
First, Break All the Rules What the World's Greatest Managers Do Differently
Reviews

Two starts alone for the amazing set of 13 questions to measure employee satisfaction with. There were some other golden nuggets, but they were badly or too shortly explained.

This was a very informative book for me as a first-time manager. The key insights that I walk away with are: 1. There's a difference between skills, knowledge and talent. As a manager, recognize that someone's talents are usually enduring and extremely difficult to change, so make sure you select for talent and cast each person to the right match based on talents. Skills and knowledge you can then teach. 2. We often confuse what is a skill vs a talent. Talents are ingrained ways of doing things that come naturally, and these are different and unique at the individual level. 3. For talents, focus on developing the strengths. Remediating weaknesses, as they relate to talent, is often a waste of time and energy. Many other things I found to be insightful and useful, but the above I'd say was the gist of what most helped my thinking. The book also has great questions to use as a manager, and I've had some great discussions so far with a few I've tried. Maybe one day I'll feel comfortable enough managing people to no longer need it, but I expect to keep this book close to my desk as a reference for a while.


