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Self-Improvement 101: What Every Leader Needs to Know (101 (Thomas Nelson)) Hardcover – November 1, 2009
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John C. Maxwell uses his decades of experience to teach you how to reach your full potential through a commitment to personal growth.
Throughout this book, leadership expert John C. Maxwell provides the essential tips and tools to help any leader continue striving for excellence no matter what industry, business, or level of leadership.
In Self-Improvement 101, you’ll learn:
- the secret of becoming a lifelong learner,
- where to focus your time for maximum growth,
- what sacrifices are worth making to keep getting better,
- how to overcome obstacles to self-improvement,
- the key to turning experience into wisdom,
- and why leaders need to be learners, among many other essential lessons.
People never reach their potential by accident. Often, those who achieve the greatest success have the greatest desire to learn and grow.
Self-Improvement 101 guides you on an essential journey to uncovering your own desire, commitment, and unyielding determination to improve your life--and to improve yourself.
- Print length128 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherHarperCollins Leadership
- Publication dateNovember 1, 2009
- Dimensions4.75 x 0.6 x 6.55 inches
- ISBN-101400280249
- ISBN-13978-1400280247
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John C. Maxwell is an internationally recognized leadership expert, speaker, coach, and author who has sold over 19 million books. Dr. Maxwell is the founder of EQUIP and the John Maxwell Company, organizations that have trained more than 5 million leaders worldwide.
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Leadership 101 | Mentoring 101 | Success 101 | Teamwork 101 | |
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This "what you need to know" guide will unleash your leadership potential, direct from the playbooks of America's most trusted leadership expert, John C. Maxwell | This essential and easy-to-read reference book gives you the bottom line on mentoring--what it is, why you should do it, and how you can do it most effectively. | In this insightful book, Maxwell distills success down to its essential components to show you exactly what success looks like and what specific steps you can take to achieve it for yourself. | In this essential guidebook, Maxwell explains why teamwork is the heart of great achievement in the game of business and shows you how to prioritize teamwork and collaboration to achieve winning results. |
Relationships 101 | Attitude 101 | Equipping 101 | The Complete 101 Collection | |
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In this helpful book, Maxwell provides time-tested principles for developing healthy relationships with others―inside and outside of your organization. | In this highly practical primer, Maxwell describes how good attitudes on a team do not warrant its success and that bad attitudes grant its ruin. | Drawing from his years of mentorship experience, John Maxwell offers this concise collection of time-tested principles on how to equip those around you for service. | In The Complete 101 Collection, Maxwell has combined his introductory works on eight core fundamentals every professional needs: leadership, mentoring, success, teamwork, relationships, attitude, self;-improvement, and equipping. |
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About the Author
John C. Maxwell is a #1 New York Times bestselling author, coach, and speaker who has sold more than 33 million books in fifty languages. He has been identified as the #1 leader in business and the most influential leadership expert in the world. His organizations - the John Maxwell Company, The John Maxwell Team, EQUIP, and the John Maxwell Leadership Foundation - have translated his teachings into seventy languages and used them to train millions of leaders from every country of the world. A recipient of the Horatio Alger Award, as well as the Mother Teresa Prize for Global Peace and Leadership from the Luminary Leadership Network, Dr. Maxwell influences Fortune 500 CEOs, the presidents of nations, and entrepreneurs worldwide. For more information about him visit JohnMaxwell.com.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
SELF-IMPROVEMENT 101
What Every Leader Needs To KnowBy John C. MaxwellThomas Nelson
Copyright © 2009 John C. MaxwellAll right reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-4002-8024-7
Contents
Preface.................................................................v1. What Will It Take for Me to Improve?.................................32. How Can I Grow in My Career?.........................................173. How Do I Maintain a Teachable Attitude?..............................274. What Role Do Others Play in My Growth?...............................415. Where Should I Focus My Time and Energy?.............................576. How Do I Overcome Obstacles to Self-Improvement?.....................697. What Role Does Experience Play?......................................838. What Am I Willing to Give Up to Keep Growing?........................95Notes...................................................................109About the Author........................................................111Chapter One
What Will It take for Me to Improve?Growth must be intentional-nobody improves by accident.
The poet Robert Browning wrote, "Why stay we on the earth except to grow?" Just about anyone would agree that growing is a good thing, but relatively few people dedicate themselves to the process. Why? Because it requires change, and most people are reluctant to change. But the truth is that without change, growth is impossible. Author Gail Sheehy asserted:
If we don't change, we don't grow. If we don't grow, we are not really living. Growth demands a temporary surrender of security. It may mean a giving up of familiar but limiting patterns, safe but unrewarding work, values no longer believed in, relationships that have lost their meaning. As Dostoevsky put it, "taking a new step, uttering a new word, is what most people fear most." The real fear should be the opposite course.
I can't think of anything worse than living a stagnant life, devoid of change and improvement.
Growth Is a Choice
Most people fight against change, especially when it affects them personally. As novelist Leo Tolstoy said, "Everyone thinks of changing the world, but no one thinks of changing himself." The ironic thing is that change is inevitable. Everybody has to deal with it. On the other hand, growth is optional. You can choose to grow or fight it. But know this: people unwilling to grow will never reach their potential.
In one of his books, my friend Howard Hendricks asks the question, "How have you changed ... lately? In the last week, let's say? Or the last month? The last year? Can you be very specific?" He knows how people tend to get into a rut when it comes to growth and change. Growth is a choice, a decision that can really make a difference in a person's life.
Most people don't realize that unsuccessful and successful people do not differ substantially in their abilities. They vary in their desires to reach their potential. And nothing is more effective when it comes to reaching potential than commitment to personal growth.
Principles for Self-Improvement
Making the change from being an occasional learner to becoming someone dedicated to personal growth goes against the grain of the way most people live. If you asked one hundred people how many books they have read on their own since leaving school (college or high school), I bet only a handful would say they have read more than one or two books. If you asked how many listen to audio lessons and voluntarily attend conferences and seminars to grow personally, there would be even fewer. Most people celebrate when they receive their diplomas or degrees and say to themselves, "Thank goodness that's over. Just let me have a good job. I'm finished with studying." But such thinking doesn't take you any higher than average. If you want to be successful, you have to keep growing.
As someone who has dedicated his life to personal growth and development, I'd like to help you make the leap to becoming a dedicated self-developer. It's the way you need to go if you want to reach your potential. Besides that, it also has another benefit: it brings contentment. The happiest people I know are growing every day.
Take a look at the following eight principles. They'll help you develop into a person dedicated to personal growth:
1. Choose a Life of Growth
It's said that when Spanish composer-cellist Pablo Casals was in the final years of his life, a young reporter asked him, "Mr. Casals, you are ninety-five years old and the greatest cellist that ever lived. Why do you still practice six hours a day?"
What was Casals's answer? "Because I think I'm making progress." That's the kind of dedication to continual growth that you should have. The people who reach their potential, no matter what their profession or background, think in terms of improvement. If you think you can "hold your ground" and still make the success journey, you are mistaken. You need to have an attitude like that of General George Patton. It's said that he told his troops, "There is one thing I want you to remember. I don't want to get any messages saying we are holding our position. We are advancing constantly." Patton's motto was, "Always take the offensive. Never dig in."
The only way to improve the quality of your life is to improve yourself. If you want to grow your organization, you must grow a leader. If you want better children, you must become a better person. If you want others to treat you more kindly, you must develop better people skills. There is no sure way to make other people in your environment improve. The only thing you truly have the ability to improve is yourself. And the amazing thing is that when you do, everything else around you suddenly gets better. So the bottom line is that if you want to take the success journey, you must live a life of growth. And the only way you will grow is if you choose to grow.
2. Start Growing Today
Napoleon Hill said, "It's not what you are going to do, but it's what you are doing now that counts." Many unsuccessful people have what I call "someday sickness" because they could do some things to bring value to their lives right now. But they put them off and say they'll do them someday. Their motto is "One of these days." But as the old English proverb says, "One of these days means none of these days." The best way to ensure success is to start growing today. No matter where you may be starting from, don't be discouraged; everyone who got where he is started where he was.
Why do you need to determine to start growing today? There are several reasons:
Growth is not automatic. In my book Breakthrough Parenting, I mention that you can be young only once, but you can be immature indefinitely. That's because growth is not automatic. Just because you grow older doesn't mean you keep growing. That's how it is with some creatures, such as crustaceans. As a crab or a lobster ages, it grows and has to shed its shell. But that's not the trend for people. The road to the next level is uphill, and it takes effort to keep growing. The sooner you start, the closer to reaching your potential you'll be. Growth today will provide a better tomorrow. Everything you do today builds on what you did yesterday. And altogether, those things determine what will happen tomorrow. That's especially true in regard to growth. Oliver Wendell Holmes offered this insight: "Man's mind, once stretched by new ideas, never regains its original dimensions." Growth today is an investment for tomorrow. Growth is your responsibility. When you were a small child, your parents were responsible for you-even for your growth and education. But as an adult, you bear that responsibility entirely. If you don't make growth your responsibility, it will never happen.
There is no time like right now to get started. Recognize the importance that personal growth plays in success, and commit yourself to developing your potential today.
3. Focus on Self-Development, Not Self-fulfillment
There has been a change in focus over the last thirty years in the area of personal growth. Beginning in the late sixties and early seventies, people began talking about "finding themselves," meaning that they were searching for a way to become self-fulfilled. It's like making happiness a goal because self-fulfillment is about feeling good.
But self-development is different. Sure, much of the time it will make you feel good, but that's a by-product, not the goal. Self-development is a higher calling; it is the development of your potential so that you can attain the purpose for which you were created. There are times when that's fulfilling, but other times it's not. But no matter how it makes you feel, self-development always has one effect: It draws you toward your destiny. Rabbi Samuel M. Silver taught that "the greatest of all miracles is that we need not be tomorrow what we are today, but we can improve if we make use of the potential implanted in us by God."
4. Never Stay Satisfied with Current Accomplishments
My friend Rick Warren says, "The greatest enemy of tomorrow's success is today's success." And he is right. Thinking that you have "arrived" when you accomplish a goal has the same effect as believing you know it all. It takes away your desire to learn. It's another characteristic of destination disease. But successful people don't sit back and rest on their laurels. They know that wins-like losses-are temporary, and they have to keep growing if they want to continue being successful. Charles Handy remarked, "It is one of the paradoxes of success that the things and ways which got you there are seldom those things that keep you there."
No matter how successful you are today, don't get complacent. Stay hungry. Sydney Harris insisted that "a winner knows how much he still has to learn, even when he is considered an expert by others; a loser wants to be considered an expert by others before he has learned enough to know how little he knows." Don't settle into a comfort zone, and don't let success go to your head. Enjoy your success briefly, and then move on to greater growth.
5. Be a Continual Learner
The best way to keep from becoming satisfied with your current achievements is to make yourself a continual learner. That kind of commitment may be rarer than you realize. For example, a study performed by the University of Michigan several years ago found that one-third of all physicians in the United States are so busy working that they're two years behind the breakthroughs in their own fields.
If you want to be a continual learner and keep growing throughout your life, you'll have to carve out the time to do it. You'll have to do what you can wherever you are. As Henry Ford said, "It's been my observation that most successful people get ahead during the time other people waste."
That's one reason I carry books and magazines with me whenever I travel. During the downtimes, such as waiting for a connection in an airport, I can go through a stack of magazines, reading and cutting out articles. Or I can skim through a book, learning the major concepts and pulling out quotes I'll be able to use later. And when I'm in town, I maximize my learning time by continually listening to instructive tapes in the car.
Frank A. Clark stated, "Most of us must learn a great deal every day in order to keep ahead of what we forget." Learning something every day is the essence of being a continual learner. You must keep improving yourself, not only acquiring knowledge to replace what you forget or what's out-of-date, but building on what you learned yesterday.
6. Develop a Plan for Growth
The key to a life of continual learning and improvement lies in developing a specific plan for growth and following through with it. I recommend a plan that requires an hour a day, five days a week. I use that as the pattern because of a statement by Earl Nightingale, which says, "If a person will spend one hour a day on the same subject for five years, that person will be an expert on that subject." Isn't that an incredible promise? It shows how far we are capable of going when we have the discipline to make growth our daily practice. When I teach leadership conferences, I recommend the following growth plan to participants:
MONDAY: Spend one hour with a devotional to develop your spiritual life.
TUESDAY: Spend one hour listening to a leadership podcast or audio lesson.
WEDNESDAY: Spend one hour filing quotes and reflecting on the content of Tuesday's tape.
THURSDAY: Spend one hour reading a book on leadership.
FRIDAY: Spend half the hour reading the book and the other half filing and reflecting.
As you develop your plan for growth, start by identifying the three to five areas in which you desire to grow. Then look for useful materials-books, magazines, audiotapes, videos-and incorporate them into your plan. I recommend that you make it your goal to read twelve books and listen to fifty-two tapes (or read fifty-two articles) each year. Exactly how you go about it doesn't matter, but do it daily. That way you're more likely to follow through and get it done than if you periodically put it off and then try to catch up.
7. Pay the Price
I mentioned before that self-fulfillment focuses on making a person happy, whereas self-development proposes to help a person reach potential. A trade-off of growth is that it is sometimes uncomfortable. It requires discipline. It takes time that you could spend on leisure activities. It costs money to buy materials. You have to face constant change and take risks. And sometimes it's just plain lonely. That's why many people stop growing when the price gets high.
But growth is always worth the price you pay because the alternative is a limited life with unfulfilled potential. Success takes effort, and you can't make the journey if you're sitting back waiting for life to come along and improve you. President Theodore Roosevelt boldly stated, "There has not yet been a person in our history who led a life of ease whose name is worth remembering." Those words were true when he spoke them almost a century ago, and they still apply today.
8. Find a Way to Apply What You Learn
Jim Rohn urged, "Don't let your learning lead to knowledge. Let your learning lead to action." The bottom line when it comes to personal development is action. If your life doesn't begin to change as a result of what you're learning, you're experiencing one of these problems: You're not giving your growth plan enough time and attention; you're focusing too much time on the wrong areas; or you're not applying what you learn.
Successful people develop positive daily habits that help them to grow and learn. One of the things I do to make sure I don't lose what I learn is file it. In my office I have more than twelve hundred files full of articles and information, and I have thousands upon thousands of quotes. But I also make an effort to apply information as soon as I learn it. I do that by asking myself these questions anytime I learn something new:
Where can I use it?
When can I use it?
Who else needs to know it?
These questions take my focus off simply acquiring knowledge and put it onto applying what I learn to my life. Try using them. I think they'll do the same for you.
Author and leadership expert Fred Smith made a statement that summarizes what committing to personal growth is really all about. He said:
Something in human nature tempts us to stay where we're comfortable. We try to find a plateau, a resting place, where we have comfortable stress and adequate finances. Where we have comfortable associations with people, without the intimidation of meeting new people and entering strange situations.
Of course, all of us need to plateau for a time. We climb and then plateau for assimilation. But once we've assimilated what we've learned, we climb again. It's unfortunate when we've done our last climb. When we have made our last climb, we are old, whether forty or eighty.
Whatever you do, don't allow yourself to stay on a plateau. Commit yourself to climbing the mountain of personal potential-a little at a time-throughout your life. It's one journey you'll never regret having made. According to novelist George Eliot, "It is never too late to be what you might have become."
Chapter Two
How Can I Grow in my Career?Be better tomorrow than you are today.
A turkey was chatting with a bull. "I would love to be able to get to the top of that tree," sighed the turkey, "but I haven't got the energy."
"Well," replied the bull, "why don't you nibble on some of my droppings? They're packed with nutrients."
The turkey pecked at a lump of dung and found that it actually gave him enough strength to reach the lowest branch of the tree. The next day, after eating some more dung, he reached the second branch. Finally after a fourth night, there he was proudly perched at the top of the tree. But he was promptly spotted by a hunter, who shot him down out of the tree.
The moral of the story: BS might get you to the top, but it won't keep you there.
(Continues...)
Excerpted from SELF-IMPROVEMENT 101by John C. Maxwell Copyright © 2009 by John C. Maxwell. Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.
Product details
- Publisher : HarperCollins Leadership (November 1, 2009)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 128 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1400280249
- ISBN-13 : 978-1400280247
- Item Weight : 6.1 ounces
- Dimensions : 4.75 x 0.6 x 6.55 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #225,099 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #1,204 in Motivational Management & Leadership
- #1,450 in Business Motivation & Self-Improvement (Books)
- #3,052 in Leadership & Motivation
- Customer Reviews:
About the author
John C. Maxwell is an internationally recognized leadership expert, speaker, coach, and author who has sold over 19 million books. Dr. Maxwell is the founder of EQUIP and the John Maxwell Company, organizations that have trained more than 5 million leaders worldwide. Every year he speaks to Fortune 500 companies, international government leaders, and organizations as diverse as the United States Military Academy at West Point, the National Football League, and the United Nations. A New York Times, Wall Street Journal, and Business Week best-selling author, Maxwell has written three books which have each sold more than one million copies: The 21 Irrefutable Laws of Leadership, Developing the Leader Within You, and The 21 Indispensable Qualities of a Leader. You can find him at JohnMaxwell.com and follow him at Twitter.com/JohnCMaxwell.
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I participate with a church small group that meets each week and we use different books to help learn leadership principles. Our small group leader chose this book for a recent study.
What I liked:
The chapters are easy to digest. We used one per week for our studies and it was perfect for that. The small footprint of the book made it easy to transport while the text is large enough to read without eye strain. The subject matter is perfect for anyone in a leadership position who truly wishes to improve themselves and be a true leader.