Alan Weiss’s Monday Morning Memo® – 3/26/18
Over the last week, I had dinner with my wife and two others in Nobu in New York, which cost about $1,600. I also had a $3 hot dog, with mustard and sauerkraut from my favorite vendor on Madison
In Case You Were Wondering What I Was Thinking
Kale is disgusting no matter how it’s cooked or prepared. It’s the new Brussels Sprouts but without the personality. “Curate” is now the most inappropriately, overused word in the lexicon. Linkedin editors “curate” the daily stories? You curate the paleontology department
Plunging
Too many of us immediately try to decide how to do something before deciding whether or not to do it. I call this the "plunge effect." This is why you're stuck with a hire who isn't close to competent, on a bad
Refusing Bad Treatment
I've never seen a business, ethical, or religious directive stating that we should allow ourselves to accept abuse. "Turn the other cheek" doesn't suggest that you allow yourself to continue to be hit. Many people who suffered abuse themselves—psychological, emotional, physical—try
Whom Do You Trust?
Some people spend more time and energy trying to weasel out of a commitment than they would in simply fulfilling it.
Metaphysics
As you begin each morning or end each day, ask yourself, "Am I making a difference?"
Episode 29: Why Are We So Threatened?
The reasons for and means to escape going through your life defensively and scared. We're scared of the wrong things. We get threatened and give in to knee-jerk reactions. Taxi drivers, for example, protested and reacted completely the wrong way when Uber threatened their business. How far did that get them? Listen to this
Alan Weiss’s Monday Morning Memo® – 3/19/18
My coaching and consulting work has consistently revealed an unhappy reality: Too many people are afraid. Those fears include: • Losing business • Your name or brand being tarnished • Missing deadlines • Being seen as an imposter (incompetent) • Asking for money that is
Proportion
One of the problems with success is that we begin to feel that everything should be perfect. I remember George Lucas saying once that the problem with wealth is that "When the battery dies in your Chevy, it's no big