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Esther Choy on Letting the Story Do the Work

Stories have a beginning, a middle, and an end, that's it. However, there is some nuance that can make a blah story into a memorable one. Esther Choy , author of Let the Story Do the Work , published by AMACOM, joins us with some ways to punch up your storytelling skills that will have people eager

Forrest Breyfogle on Taking Six Sigma to the Next Level

Problem-solving or assessment methodologies such as Six Sigma, Lean Six Sigma, or ISO may not provide a business framework so that organizations can move toward achieving the three Rs of business: everybody doing the Right Things the Right Way at the Right Time. In The Integrated Enterprise Excellen

Frank Pietrucha on How to Be a Supercommunicator

Technology is changing our vocabulary, creating new acronyms, buzzwords, and concepts every day. It can be hard to keep up. Frank Pietrucha, author of Supercommunicator , published by AMACOM, has plenty of tips on how to explain our technical knowledge to nontechnical listeners.

Fred Kofman on The Meaning Revolution

Can everyone run a marathon? Yes and no. A lot of people can but not tomorrow, not without training. The ones that want to will put in the work. To Fred Kofman , the same metric applies to leadership. It takes effort but the ones who put in the time will be able to learn how. He joins us to talk abo

G. Michael Campbell on Ensuring Project Success

G. Michael Campbell has found that there is one fairly reliable predictor of project success: communication. If you have good, open communication with the stakeholders involved in your project you are more likely to see the project through to completion. And vice versa. He joins us today to talk abo

Geoff Colvin on Why Talent is Overrated

Why are some people – Tiger Woods, Warren Buffett, Yo-Yo Ma – so incredibly accomplished at what they do, while millions of others in those same fields never become very good? Why are some people so extraordinarily creative and innovative? Why can some continue to perform great at ages when conventi

Geoff Vuleta on Creating Innovation for the Future

Geoff Vuleta , CEO of Fahrenheit 212, an “innovating consultancy firm,” joins us on Edgewise to share some of his companies' methods of creativity and innovation. He describes two types of innovation: renovation innovation, which is the bulk of all innovation efforts, and transformational innovation

Geoffrey Colon on Disruptive Marketing

Today on Edgewise Geoffrey Colon , author of the new AMACOM book Disruptive Marketing, joins us for a freewheeling conversation about music, technology, ethics, and taking the fear out of failure.

Georg Vielmetter and Yvonne Sell on Megatrends You Need to Understand

Georg Vielmetter and Yvonne Sell , co-authors of Leadership 2030: The Six Megatrends You Need to Understand to Lead Your Company into the Future , published by AMACOM, share with us their analysis of the six megatrends affecting organizations today. Leaders must adapt to the ever-changing global cli

George Anders on Finding Exceptional Talent

What changes should your organization consider in order to get the most out of the recruitment process? New York Times bestselling author, George Anders , discusses this in his new book titled, The Rare Find: Spotting Exceptional Talent Before Everyone Else. He emphasizes the importance of new techn