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Why Leadership and Mentorship Does Not Need to Fail Us | Tony Tjan | TEDxBeaconStreet
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In his latest book, Good People (April 2017, Portfolio Penguin) and research initiative, New York Times Best-selling author and entrepreneur turned venture capitalist (founder of ZEFER, co-founder of MiniLuxe, founder of Cue Ball Capital), Anthony Tjan looks at why so many of us are indifferent in the workplace and how the traditional view of leadership need and mentorship fails us – but does not need to.
Big problems, Business, Communication,Culture,Empathy,Entrepreneur,Interview,Investment,Leadership,Morality,Social change,Success,Work Over the course of a high-velocity career founding, leading, and now investing in and advising transformative businesses, Anthony Tjan has emerged as a leading expert on how to strategically innovate business models and channel the power of people and culture into enduring value.
Across four different industries – Internet, media, tech-enabled retail, and financial services – Tjan has used the power of people and culture to challenge industry conventions. One of his largest transformations was serving as the chief strategic advisor to Thomson Corporations radical evolution from a newspaper company to the one of the largest information media conglomerates today, Thomson Reuters.
With his latest book (Good People) and research initiative (The Good People Project), Tjan challenges leaders to re-frame traditional thinking around how we build our teams, cultures and our people ecosystems and to acknowledge and embrace leadership of character over leadership of competency. What do we need to look for when we evaluate goodness of character and values? Why is it that we tend to evaluate candidates and employees by their measurable accomplishments than by their “softer” qualities, like self-awareness, empathy, and respect? Why is it so hard to practice being good and what can we do about it in terms of talent assessment and mentorship?
After reviewing nearly 100 case studies in organizations and leadership Tjan has established that there is a hard truth to soft matters in terms of what really drives long-term value and competitive advantage. With this in mind, Tjan is leading a movement to change the way we think about goodness, so we can become better judges of people, better leaders, and create more goodness in ourselves and our organizations.”
Big problems, Business, Communication,Culture,Empathy,Entrepreneur,Interview,Investment,Leadership,Morality,Social change,Success,Work Over the course of a high-velocity career founding, leading, and now investing in and advising transformative businesses, Anthony Tjan has emerged as a leading expert on how to strategically innovate business models and channel the power of people and culture into enduring value.
Across four different industries – Internet, media, tech-enabled retail, and financial services – Tjan has used the power of people and culture to challenge industry conventions. One of his largest transformations was serving as the chief strategic advisor to Thomson Corporations radical evolution from a newspaper company to the one of the largest information media conglomerates today, Thomson Reuters.
With his latest book (Good People) and research initiative (The Good People Project), Tjan challenges leaders to re-frame traditional thinking around how we build our teams, cultures and our people ecosystems and to acknowledge and embrace leadership of character over leadership of competency. What do we need to look for when we evaluate goodness of character and values? Why is it that we tend to evaluate candidates and employees by their measurable accomplishments than by their “softer” qualities, like self-awareness, empathy, and respect? Why is it so hard to practice being good and what can we do about it in terms of talent assessment and mentorship?
After reviewing nearly 100 case studies in organizations and leadership Tjan has established that there is a hard truth to soft matters in terms of what really drives long-term value and competitive advantage. With this in mind, Tjan is leading a movement to change the way we think about goodness, so we can become better judges of people, better leaders, and create more goodness in ourselves and our organizations.”
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