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There are ideas about leadership and management that you and I have learned over the years that sound reasonable. We do them all the time. Surely they must work, right? For example, having competency models to identify what makes, let's say, an effective project manager or team leader. Using 360-degree feedback instruments to understand our strengths. That strengths are things we're good at, weaknesses are things we're bad at, and that we should focus on the things we're good at. That people need feedback to improve performance, and that annual cascading goals from the top down to teams is a responsible way to run a business.
But what if those, as in all of those, were wrong. Or at least wanting for evidence that they're right. Or, in the words of today's guest, they're actually lies?
Marcus Buckingham is the co-author of a new book entitled Nine Lies About Work, and he takes a provocative look at work as it is--not how we'd like it to be. And the results are both challenging and refreshing.
Learn more about Marcus and his book at https://www.marcusbuckingham.com/.
Let's Stay In Touch!I hear from listeners almost every day, and I love it! How about you and I connect on LinkedIn? Go to https://PeopleAndProjectsPodcast.com/LinkedIn and send me an invite!
Also, if you know of a group at your organization that has an upcoming large group gathering and uses outside speakers, let them know about the podcast! I'd love to work with them to help improve their ability to lead and deliver. Learn more at https://i-leadonline.com/keynotes. Thanks!
Thank you for joining me for this episode of The People and Projects Podcast!
LIES by Single Bullet Theory Licensed under a Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDrivatives (aka Music Sharing) 3.0 International License.
CANDLEPOWER by Chris Zabriskie Licensed under a Creative Commons: Attribution License.
By Andy Kaufman, PMP, PMI-ACP4.8
171171 ratings
There are ideas about leadership and management that you and I have learned over the years that sound reasonable. We do them all the time. Surely they must work, right? For example, having competency models to identify what makes, let's say, an effective project manager or team leader. Using 360-degree feedback instruments to understand our strengths. That strengths are things we're good at, weaknesses are things we're bad at, and that we should focus on the things we're good at. That people need feedback to improve performance, and that annual cascading goals from the top down to teams is a responsible way to run a business.
But what if those, as in all of those, were wrong. Or at least wanting for evidence that they're right. Or, in the words of today's guest, they're actually lies?
Marcus Buckingham is the co-author of a new book entitled Nine Lies About Work, and he takes a provocative look at work as it is--not how we'd like it to be. And the results are both challenging and refreshing.
Learn more about Marcus and his book at https://www.marcusbuckingham.com/.
Let's Stay In Touch!I hear from listeners almost every day, and I love it! How about you and I connect on LinkedIn? Go to https://PeopleAndProjectsPodcast.com/LinkedIn and send me an invite!
Also, if you know of a group at your organization that has an upcoming large group gathering and uses outside speakers, let them know about the podcast! I'd love to work with them to help improve their ability to lead and deliver. Learn more at https://i-leadonline.com/keynotes. Thanks!
Thank you for joining me for this episode of The People and Projects Podcast!
LIES by Single Bullet Theory Licensed under a Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDrivatives (aka Music Sharing) 3.0 International License.
CANDLEPOWER by Chris Zabriskie Licensed under a Creative Commons: Attribution License.

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