Rating:  Summary: Implications for Education Review: On its own, "Now, Discover Your Strengths" is a very interesting read for anyone in a leadership position, but paired with its prequel, "First, Break All the Rules," one can be armed with a self-awareness and understanding of others to create paradigm shifts in nearly any organization. As an educator, I recognized immediately the implications of exploring the thirty-four talents outlined in this text for all levels of an educational organization. Teachers would do well to read this book to help bridge students' natural talents with curricular knowledge and skills (multiple intelligences), building-level administrators would do well to tap into various staff members' talents in order to develop and manage a school culture where each staff member is valued and, therefore, serves with a common goal of helping students reach their full potential. Central office administrators would do equally well to understand the talents outlined in this text as they go through their recruiting and hiring routines. Working from the text's premise that it is best to develop people's talents into strengths instead of trying to 'fix' weaknesses, evaluation and professional development practices in schools have the potential to be dramatically improved. Overall, this book, either alone or with its predecessor, would be a valuable read for any aspiring or practicing instructional leader.
Rating:  Summary: Unbelievable Review: The road is clear to newfound strength in life by these easy guidelines to your business self. What about the other side though? We all need a guideline to the other side of ourselves. Dreams: Gateway to the True Self is just that.By managing our lives through self realization we become more of the person we want to be. This book has changed my philosophical introspection resulting in a better self--the one I've always wanted to recognize.
Rating:  Summary: This book is a strong Second... Review: For a manager who desires increased productivity and a happier work place, start with "First Break all the Rules." It has much better advise about how understand and manage people to their maximum productivity than any other management book I have ever read. This is a follow-up book that goes more deeply into the basic "talents" that people have. At first I thought it was almost devoid of content when set against the marvelous first book from the Gallop Organization. But now that I have used its concepts for six months I am rereading it again and again. The on-line "Strengths Finder" is very much geared toward corporate (or non-profits) organizations and finding strengths that help you in an organization. But once you have these defined, and if you actually use them in your organization, these "themes" are extremely helpful. Because you not only use them yourself to understand why you are good at some things and struggle with others, your manager and coworkers can also use them to understand you better. This really works best if the entire organization works toward a strengths-based organization, but I have seen miracles in the groups that blazed the path first at our company. One manager (who has no empathy) told me that she uses the themes like a black box. "I can't really understand what it is like to have Harmony or Woo, but now I know if I put X type of person in Y type of situation, Z will result. It has simplified my life as a manager tremendously. No longer do I ask someone with Harmony to go to meetings filled with controversy, I send someone with Woo. When the details are critical, I give the job to a Deliberative person. When thought and planning are required, I make sure that the team has plenty of Strategic and Arrangers. But when I need the fire put out now, I ask an Activator to get it done now. My people are much, much happier, the work expectations are much clearer, and our productivity is up. The concepts in this book and in First Break All the Rules have made a huge impact on our company, our employees, and our stress levels. I highly recommend it!
Rating:  Summary: remedial Review: this is a fine book for those who've never done a self analysis course or personality test. unfortunately, that's all this really is and the multiple references to sales and the word "empathy" make it clear that the authors were lazy in their providing the depth that this topic deserves. "now, break the rules" was infinitely better than this half written effort to make more money.
Rating:  Summary: A worthwhile concept well explained Review: I really enjoyed Strengths and have recommended it countless times. Of course, access to the web site (through a code nu,ber hidden inside the book's jacket)and development of my own personal strength profile have helped me to transform this book into a genuinely practical, enduring experience. I highly recommend this book.
Rating:  Summary: worth it Review: This book is worth purchasing just for the Strengthfinder online "test". I've been through these types of assessments before-- this was by far the most insightful & helped me understand WHY I work the way I do. It has helped to keep me on track in capitalizing on my individual strenghts. Now I don't view my "quirks" as impediments. I understand that these are the motivating factors that keep my work ethic afloat. Of course, knowing the strengths of your boss will help you respond & react to him/her in the most productive way. And with subordinates, you'll be able to help them work in a way that is more gratifying to them, which will sustain their morale & most likely generate a lot of new ideas for your workplace. Buy it for yourself, and some for co-workers. Then share your Strengths! (Once you get your online assessment, you can also sign-up to receive for Strength-specific tips on a regular basis!)
Rating:  Summary: Very refreshing, decent social science Review: The book's strength, to turn the tables a bit, is not in its length (less than average amount of words per page, about 250 pages), not in its style (written at a relatively low level), and not in its technical explanations (very little justification and explanation for the theories it proposes). The strength of the book is how it introduces a new vocabulary for identifying an individual's potential strengths and talents. The reader must go to a web site and take an assessment test rather early in the book. After the reader takes the test, Buckingham and Clifton work at unraveling old ways of looking at performance and standard practices. For example, they dare to suggest that the paradigm of improving a person's weaknesses as a strategy to implement optimum performance on the job or elsewhere is faulty. You may disagree, and you may find the test useless if you take it. In my instance, the test clearly verfied my areas of talent. So I gave the book five stars, because it's an amazing groundbreaking book - we now have a way to identify and talk about 34 different groups of human talents - and I don't care how Gallup, Buckingham, and Clifton arrived at the results they did if the results are clearly true, as in my case. Now, Discover Your Strengths doesn't tell you how to find a career based on your top five strengths. It's a very personal decision, and also impractical, given that about 33 million combinations of five exist. Buckingham and Clifton give examples of successful people and what they chose as careers, which utilize some combination of their strengths, and other useful suggestions, such as strategies to mitigate weaknesses. Highly recommended. I never would have known any of this had someone not suggested I read the book, and now a whole new way of looking at myself and the world is open to me. econ
Rating:  Summary: parent and career development coach Review: I love this book because it simplifys the mysteries of what a strength is and how important it is to honor and value who we are. Self-awareness is the foundation to a happy, successful life with self-esteem intact. Everyone will benefit from reading this book and participating in the strengths-finder assessment. This is what I am recommending to everyone regardless of what they think they know about themselves. I am buying it as gifts for everyone.
Rating:  Summary: Get a handle on your self Review: I thought the enneagram would be the last time I tried to quantify personality. These guys have done, to my mind, a better job because they aren't trying to explain so much. The test makes a lot of sense to me, and the insights are helpful. I also appreciate that their approach is understated. These guys aren't telling you that with their system your life will finally fall into place. They are just offering customized insights into your particular personality and offering basic strategic advice on how to maximize your potential.
Rating:  Summary: Discover your strengths Review: The authors focus on strengths. What are they? Where do they come from? How does one recognize them? They distinguish between what can be learned such as behaviors and skills and the raw materials that each person brings with them, their passions interests and talents. These raw materials are the foundation upon which our strengths are built. And working from our strengths is how greatness is achieved. The authors remind us that the difference between good and great is measured in relatively small but significant levels of achievement. The concept of understanding your innate talents and using them to create consistent superior results in your life runs directly counter to the notion that we must focus on our weaknesses and work to shore them up. As a result very few of us have a clear grasp of what our strengths and talents are and a disproportionately harsh view of our perceived faults. The ability to take an honest look at ourselves without being judgmental and critical is key to any real growth. Therefore I also recommend a book called "Working on Yourself Doesn't Work" by Ariel and Shya Kane. The authors are excellent guides into the realm of self-awareness.
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