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Leadership Wise. Why Business Books Suck, but Wise Leaders Succeed. Edition No. 1

  • Book

  • 240 Pages
  • September 2023
  • John Wiley and Sons Ltd
  • ID: 5839760

Why do so many business books feel useless the moment they come in contact with your day job?

Business books often contradict one another, each providing advice that's only helpful some of the time, and exhaustingly, your boss is going to cherry pick only the books that suit their way of working.

Additionally, too often leadership books push fundamentally changing your personality to look like some idealized leader, often some dude. That dude may not even be a business leader! They might be a marine, a mountain climber, or a politician. Their stories might inspire you to summit Everest, but they're not going to help you figure out the looming company merger or what to do with that struggling manager

In Leadership Wise, Chief Product Officer at Podium, John Foreman, delivers a different and refreshingly practical take on business leadership. The author moves beyond what a leader should look like, to discuss how you can make better decisions over time to help your organization accomplish its goals. Regardless of a reader's personality and background, John provides practical advice for how anyone can become a great leader just as they are by making more effective decisions over and over again. It's not about becoming a 5-star general or a mythical titan of industry, it's about making better decisions more often. In the book you'll find:

  • A structure for understanding and becoming comfortable with the unending contradictions of leading in business
  • Strategies for defining priorities, sourcing options, and choosing the best decision
  • Advice for channeling your emotions and company culture to more effectively solve problems 

An engaging and hands-on exploration of how to lead real people in real companies by making the best decisions possible with the information you have, Leadership Wise belongs on the desks of managers, executives, directors, entrepreneurs, and founders everywhere.

Table of Contents

A Few Things Up Front xv

Chapter 1 Business Books Suck 1

Context Is Everything: Do Things That [Don’t?] Scale 6

What If I Said That Bad Leaders Are Too Consistent? 11

Introducing Wisdom Literature 12

The Facebook Uncle Dilemma 14

Chapter 2 Let’s Warm Up! Ten Business Choices Where One Option and Its Opposite Both Have Merit 19

Let’s Take a “Walk Around the Business” 22

People 24

A Players vs. B Players 25

Accountability vs. Blamelessness 30

Inputs vs. Outputs 34

Far vs. Fast 36

Process 39

Speed vs. Order 40

Specialization vs. Generalization 41

Top Down vs. Bottom Up 45

Product 49

Good vs. Great 50

Bundling vs. Unbundling 52

Build vs. Buy 55

I Didn’t Give You Answers; I Gave You Options 57

Let’s Do a Little Exercise 59

Chapter 3 Generating Options 61

Let’s Get This Out of the Way: Consult Yourself 64

Consult Your Co- workers and Customers 66

Set Expectations in These Conversations: You’re Just Gathering Input 67

Consult Your Network 69

Go Ahead, Read the Business Books! 70

Management by Metaphor 71

What Are My Levers? Chart Options Against Your Decision Levers 79

Using All the Parts of the Animal 81

Pull a “10th Man Rule” 82

Checking In on Our Exercise 84

Wisdom Literature Would Suggest None of These Options Is “Wrong” 84

Isn’t This Overkill? “Paralysis by Analysis” 85

Over- confidently Incorrect 86

This Needn’t Take Long 86

Analysis Paralysis Is All About Objectives, Not Options 87

Chapter 4 What’s Your Objective? 89

A Problem Isn’t a Priority 91

Two Words to Know and Love: Minimize and Maximize 93

Is It Possible to Love Two Objectives at the Same Time? 96

Turn Priorities Into Constraints 100

Chapter 5a A Brief Interlude 103

There’s Plenty of Book Left! 104

Chapter 5 Check Yourself Before You Wreck Yourself 107

Going Deeper with Data 108

Is an Anecdote Data? 109

Quantitative vs. Qualitative Who Wants Pretty Good Pizza? 110

Priorities and Constraints Come First 112

You Know What They Say About Assumptions 112

Default to Learning Fast and Iterating 113

Not All Who Wander Are Lost 114

One- way vs. Two- Way Doors or Are They Streets? Two- Way Things 117

Do a Premortem 121

Blazing Through Covering Your Ass 127

Chapter 6 Making the Most of Execution 129

Make Your Decisions “Fully Loaded” 131

“Use All the Parts of the Animal” 133

Establish Success and Failure Criteria Up Front 135

Be Transparent, But Commit to the Bit! 139

Transparency Costs You Nothing 140

What’s “My Part of Our Whole?” 142

Commit to the Bit 143

There Is No Separation of Mind and Body 144

Chapter 7 “Keeping It Real” 147

Emotions Are Shortcuts 148

Diving a Little Deeper into My Knee- Jerk Reactions 150

All Feelings Are Valid. Always Acting Out of Them Is Neither Authentic nor Beneficial 155

A Process for Becoming Increasingly Authentic 157

Start with Post Facto Reflection 160

Positive Reinforcement Is the Feedback Loop That May in Fact Change You 163

That’s Cool. But It Doesn’t Apply to Me 164

Enough with This Woo- Woo Feelings Stuff 166

Chapter 8 Shaping the Company for Success 167

Company Culture and Values 168

Culture Is a Sum of Our Values, Explicit and Implicit 169

Good Leaders Actively Check On and Shape Their Culture to Produce Better Decisions 171

Culture Eats Decision- Making for Breakfast 173

So How Do We Eat Culture for Breakfast? 175

Making Implicit Values Explicit 179

People: Hiring, Managing, Promoting, and Firing 183

Hire People Who’ve Read and Like This Book 183

Give Less Responsibility to Those Who Make Poor Decisions. Give More to Those Who Make Great Decisions 185

Scale Your Impact 188

Conclusion 189

Acknowledgments 195

About the Author 197

Index 199

Authors

John W. Foreman