55 min

Ep 136: Chris McChesney - Twenty Years in Love with the Same Problem The Global Leadership Podcast

    • Education

In this episode, Global Leadership Podcast interviewer Jason Jaggard sits down with Chris McChesney, co-author of The Four Disciplines of Execution, to revisit the book and to explore how the four disciplines can impact our lives outside the business world.
 
IN THIS EPISODE:
-       What is a basic overview of the “Four Disciplines of Execution”?
-       How can you learn to focus what is most important, but is not necessarily the most urgent?
-       What “levers” can you affect that make it seem like your intended result is a winnable game?
-       What has being a parent taught Chris about leadership, and how can the four disciplines be applied to a family? 
 
LISTEN
Apple Podcasts | Spotify | YouTube
 
 STANDOUTS AND TAKEAWAYS
-       It’s better to fall in love with a problem than it is to fall in love with a solution.
-       All of the “have tos” in our life is called “The Whirlwind.” The “One” is the strategic result in your life that is going to require disproportionate effort.
-       Human beings have the capacity to handle “the whirlwind plus one.”
-       It’s best to not give your frontline teams the answers; get their commitment and engagement by making them a part of the process.
-       The Four Disciplines can actually be a way to protect the entrepreneurial spirit of a organization.
-       If you want to see the highest level of engagement a human being is capable of, watch them in a game.
-       The strategic result you’re looking for should feel like both a high-stakes game and a winnable game.
-       Progress and purpose are the most important things that drive employee engagement. This fact also has profound implications for how leaders address remote work.
-       The whole purpose of The Four Disciplines is to achieve goals that do not feel as important as “the day job.”
-       If kids have one anchor of self-esteem in their life, they are able to handle the whirlwind and drama of life much more effectively.
-       The enemy of the human soul is not work; it’s futility.
-       The struggle is that as you become more successful as a company, the whirlwind grows and requires more and more.
-       People don’t fear change; they fear uncertainty.
-       Most success comes from putting huge energy into small wins.
-       The most significant jump is moving from leading a team to leading leaders.
 
LINKS MENTIONED
-       Website: Chris McChesney
-       Book: The 4 Disciplines of Execution: Revised and Updated: Achieving Your Wildly Important Goals
-       Added Value: Tim Harford: Trial, error and the God complex (TEDTalk via YouTube)
-       Added Value: “Leaders Concerned About Remote Work Should Be Looking at This Metric”
-       Podcast: 2018 Global Leadership Podcast
-       Book: The Truth About Employee Engagement: A Fable About Addressing the Three Root Causes of Job Misery (Patrick Lencioni)
 
-       Website: Global Leadership Network
 
THIS EPISODE SPONSORED BY: 
-        World Vision

In this episode, Global Leadership Podcast interviewer Jason Jaggard sits down with Chris McChesney, co-author of The Four Disciplines of Execution, to revisit the book and to explore how the four disciplines can impact our lives outside the business world.
 
IN THIS EPISODE:
-       What is a basic overview of the “Four Disciplines of Execution”?
-       How can you learn to focus what is most important, but is not necessarily the most urgent?
-       What “levers” can you affect that make it seem like your intended result is a winnable game?
-       What has being a parent taught Chris about leadership, and how can the four disciplines be applied to a family? 
 
LISTEN
Apple Podcasts | Spotify | YouTube
 
 STANDOUTS AND TAKEAWAYS
-       It’s better to fall in love with a problem than it is to fall in love with a solution.
-       All of the “have tos” in our life is called “The Whirlwind.” The “One” is the strategic result in your life that is going to require disproportionate effort.
-       Human beings have the capacity to handle “the whirlwind plus one.”
-       It’s best to not give your frontline teams the answers; get their commitment and engagement by making them a part of the process.
-       The Four Disciplines can actually be a way to protect the entrepreneurial spirit of a organization.
-       If you want to see the highest level of engagement a human being is capable of, watch them in a game.
-       The strategic result you’re looking for should feel like both a high-stakes game and a winnable game.
-       Progress and purpose are the most important things that drive employee engagement. This fact also has profound implications for how leaders address remote work.
-       The whole purpose of The Four Disciplines is to achieve goals that do not feel as important as “the day job.”
-       If kids have one anchor of self-esteem in their life, they are able to handle the whirlwind and drama of life much more effectively.
-       The enemy of the human soul is not work; it’s futility.
-       The struggle is that as you become more successful as a company, the whirlwind grows and requires more and more.
-       People don’t fear change; they fear uncertainty.
-       Most success comes from putting huge energy into small wins.
-       The most significant jump is moving from leading a team to leading leaders.
 
LINKS MENTIONED
-       Website: Chris McChesney
-       Book: The 4 Disciplines of Execution: Revised and Updated: Achieving Your Wildly Important Goals
-       Added Value: Tim Harford: Trial, error and the God complex (TEDTalk via YouTube)
-       Added Value: “Leaders Concerned About Remote Work Should Be Looking at This Metric”
-       Podcast: 2018 Global Leadership Podcast
-       Book: The Truth About Employee Engagement: A Fable About Addressing the Three Root Causes of Job Misery (Patrick Lencioni)
 
-       Website: Global Leadership Network
 
THIS EPISODE SPONSORED BY: 
-        World Vision

55 min

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