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W**R
Follow me! [motto of US Infantry]
âHow to Leadâ is a fascinating book. I happened to learn about it by watching John Dickersonâs TV interview of David Rubenstein several days ago. What really got me interested was Rubenstein's summary of his book and his list of leadership traits (he mentions more and mostly different ones in his book): Ability to 1. Focus, 2. Communicate, 3. Set priorities, 4. Be humble, 5. Use humor, 6. Inspire and rise to the occasion. He also said that leadership was heavily dependent upon the ability to learn from what one did wrong and, perhaps most importantly, upon the ability to persuade (orally like John F. Kennedy; written like Thomas Jefferson; or by example like George Washington).While there is no summary as such in the book, Rubenstein does have a fine introduction, discussing his life history and the leadership success he has enjoyed. In this section, he also gives, as more or less a heads-up or reverse-summary (to discern amongst the details that will follow), a somewhat new list of 13 leadership traits heâs found common in his surveying interviews of 31 fairly well-known leaders. The interviews are blocked as chapters in terms of six leadership types, with usually five interviews per type: 1. Visionaries (e.g., Jeff Bezos), 2. Builders (e.g., Phil Knight), 3. Transformers (e.g., Tim Cook), 4. Commanders (e.g., Colin Powell; here Presidents GW Bush and Clinton share a chapter), 5. Decision-makers (e.,g Anthony Fauci), 6. Masters (e.g., Coach K).With each chapter, Rubenstein starts with an artistâs image of the leader, an important quote coming from the interview, Rubensteinâs overview of the leader, and the interview itself. The interviews are wide-ranging, with some questions very focused, others open-ended. In each case, the conversation is enlightening, engrossing, and often-times salted with Rubensteinâs own particular brand of eye-twinkling, tongue-in-cheek humor. One will definitely learn a lot, not only about a leaderâs particular philosophies and general experiences, but the answers to many curious personal items and the secrets observers may have heretofore only wondered about. As well, little known trade insights are freely sprinkled throughout, such as why and how Bill Gates came up with Control/Alt/Delete.After the final interview, Rubenstein ends his book with acknowledgments and short resumes of his leadership interviewees.Bottom line, I think youâll find this a unique, well-researched, and engaging must-read for your leadership library.9/12/2020 Edit: Given some critical reviews of Rubenstein's book, I reread the chapter on Bezos and can see how someone might not like it if they were looking for a cookbook of specific recipes on how to lead at a particular level. I would say that the concepts are there if you look for them, but they're not in recipe form. For those concerned, I recommend they take advantage of the Amazon "Look Inside" function before buying.Of possible interest: Strategy Pure and Simple: Essential Moves for Winning in Competition and Cooperation andGeorge Washington's Liberty Key: Mount Vernon's Bastille Key â the Mystery and Magic of Its Body, Mind, and Soul, a best-seller at Mount Vernon. âCharacter is Key for Liberty!â
P**R
"How To Lead" a MUST Read
"How To Lead" is an amazing compilation of incredible interviews with truly extraordinary individuals. The interviews reveal each individual's background and what makes them a great leader. Each chapter concludes with "words of wisdom" making the reader appreciate how fortunate we are that such great people exit. The book is easy and enjoyable to read. If you're looking for a great escape from today's turmoil, "How To Lead" is a must read.
I**N
Ian Mann's book reviews
Is there really anything that hasnât already been said about how to lead? Probably not. But this book is worth reading, and hereâs why.The author David Rubenstein is a founder and Co-Executive Chairman of Carlyle, one of the worldâs largest and most diversified investment firms. They have $230 billion under management, employ over 1,800 professionals, and operate across 6 continents.Rubenstein began his âPeer to Peerâ interview show on Bloomberg TV in 2016, and this book is an outgrowth of those interviews. The quality of the people interviewed, is no doubt, because Rubenstein is their âpeer.âThe leaders interviewed cover a wide array of contexts in which they led and excelled, from business (of course), to the performing arts, health and justice â all at the highest possible levels.He has divided leaders into six categories and has five interviews in each. To get a sense of the quality of people interviewed, consider these examples in each category. The âVisionariesâ, Jeff Bezos and Bill Gates; the âBuildersâ, Phil Knight and Jamie Dimon; the âTransformersâ, Eric Schmit and Tim Cook; the âCommandersâ, General Colin Powell and Condoleezza Rice; the âDecision-makersâ, Christine Lagarde and Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, and the âMastersâ Jack Nicklaus and Yo-Yo Ma, the cellist.I will describe only one from each category.âFew American success and leadership stories rival that of Oprah Winfreyâsâ, Rubenstein notes. Oprah was raised in absolute poverty by her grandmother. She achieved extraordinary fame as a talk show host, in a different league to all others, and that has made her the richest black woman in America. She has been the most watched television personality in the US for nearly three decades, with reach into the homes of Americans unmatched by any TV personality, ever.How did this happen? Clearly, she was determined to rise from poverty, but it was her critical skill as an interviewer, who really listened to what the interviewee was actually saying, and trying to understand the impact of what was being said. This combined with her unique way of showing empathy for her interviewees, and her audience. Her ability to connect so viscerally with those who were watching, made her extremely appealing, and unique.She recalled autographing after a show and never looking up, trying to get through all 350 people. Then she stopped mass autographing, because what she really wanted was to talk to this audience, to find out who they are, where they come from. What all people want to know, is âDid you hear me? Did you see me? And did I say anything that mattered?â Oprah believes.That is why she was so influential.One of the âTransformersâ interviewed was Indira Nooyi, the CEO of PepsiCo from October 2006 to October 2018. It is rare in the U.S. for huge companies to be led by a woman, and especially when the woman is an Indian immigrant.During her tenure, Pepsiâs market value rose from $104 billion to $154 billion! She has a rare combination of intellect, focus, work ethic, global perspective, and charm. She maintains strong family relationships with her parents, husband, and children.Her leadership âsecretâ was being very well grounded by her parentsâparticularly her mother, who taught her not to take herself too seriously, and to always be respectful of others.She regularly wrote letters to the parents of her senior employees, giving them a report of how well their children were doing. âIt occurred to me,â she said, âthat I had never thanked the parents of my executives for the gift of their child to PepsiCo.âGeneral David Petraeus is an example of a âCommanderâ.He describes the risks that combat leaders take as being of a different order of magnitude. While âthey need to be very precise and decisive in their orders and directions, and need to instill discipline, teamwork, and confidence into their troops.â A very tall order.Petraeus believes that leadership at the very top of any organization involves four critical tasks: Getting the big ideas, (the strategy) right. Communicating this effectively throughout the organization. Overseeing the implementation of the big ideas. And then having a process to determine how the big ideas need to be revised and refined in response to what has been learned, and to changing circumstances.Doing all this is undoubtedly required, if rare among leaders of any organization.Among the leaders who are âDecision Makersâ is Dr Anthony Fauci, physician-scientist and immunologist who was the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases since 1984. He is now the chief medical advisor to President Biden.His leadership style is not to dictate to people, but rather to let them know what your vision is. This requires that you hire the best people, and then donât get in their way.During the COVID-19 crisis, he became known as the worldâs leading authority on infectious diseases. He dived into this crisis with the same âwork-around-the-clock, just-the-facts styleâ he always exhibited working with six U.S. presidents. He could work with them all because he is completely apolitical.He has dealt with every serious infectious disease challenge while at the same time writing or editing more than 1,100 scholarly articles and several textbooks!Until this crisis he commuted to work by Metro, after several miles of powerwalking, his daily exercise. âNo federal civil servant, in any area, can exceed Tony Fauciâs long-term and selfless commitment to this country and the health of its people.âM0ney doesnât motivate him, but serving the country does, to the countryâs good fortune.A leader in the âMastersâ category is Lorne Michaels, the producer of Saturday Night Live.On October 11, 1975, television history was made with this comedy show that is unlike any other. It has continued running for 45 years as the showcase and arbiter of American humour.Lorne Michaels produced the first episode, and is still producing the show. This 90-minute weekly live show with its performers, skits, and set changes all done live, just keeps going. The key Michaels says is being open to new ideas, to changing his mind, and to accepting the best ideas from wherever they come. It keeps going because the show is placed ahead of anything else, including egos.This is an extraordinarily engaging book. Will you learn a set of new techniques? No. Are there immutable laws of leadership â clearly not. The value is simply being exposed to the very, very best, and being inspired and enriched by knowing more about them, and each oneâs inimitable leadership style.Readability Light -+--- SeriousInsights High -+--- LowPractical High ----+ Low*Ian Mann of Gateways consults internationally on strategy and implementation, is the author of âStrategy that Worksâ and a public speaker. Views expressed are his own.
H**Y
What Leadership Is All About
While I'm not quite finished with the book, I love the diversity of the interviewees and their respective thoughts on why they are perceived as outstanding leaders. DR is an excellent interviewer, and makes me feel good while reading about some people for whom I don't care much. Politics aside, the book is excellent. It provides more about effective leaders than most books on leaders, and I've read scores of them. It is worth the time and effort to read this book.
H**Z
Masterful
This is the best narrative on the self imposed exile of Puerto Rico greatest leader Luis Muñoz MarĂn and his triumphant return to the island.One of the greatest challenges of leadership is when and how to retire. Here is the masterful account of a masterful event. Using secret documents and interviews the author recreates the drama that decides the turning point of this decisive moment in political history.An excellent book not to.be missed.HĂ©ctor Luis AcevedoMayor of San Juan 1989-1997
M**G
Unending bursts of inspiring insights
Impossible to extract such wide ranging perspectives on life and accomplishing from the worldâs authorities across such a diverse array of industries in a single book. Great thanks to David for his devotion, detail, and intellect to achieve and share this. One of my favorite books.
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