Unlocking Leadership Mindtraps

Unlocking Leadership Mindtraps
Author: Jennifer Garvey Berger
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Total Pages: 165
Release: 2019-01-29
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 1503609782

Author and consultant Jennifer Garvey Berger has worked with all types of leaders—from top executives at Google to nonprofit directors who are trying to make a dent in social change. She hears a version of the same plea from every client in nearly every sector around the world: "I know that complexity and uncertainty are testing my instincts, but I don't know which to trust. Is there some way to know what to do when I can't know what's next?" Her newest work is an answer to this plea. Using her background in adult development, complexity theories, and leadership consultancy, Garvey Berger discerns five pernicious and pervasive "mind traps" to frame the book. These are: the desire for simple stories, our sense that we are right, our desire to get along with others in our group, our fixation with control, and our constant quest to protect and defend our egos. In addition to understanding why these natural impulses steer us wrong in a fast-moving world, leaders will get powerful questions and approaches that help them escape these patterns.

Unlocking Leadership Mindtraps

Unlocking Leadership Mindtraps
Author: Jennifer Garvey Berger
Publisher: Stanford Briefs
Total Pages: 168
Release: 2019
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9781503609013

Author and consultant Jennifer Garvey Berger has worked with all types of leaders - from top executives at Google to nonprofit directors who are trying to make a dent in social change. She hears a version of the same plea from every client in nearly every sector around the world: "I know that complexity and uncertainty are testing my instincts, but I don't know which to trust. Is there some way to know what to do when I can't know what's next?" Her newest work is an answer to this plea. Using her background in adult development, complexity theories, and leadership consultancy, Garvey Berger discerns five pernicious and pervasive "mind traps" to frame the book. These are: the desire for simple stories, our sense that we are right, our desire to get along with others in our group, our fixation with control, and our constant quest to protect and defend our egos. In addition to understanding why these natural impulses steer us wrong in a fast-moving world, leaders will get powerful questions and approaches that help them escape these patterns.

The Thinking Trap

The Thinking Trap
Author: Warren Lake
Publisher: Warren Lake
Total Pages: 74
Release: 2017-02-26
Genre: Self-Help
ISBN:

Many of the greatest personal achievement advocates of the past and present have influenced the content leveraged in this book. It can take many hours of reading to get benefit from the writings of these authors, however, this book makes this a quick task. The Thinking Trap provides a wealth of knowledge regarding how to obtain personal success and the traps that we can sometimes lay down for ourselves. The question is, can you avoid the thinking trap?

Mental Traps

Mental Traps
Author: Andre Kukla
Publisher:
Total Pages: 256
Release: 2006
Genre: Errors
ISBN: 9780385662499

Mental Trapsis André Kukla’s immensely enjoyable and down-to-earth catalogue of the everyday blunders we make in our thinking habits, how these traps can affect our entire lives, and what we can do about it. Ever find yourself putting off even relatively minor tasks because of the many other little jobs that you’d have to tackle first? Or spending far too much time worrying about things you can’t change? Or living for the future, not for today? Truth is, we all do — and we all recognize that sometimes our ways of thinking just aren’t productive. When it comes to our daily lives, we often laugh off habits like procrastination as being human nature and just resolve to approach things differently next time. Or, when the issues facing us are enormous or traumatic, we might recognize that we’re dwelling on our problems, or otherwise spending our time on fruitless thinking, but have no idea how to get out of that miserable rut. Either way, it takes up a lot of our mental energy. But as André Kukla makes clear inMental Traps, what wedon’trecognize — or at least admit to ourselves! — is how thinking unproductively about even the smallest elements of everyday life can mount up and keep us from being happy, from living life to the fullest. For what appear to be minor lapses are actually “habitual modes of thinking that disturb our ease, waste enormous amounts of our time, and deplete our energy without accomplishing anything of value for us or anyone else.” So whether we’re dealing with how to attain our major career goals or deciding when to serve the salad course at dinnertime, the end results can be much the same: readily identifiable patterns of wasteful thinking. These, in Kukla’s view, are the mental traps. In his introduction, Kukla compares his method to that of naturalist’s guides, which take a very matter-of-fact approach to providing practical information. He then outlines eleven common mental traps, such as persistence, fixation, acceleration, procrastination and regulation. Devoting a chapter to each, he provides simple examples to help us to identify mental traps in our own thinking — and to recognize why it would be beneficial to change our ways. Our anxiety, our dissatisfaction, our disappointment — these are often the consequences of thinking about the world the wrong way. And it’s in the parallels he draws between the major and minor events of our lives that he truly brings his point home: How is refusing to eat olives like toiling at a job that has long ago lost all satisfaction? How is arriving at the airport too early a symptom of a life never fully lived? Again, what can seem to be a very inconsequential habit can actually signal bigger, more detrimental problems in our ways of thinking. Kukla’s goal — one that we should share, in the end — is to help us realize how much more enjoyable our lives would be if we were a little more attentive to our thought processes. Just as Buddhism, from which the author has drawn many of his ideas, teaches that we should perform all of our acts mindfully, Kukla suggests that we make a conscious effort to step back, clear our minds, and simply observe how our thoughts develop. By doing so, we will begin to recognize unproductive patterns in our own thinking, and then we can try to avoid them. Ultimately, Kukla hopes thatMental Trapswill help readers move towards what he calls a “liberated consciousness” — a state in which we no longer allow mental traps to inhibit our experiences. From having more energy to being able to act impulsively, we’d realize the benefits of living in the moment and feel truly free.

Mindtraps

Mindtraps
Author: Roland Barach
Publisher: International Institute of Trading Mastery
Total Pages: 260
Release: 1996
Genre: Investments
ISBN: 9780935219074

Dr. Van Tharp, noted investment psychologist and "Market Wizard" highly recommends this outstanding book. Most investors are biologically and culturally "wired" to lose money when they play the markets, but this has nothing to do with what the market does. It has everything to do with the way they think. The investor is his own worst enemy. "Mindtraps" convincingly shows you how to overcome the psychological snares which cause you to lose in the market.

Mind Traps

Mind Traps
Author: Tom Rusk
Publisher: HP Books
Total Pages: 326
Release: 1990-01-19
Genre: Psychology
ISBN: 9780895867483

By enabling the reader to look objectively at himself or herself, Mind Traps helps to identify self-defeating attitudes and guide readers to self-understanding and personal growth. Illustrated.

The Thinking Traps

The Thinking Traps
Author: Jessica Cortez
Publisher: Bookbaby
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2019-04
Genre: Psychology
ISBN: 9781543964783

This story follows the Thinking Trap characters as they go to school and play with friends, encounter challenging thoughts that all children face, and ultimately create strong coping strategies to help them today and in the future. The workbook allows elementary-aged children to learn about and identify common thinking traps that might cause them difficulty in their lives and to practice ways to handle their feelings. The second half of the book allows clinicians and families to work through these topics together with the child.

Traps

Traps
Author: MacKenzie Bezos
Publisher: Vintage
Total Pages: 226
Release: 2013-03-12
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 0307959740

Reclusive movie star Jessica Lessing is finally coming out of hiding—to confront her father, a con man who has been selling her out to the paparazzi for years. On her four-day road trip to Las Vegas, she encounters three unexpected allies—Vivian, a teenager with newborn twins; Lynn, a dog shelter owner living in isolation on a ranch in rural Nevada; and Dana, a fearless ex-military bodyguard wrestling with secrets of her own. As their fates collide, each woman will find a chance at redemption that she never would have thought possible. MacKenzie Bezos’s taut prose, tough characters, and nuanced insights give this novel a complexity that few thrillers can match. This ebook edition includes a Reading Group Guide.

Escaping the Build Trap

Escaping the Build Trap
Author: Melissa Perri
Publisher: O'Reilly Media
Total Pages: 200
Release: 2018-11-01
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 1491973765

To stay competitive in today’s market, organizations need to adopt a culture of customer-centric practices that focus on outcomes rather than outputs. Companies that live and die by outputs often fall into the "build trap," cranking out features to meet their schedule rather than the customer’s needs. In this book, Melissa Perri explains how laying the foundation for great product management can help companies solve real customer problems while achieving business goals. By understanding how to communicate and collaborate within a company structure, you can create a product culture that benefits both the business and the customer. You’ll learn product management principles that can be applied to any organization, big or small. In five parts, this book explores: Why organizations ship features rather than cultivate the value those features represent How to set up a product organization that scales How product strategy connects a company’s vision and economic outcomes back to the product activities How to identify and pursue the right opportunities for producing value through an iterative product framework How to build a culture focused on successful outcomes over outputs

The Foolish Corner

The Foolish Corner
Author: John Howe
Publisher:
Total Pages: 122
Release: 2017-01-03
Genre: Finance, Personal
ISBN: 9780998510705

When we get near money, our decision-making processes often go haywire. It's like placing a compass next to a magnet-we can't figure out which direction is north, and our finances can head south as a result. Within the growing academic field of behavioral finance, researchers are discovering just how easily we are swayed by subtle emotional forces, no matter how hard we try to make rational choices. Do you hate losing a hundred dollars more than you love receiving a hundred dollars? Are you reluctant to make an investment if the people around you aren't doing so? These kinds of mental biases have a huge-though often unnoticed-influence on our decisions about money. In The Foolish Corner, finance expert John Howe offers an introduction to these biases, showing you how to locate them in your own approach to money and uncover their effects on your life. Learn how to head off these subliminal influences-and sometimes even use them to your advantage.