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.



Search Field Notes


  • How Big Is Your Frying Pan?

    How Big Is Your Frying Pan?

    Championship football coach Nick Saban often asks his team an odd question: how big is your frying pan?  Coach Saban is referencing an experience he had once while fishing. He wasn’t getting any bites, yet another angler just upstream was pulling in fish after fish.  Saban noticed he was releasing the big fish and keeping…

    Read More ›

  • Distraction Is Your Daily Opponent

    Distraction Is Your Daily Opponent

    The clutter of distraction gets in the way of great performance — for leaders, and for teams. Distraction is the enemy. It gets in the way of focus. Anything that distracts a leader or a team from focusing on the task at hand is a huge problem. Distractions are everywhere and come in many forms:…

    Read More ›

  • One Skill at a Time

    One Skill at a Time

    Former Google CEO and tech titan Eric Schmidt has some advice for those who want to develop their ability to lead others: develop yourself one skill at a time. Dive deep into one functional area of leadership and master it. Then, branch out from a strength.  Get great at giving feedback, or running meetings, or…

    Read More ›

  • Essential Work for Great Leaders

    Essential Work for Great Leaders

    Ask any of the great talk show interviewers—Winfrey, Letterman, O’Brien, Kimmel—and they will tell you that no matter how successful, famous or established the interviewee, they always want to know how they did. After the interview, they all ask the same questions: How did that go? Did I do okay? What did you think? The…

    Read More ›

  • Experience Can Be Detrimental

    Experience Can Be Detrimental

    Researchers who study survival situations, where decisions determine life and death, stumbled upon a most unusual finding. So surprising is this pattern, they pored through the data on survivors with the hope they were wrong. But, the conclusion became painfully clear: beginners, and those who lack experience in a given situation, normally survive. The seasoned…

    Read More ›

  • How Not to Emerge as a Leader

    How Not to Emerge as a Leader

    The process by which leaders naturally emerge when there is not a designated authority is still somewhat shrouded in mystery. On the other hand, how not to emerge as a leader is perfectly clear and worth remembering:  Sit back and watch. Contribute very little to the group discussion. Keep your ideas and opinions to yourself…

    Read More ›

  • The Hidden Weakness of Close-Knit Groups

    The Hidden Weakness of Close-Knit Groups

    Everything has a downside. Even strong team cultures and close-knit relationships. The more cohesive the group or relationship, the more susceptible it is to “groupthink.”  The idea of groupthink emerged in social psychology in the 1970s to describe the desire of group members to conform to other members’ opinions. Interestingly, this happens most frequently when…

    Read More ›

  • Questions Matter More Than Answers

    Questions Matter More Than Answers

    When confronted with a problem, the brain seeks an answer. Many brains in one room will argue over competing answers in hopes of reaching an understanding of which answer is best. This is how it is done. We solve problems through discussion and advocacy.  Examine breakthroughs and creative new approaches, however, and we learn that…

    Read More ›

  • A Star in the Sky Worth Reaching For

    A Star in the Sky Worth Reaching For

    Interviewers commonly ask well-known leaders for the best advice they have ever received. Usually, the replies are good reminders and join a long list of celebrated but obvious wisdom. Every once in awhile, a leader offers a piece of advice that elevates the conversation and asks us to reevaluate who we are as both leaders…

    Read More ›

  • What Are You Not Doing?

    What Are You Not Doing?

    Sometimes, it’s what you don’t do that matters most. We live in a world of to-do’s. The advice we receive is full of prescription and action.  But, what about what we’re not doing? How important is that?  Consider your family or team. Ask yourself this important question: What am I not doing that is hurting…

    Read More ›