- Leadership is Language - L. David Marquet
- A World without Email - Cal Newport
- One Mission - Chris Fussell
- A Paradise Build in Hell - Rebecca Solnit
- Follow-up Reading
Leadership is Language - L. David Marquet
The Hidden Power of What You Say and What You Don't
Outline: (top two levels)
- Foreword
- Introduction
- Turning the ship around
- Leadership is language
- Spreading the word about language
- A new leadership playbook
- Balancing deliberation and action
- How did we get here?
- Chapter 1: Losing El Faro
- Tuesday
- Wednesday
- The language of vulnerability
- Thursday
- The danger of old thinking in new situations
- Share of voice
- Chapter 2: The New Playbook
- Anchored to an outdated playbook
- Embracing vs. reducing variability
- Redwork and Bluework
- The end of blueworkers and redworkers
- Can I get some thinking?
- Red-blue approaches
- The rhythm of redwork-bluework
- The thinking animal
- The brain's response to stress and motivation
- Adapting for the future
- Chapter 3: Exiting Redwork: Control the Clock
- Who's to blame?
- How to control the clock
- ...
- Chapter 4: Into the Bluework: Collaborate
- How to collaborate
- ...
- Establish the right hypothesis
- How to collaborate
- Chapter 5: Leaving Bluework Behind: Commit
- Consequences of compliance
- How to commit
- ...
- What do committing statements sound like?
- Coulda, Woulda, Shoulda
- In for a penny, in for a pound: escalation of commitment
- Separate the decision-maker from the decision-evaluator
- Chapter 6: The End of Redwork: Complete
- Completion is critical
- Keep on rollin'
- How to complete
- ...
- Chapter 7: Completing the Cycle: Improve
- When to improve
- Aim for discontinuous improvement
- All together now
- The "be good" self vs. the "get better" self
- Our three emotional needs
- ...
- It's my life
- Overcoming learned helplessness
- How to improve
- ...
- Using the timeline as a tool
- Thinking as a team
- Study of pilots shows it's all true
- A lesson from agile management
- Chapter 8: The Enabling Play: Connect
- Hierarchy first
- How to connect -- underlying requirement for all plays
- ...
- Patient Elliot
- Gambling in Iowa
- Humans and Hierarchy
- Chapter 9: Applying the Redwork-Bluework Principles in Workplace Situations
- A quick recap of our new playbook
- Interference or controlling the clock: when to exit redwork
- Enough talk already: managing a change initiative
- We can't stop, we're going too fast: pausing to improve
- All quiet on the idea front: using connect to make it safe
- I'm starting to think it's you not me: more effective collaboration
- Getting commitment instead of compliance
- Put your own mask on before helping others
- Avoiding the pitfalls of the old playbook
- Using red-blue thinking to control situations better
- Making it safe for my boss
- Job descriptions, hiring, and evaluations
- Chapter 10: The Red-Blue Operating System
- The perils of goal setting
- Strict goals + steep hierarchies = unethical behaviour
- The red-blue annual cycle
- Just sell one engine
- Revisiting agile
- Bluework at the tactical level: deliberate action
- Self-regulation
- Lifelong learning
- Chapter 11: Saving El Faro
- Monday
- Wednesday
- Friday
- Acknowledgments
- Further Reading
- Glossary
- Notes
- Index
A World without Email - Cal Newport
Reimagining Work In An Age Of Communication Overload
Outline:
- Introduction: The Hyperactive Hive Mind
- Part 1: The Case Against Email
- Email Reduces Productivity
- Email Makes Us Miserable
- Email Has a Mind of Its Own
- Part 2: Principles for a World Without Email
- The Attention Capital Principle
- The Process Principle
- The Protocol Principle
- The Specialization Principle
- Conclusion: The Twenty-First-Century Moonshot
- Acknowledgements
- Notes
- Index
One Mission - Chris Fussell
How Leaders Build a Team of Teams
Outline:
- Foreword by General Stanley McChrystal
- Introduction
- One Mission
- The Hybrid Model
- Case Study: Intuit
- Interconnection
- Case Study: Oklahoma Office of Management and Enterprise Services
- Operating Rhythm
- Case Study: Under Armour
- Decision Space
- Case Study: Medstar
- Liaisons
- Eastil Secured
- Conclusion
- Appendix: Chief of Staff
- Acknowledgements
- Notes
- Index
A Paradise Build in Hell - Rebecca Solnit
The Extraordinary Communities That Arise in Disaster
Outline:
- Preface to the Revised Edition
- Prelude: Falling Together
- I. A Millenial Good Fellowship: The San Francisco Earthquake
- The Mizpah Cafe
- Pauline Jacobson's Joy
- General Funston's Fear
- William James's Moral Equivalents
- Dorothy Day's Other Loves
- II. Halifax to Hollywood: The Great Debate
- A Tale of Two Princes: The Halifax Explosion and After
- From the Blitz and the Bomb to Vietnam
- Hobbes in Hollywood, or the Few Versus the Many
- III. Carnival and Revolution: Mexico City's Earthquake
- Power from Below
- Losing the Mandate of Heaven
- Standing on Top of Golden Hours
- IV. The City Transfigured: New York in Grief and Glory
- Mutual Aid in the Marketplace
- The Need to Help
- Nine Hundred and Eleven Questions
- V. New Orleans: Common Grounds and Killers
- What Difference Would It Make?
- Murderers
- Love and Lifeboats
- Beloved Community
- Epilogue: The Doorway in the Ruins
- Gratitude
- Notes
- Index
Follow-up
- More on Leadership is Language
- More on One Mission
- Remember also: (via brevity principles)
- Noise - Joe McCormack
- Brief - Joe McCormack
- Check out: Walkaway (fiction)