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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  • The Essential Ingredients of a Highly Engaging Team Offsite

    The Essential Ingredients of a Highly Engaging Team Offsite

    Running a great offsite is no easy task. Team members want to be fully engaged and spend the time productively. But they also want to have fun and get the chance to converse with other team members in a relaxed atmosphere. Naturally, when asking the team to set aside time away from the work setting,…

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  • Delivering a Tough Message About Their Flaws Starts With Your Flaws

    Delivering a Tough Message About Their Flaws Starts With Your Flaws

    Some team members don’t know themselves well and fight the same demons on many days. They need to come to grips with the character flaws that make them less effective than they should be.  Some are too reactive, others too emotional, some lack clear values, others live in a state of anxiety. Some are too

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  • The Feeling of Being Trusted

    The Feeling of Being Trusted

    Legendary investor Warren Buffett was recently asked why he still enjoyed investing money for others. He replied, “I like the feeling of being trusted.” That statement explains a lot about Buffet and captures a feeling many leaders value but rarely articulate. Many of the most admired leaders in the world build their lives and reputations…

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  • The Pain of Discipline or the Pain of Regret

    The Pain of Discipline or the Pain of Regret

    The key to enhancing discipline is to engage in honest self-review. Leaders must objectively call out where they lack important self-control and how they might find it. Knowing where in your leadership life your personal discipline is lacking is a great place to start. What can you do to create the willpower to set higher…

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  • In a New Role, Achieve Clarity With a DON’T DO List

    In a New Role, Achieve Clarity With a DON’T DO List

    The Don’t Do list creates a clarity of role that can’t be achieved by the Do list alone. Thankfully, leaders can explore both question sets and avenues to identify how others see the task ahead and to define expectations more precisely. The next time you take on a new role or assignment, consider asking the…

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  • The Teaching Power of a Double Demonstration

    The Teaching Power of a Double Demonstration

    By definition, high performance is a demonstration of skill. When a more experienced leader is willing to humbly compare and contrast their skill to those of others, they show them a path forward that otherwise remains hidden from view. Exposing the assumptions, choices, and strategies of high performance is a lens into learning like none…

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  • How Self-Aware are You?

    How Self-Aware are You?

    Being self-aware changes how a leader learns, navigates the world, and influences how they behave. The more self-aware a leader is, the more likely they can adjust their behavior and thinking to fit a situation. If there were only one quality from which to predict lifetime success, self-awareness would have to be on the shortlist.

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  • Thinkers and Doers

    Thinkers and Doers

    On every team, there are thinkers and doers. Thinkers like to contemplate problems and issues and devise strategies to address them. While thinkers are not without initiative or action, they prefer thought partners over accountability buddies. They take steps cautiously and deliberately. Doers, on the other hand, like to get things done. They don’t bypass…

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  • Thinking in Bets

    Thinking in Bets

    The best decision-makers identify their key beliefs and give them a probability of certainty. They then explore the underlying reasons and assumptions they depend on to make such a guess. That is what it means to think in bets. Are you 50 percent likely to begin assigning probabilities to your critical beliefs when making a…

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  • Everything You Own Owns a Piece of You, Too

    Everything You Own Owns a Piece of You, Too

    Everything You Own Owns a Piece of You, Too. This is true for taking on a new leadership role, as well. When we agree to the responsibilities and commitments required in an elevated position, we invariably “own” the role as if it were a tangible thing. Owning a role is quite common for those who…

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