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For generations, when we've needed to innovate and grow, we've been told to "think bigger"—it's now time to embrace strategic leadership and Lead Bigger.
Inclusion has been overly politicized and narrowly defined to issues of gender and race today. As a result, we need a new approach to inclusive leadership that goes beyond DEI, leveraging its potential for business innovation and sustainable growth. In Lead Bigger, Anne Chow "has written a bona fide leadership masterpiece" (Stephen M.R. Covey, New York Times bestselling author) by reframing inclusion as an essential leadership skill of expanding our perspectives for greater performance in our work, workforce, and workplace.
As former CEO of AT&T Business, Chow was the first woman of color to hold the position of CEO in the company's over 150-year history. Drawing from her expertise in transforming organizations, she shows how it's every leader's responsibility to be inclusive, teaching you how to create a dynamic environment that engages everyone you interact with while adapting to the ever-changing world. This book equips you to lead inclusively, with insights from leadership visionaries General Stanley McChrystal, Arianna Huffington, and Adam Grant.
If you're committed to advancing work that matters, engaging a dynamic workforce, and fostering an agile workplace, you're ready to Lead Bigger.
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Creators
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Publisher
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Release date
September 10, 2024 -
Formats
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OverDrive Listen audiobook
- ISBN: 9781797182780
- File size: 228908 KB
- Duration: 07:56:53
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Languages
- English
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Reviews
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Publisher's Weekly
July 29, 2024
“Today’s rapidly evolving world demands inclusion as a core leadership competency,” according to this straightforward manual. Chow (coauthor of The Leader’s Guide to Unconscious Bias), who serves on the boards of 3M and the leadership consultancy Franklin Covey, contends that teams benefit from including members diverse in age, ability, belief systems, and life experiences. By way of example, she notes that “JPMorgan Chase found that their autistic employees were... 92 percent more productive than neurotypical employees” and discusses a “two-way” mentorship she established with a younger employee who helped her set up a professional blog in exchange for career advice. Serving the needs of a diverse workforce requires flexibility, she contends, urging managers to, for instance, adopt an expansive definition of family when determining who’s eligible for child leave. Chow also calls on leaders to protect their workers’ mental well-being by relieving the workloads of overburdened employees and normalizing discussions of mental health. Chow’s argument in favor of diverse workforces largely tracks what other authors have written, though she does call attention to a few under-addressed biases, encouraging supervisors to be cognizant of how, for instance, “lookism” (the preference for conventionally attractive people) might affect hirings and promotions. This may not break much new ground, but it’s nonetheless a sensible primer on creating a welcoming workplace. Agent: Scott Miller, Gray + Miller.
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