Interviews
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Interviews
Jacob Morgan
"[M]ost organizations and managers today focus on the amount of time that employees appear to spend doing something and not on what they actually produce. This has to change. Just because employees are “putting in hours” doesn’t mean anything.
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Interviews
Thinker in Residence - John Hope Bryant on Business and Books
"It’s not like we delivered 'the memo' and poor, working class and middle class folks flubbed it and failed the test. We were simply never given the memo. " ~John Hope Bryant
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Interviews
Thinker in Residence: A Q&A with John Hope Bryant
"As I looked around me, throughout the course of my life, it just dawned on me that Americans' and America’s real value was hiding in plain sight. " ~John Hope Bryant
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Interviews
Thinker in Residence: John Hope Bryant
"The most dangerous person in the world is a person with no hope. " ~John Hope Bryant
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Interviews
Thinker in Residence - Ryan Holiday on Business & Books
"How do you not delude yourself with a story about your business but stay focused on the vision you have for it five years down the road? " ~Ryan Holiday
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Interviews
Thinker in Residence: A Q&A with Ryan Holiday
"Our perceptions and inner dialogue determine to a large degree what what we are capable of. And if they push us towards acting instead of passivity, it becomes a feedback loop that becomes easier over time. " ~Ryan Holiday
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Interviews
Thinker in Residence: Ryan Holiday
"We decide what we will make of each and every situation. " ~Ryan Holiday
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Interviews
Thinker in Residence: Warren Berger on Business & Books
By Sally Haldorson
"On the big questions of finding meaning, fulfillment, and happiness, we're deluged with answers--in the form of off-the-shelf advice, tips, strategies from experts and gurus. It shouldn't be any wonder if those generic solutions don't quite fit: To get to our answers, we must formulate and work through
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Interviews
Thinker in Residence: A Q&A with Warren Berger
By Sally Haldorson
"We have an education and business culture that tends to reward quick factual answers over imaginative inquiry. Questioning isn’t encouraged—it is barely tolerated. " ~Warren Berger
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Interviews
Thinker in Residence: Warren Berger
By Sally Haldorson
"We’re all hungry today for better answers. But first, we must learn to ask the right questions. " Warren Berger believes questions are more important than answers.
One of the best things about working at Porchlight is the opportunity to form relationships with the authors who write the books we sell. One of the great things about forming those relationships is that it allows us, when time permits, to ask the authors about their work.