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\nAbout the author
\nMarcus Buckingham is the author of two of the best-selling business books of all time, has two of Harvard Business Review’s most circulated, industry-changing cover articles, and has been the subject of in-depth profiles in The New York Times, Wall Street Journal, USA Today, Forbes, Fortune, Fast Company, The Today Show, and The Oprah Winfrey Show. After spending two decades studying excellence at the Gallup Organization and co-creating the StrengthsFinder tool, he built his own Coaching + Education firm, The Marcus Buckingham Company. As CEO, he quickly turned it into a Human Capital Management company working with some of the world’s largest organizations.
\nHe is known as the world’s most prominent researcher on strengths and leadership at work, and today leads research at the ADP Research Institute. Challenging entrenched preconceptions about achievement to get to the core of what drives success, Marcus’s strengths- based approach is defining the future of work as we know it.
\nSource: https://www.marcusbuckingham.com/about/
\nAbout the book
\nYou’ve long been told to “Do what you love.” Sounds simple, but the real challenge is how to do this in a world not set up to help you. Most of us actually don’t know the real truth of what we love\u200a—\u200awhat engages us and makes us thrive\u200a—\u200aand our workplaces, jobs, schools, even our parents, are focused instead on making us conform. Sadly, no person or system is dedicated to discovering the crucial intersection between what you love to do and how you contribute it to others.
\nIn this eye-opening, uplifting book, Buckingham shows you how to break free from this conformity\u200a—\u200ahow to decode your own loves, turn them into their most powerful expression, and do the same for those you lead and those you love.
\nHow can you use love to reveal your unique gifts?
\nHow can you pinpoint what makes you stand out from anyone else?
\nHow can you choose roles in which you’ll excel?
\nLove + Work unlocks answers to these questions and others, so you can:
\nLove, the most powerful of human emotions, the source of all creativity, collaboration, insight, and excellence, has been systematically drained from our lives\u200a—\u200aour work, teams, and classrooms.
\nIt’s time we brought love back in.
\nLove + Work shows you how.
\nSource: https://loveandwork.org/about-the-book/
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Further listening: I enjoyed this episode of Marcus Buckingham on the Diary of a CEO podcast, talking about some of the ideas from the book.\n
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Big idea #1\u200a—\u200aYou are wyrd (but nobody cares)
\nFrom an early age, we’re pushed in certain directions. And often those directions have little to do with our unique strengths, preferences, loves, or desires.
\nMore often than not we are constantly pushed to work on our weaknesses or our ‘development areas’ rather than actually focusing on what we love and what we’re good at. When you get to work, you’re given goals from above, a performance review that ranks you soullessly against your peers, and pushed towards a fixed career path.
\nOur education and work systems aren’t designed this way through malice, but through this relentless search for efficiency or standardisation, but at the cost of people’s unique contributions.
\nThe idea of wyrd is not ‘weird’, it’s wyrd; an ancient Norse term which means “the idea that each person is born with a distinct spirit, a spirit unique to you that guides you to love some things and loathe others.”
\nYour wyrd can be found in your ‘red threads’; the situations where you lose track of time, you’re in that flow state, times where you’re the only one to notice something, or the only one who can come up with a new way of doing things and improving things.
\nBig idea #2\u200a—\u200aA little bit of love, every day
\nLove belongs at work, without it work would be pretty miserable. But we don’t have to love all of it, all of the time.
\nWe know this because when we survey a group of people who are highly successful, resilient, and engaged, and a contrast group of people who are less so, the two best questions that separate these groups are these;\n
- do you have a chance to play to your strengths every day?\n
- were you excited to go to work every day, last week?
The people who are thriving the most answer ‘strongly agree’ to both of those questions.\n
So do you have a chance to play to your strengths every day?
\nIt shows that frequency trumps intensity when it comes to loving what you do. They reckon that you need to love what you’re doing around 20% of the time in order to thrive. It means that you, you don’t need ‘a whole quilt of red threads’ to thrive and be resilient, just enough of them every day.
\nYou can write a love note to dig a bit deeper. If you say you love helping people, ask if it matters who you’re helping, when you’re helping them, why you’re helping them, what you’re helping them with, and how you’re helping them?
\nYour why matters, but your what matters so much more because that’s really what you think about when you answer the questions around enjoying what you did that day / if you’re excited to go to work.
\nIt’s important to note that your strength is not something that you’re good at but you hate doing. You might be good at it, but it doesn’t count as a strength.
\nBig idea #3\u200a—\u200aLove and leadership
\nIf you think that love has no place at work, and that work is to be endured, then listen up. You don’t just need to ‘suckitup’, and love can be found in all kinds of jobs for different people. What one person loves, another will loathe, and vice versa.
\nLove and work leaders prioritise their people as people. They push against some of the formulated systems and processes that exist in most workplaces and instead focus on the individuals, their loves, and what helps them contribute.
\nLeaders who check in regularly with their team members get better results. There’s a particular check in formula that he suggests; a weekly 15 minute conversation held each week about the upcoming week. The conversation is built on four short questions (two about last week and two about the next coming week).
\nTeam leaders who had this conversation every single week with their team members had engagement scores 77% higher than the control groups and attrition at 67% less than the control groups. This checking can be done in any manner of ways; email, text, voice, face-to-face… it doesn’t matter, as long as it happens.
\nMarcus says that if you don’t want to do this, or the idea of this bores, you really need to consider your role as a leader. If you’ve got too many people reporting to you to make this possible, focus on fixing that.
\nMarcus also presents some bold things that love and work organisations don’t do.
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