Alan Weiss’s Monday Morning Memo® – 8/24/15
This week's focus point: One reader objected to my description of Nantucket last week, demanding that I provide more "practical help." The fact that this is a free newsletter was not apparently appreciated! Then a woman on Twitter admonished me
Idiosyncratic Structures
The recent New York Times piece on Amazon's grinding culture is just another example of idiosyncratic leadership and structure. Jobs at Apple did the same, using his personal (and often damaging) vision of what the company should look life. The new,
Change the Life You Have Into the Life You Want
Change the Life You Have Into the Life You Want, AND opt to have access to me for a year by phone and email, attend a live, full day in Boston with me, and receive monthly video programming totaling six
Alan Weiss’s Monday Morning Memo® – 8/17/15
This week's focus point: I wander down a narrow path abutted by dune grass from the house here in Nantucket to the sea, a solitary man. The beach is quiet in the mornings, the receding tide behaving itself, offering azure
In Case You Were Wondering What I Was Thinking….
Are you telling me that we can create particle accelerators to find elements that exist for a nanosecond, but we can't create a sealed product that can be easily opened with just a pull on a tab? It takes a
Alan Weiss’s Monday Morning Memo® – 8/10/15
This week's focus point: My personal feeling is that people deserve respect. I don't meet someone with a belief that they are "broken" and need to be fixed, and I don't write my books with the idea that my readers
Hold the Crowd Back for the Person We Don’t Want You to See
I was walking into The White Elephant here in Nantucket to meet my wife for brunch after parking my car a quarter mile away. As I approached the main entry, a Massachusetts State Police SUV pulls in, followed by a
Dumb Ass Stupid Management: CVS, Who’s Minding the Store?
In East Greenwich, RI, where I live, the CVS store on Main Street has had one of its drive-through pharmacy lanes out of action for about three months. The lines at the store register snake into the aisles until the