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Book Capsules, July 2024
Content
Ask by Jeff Wetzler and The Problem With Change by Ashley Goodall
Ask by Jeff Wetzler and The Problem With Change by Ashley Goodall
Mon Jul 01 2024
Content
Ask
Ask
Content
Jeff Wetzler
Jeff Wetzler
Content
Hachette Go, 304 pp., $30
Hachette Go, 304 pp., $30
Content
Asking the right questions in the right ways is a superpower, says Wetzler, cofounder of education nonprofit Transcend and a former international business consultant. He calls it the Ask Approach. The premise is simple: Tapping into what people actually think, know, and feel can change an individual's career and life. Wetzler breaks the book into three sections. The first outlines common things people keep to themselves; the second shows readers the five steps of the Ask Approach; and the third provides readers with ways to apply the Ask Approach to themselves, their teams, and their organizations. Ask outlines why learning from colleagues and leaders is critical to a person becoming the best version of themselves.
Asking the right questions in the right ways is a superpower, says Wetzler, cofounder of education nonprofit Transcend and a former international business consultant. He calls it the Ask Approach. The premise is simple: Tapping into what people actually think, know, and feel can change an individual's career and life. Wetzler breaks the book into three sections. The first outlines common things people keep to themselves; the second shows readers the five steps of the Ask Approach; and the third provides readers with ways to apply the Ask Approach to themselves, their teams, and their organizations. Ask outlines why learning from colleagues and leaders is critical to a person becoming the best version of themselves.
Content
The Problem With Change
The Problem With Change
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Ashley Goodall
Ashley Goodall
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Little, Brown Spark, 288 pp., $30
Little, Brown Spark, 288 pp., $30
Content
Leadership expert Goodall says change is not always synonymous with improvement. In this book, he argues that "life in the blender"—the perpetual cycle of upheaval, uncertainty, and unease—is wrong and harmful for workers. Companies should focus on marked improvement instead of constant fluctuation. The author recommends prioritizing team cohesion rather than reshuffling teams, using familiar vocabulary over corporate speak, sharing secrets instead of mission statements, and fixing only broken things rather than breaking everything. The Problem With Change argues that individuals have become numb to the consequences of workplace changes because change has become far too common.
Leadership expert Goodall says change is not always synonymous with improvement. In this book, he argues that "life in the blender"—the perpetual cycle of upheaval, uncertainty, and unease—is wrong and harmful for workers. Companies should focus on marked improvement instead of constant fluctuation. The author recommends prioritizing team cohesion rather than reshuffling teams, using familiar vocabulary over corporate speak, sharing secrets instead of mission statements, and fixing only broken things rather than breaking everything. The Problem With Change argues that individuals have become numb to the consequences of workplace changes because change has become far too common.
