|
Showing 1 - 8 of
8 matches in All Departments
The workplace is drastically changing. Managers have more direct
reports than before the recession, Millennials will soon out number
all other generations at work, businesses have the new technology
and tools to boost performance, cut costs, and give employees more
freedom over their own projects, and of course, our ability to work
from anyplace, at any time. In order for businesses to succeed in
this new environment, employees, managers, and organizations as a
whole need to redefine what it means to work. The Future of Work
explores the new behaviors, new technologies, and the new people
entering the workforce, focusing on: How the traditional command
and control leadership model is deadWorking with and for
Millennials, who expect to be doing meaningful work, share their
voice, and want rapid feedbackHow to adapt to the mobile workerHow
to succeed when the corporate ladder is replaced by employees
creating their own wayWhy the future of work is about sharing
information and not hoarding itHow new technologies are reshaping
the way we communicate by forcing an open environment of
collaboration among all levelsThe Future of Work is about what we
can do to reach our bottom line while empowering our employees
across the board, creating not only profitable businesses and
meaningful work, but an environment to attract and keep the best
talent.
How do some of the world’s top leaders unlock the potential of
others, create trust, and lead through change? Jacob started out
with one basic question: Is vulnerability the same for leaders as
it is for everyone else? It turns out that it’s not. On August
20, 1991, Hollis Harris, the CEO of struggling Continental Airlines
told his 42,000 employees to pray for the future of the company.
The next day he was fired. What Hollis did was vulnerable, but it
was not leadership. While vulnerability cripples some leaders,
others tap into it and use it as a superpower. Vulnerability alone
makes leaders seem incompetent. Competence on its own makes it hard
for leaders to connect with their people. The key is to develop
both competence and vulnerability, what Jacob calls “The
Vulnerable Leader Equation.” Based on over 100 CEO interviews and
a survey of nearly 14,000 employees, renowned leadership thought
leader and futurist Jacob Morgan shares candid stories and original
research that shows how leaders can tap into vulnerability to
transform themselves, their teams, and their organizations. This
book will show you why it’s so crucial to lead with vulnerability
and how to do it well. You will learn: The difference between being
vulnerable and leading with vulnerability The 5 vulnerable leader
superheroes What makes leaders feel most vulnerable at work and why
The ROI of leading with vulnerability The 8 attributes of
vulnerable leaders What happens when vulnerability is used against
you How to climb the “vulnerability mountain” What keeps
leaders from being vulnerable at work and how to overcome it
Leading With Vulnerability is not just a book to share with your
leaders and your co-workers. It's an invitation to a
paradigm-shifting adventure. Nothing like this has been written
before and, after reading it, you’ll never look at leadership the
same way again.
|
|