FieldNotes

Our daily Field Notes email is just the kind of jumpstart you need. 
A fast read. Maybe less than a minute. Because sometimes it just takes one insight to change the trajectory of the day.



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  • When Ambition Gets in the Way

    When Ambition Gets in the Way

    Ambition is a prized quality. It drives people to set and pursue goals on their way to making an impact and leaving a mark. Ambition opens doors to new experiences and fuels the innovation necessary for significant achievement. When balanced with humility and a strong ethical code, ambition lights the pathway to success.  Ambitious leaders

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  • Will Artificial Intelligence Make Us Lazy Thinkers?

    Will Artificial Intelligence Make Us Lazy Thinkers?

    It’s too early to tell if Artificial Intelligence Chatbots will make people smarter or dumber. But AI clearly has the potential to replace deep thinking with an instant answer to any question. The option to allow artificial intelligence to think for us will be hugely attractive to many people. If and when that becomes a…

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  • The Art of Setting Deadlines

    The Art of Setting Deadlines

    Progress on tasks is not always a straight line. The best leaders only set exact deadlines when the timing for completion is do or die, or accountability is suspect without it. In all other cases, they suggest a more general timeframe and focus the team’s attention on the goals and mileposts that mark progress. The…

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  • Are Your Performance Measures Current?

    Are Your Performance Measures Current?

    The purpose of performance metrics is to focus the energy of the organization on the critical issues generating its success. If those metrics haven’t been realigned with new priorities, processes, and challenges, they will obscure the picture of how well the enterprise is performing. The ongoing task for leaders is to assess whether the current…

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  • The Overwhelming Allure of the Status Quo Bias

    The Overwhelming Allure of the Status Quo Bias

    Of the most widely studied and thought-about biases, one decision contortion has a disproportionate influence on nearly every decision leaders and team members make and is often overlooked. The prize for the most pervasive decision flaw likely belongs to the Bias of the Status Quo. Every good leader needs to understand this thinking tendency and…

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  • Why Are Some Leaders Praise Stingy?

    Why Are Some Leaders Praise Stingy?

    Good leaders recognize that praise focuses attention on actions worth repeating. The more specific and timely it is, the more it encourages people to replicate their actions. Leaders who don’t praise fail to realize their role in priming and reinforcing the behaviors they want to see from others. Praise given at the right moment is…

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  • Making Presentations Razor Sharp

    Making Presentations Razor Sharp

    Simple means eliminating anything unnecessary, superfluous, or tangential to the main point or takeaway of the presentation. When everything said ties directly to the primary thrust of the presentation, the audience will find solace in the clarity and coherence created by the presenter. That’s why simple is always more persuasive. Complexity is the enemy of…

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  • Does Your Team Have Vision Fatigue?

    Does Your Team Have Vision Fatigue?

    For leaders, keeping the vision and long-range goals front and center for the team is essential work. Team members are more engaged and confident when they know where the ship is headed and how the organization plans to get there. But when progress is slow or inhibited over a long period of time, the team

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  • Name Parts of Your Day

    Name Parts of Your Day

    Naming parts of your day can provide a mental anchor and help to establish a specific intention to boost productivity or enjoyment.  We all set aside specific times to engage in a particular activity, but by committing to the same time every day and then naming it, the activity becomes more purposeful and focused. This

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  • Training for the Hardest Things

    Training for the Hardest Things

    To become a masterful practitioner at anything, performers must train themselves to find delight in the most uncomfortable things. High performers and top athletes put the most work into the hardest things. They know that the more tolerance and pleasure they can muster for embracing the most difficult practice, the larger their zone of competence…

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