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Aftersleep Books
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Thinking for a Change 11 Ways Highly Successful PThe following report compares books using the SERCount Rating (base on the result count from the search engine). |
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Aftersleep Books - 2005-06-20 07:00:00 | © Copyright 2004 - www.aftersleep.com () | sitemap | top |
by John C. Maxwell, subtitled "11 Ways Highly
Successful People Approach Life and Work."
I kept taking notes on it and, in fact, my biggest challenge
will be to present my thoughts in just a few paragraphs here . . . the
author presents countless examples, but what makes them
so relevant is that they're all based on real companies and
individuals . . . in addition, he presents many relevant
quotes . . . and perhaps best of all, he concludes each chapter
with several questions that force you to reflect on what you've read.
Even if you've never thought too much about thinking, you'll get
a real feel for such things as:
Big-Picture Thinking--seeing the world beyond your own ideas and
how that leads to great ideas;
Focused Thinking--removing mental clutter and distractions to
realize your full potential;
Creative Thinking--stepping out of the "box" and making
breakthroughs;
Shared Thinking--working with others to compound results; and
Reflective Thinking--looking at the past to gain a better understanding
of the future.
There's much more, too . . . but to give you just a feel for some of the
many memorable passages, consider the following:
* Because of my workload, I also have to skip doing many things that
I would love to do. For example, every week I hand off projects that
I think would be fun to do myself. I practice the 10-80-10 principle
with the people to whom I'm delegating a task. I help with the
first 10 percent by casting vision, laying down parameters, providing
resources, and giving encouragement. Then once they've done the
middle 80 percent, I come alongside them again and help them take
whatever it is the rest of the way, if I can. I call it putting the cherry
on top.
* Creating additional thoughts is like taking a trip in your car. You may
know where you are going, but only as you move toward your
destination can you see and experience things in a way not possible
before you started. Creative thinking works something like this:
Think - Collect - Create - Correct - Connect
Once you begin to think, you are free to collect. You ask yourself,
What material relates to this thought? Once you have the material,
you ask, What ideas can make the thought better? That can start
to take an idea to the next level. After that, you can correct or
refine it by asking, What changes can make these ideas better? Finally,
you connect the ideas by positioning them in the right context to
make the thought complete and powerful. The whole process happens
more readily when you have a framework or picture of where you
want to go. That frees you to add value to your thinking. If you go
to the ideas, soon the ideas will flow to you.
* If possibility thinking is new to you, you're going to have to give yourself
a lot of coaching to eliminate some of the negative self-talk you may hear
in your head. When you automatically start listing all the things that can
go wrong or all the reasons something can't be done, stop yourself and
say, "Don't go there." Then ask, "What's right about this?" That will help
to get you started. And if negativity is a really big problem for you and
pessimistic things come out of your mouth before you've even thought
them through, you may need to enlist the aid of a friend of family member
to alert you every time you utter negative ideas.