When coaches and executives attempt to condense a loss into one play, one bad call, or one poor decision, they are setting themselves up for failure moving forward.
After winning, people often want credit, and egos can easily get in the way.
When we fail to appreciate the backgrounds of the people we lead and do not spend time studying their lives, we fail as leaders.
Meticulous preparation and repetition put you in a position to seize the moments on the biggest stages.
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Each day is a chance to reframe our doubts as positives — indications not that you don’t have what it takes, but that you are consciously aware of your limitations.
Day after day, year after year, challenges that seem overwhelming will stare us in the face.
How you act and how you behave dictates how those around you will respond.
Kobe Bryant lived 41 years of uncommon achievement, epitomizing what it meant to be deeply in love with your craft and family.
There is no higher calling than to lead people. Embrace the opportunity and thank people for allowing you to lead.
Be careful not to study one area of your past to the point of diminishing returns.
All too often, failure blinds leaders and coaches to the greatness that lies just behind the bend in the road.