Showing posts with label power. Show all posts
Showing posts with label power. Show all posts

Saturday, November 29, 2014

Book Review: Power - Why Some People Have it and Others Don't @JeffreyPfeffer

Power: Why Some People Have it and Others Don't by Jeffrey Pfeffer

Once again, I find myself at a book that I ended up reading just at the right time in my life when I needed it. I wish I had read it a decade ago, but I might not have been as receptive. I just recently left an organization that highly prized, nay, demanded collaboration. "For the good of the organization" was drilled into you. Do good and you will be rewarded, probably now and certainly in the life to come. Yes, we were a Christian organization believing we were doing the work of God. Probably were. But certain unhealthy ways of thinking had crept in over the decades and, well, I'm still under contract not to say much about that until at least next February.

The premise of this book is that no one else is looking out for you - you need to create environment within which you can be successful in both the large and small things. This ties in nicely with The 10x Rule (My Review) - relentlessly push forward. It may, at times, feel selfish, but no one else is going to do it for you. And as much as people say they may have hierarchy and politics, they are a part of the modern office and if you want to get ahead, you must learn to play them. This is the ultimate "bring me solutions, not problems" - only in this case, you're both the sender and receiver - you make your success or you do not have success. No time for what's blocking you, all your effort needs to be going where you're unblocked, even if that's at some other job. More than ever, we are Human Resources, not people.

Harsh, but true.

I don't see a need to belabor the point. I would recommend this book to people at any point in their careers. I would especially recommend it to people who have felt left behind or people who are by nature introverts. Some people are happy to be left alone to put their heads down and work. But if you're feeling any discontent or frustration or watching anyone else get ahead because they "play the game" - guess what, you need to play it, too.

In the end, the author shows a scientific, statistically-controlled correlation because those with people and those who felt powerless and mortality rates - that without power, you will also die sooner.


Power: Why Some People Have It-and Others Don't (Amazon)

Saturday, April 27, 2013

Worth Repeating: Jennifer Granholm @JenGranholm



Kicking off the TED2013 conference, Jennifer Granholm asks a very American question with worldwide implications: How do we make more jobs? Her big idea: Invest in new alternative energy sources. And her big challenge: Can it be done with or without our broken Congress? More on TED.com...

Why I'm posting: This is awesome.  I would love it if someone actually made this happen.

Saturday, August 28, 2010

Odds and Ends 48

-EXTRA-

"Everyone gets organized at some point, they might just not be around for it." -- Sue DeRoos

-1-

CNET -- DARPA wants a flying car

-2-

INHABIT -- Sonnenschiff[, Germany]: Solar City Produces 4X the Energy it Consumes

-3-

GARFIELD MINUS GARFIELD -- Oh, poor Jon

-4-

ENGADGET -- Nike files patent for auto-lacing sneakers, Marty McFly doth protest. Wow.. that's heavy.

-5-

SETH GODIN -- Sell the Problem

-6-

ZEROVIEWS -- The Best of the Bottom of the Barrel - A curated list of the best videos, that until they'd watched them, no one'd watched them.

-7-

THE INDEPENDENT -- Why the world is running out of helium

-Videos after the break... Babies controlling wheelchairs, a guy that seems to make crystal balls float in the air and a surface-like board that can interact on its own with physical objects on top of it.

Sunday, December 23, 2007

Wave Power to Go Commercial in California

NEWS.COM -- This is cool - a wave-based electrical generating system is about to be built in California. The article can explain it better, but it's basically a bouy attached to a piston. As the bouy bobs the piston cranks a turbine, generating electricity. Sounds like minimal risk to environment and massive power generation. More...