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10 Steps To Successful Teams

Prisoners of Our Thoughts, Second Edition

Bootstrap Leadership

Amazon Reviews


6 of 6 people found the following review to be helpful:

We Must Be the Change We Want to See,  November 4, 2008

By Jeffrey N. Mccollum

This book is challenging and provocative. It's not one you can breeze through because it has this unsettling knack for holding up a mirror and saying, "Hey look. There's something here I want you to see." The something it wants us to understand is how deeply our everyday conversations at work are riddled with a lack of authenticity and how that lack stifles engagement and personal accountability. As a result, business results are less than they could be.

At the heart of this problem is an enormous collusion--a pattern of parent-child conversations that have become undiscussible in daily life. These norms in turn create organizational culture. The Showkeirs' fundamental premise is if you want to change a culture you have to change the conversations--difficult and, in their view, dangerous work. To change those conversations we have to accept our complicity in them.

The book is broken into two broad sections. First the Showkeir's lay out their case for change. Then, the offer a set protocols for shifting those conversations.

The case for change starts with an identification of "relationships that don't work at work ". Specifically, they point out how the following conversations--holding others accountable, caretaking, coping with disappointment and colluding with cynicism--are so deeply engrained that we take them for granted. "In all cases, these types of conversations have a detrimental impact on the culture and the business", they argue.

The conversations rest on a set of "old" management assumptions that see people as objects, ignore individual freedom and will, use policies and procedures that ensure compliance and emphasize leaders and experts while ignoring those who work in the system.

Leaders who see their role as "holding people accountable (as opposed to them being accountable) and who seek to protect their organizations from the rough and tumble vicissitudes of the market place (as opposed to helping them understand those realities) are operating from an implicit parent child model. This model puts unreasonable expectations on the leader and creates dependency in those led. [Although the Showkeirs chose not to venture into a discussion of contemporary American politics, it was hard for me to avoid looking at their arguments in the light of how self interest seems to be trumping service on the public stage.]

The Showkeirs explore the power of cynics to sap organizational change efforts of vitality and momentum. They become, in effect, a black hole into which hopes for a better future disappear. Leaders who seek to protect people from disappointment by promising safe landings in all difficult circumstances create cynics.

The antidote to all of this is to promote an "adult to adult culture" in which each individual in the organization:
* Becomes the eyes and voice of the business
* Brings an independent point of view
* Is expected to raise difficult issues
* Extends a spirit of goodwill to the endeavor
* Creates business literacy in others
* Choose accountability for the success of the whole business
* Manages his own morale, motivation and commitment

These qualities propel an organization from manipulation to engagement. People in the organization are enabled, ennobled and empowered--by their own choice. Manipulative conversational practices like name dropping, hidden agendas, over promising, sarcasm and exaggerated optimism or pessimism are replaced by authentic ones. All of this requires that we remain vigilant to three levels that operate in any conversation: the content, others' emotional responses and our own emotional responses. To business that operate on the belief that "business is about logic and fact based decisions", these three realities are radical in their own right.

Having laid out their case, the last portion of the book is a "practical guides to conversations like:
* Facing a difficult issue
* Seeking an exception (a radical reversal of the common organizational practice that it's easier to beg for forgiveness than ask for permission)
* Proposing change
* Introducing a mandate
* Renegotiating an established relationship
* Initiating endings
* Dealing with individual performance

These types of conversations, done in a manipulative parent-child environment, tie people in knots. Done authentically, they create clear, clean communication which, in turn, drives business performance to higher and higher levels.





2 of 2 people found the following review to be helpful:

Long-Overdue Wisdom,  September 16, 2008

By P. Banks

In this masterfully crafted and thought-provoking work, the authors engage you from the start with their revelation of what really goes on in an organization's culture and why today's 160+ year old models of management won't work in today's environment. For those with the conviction, courage and strength to favorably and lastingly change an organization, a long-overdue wisdom and powerful tools have finally arrived.

I can't remember the last time I was this excited about a book on corporate cultures and leadership. With so many organizations today desperately looking for ways to get better at what they do, right under their noses, literally, are the solutions. Authentic Conversations presents persuasive business reasons for change, and puts forth a proven strategy to get on with changing and unleashing the organization's buried and dormant core potential. It left me wanting more.





2 of 2 people found the following review to be helpful:

Hope for the World.,  September 16, 2008

By Patricia A. Mccarty

Authentic Conversations is a handbook, of sorts, for the future, for those hoping to have one. The world has changed. We can no longer get away with treating others as if they are our slaves, whether in a family or in a work environment. The Internet allowed a connection that was previously unavailable. We now must learn to communicate honestly, with grace and kindness...if we are to have any relationships in our lives that truly matter. Bravo to the authors and publishers. This will become a "must have" in every office and in every family bookshelf.





1 of 1 people found the following review to be helpful:

Excellent book on an essential topic,  March 2, 2010

By A. Kahane

In this wonderful little book, Jamie and Maren Showkeir address carefully and thoughtfully the most fundamental of all social skills: open talking and listening. Without this skill, which in most contexts is woefully underattended to, we cannot address any of our most important challenges, either at home, or at work, or in the world. Read it, practice it, spread the word.





1 of 1 people found the following review to be helpful:

Talking Wisdom,  October 27, 2008

By C. Piotrowski

According to Rodd Wagner and James K. Harter of the Gallup polling organization, "The evidence is clear that creation and maintenance of high employee engagement, as one of the few determinants of profitability largely within a company's control, is one of the most crucial imperatives of any successful organization." Their research contained in this book (pp. 18-19) identifies companies with engaged workers have significantly less turnover, less employee theft, fewer accidents, less absenteeism, higher customer service scores, higher productivity and profitability, and earnings per share.
Authentic Conversations is about developing engaging relationships. Trust, engagement, and personal accountability grow out of the conversations we have within the workplace and elsewhere. This book provides an array of ideas and pathways to authentic, engaging conversations.
As a CPA, I enjoyed the insights provided in Chapter 3 "The Myth of Holding Others Accountable." It identifies as much as managers want to control and hold others accountable, their success is one-sided and failures abound. Understanding and true accountability flows from honest, meaningful dialogue that Jamie and Maren Showkeir demystify in this book.
In my opinion, leaders and followers who aspire to be future leaders should read this book. It provides a breath of fresh insights and strategies for success.










AUTHENTIC CONVERSATIONS
Moving from Manipulation to Truth and Commitment

In this groundbreaking new book, the Showkeirs take something people typically think of as merely functional—ordinary conversations—and show the power they have to create, sustain, and change the very nature of workplace culture. Conversations can lead to an engaged and energized workforce, or to one that is alienated and uninspired. If you want to change the culture you must change the conversations.

All too often workplace conversations—between managers and direct reports, peer-to-peer, or with external stakeholders— create parent-child relationships. People hide facts, sugarcoat reality and claim helplessness to try to control interactions and get what they want. The Showkeirs expose the destructiveness of these manipulative conversations, and demonstrate how we can move to honest and authentic interactions that create adult relationships. By intentionally and thoughtfully changing conversations, organizations will engender increased commitment, true accountability, and improved workplace performance.

Drawing on more than 25 years of experience as organizational consultants, their book offers examples of parent-child and adult-adult workplace conversations in a variety of settings, circumstances and industries. They also provide a hands-on guide, including sample scripts, for dealing with a host of potentially difficult conversations.

Authentic Conversations goes to the heart of why so many people today are disengaged, uninspired, and uncommitted to their organization’s success. It challenges the conventional wisdom about managing people and sets out specific, concrete ways to consciously make conversations the primary driver for change.