is organized in short, digestible segments that are easy…

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Religion-Philosophy

The Cost of Ambition: How Striving to Be Better Than Others Makes Us Worse

Self-interested ambition seems to fuel society in the West. For instance, politicians try to achieve dominance over the opposition; sports figures try to become a “GOAT” – even when the GOATs change every year! Even religious leaders try to be “the man” (and it’s usually a man) despite religion’s calls for humility. In 1776, Adam Smith saw self-interested motivations as one of the strengths fueling capitalism. Today’s society, by and large, admires strivers over those…

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