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Ideal Books

  • Malcolm Gladwell: blink

    Malcolm Gladwell: blink
    How developed is your intuition? Gladwell's book speaks to what we inately know and how this can impact how we keep our ideals in motion.

  • Geshe Michael Roach: Diamond Cutter

    Geshe Michael Roach: Diamond Cutter
    Some great tools and insights for keeping myself and my ideals in motion.

  • Daniel Quinn: Ishmael

    Daniel Quinn: Ishmael
    Fascinating book that places the reader in a position to view our culture as humans through the eyes of an outsider. Free of prejudice and beliefs, the outsider's view is provacative. In reading this book you will come to question "truths" that, for many of us, are sorely in need of examination.

  • The Arbinger Institute: Leadership and Self-Deception

    The Arbinger Institute: Leadership and Self-Deception
    Learning how the process of self-deception works - and how to avoid it and stay in touch with our innate sense of what's right - what's ideal - is at the heart of this book.

  • Peter Senge: Presence

    Peter Senge: Presence
    This is not a typical business book. It offers powerful tools and ideas for changing the mindset of leaders and unlocking the latent potential necessary to keep our ideals in motion.

  • Jerry Porras, Stewart Emery, Mark Thompson: Success Built to Last: Creating a Life that Matters

    Jerry Porras, Stewart Emery, Mark Thompson: Success Built to Last: Creating a Life that Matters
    From one of the authors of Built to Last and one of my good friends, this book expertly draws on hundereds of conversations with remarkable people from around the world to explore why successful people stay successful and what you can do to have a life that is "built to last".

  • Arbinger Institute: The Anatomy of Peace: Resolving the Heart of Conflict (BK Life)

    Arbinger Institute: The Anatomy of Peace: Resolving the Heart of Conflict (BK Life)
    "...is a brilliantly written, stimulating read with a rare clarity that awakens reflection and compels action. I recommend it without hesitation to anyone interested in finding solutions to conflicts ranging from the personal to the global." ~ Gilead Sher, former Chief of Staff of the Prime Minister of Israel and chief negotiator with the Palestinians

  • Bruce H. Lipton: The Biology Of Belief: Unleashing The Power Of Consciousness, Matter And Miracles

    Bruce H. Lipton: The Biology Of Belief: Unleashing The Power Of Consciousness, Matter And Miracles
    Fascinating look at the way we are literally creating our present and future realities from the inside out.

  • Richard Strozzi-Heckler: The Leadership Dojo: Build Your Foundation as an Exemplary Leader

    Richard Strozzi-Heckler: The Leadership Dojo: Build Your Foundation as an Exemplary Leader
    Profound and practical don't often go together and with this book Richard Strozzi-Heckler has managed to accomplish this rare feat. This book is one of the best treatments I've read on a topic as old as humankind. With humor, storytelling and a grasp of leadership that is truly masterful the author "leads" the reader on a journey exploring both what it means and what it takes to be an exceptional leader. It's a journey that culminates in viewing "leader" and "leadership" in a way that shatters stereotypes and makes the art of leadership accessible to any that are required to be leaders in their lives. Highly recommended!

  • Pam Bartlett: Women Connected - A Session-by-Session Coaching Guide for Women's Groups

    Pam Bartlett: Women Connected - A Session-by-Session Coaching Guide for Women's Groups
    An extraordinary and practical guide to sustaining ideals in motion. Author Marianne Williamson says "Women Connected paves the way, by bringing us closer to each other and to the truth within ourselves."

Recently Updated Weblogs

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May 13, 2008

Leaders Define "Space"

I recently had a conversation with a very good friend who related a story of a chance meeting he had shortly after the Vietnam War with someone during a long airplane trip back from Asia. The individual that he sat next to was in the military and was involved with biological research. My friend eventually asked a question pertaining to how the effectiveness of biological weapons was determined. The answer surprised him. It wasn’t the mortality rate that his seatmate cited. It was the receptivity of the environment to the particular pathogen that would be introduced. The environment’s ability to support and grow the pathogen was the key to determining the pathogen’s effectiveness.

Results in an organization emerge in direct correlation to the aspects of the environment that most nurture them. Similar to my friend’s airplane conversation, think in terms of disease resulting from bacteria or virus growth in an organism. If the “environment” within the organism (the health of and relationships amongst the various organs, systems, and bodily functions) is not conducive to a noxious bacteria or virus taking root and growing the organism will remain free of the disease – which may be thought of as the “result” called good health (or profitability for a company). Similarly, disease can be thought of as simply a result that is directly correlated to the receptivity of the organism’s “environment” to support the growth of a particularly noxious bacteria or virus (think of a disengaged workforce where fear is a chief motivational tool and you’ll likely find poor product or service quality). In nature bacteria and viruses of all kinds are always present – and they don’t always take root and grow. The receptivity (or not) of the environment is the key.

Looked at this way, leadership is an outward facing activity. Outward in the sense that an effective leader is continuously attending to their environment – the “space” that they and their organization occupies that makes certain results likely.

As a leader, I need to attend to defining the space in which I move and the environments on which I most want to have influence. I do this not by managing tasks but by focusing on the type and quality of the interconnected relationship that are required to produce the results I desire. Leadership is about defining space; management is about the execution of tasks.

This gives rise to two unorthodox claims: To effectively look outward an effective leader cannot be preoccupied with task accomplishment. For that matter, it is also unwise for leadership (as an activity) to be unduly focused on any particular result. Results are simply a metric that indicates what the environment is designed to produce. Therefore, if I as a leader am not getting the results I want the place to look is to the type and quality of the myriad interconnected relationship within our organizational environmental “space”.

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