Showing posts with label Book. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Book. Show all posts

November 12, 2011

Question Book - My Release


I am really proud and happy to announce that I have released my first book: The question book or Livro das Perguntas. It is a game-pocket-book with 317 questions about life, experiences, love, religion, politics and else with the objective for you to get know more and more your friends! It is a great game to take to the camping, the beach, the bar and play with friends along with great food and drinks!




My friends and I playing the game after the book release!!!


I created a character, an EGG, called EMBURRADINHO or Little SULK (egg on the picture). 


Book cover!


The Question Book promotion winner, Felipe Rollin, with his Ass-Egg picture! Congrats Felipe! 
Very funny!


I ate my character! Indeed!


Actress Mariana Bassoul, the funny egg and I giving out tongues 


Bernardo Souto request a book kiss!



Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/pages/LIVRO-DAS-PERGUNTAS/299135780101794

Promotion: Winner Ass-Egg: https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.302486149766757.94918.299135780101794&type=3

Little SULK at RIOhttps://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.306609212687784.95951.299135780101794&type=1

To buy: SARAIVA ONLINE BOOKSOTORE: http://www.livrariasaraiva.com.br/produto/3686651/livro-das-perguntas/?ID=C8BA0D9E7DB0B040E1D220744



Little SULK at the beach having a coconut water!


Tongue egg at the beach!


Little SULK egg among my golf ball collection!

Book illustration!!!


Promotion picture!

Promotion picture!

Which came first: the egg or the chicken?

Egg's cellulitis !!!


Ostrich egg from Northfield, Missouri! Thanks Herreid Family!

Promotion picture!


Promotion picture!

So that's why I am not posting a lot here at the blog. I have been really busy lately with the book release! My bad!!!

Hugs from Brazil...


August 27, 2011

Special Topics on Calamity Physics - Marisha Pessl


Brazilian Cover
I have to say its much better than the original one

You can call me crazy, but I saw that book in a Bookstore next to my house and I was really curious about it.
After reading its review, I decided I wanted to read. However, the book was really expensive here in Brazil (R$65,00 = which would be $32,00), so I decided to wait. Soon enough, the Bookstore went out of business and sold every book really cheap. A bad news are always followed by a good ones. Or the other way around. I preferred the bookstore. Oh Well!

The book became a metro book for me, that's how I call the books I read during the 45 minutes on the daily metro (1,3 hours total). Usually I read fast books, poems or short stories are preferred. They are faster and easier to read with all those people, music and noise around.

Anyway, I am slowly reading Special Topics on Calamity Physics on my way to work and I am finding it really nice. The narrative is amazing. The tone is ironic and slightly funny. The story is a mystery.
                             


"Dazzling," (People) "Exuberant," (Vogue) "marvelously entertaining," (The Dallas Morning News) Marisha Pessl's mesmerizing debut has critics raving and heralds the arrival of a vibrant new voice in American fiction. At the center of this "cracking good read"4 is clever, deadpan Blue van Meer, who has a head full of literary, philosophical, scientific, and cinematic knowledge. But she could use some friends. Upon entering the elite St. Gallway school, she finds some-a clique of eccentrics known as the Bluebloods. One drowning and one hanging later, Blue finds herself puzzling out a byzantine murder mystery. Nabokov meets Donna Tartt (then invites the rest of the Western Canon to the party) in this novel-with "visual aids" drawn by the author-that has won over readers of all ages.




Publishers Weekly:
Starred Review. Pessl's showy (often too showy) debut novel, littered as it is with literary references and obscure citations, would seem to make an unlikely candidate for a successful audiobook. Yet actor and singer Emily Janice Card (a North Carolina native like the author) has a ball with Pessl's knotty, digressive prose, eating up Pessl's array of voices, impressions and asides like an ice-cream sundae. Card reads as if she is composing the book as she goes along, with a palpable sense of enjoyment present in almost every line reading. Her girlish voice, immature but knowing, is the perfect sound for Pessl's protagonist and narrator Blue van Meer, wise beyond her years even as she stumbles through a disastrous final year of high school. Card brings out the best in Pessl's novel and papers over its weak spots as ably as she can. 



July 3, 2011

Letters of Vincent van Gogh

Daily, I spend about 2 hours on traffic going to work. Sometimes I am able to read on the buss. I prefer fast texts like poems or short stories, because the buss shakes a lot and I get dizzy.


Brazilian Version
By L&PM Pocket Book

My current buss-book is called Letters of Vincent Van Gogh.


Letter from Vincent van Gogh to Theo van Gogh, Etten, September 1881

Van Gogh was 37 and on the edge of fame when, in 1890, he shot and killed himself. Unable to sell his brilliant canvases, he was utterly dependent upon his younger brother, Theo, to whom most of the letters collected here are written. Anguished by loss of faith after planning to be a priest, disappointed in several once-promising love affairs, he was also so tormented by poverty that one of his artistic breakthroughs occurred when, without proper colors, he brushed in "a garden, green by nature, but painted without actual green, nothing but Prussian blue and chrome yellow." 



Whether van Gogh's suicide was the inevitable culmination of depression, or due to epilepsy or to professional frustration (he is remembered, beyond his pictures, for razoring off part of his ear), his letters reveal that the end was long contemplated. In 1878, he had written to Theo, "It must be good to die in the knowledge that one has done some truthful work." By the time he put a hole in his chest, he knew he had done that. The letters, edited by de Leeuw, the director of the van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam, echo the artist's passionate voice, and the connective narrative excerpts other letters that readers may regret not having in full. Integral to the letters are 49 pen-and-ink sketches that evidence van Gogh's development into a creative force. Although each letter possesses an inherent pathos because one knows what lies ahead, van Gogh's epistolary appeal goes beyond melodrama. Often inspired by books despite being a limner of peasant life and the land, he once wrote, "How beautiful Shakespeare is, who else is as mysterious as he is; his language and method are like a brush trembling with excitement and ecstasy." 


                                                          ***


This is a very fine collection of the letters, with multiple sides of VVG revealed. To read a collection of letters by an artist whose work you know very well is to invite yourself to take a look at him as a person. As a person, I found that I liked him best in these letters when he was struggling with his religion, his art, and his purpose. 


He writes about his friendships, his family, his attempts at love affairs, his religious beliefs and questions, and most importantly, about his art. These letters reveal him as anything but the anti-social person often portrayed in the past, with the ones about his relationship with his brother Theo being particularly touching.


Van Gogh was a prolific correspondent and an absolutely wonderful writer. His prose is remarkable--he could have been a writer as well as an artist. These letters shed light on the inner thoughts and the inspiration for his art and show him as a person of great passion and compassion.


One of the passages I liked was: ". . . after all I think, I think, that I would still rather be a shoemaker than a musician in colours."


***
So, if you want to join me in this reading, I would be honored. I am starting it now.
I will definitely take a LONG time to read as I always feel dizzy reading on the buss...


Also, I found this website really interesting: http://vangoghletters.org/vg/letters.html and http://www.vggallery.com/letters/to_theo_saintremy.htm



June 19, 2011

Linchpin by Seth Godin


I have just finished reading Linchpin by Seth Godin. If you have been following my blog you know that I follow Seth constantly. I love his inputs and analysis about marketing and markets. If you want to know, I liked this book, but you have to know exactly what is its intent or you will be deeply disappointed. 

No deep theories, no deep analysis, no deep content. This is a book that makes you think about your status quo, about your actual situation, your goals and the reason of all that surrounds you. The book works mostly as a professional push or shaken, if you will, than a "brainer" book. So, that´s it. If you are in that time of your life that you stand in front of a bifurcation and you ought to choose a direction to go or lyou want to listen to a friend´s point of view...that´s the book! If you want a deep analysis, that´s not! As artists are oftenly in that position...you should try it...

Seth argues that you should overcome the faceless cog and become a Linchpin, a professional or a person with differentials. There is no map to become a linchpin, and he doesn't attempt to create one for us. Seth only describes what are the characteristics of a Linchpin and what it is expected of her-him. 

Check the interviews and the review!





Review by Debbie S. Glade


While reading Linchpin I looked around a few times to see if author Seth Godin was perhaps peering through my living room window to see my reaction. It really felt like he was talking to me, singling me out. How could he know how I rationalize things? 

"There are no longer any great jobs where someone else tells you precisely what to do." 

Linchpin is a most unusual, well-organized, concise book about what it takes to become indispensable in the workplace - whether you work for someone else (at any level) or are self-employed. It's about how business has rapidly changed and how treating employees like factory workers (or doing your job like one) doesn't work any longer. We must make choices and take action to "chart our own paths" and add value that others do not. We cannot wait for a boss or a job description to tell us what to do, rather we must just take the initiative ourselves. Only then can we become indispensable "linchpins," rather than replaceable "cogs." There are so many fantastic quotes in the book too. 

"You don't become indispensable merely because you are different. But the only way to become indispensable is to be different. That's because if you're the same, so are plenty of other people." 

The 14 chapters in this book are each broken down into short segments with great headlines that summarize them. Godin uses special vocabulary words to describe the many factors that go into becoming a linchpin. These words have unique meanings in the context in which they are used. You'll learn interpretations for terms such as art, thrashing, gifts, resistance, pranja, ship, lizard brain, shenpa, emotional labor and others. 

"Art is unique, new and challenging to the status quo. It's not decoration. It's something that causes change. Art cannot be merely commerce. It must also be a gift." 

You'll never be bewildered or bored while reading Linchpin. It will awaken a part of your brain that you may have never used before. It will make you take a deep look inside your thoughts, patterns and habits and oblige you to realize there are things you can change right now to become more of a success, a true "artist." In fact, you may find yourself sliding down in your chair a bit while reading, like I did. But that's okay; it's part of the learning process. 

"If all you can do is the task and you're not in a league of your own at doing the task, you're not indispensable." 

This is particularly true in the chapter on page 101 entitled The Resistance. Just this chapter alone is worth the price of the book. You've got to read it twice to really capture all it offers. Here you'll be faced with all the reasons why you're currently not as indispensable as you could be - as you should be. Have you ever delayed a project and not delivered (Seth calls this shipping) on deadline just because you were trying to achieve perfection? That's resistance. It is the "lizard brain" way-of-thinking that causes us to resist. Do you find yourself doing a lot of busy work (obsessive email checking, Tweeting, etc.) rather than taking action that really adds value? That's resistance too. 

"The lizard brain is the reason you're afraid, the reason you don't ship when you can. The lizard brain is the source of the resistance." 

Godin will educate you on what it truly means to be a valuable gift giver. He'll tell you that there's no map in existence to help you become an indispensable artist. He'll tell you that you have a choice to either "Fit in or stand out. Not both." He'll even tell you that there are times when your art will not work, and for whatever reason, you may not be able to get paid for your particular talent. 

"Maybe you can't make money doing what you love (at least what you love right now) But I bet you can figure out what you can do to make money (if you choose wisely)." 

"There is no map. No map to be a leader, no map to be an artist. I've read hundreds of books about art (in all its forms) and how to do it, and not one has a clue about the map, because there isn't one." 

The only thing Seth Godin left out of his well-researched Linchpin book is that his principles can be applied not only to business but also to other aspects of a person's life. Linchpins can be better spouses, friends and community members at large. They can be truly indispensable in many ways. 

"Nothing about becoming indispensable is easy. If it's easy, it's already been done and it's no longer valuable." 

Ever read a business or marketing book that is interesting while you're reading it, but two days after you have finished it, you cannot really remember the gist of what you read? Linchpin is not one of those books. This one will stay with you. There is nothing else like it; it can change your future. That is, if you set your lizard brain aside and replace it with the true linchpin artist in you.

  Review

"It's easy to see why people pay to hear what he has to say."
-Time

"Thousands of authors write business books every year, but only a handful reach star status and the A-list lecture circuit. Fewer still-one, to be exact-can boast his own action figure. . . . Godin delivers his combination of counterintuitive thinking and a great sense of fun."
-BusinessWeek

"This book is a gift."
-Jacqueline Novogratz, Founder, The Acumen Fund

"If Seth Godin didn't exist we'd need to invent him-that's how indispensable he is! You hold in your hands a compelling, accessible, and purpose-filled book. Read it, and do yourself a big favor. Your future will thank you!"
-Alan Webber, Founder, Fast Company

"This is what the future of work (and the world) looks like. Actually, it's already happening around you."
-Tony Hsieh, CEO, Zappos.com

"Thousands of authors write business books every year, but only a handful reach star status and the A-list lecture circuit. Fewer still - one, to be exact - can boast his own action figure....Godin delivers his combination of counterintuitive thinking and a great sense of fun."
-BusinessWeek



May 27, 2011

The PhoneBoox (UK Invention)



As economic pressures have threatened public libraries with closure from lack of funds, the rise of mobile telecoms has rendered public phone boxes effectively redundant. Making the best of two seemingly unrelated developments, the UK-based PhoneBoox has converted a leftover phone box into an informal book exchange for the community.
The brainchild of British media consultant James Econs, the PhoneBoox in Horsley, Surrey, developed over the course of a single weekend afternoon. After being inspired with the idea, Econs cut and painted wood shelves, then installed them in the phone box. Books were scrounged and placed on the shelves, and a message to visitors was inscribed: “You are welcome to take me... but please make sure to replace me!! enjoy.” The PhoneBoox has been a hit ever since it was installed, Econs writes, and a fresh supply of books continues to flow.
Econs explains: “I guess the point is you don't have to 'be' anything to make things happen. I'm not a designer, I'm not a bookworm and I'm not a carpenter. I just had an idea, and without really caring whether it would be 'a success' - more just wanting to see what would happen - I got on with it. ... That is exactly what I like so much about it; Socially Beneficial Creative Vandalism. Manifestation to deployment in one lazy Saturday afternoon.”
The PhoneBoox book exchange from James Econs on Vimeo.

Indeed, much like the repurposing of old candy machines to sell seed bombs for guerrilla gardening or using retired cigarette vending machines to sell art, the PhoneBoox proves once again that grassroots innovation really can conquer all. Be inspired!
MESSAGE FROM THE PHONE BOOX'S CREATOR
I am no designer - far from it in fact. I am not even a book worm. The term 'book-worm' actually couldn't be further from the truth. I read about the art of organisation and how to free employees minds enough to get their best work out of them. 

In my local village there sits a lonely classic old red Phonebox. With the age of mobile phones in full swing, you can imagine it is seldom used - except maybe as a game for groups of kids to come and smash the windows in one a month. Perfectly located at the end of a quite-ish high street with the bonus of two benches next to it, the local newsagents opposite and a park just down the road, it actually makes for a good place for all ages to hang out... and they do often. 

With the recent threat of library closures in the UK, what better way to restore these icons of England's past with a rejuvenating revamp? With nothing planned on a Saturday, the idea came at about 10am. Past experience told me that projects like these can be forgotten in a flash if action isn't immediately taken so, with lessons learned I set to work. By 11am, I had location and interior photos along with some basic measurements. 12pm came, and I had set-up a workbench in the garden with makeshift shelves already cut. 1pm; the shelves had been painted and while waiting for them to dry I had the idea of making some book-ends out of the left-over ply. 2pm saw me scrounging around for books that were ultimately waiting for a new home or headed for the charity shop. 

Back at the Phonebox - kids watching closely - I got on with its installation and finished off by writing a message to encourage good use; and put a poster up on the local notice board.

I guess the point is you don't have to 'be' anything to make things happen. I'm not a designer, I'm not a bookworm and I'm not a carpenter. I just had an idea, and without really caring whether it would be 'a success' - more just wanting to see what would happen - I got on with it. 

Its been a hit with friends bringing comments like "the Banksy of the carpentry world!" and offers of fresh books are still rolling in. That is exactly what I like so much about it; Socially Beneficial Creative Vandalism. Manifestation to deployment in one lazy Saturday afternoon.

Introducing 'The PhoneBoox'

(The PhoneBoox book exchange is located in Horsley, Surrey, UK and is open to all...)

April 25, 2011

Tribal Leadership by Dave Logan, John King & Halee Fischer-Wright

Today, I finished another book called Tribal Leadership. Actually, I finish listening to its e-book (MP3).
I believe it can be really useful for people who want to lead tribes and groups for a noble cause.

I hope you like my summary which emphazises the tribal stages, its descriptions and advises on leader's actions:


Book Highlights

> Tribal is the powerful vehicles. The culture is the trigger.
> Tribal more than 150 people.
> Exist more Stage 2 then Stage 3 in organizations.
> The essence of leadership is to get people to do things they know it is in their self interest.
> Most of all that are seeing like successful are just survivors.
> “If you wait first, you are last”
> A huge part of playing the game is to know how to phrase what you want
> “I teach, I do lectures, speeches, everyone applauds and feels really excited, but I after they leave no one is changed. Nothing changed in people’s lives. My impact is far less than I idealized. No action is done through the messages I gave. How can I motivate people to act?”
> Only in stage 5 the need of a competitive / adversary goes away
> Awareness comes before any action or feelings
> Coaching is to let the ideas create an awareness how things can be different for you and others
> “If you category any propose in the world it would be to help someone. What is the reason anyone is here. If you have to shortly define humanity, it would be it”
> Transformation begins with accepting things exactly as they are and as they are not

References mentioned in the Book

* Spiral Dynamics by Don Edward Beck and Christopher Cowan
* Geeks and Geezers by Warren G. Bennis and Robert J. Thomas
* The Prince by Niccolò Machiavelli (Maquiavel)

Tribal Stages

1. Mind-set for “Life Sucks”
Violence, aggression, isolated gangs, own rules, no loyalty, alienated, verbal abuse, vandalism, no point to value or morality, give in the reality of the situation, hostility, only see continue despair.

2. My Life Sucks
Passive antagonist, no passion, sarcasm, cluster of pathetic victims, avoid accountability, no innovation, no follow up on ideas, disconnected from organizations concerns, no initiative or passion, passive aggrieves behavior, no amount of time or effort would help the situation, this tribe is an unending well of unmet needs, rights, disappointments and repressed anger, offended behavior is not tolerated, apathy, do the minimum amount of work to get by, nothing changes, sarcasm, resignation, people blame lack of education, poor social network, lack of political skill, unsupportive spouse, it is contagious, complaint addicted, miserable.

3. I am great and You are not
Knowledge is power, winning is personal, outthink competitor in daily basis, ambition, skilled, don’t have enough time, individual basis, no amount of team players will make them a tribe, people engage easily on projects but when you observe closely they only think about themselves, focus on appearing smarter, no team concerns, personal interests, don’t bring people together, don’t share information.
Leverage point: Addictive hit they get from winning, do more talking, know more and disclose less than others mean power, use the info in the best interest, think they are in stage 4, focus on time management, obsession with self, lone ranger.
4. We are great and They are not
Eye contact, overall vibe is tribal pride, seek its own competitor, leader is the one with influence over the target, the bigger the fowl more powerful the tribe, common propose, adhoc parternership.

5. Life is great
Committed to shared values; do not tolerate certain behaviors, language evolve into infinity potential, innocent wonderment, miraculous innovations, vision, leadership and inspiration, don’t refer to the competition, commitment to the organization values are so important as their own, no work place conflict, the results make history.

Tribal Leader´s Actions

Stage 1

  1. Never give up at anyone
  2. Listen & Listen carefully
  3. Understand the others perspective
  4. Get them evolved in clubs with mentor and professors
  5. Give up the language and practices of a Tribe and adopt the other

Leverage point:
  1. Encourage to go where the action is (groups, meeting, societies, associations)
  2. Encourage to see and know ways where life works (example, inspiration)
  3. Encourage to cut ties to the people in Tribe Stage 1.


Stage 2

  1. You can’t attack or try to make better the subject of their complaints. They will just find others.
  2. Talk the language of the stage above
  3. Explain you see potential in the person
  4. Spot the one that want to be different and work one-by-one
  5. Build trust in your intentions and confidence in the abilities
  6. Spend time directing with specific actions

Leverage points:
1.Encourage to establish dyadic (two person relationship)
2.Encourage to establish relationship in Stage
3. In one-o-one session show areas of competencies with positive tone
Assign project that he does well in a short period of time


Stage 3

  1. Tribal success is more important than personal success
  2. Create blind spots to make people
  3. Be hungry for tool, tips and techniques.
  4. Values are not personal but collective
  5. Break the illusion of “We are great”
  6. Learn business but without the ME focus
  7. Have or introduce vision and values
  8. Learn and get a top degree program
  9. Find a mentor at stage 4

Leverage points:
  1. Encourage him to be a part of projects bigger than anything he can do alone.
  2. Ensure or assign him works that require partnership
  3. Point out that his success came from his own level of commitment, but show him that what brought him to this point will not be enough to move him forward. He will need another mind-set and style.
  4. Describe role model ideals in the company (# of triads in the network, successful that comes from groups, collective mind set)
  5. Tell stories of the time you made the transition from stage 3 to stage 4
  6. Coach him that real power does not come from knowledge but from networks. Show him that there is much leverage in wisdom than from information.
  7. Help him to know that his goals require help from other people
  8. Encourage him to overcommunicate.
  9. Encourage him to communicate with transparency

You will decide through your goal settings if you need to go from Stage 3 (win) to Stage 4 (higher impact).

>>>>>>>>>>//<<<<<<<<<<<

Epiphany (Awakening Moment)

Ø  “So now, what are you going to do?”
The turning point in the life, professionally and personally, with no turning back.

Epiphany #1: Soul searching
Epiphany #2: How can I fix this? (Awareness of a need of different way of operation)
Epiphany #3: System of Stage 3 develops no true followers, hence no legacy. When you operate in                     stage 4 you can have individual legacy.
Epiphany #4: Realizes the impact he aims is not
Epiphany #5: Realizes the mind-set “I, me and my system” does not work
Epiphany #6: View the world and the others in the eyes of others
Epiphany #7: The situation can not be fixed, but abandoned.
Epiphany #8: What’s the real goal? Make impact in a larger group of people.
                       The ego hit of an accomplishment is not the same as success itself. His attention shifts n                          to what is really important to his and almost always the goal is tribal.
Epiphany #9: The more the group succeeds, the more I succeed.
Epiphany #10: Speak for the tribe, in the name of the tribe.

>>>>>>>>>>//<<<<<<<<<<<

Stage 4 – “I am because we are”

Concepts:

  1. Today I share with you, because tomorrow you will share with me.
* Ubuntu: is an ethic or humanist philosophy focusing on people's allegiances and relations with each other. The word has its origin in the Bantu languages of southern Africa. Ubuntu is seen as a classical African concept meaning "I am what I am because of who we all are."
      2.   Innovation, communication, fun, collaboration
      3.   A company is only as strong as the culture of its tribes.
            * Example company: IDEO – Design Consulting
      4.   Stage 4 requires a different mind-set and behavior
      5.   The tribes become before profits and relationships before the business models.
      6.   A small group of people can be a seed group
      7.   Everyone seems equals
      8.   The hard part is to start a tribal
      9.   The business has to truly measure its values.
    10.   The physical space/design should match the values. The future of corporate commercial     architecture must hold hands with the future of collaborative culture.
    12.   Clients should be partners.
    13.   Start of with a common set of values (communication, ethics, competition, quality,            collaboration, great value).
    14.   Pride ties actions to success
    15.   Values: Communication, Collaboration, partnership, innovation, making a difference, dignity,       respect and learning Aiming to reach the Accomplishment.

>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

Leader should:

  1. Show example when applying the rules to everyone. All rules should work in advance of the tribe.
  2. Tribal leader don’t back down from difficult decisions. Stick to the principles.
  3. Focus on we give the credit to others as a collaborator.
  4. Encourage wild ideas.
  5. Stay focused
  6. Be visual
  7. Should have a tribal antenna – find people
  8. Focus com collective success
  9. Identify core values and Align on a noble cause
  10. Hire and promote according to the values, not only skills.
  11. Make the values tangible.
  12. Find values that unit people to reach a common identity.
  13. Talk about the values with employers; align them with the practices of the companies.
  14. Tribal reactions indicate the moment when the values become real.
  15. Find expressions of core values to achieve outcomes.
  16. The moment of truth: living values is not easy. Commitment to values requires courage.
  17. Find a noble cause to unite the values. It can capture the Tribal’s ultimate aspirations.
  18. Everyone got to win with the values.
  19. A noble cause represents the earning of a tribal, technique accuracy isn’t important. Most people align on the Vision. A noble cause is a pronouncement of a future state that the tribal bring about though its coordinated action. It’s bigger than what one person can do alone. It requires people best efforts and passion. Even if people fail, the noble cause is worth the effort.
  20. To create a noble cause you should keep asking: in service of what are we working, are we making an effort?   & ask the big four questions:
      1 What is working well?
      2 What’s not working?
      3 What can we do to makes things that are not working work?
      4 Is there something else?
21. On going communication is crucial for increasing values among employers.
22. Oil Change: do a mid-way check on the values. Always talk about it and let others talk.
23. YOU should renew life! “We renew life!” should be the theme.
24. Tribal leaders´ description: Using works to get the best out of other people and changing everything.
25. A noble cause and values should be re-visited once a year.

>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

Triads and Networking

  1. Triads: three people relationship.
  2. Ability to Triads: Drive, endless energy, vision for the business, focus on integrity and values to create business relationship between two people based on core values and mutual self interest.
  3. Have two people beside of you all the times in events, talk to them both at the same time, have the ability to link, build and deepen their relationship. Introduce people in two levels: resume issues (why do they need to meet each other, what can they profit from this network) and discuss what makes each person important (what are their core values?). The actions should build triads which results on a good reputation as magnetic person for business.
  4. Once the tribe gets bigger than 150 people it divides itself into two tribes, each filled with triads.

      Triad´s Anathomy

  1. It is formed by three people, each forming a triangle with each leg of the structure responsible for quality of the relationship with the other two parts.
  2. Use triads to resolve problems. Remind employers that they should be in the same path driven by shared values. This would solve any disagreement.
  3. The important thing is to remind the parts the essential: team comes first. “What is best for the team here?” Every decision should take this in consideration.
  4. Not only forming and nurturing triads save the tribal leader time, they encourage the level of followership that is unimaginable in stage 3.
  5. Triads bring a lot of support to help on your efforts and results. You are not alone!
  6. Triads have three distinct characteristics: Stability, Innovation and Scalatibily.
  7. LinkedIn is one example of triads: employer, employee and program.
  8. Introducing new person in one group automatically makes the group check out the benefits of this introduction. All parts should profit.
  9. Scaling tribal effectiveness within Triads: A leader should set the tone, brings volunteers, lead the people doing the work and let the tribe grown on its own. The applicants pull expands geometrically as the enthusiasm of the prospects. People should only see a blizzard of networking activity bringing together experts from different fields. Everyone contributing ideas and leveraging off one another’s wisdom.  Leaders should be match makers.
  10. Know the values, current projects, aspirations, interest of each person in your tribe. Introduce people on both levels (this is possible only by knowing each person, take your time and learn about people – there are no short cuts on that!). Use the theory of small gifts or have the credibility with each person. Form triads bring two people together on the basis of their current projects and shared values. Pass through stage 3. Be great at someone world class if possible. Be authentic.
  11. Triad is the key for stabilizing stage 4 and to lip to stage 5.


Stage 5 – “Life is great”

Concepts

  1. No evidence of tribal pride, but of innocent wonderment.
  2. Life is great language used devoid by any competitor. Not that the competitor does not exists, but it doesn’t matter.
  3. Values that are important in stage 4, are vital in stage 5, life giving.
  4. The noble cause is the compass of stage 5.
  5. World Call: New appreciation of the ability to contribute to global concerns and all inclusive view. Improve the wellbeing of clients and organizations and improve the life of the 6 billion people on earth.
  6. Stage 5 uses: noble cause, set of shared values, global brand, top talent, highly nimble network tribe, behaviors, and triads.
  7. The emergency of a stage 5 tribe is so unfamiliar to most of us that we go to religious or spiritual words on describing it. “Wow!” Moment.
  8. Culture and strategic performance come together.
  9. A tribe should only go to stage 5 if it is stable at stage 4 and it has the business results to keep it there.
  10. Tribes like that are examples to others.
  11. The future of business if stage 5. The challenge is to

>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

Leader should:

  1. Unlock the potential in invidious, companies, professionals, and organizations.
  2. Attract people that are driven by mission and purpose.
  3. Emphasize the positive.

Dave Logan on Tribal Leadership



FoxNews




Til next book!



Related Posts with Thumbnails