Wooden on Leadership: How to Create a Winning Organizaion
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- ISBN13: 9780071453394
- Condition: NEW
- Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.
Product Description
A Wall Street Journal Bestseller
A compelling look inside the mind and powerful leadership methods of America’s education legend, John Wooden
“Team spirit, loyalty, enthusiasm, determination. . . . Buy and keep these traits and success should follow.”
–Coach John Wooden
John Wooden’s goal in 41 years of education never changed; namely, to get maximum effort and peak performance from each of his players in the manner that best served the team. Wooden on Leadership clarifies step-by-step how he pursued and accomplished this goal. Focusing on Wooden’s 12 Lessons in Leadership and his acclaimed Pyramid of Success, it outlines the mental, emotional, and physical qualities essential to building a winning organization, and shows you how to renovate the skill, confidence, and competitive fire to “be at your best when your best is needed”–and teach your organization to do the same.
Praise for Wooden on Leadership:
“What an all-encompassing Pyramid of Success for leadership! Coach Wooden’s moral power and brilliant definition of success encompass all of life. How I admire his life’s work and concept of what it really means to win!”
–Stephen R. Covey, leader, The 7 Habits of Highly Successful People and The 8th Habit: From Effectiveness to Greatness
“Wooden On Leadership offers valuable lessons no matter what your endeavor. ‘Competitive Greatness’ is our goal and that of any successful organization. Coach Wooden’s Pyramid of Success is where it all starts.”
–Jim Sinegal, president & CEO, Costco
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John Wooden starts with brief remembrances of his life as a young farm boy (lots of hard work, and a fantastic deal of competitiveness with his older brother), and absorbing key lessons from his father – “Focus on being the best you can become, and don’t worry about whether your are better than some else. You have control over the one, the additional you don’t.” This lesson would become part of Wooden’s education foundation.
It was also appealing to learn that, but for the privileged pay afforded high-school education, Wooden might as a replacement for have spent his career teaching college English. Either way the world would have benefited; but, education provided much greater visibility for Wooden.
Ultimately Wooden constructed what he calls his “Pyramid of Success.” Components include “Focus on the process, as a replacement for of the prize (winning),” “compete only against yourself,” “don’t hastily replace the ancient-fashioned with the new-fangled,” “enthusiam (one must truly delight in what he/she is doing), “loyalty (to self, and persons depending on you), “Small things make huge things take place,” and “emotion is your enemy.”
Coach Wooden’s basketball record (and methods) speak for themselves. Where I do have a problem, but, is when others aver that Wooden’s methods for basketball success translate readily to the business world. While no such aver is made on the book jacket or within its contents, the publisher, at least implicitly does so it lists “Wooden on Leadership” under the Business Leadership category.
Business is far more complex than basketball, but; this implies no disrespect for Coach Wooden. Obvious differences include the number of competitors, the role of finance, part of “the competition,” the importance (or lack thereof) of physical conditioning, the motivations of student players vs. employees, and their relative time commitments, issues of product-placement, marketing, “make-or-buy,” and outsourcing, vs. just execution of a limited number of routines, etc. These differences invalidate simply trying to an extremely successful set of leadership skills to an environment not proposed. Doing so makes about as much sense as a student nurse studying, eg. the Pittsburg Steelers.
Reader’s Rating: 5 / 5
The book has some excellent thoughts, but it is full of one liners. It gets dull at times.
On the excellent side – you have a lot of one liners to say and place on posters.
Reader’s Rating: 3 / 5
I have ever read – Coach Wooden’s book is applicable for coaches, teachers, parents, businessmen and students
Reader’s Rating: 5 / 5
John Wooden is a legendary basketball coach and teacher. His unsurpassed success as a basketball coach has its roots in his teachings which is written in this book. As a start, he outlines his legendary Pyramid of Success:
1)Industriousness (hard work)
2)Friendship
3)Loyalty
4)Cooperation (be interested in finding the best way, not in having your own way)
5)Enthusiasm
6)Self Control
7)Alertness
8)Initiative
9)Intentness (Being determined and persistent)
10)Condition (practice moderation)
11)Skill (knowedge and ability)
12)Team Spirit
13)Point
14)confidence (Preparation and proper perspective)
15)Competitive Greatness
Being around 90 years ancient, but, John Wooden is a huge fan (perhaps because he doesn’t know otherwise) of the Ancient School. For example, he empasizes values over victory, character over talent, and like over competition. He doesn’t even judge in recruiting basketball players. He also believes any basketball player with moral, ethical, or attitude issues should not be offered a erudition (not at his program anyway). All this is fine, and I personally don’t disagree. His thoughts, but, are to some extent outdated in our hyper competitive results-oriented society. Take NCAA basketball, how many coaches are fired for not graduating its players? Very few. Most are fired, but, if they fail to notch enough wins.
I still reflect this is a very excellent book to buy. Especially to youngsters and teenagers, that is, if you want to learn lessons from an Ancient School teacher.
Reader’s Rating: 4 / 5
Wooden was never my type of role model to emulate, then I saw an HBO documentary and my curiosity was tweaked.
Coming of age in the fifties and sixties when whenever I heard the word “leadership” I would immediately turn off.
Leadership was the antithesis of the flower child age nearly but not reasonably to a fault.Going through the seventies, eighties and to the present day a sea change has occurred among athelets, coaches, fans and franchises
to the point where one as jaded as myself will simply in regards to sports clamor-”WHATEVER DUDE.”
The magic seems to have disappeared with the overexposure of the Knights, Bonds, Cubans and Boros (my home Spurs gladly are the exception)to the point of boredom when one thinks sports.
_Wooden_ reminded me of what I chose to ignored: there are persons who are worthy of the title Leader,but rare.
Reading the work I was simply nonplused thinking can this be taught? Sadly the answer was no it can not. The question after this was is it worth pursuing; and the answer was beyond a doubt a huge affirmative.
Above all Mr. Wooden is a gentleman, a very wise and worthy gentleman who can not be diminished by anyone. My generation seems to have forgotten this, myself included, and this book reminds me of the way it could be.
If you are looking for a rah-rah self-improvment book forget about _Wooden_, if, but your looking for something with nuances that force you to tell to your behavior and how you can make a difference in whatever you do then grab it, open, devour it and keep it nearby in case you ever forget what it is to be a gentleman.
Reader’s Rating: 5 / 5