Get your brain in motion

Category: Book (Page 3 of 9)

Upgrading your reading skills

Time constraints are constantly limiting our ability and efficiency in reading books and, above all, retaining what we have read in the long run.

Upgrading our reading skills would certainly help us in optimizing the time and effort we put into it, bringing positive benefits in our daily life and work.

In this article from blinkist.com, Caitlin Schiller lists 6 science based tips aimed at improving our reading method:

  1. Find a personal angle
  2. Get a bird’s eye view
  3. Drum up curiosity
  4. Create your own structure
  5. Record key insights
  6. Review your notes

Click here to read the full article.

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Image source: Pixabay – CC0 Public Domain

The musicianʼs relationship to time

In his book “Moving to Higher Ground: How Jazz Can Change Your Life“, the great music educator Wynton Marsalis explains how swinging can alter how we experience change.
The musicianʼs relationship to time can be of ultimate assistance to us in:

1) adjusting to changes without losing your equilibrium;
2) mastering moments of crisis with clear thinking;
3) living in the moment and accepting reality instead of trying to force everyone to do things your way;
4) concentrating on a collective goal even when your conception of the collective doesnʼt dominate;
5) knowing how and when to expend your individual energy.

Wynton Marsalis, “Moving to higher ground: How jazz can change your life

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Image source: Flickr – music2020 – (CC BY 2.0

Boost your memory and sharpen your time

Just as time management is vital to the effectiveness of managers, so the management of memory is vital for their productivity and success. Organizing our thoughts is as important as organizing our desk. Our multitasking reality puts a strain on our memory since we have to manage at the same time different information and deadlines belonging to different duties and tasks.

In this free book “Boost your memory and sharpen your time” , Harold. L. Taylor explains how to train and increase our memory using it in our everyday job.

 

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The Little Prince puts on his tie


How many people have read Antoine de Saint Exupery’s masterpiece “The Little Prince”? Probably a correct guess would be several million. In fact it is rather surprising how few people know its business version “The little prince puts on his tie” by Borja Vilaseca.
Based on true events of the author himself, this tale is a story of a young Spanish maverick who, after having explored Madagascar, becomes the new human resources manager at a software company ruled by conflict and persisting poor economic results. Shortly after, the main character, Pablo Prince (Borja Vilaseca) realizes that the working environment is seriously damaging the company and its outcome, since it is based on the fear of the bosses, passive acceptance of the status quo and widespread distrust among colleagues.
Prince decides to challenge this instability by organizing a human development course asking people to follow it skeptically and not to take any idea for granted but, at the same time, to try to follow his methods with a correct attitude before evaluating them. His theory develops on innovative approaches based on self-knowledge and personal growth. He is convinced that people cannot change the external environment where they have little or no control at all but they should try to change what they really can, themselves. He wants his colleagues to proactively engage in their working situations and to not just accept them passively but to remove their personal constraints that obstruct their potential. How? According to Prince, emotions such as fear and happiness are based on how somebody decides to interpret external events and everybody should be conscious that those can be molded to his advantage and his personal development.
Despite being a new hire, Prince decides to confront his bosses about allowing more free time to his colleagues for a better work-life balance, specifying individual tasks clearly for better understanding of their role and giving them greater responsibility so they feel a more relevant part of the organization. His colleagues slowly realize they could be free from stress and deadlines thus releasing their creative energy and their full potential. Employees start to feel that the company is the place where they can learn, improve and fulfill their professional goals. Therefore, the old idea of the company as a “prison” becomes outdated. Prince understands that his colleagues were using their external problems and excuses to justify their working behaviours rather than learning from their mistakes and nurturing greater self-awareness and conscience.
The process of change and transformation of the company comes true developing the potential, talent and creativity of its employees. By changing mentality, leadership and business culture, eliminating conflict and dissatisfaction and managing emotional intelligence, Prince shifts the main objective from company’s results to its employees’ personal results.
If you are interested in reading this noteworthy book you chose wisely and you should probably stop reading right here.
In case you are curious to know how it finishes, I’ll fast forward to its end. The company started to be profitable after five years of losses reaching its highest ever turnover without investing any economic resources. It did not raise salaries, guarantee promotions, relocate its offices to new exotic locations nor distribute prizes. The miracle happened thanks to a young visionary human resources manager who was able to work on people’s happiness, talent and creativity. But if you want to know precisely how he did that and if you want to know and improve yourself, then you should probably read this book.


« The whole world steps aside for the man who knows where he is going »
ANTOINE DE SAINT-EXUPÉRY

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Image Source: Pexels

 

Thinking Skills

Eric Garner, in his book Thinking Skills, argues that our brain is the most powerful organ we possess. It is the tool that, if used skillfully, can help us perform better in our job, better in our team and better in our organization.

Thinking Skills are some of the most valuable skills to learn today. Indeed, we live in an Information Age, no longer an Industrial Age. That’s why brain has replaced brawn, and strength in thinking has replaced strength in muscles. No matter what kind of business you work for, nor what kind of job you do, today you are expected to apply a range of thinking skills to the work you carry out. This includes using your judgment; collecting, using, and analyzing information; working with others to solve problems; making decisions on behalf of others; contributing to ideas to innovate and change; and being creative about how your job can function better.

By developing your thinking skills to meet the needs of the modern world, you are guaranteed to succeed.

 

Brain food

Image: FlickrSean MacEntee (CC BY 2.0)

 

12 books a leader should read

On December 2014 Bob Sutton, Professor at Stanford University, published the long-awaited list of 12 books (or 13…) recently published books that every leader should read.

This is the list:

1. The Progress Principle by Teresa Amabile and Steven Kramer.
2. Influence by Robert Cialdini.
3. Made to Stick by Chip and Dan Heath.
4. Thinking, Fast and Slow by Daniel Kahneman.
5. Collaboration by Morten Hansen.
6. Orbiting the Giant Hairball by Gordon MacKenzie.
7. Creativity, Inc. by Ed Catmull.
8. Leading Teams by J. Richard Hackman.
9. Give and Take by Adam Grant.
10. Parkinson’s Law by the late C. Northcote Parkinson.
11. To Sell is Human, by Dan Pink.
12. The Path Between the Seas by historian David McCullough.

Sutton suggests also to add a 13th book published in April 2015: Work Rules by Laszlo Bock.

Do you want to know more? Click here

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Image source: Flickr – Jonathan Kim (CC BY-NC 2.0)

Quick Diplomatic Response

Quick Diplomatic Response is one of the few existing comic books on diplomatic activities. This booklet was written by Jovan Kurbalija, illustrated by Vladimir Veljasevic and published by Diplofoundation in 2007. It can be consulted here.

This comic book aims to explain the crucial role of diplomacy in the contemporary world. It also shows how diplomacy can be improved through the use of modern tools and approaches.COVER NOVI -L

Re-awaken the giant within

“Global beliefs are the giant beliefs we have about everything in our lives: beliefs about our identities, people, work, time, money, and life itself, for that matter. These giant generalizations are often phrased as is/am/are: “Life is . . .” “I am . . .” “People are …”

As you can imagine, beliefs of this size and scope can shape and color every aspect of our lives. The good news about this is that making one change in a limiting global belief you currently hold can change virtually every aspect of your life in a moment! Remember: Once accepted, our beliefs become unquestioned commands to our nervous systems, and they have the power to expand or destroy the possibilities of our present and future.
If we want to direct our lives, then, we must take conscious control over our beliefs. And in order to do that, we first need to understand what they really are and how they are formed.”

“Re-awaken the giant within” by Anthony Robbins

You can donwload for free the book of Anthony Robbins here
Re-awaken the giant within

Thinking Skills

This free e-book Self-Confidence at Work by Kasia Lyczkowska, downloadable at bookboon.com approaches confidence as a skill to be acquired. Each of the six chapters of the book focuses its attention on different contributors to confidence. No matter what your current level of confidence, application of each chapter separately or all of them simultaneously, will bring you to the next level of soaring and going for success you deserve.

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Personal Confidence & Motivation

Do you have the self belief and confidence to make a difference? Do you “just know” that you’ll succeed no matter what? Do you know what motivates and gets you going? And do you know how to tap into the motivations of other people?

In Personal Confidence & Motivation written by Sean McPheat (Founder and Managing Director of management development specialists, MTD Training) you’ll find the answers to all of these questions and much more besides. You’ll understand how to build your own confidence levels and how to generate confidence in an instant. You’ll then move to the topic of motivation and you’ll be able to really understand this area of personal development.

Motivation

Image Source: Flickr – Run On Beat by Run on Beat

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