Gaining the Perspective of Wisdom
Dan Wooldridge reflects on what it takes to keep our heads when everyone is losing their’s in the midst of the current economic crisis.
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Over the past two decades, the American business and academic community has produced hundreds, perhaps thousands, of management-type business books prodding and showing Americans how they can work smarter, get better results, and compete with those wily Asians … By and large they all urge companies and managers to aspire to greatness by listening to their customers, championing innovation, fostering empowerment and leadership, and ratcheting up quality. Many companies have done very well following the advice contained in these books. Others have faltered. Such inconsistency is a result of two apparent flaws with many of these best-selling tomes. The books, with few exceptions, are mostly geared for managers and mostly preach using techniques on task-driven thinking, not critical thinking.
LeGault, Michael R.
Th!nk: Why Crucial Decisions Can’t Be Made in the Blink of an Eye (p. 50-51), Threshold Editions, 2006
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Dan Wooldridge reflects on the difference between information, knowledge, and wisdom.
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Reading articles on the rise in the Wholesale Price Index in the Los Angeles Times and New York Times today reminded me of the Proverb about the “prudent person.” The first half of Proverbs 14:8 says, …
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There is a new sound in the marketplace. It is not the hum of the PR machine. It is the voice of people—real people—returning to the marketplace.
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