LEADERSHIP AND SELF-DECEPTION - Training Video (16 minutes - Excerpted Above) Available from CRM Films.
* A BusinessWeek Bestseller! Read about it here!
* Identifies a critical, underlying cause of leadership failure
* Reveals why some leaders succeed with people and others fail-even when they do the same things
* Explains why most change that occurs in organizations is only temporary
* Spotlights the central, paradoxical truth about genuine change-and shows how anyone can achieve it
Through an entertaining and compelling story dubbed Who Moved My Cheese meets 7 Habits of Highly Effective People by one manuscript reviewer--Leadership and Self-Deception presents a revolutionary new understanding of the nature of successful leadership.
The authors show that the key to successful leadership lies deeper than a particular technique, behavior or skill. This is why so many leadership development initiatives end up failing, and why so many leaders, no matter how hard they try, are ultimately unsuccessful. The key to successful leadership lies not in what we do, but in who we areour way of being.
Leadership and Self Deception shows how self-betrayal going against one's innate sense of what he or she should be doing for others leads to self-deception, the central player in all leadership breakdowns, relationship issues, and performance problems in organizations.
The book follows the progress of a new executive at the fictional Zagrum Corporation as he sheds his old ways of acting and learns a new, better way to lead. Leadership and Self-Deception uses vivid examples to show what self-deception is, how it operates, and, most importantly, how it can be overcome. While other books cover useful people skills, techniques, and systems of leadership, this one goes deeper, fully illuminating the source of what makes truly effective leadership.
From the Arbinger Institute, a consortium of scholars, business leaders, and professionals, LEADERSHIP AND SELF-DECEPTION is the first book to reveal this foremost, critical cause of leadership failure. The authors identify self-deception as the "disease" at the core of all of the leadership shortcomings we see in today's organizations, and self-betrayal as the cause of the disease. It provides a new solution to the age-old problem of self-deception. This powerful solution shows that most people problems in organizations are the result of self-deception-a problem that can be identified, isolated, and treated in a disciplined, results-oriented way.
The book reveals how leaders who are self-deceived might as well be living in a box-trapped, cut off from others, and blind to the truth. It illustrates how leaders trapped within this box cannot lead effectively no matter how hard they try and no matter how many skills and techniques they employ.
Leadership and Self-Deception demonstrates that when we understand self-deception we understand why its not enough to identify and treat leadership problems as if they were separate and distinct. Often that's what happens: we make an inventory of leadership skills and determine that a given leader doesn't provide enough feedback or doesn't take time to listen to people, or delegates without providing clear direction. But those who receive such feedback often fail to improve their leadership abilities. They may work to become more effective evaluators at one workshop, more practiced listeners at another, more directive leaders at another, and yet overlook completely the root cause of the problem. Frequently, they still are not transformed into leaders whom people want to follow.
What will transform them? The authors assert that the key to leadership lies deeper than any particular behavior or skill. It lies in how we are-our way of being. They reveal that at the deep level of who we are, there are fundamentally two ways of being: the state of self-deception (like living in a box), and the state of being that is honest, straightforward, and genuine. The first is the source of leadership problems and the second the source of leadership success.
While some books have identified the importance of state of being in leadership, this book shows how we come to enter one state or the other as leaders-and how it is possible to change. Understanding and applying this principle is the key to leadership transformation; it is the key to becoming a consistent catalyst for success.
Leadership and Self-Deception clearly demonstrates how people can stop undermining themselves and what amazing things happen when they do-freely and fully putting to work all the behavioral skills, systems, and techniques that will bring success to them and their organizations. While other books cover useful people skills, techniques, and systems of leadership, this one goes deeper, fully illuminating the source of what makes truly effective leadership.