Monday, August 11, 2008

Seeing Systems (2nd Edition) by Barry Oshry - Book review



Seeing Systems

Unlocking the Mysteries of Organizational Life


By: Barry Oshry

Published: 2007
ISBN: 9781881052999
Format: Paperback, 228pp
Publisher: Berrett-Koehler Publishers, Inc



A pattern is not personal nor specific to any given organization. It is systemic, writes Barry Oshry in the revised edition of his classic book about organizational systems and power
Seeing Systems: Unlocking the Mysteries of Organizational Life
. In this definitive textbook on finding and understanding patterns within organizations, Barry Oshry demonstrates how to move past system blindness and the failure to recognize patterns, toward system sight where people live and work together productively.

Barry Ohsry begins with the insight that humans systems creatures. Human consciousness is shaped by the very systems that make up people's lives. Whether at work, home, or leisure, systems evolve in roughly the same format. There are people at the top, the middle, and the bottom, with customers and clients who interact with the systems from the outside. Instead of seeing these systems as personal and ego-centric, the author views them as patterns. The paradox discovered in the book is once system sight is developed and understood, the individual finds more personal empowerment within the system.



Barry Oshry (photo left) possesses the unique skill of taking a potentially daunting subject, systems and organizational behavior, and making the concepts easy to grasp and understand. Through the use of story and analogy, complex issues are rendered into human terms, and reflect the overall themes of the book. The author's story based format is ideal for developing pattern recognition within organizations, by employing that that method to write the book. When familiar patterns emerge based on the overall system, instead of basing impressions on the unknown motivations of individuals, true systems sight and understanding will emerge.

For me, the power of the book is its deep insight into the nature of organizational behavior, and the similarities and common features shared by all systems. Barry Oshry presents complex systems and organizational analysis in a clear and understandable format in the form of story telling. Without the book's emphasis on seeing and recognizing systems, a person can be lost and feeling powerless. By demonstrating the patterns that emerge in all organizations, the author shows how to avoid conflict, misunderstanding, attributing fictional motives to other members of the organization, and how to become an empowered member of the system.

I highly recommend
Seeing Systems: Unlocking the Mysteries of Organizational Life
by Barry Oshry, to anyone who wants to understand how systems develop, and how to recognize the characteristics of those systems. By learning how to see systems in all facets of a person's life, the individual can take control of their own actions within the system, ending frustration and conflict.

Read
Seeing Systems: Unlocking the Mysteries of Organizational Life
by Barry Oshry, and learn to see systems, instead of stumbling along blindly believing incorrectly that personalities are in control. This book will help you to see what is really taking place in your organization, giving you the power to be in charge of your own life.

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Sunday, August 10, 2008

Elizabeth Gordon & Leanna Adams: The Chic Entrepreneur - Author Interview



1. Your book is titled The Chic Entrepreneur. What do you mean by the term of Chic Entrepreneur?

Chic Entrepreneur: A Chic Entrepreneur is an entrepreneur that is savvy and stylish in her business manner and method. She understands that a business is a living organism, with great potential for growth if tended to properly. She combines her signature style with industriousness to form a strategic marketing plan that will allow her business to grow into an entity that will ultimately function without her. She understands that the true purpose of starting and growing a business is to create an entity of value, as opposed to simply a job for herself.

She also is self-aware enough to recognize her strengths and weaknesses and clever enough to surround herself with people who round out that picture. She sees the big picture and knows her role in it. She knows when to persevere and when to cut her losses.

2. How can a Chic Entrepreneur find and develop a good business idea?

Chic Entrepreneur: A true Chic Entrepreneur sees the world through a business lens. She is alert to the market opportunities all around her and is always looking for ways to solve problems and thus create business value. The business idea(s) that she, Ms. Chic, decides to pursue should be something that she is passionate about and ready to put an incredible amount of energy, brainpower and money into. However, the idea itself is just the beginning.

I find a common misconception many want-to-be business owners have is that it is all about the idea. In reality however, a mediocre idea with a well thought out strategy and solid plan, will ultimately out perform a brilliant idea that lacks those other elements. So it’s important to spend the time and the thought energy to flush out the idea into a plan, and to run it by others for feedback before you invest your life savings, or even just last year’s Christmas bonus into your new business venture.

A Chic Entrepreneur’s business idea dares to be different. She does business with a bold and authentic personality that speaks directly to customers’ unmet needs, and delivers unique value to them. This is the way Chic Entrepreneurs stand apart from the crowd.

Chic Entrepreneurs who know that they want to start a business, but don’t know what kind yet, should consider their passions and do research by working within that field and talking to others. You want to let your passions guide you and then overlay a business framework to test the business viability of your idea. The Flourishing Business Methodology (which is referenced in the book’s conclusion) offers a simple way to take an idea and then map out a business strategy around it.



Elizabeth Gordon (photo left)

3. Should a Chic Entrepreneur concentrate on dominating a niche market?

Chic Entrepreneur: Yes. Trying to sell to anybody who will buy is a losing strategy. The power of focus will propel you further than the temptation to take whatever you can get. I find people often underestimate just how big the market they are in is and just how long or how much money it takes to develop a known reputation. In your early days, developing a sustainable stronghold in a narrow niche where you can count on repeat business and word of mouth to add momentum to your marketing message will allow you to bring in the kind of profits you’ll need to fund your growth.

Ultimately, your goal is to build a scalable business that provides you, the owner, with the maximum amount of leverage possible. To accomplish this, you must choose a niche to focus on and resist the urge to stray. Stick to your niche and become the absolute best at what you have to offer. If you spread yourself too thin, much like Rome, you will collapse in a tough economy.

4. How important is it to start out a new business with a solid business plan and strategy?

Chic Entrepreneur: This is arguably the most important part of a business. While I have met business owners who do not continue to update their business plan or who have never used one, I see many more business owners succeeding because they had a plan, constantly update it and use it as a guide to their success and growth.

That being said, a business plan does not have to be 25 pages long and bound with a glossy cover. A good business plan should also be brilliant in its simplicity. You should be able to fit the core of it on an index card, and everyone within the company should know the business model and their role in making it work.

I hear many new entrepreneurs use verbiage such as “so I thought I’d give this a try” to describe their recent foray into entrepreneurship which is a little scary. Deciding to start a business venture involves risk. The degree of that risk varies by the type of business and the stage of life and financial situation of the entrepreneur.

Most entrepreneurs are not too keen on the idea of planning, but here’s another way to think about it. If you went out looking for a new job and got an offer to work somewhere for 6 months or a year without pay, with the promise that they would pay you once they saw that you were really ‘going work out’ as an employee, you would likely think long and hard before taking such a job. You’d probably want to see their business plan. In the same regard, that is essentially what you are doing when you start a business, you are taking a job that doesn’t pay, with the promise that if things go as planned, you will get paid. You are putting your money, your time and your ability to provide for your family’s livelihood on the line. When you think about it this way, you can see the importance of knowing in much more detail what “as planned” really means, and thus the value of that plan.

If you are in a position where you have a high-risk tolerance and you can afford to cut your losses, feel free to stumble in haphazardly and see what happens in the first few months. If things don’t work out, no big deal, you can move on to something else with little pain. If you do meet with some initial success, congratulate yourself for a good guess and then sit down and plan out how you will continue such success.

The plan itself is not necessarily the most important outcome of undertaking the planning process, the real value is that you force yourself to really do some research and think through what you are doing and why it will work. It forces you to identify what are the critical success factors, what could go wrong and what you will do then. Things seldom go as planned, but having planned better prepares you for making decisions about what to do next.

5. It's a crowded marketplace out there. How can a Chic Entrepreneur set her business apart from her competitors?

Chic Entrepreneur: It is a crowded marketplace and it isn’t. If you develop a unique value, be it a product, service, information or experience, you will be able to define your own market more narrowly and have a clearly defined niche market that you can dominate or at least become known within. It feels a lot less crowded when what you are selling is unlike what the competition is pedaling.

6. Good employees can make a business more successful and bad employees can often do serious damage to a company and its reputation. How can a Chic Entrepreneur attract and keep the best employees to her business?

Chic Entrepreneur: Most small businesses cannot afford to finance laziness or incompetence. By taking the time to screen employees, assess their abilities, find out what motivates them and what their true desired career goals are, you can attract employees that will grow with your company and be with you for the long haul. What a person has done in the past (i.e. the contents of the resume) will give you an idea of their track record and their reliability, but what a person has done is less important than who they are and what they can do. Many skills can be taught but inherent qualities such as a friendly personality, empathy, a good work ethic, ability to perform under pressure or learn quickly, creativity, or a sense of humor can not be taught, so keep that in mind. Cultural fit is just as important as being able to perform. Create an environment in which candidates can see that they will be an integral part in the greater plan and want to see the company succeed.

Getting those first few dedicated employees is critical because they will be your walking billboards for the company. Turnover is a killer. When an employee leaves, knowledge and experience walks right out the door and thus right off your balance sheet. When you have to retrain, you loose continuity with your clients and internally, so it’s imperative to be choosy and find employees that aren’t going to run away for a little more money, a job closer to home or any other issue.

You have to vet employees’ primarily motivational drivers out when you’re hiring your staff. Making sure that your job is going to a good fit for them, is just as important as knowing whether they will be a good fit for the job. Your employees should be with you because they want to, if they believe in what you are doing, they can get excited about the mission, they enjoy the work, and they can grow with you. Good jobs should enable employees to reach their goals. The current CEO of McDonalds started as a fry cook.

A Chic Entrepreneur sees her staff and people with lives and goals and dreams, not just workhorses, although they need to be that as well. Matching people to jobs that will allow them to use their strengths will provide them with satisfaction. Providing them with incentives that will motivate them to meet and exceed expectations will help you get the best out of them.



Leanna Adams (photo left)

7. Maintaining positive cash flow is vital to a business. How can a Chic Entrepreneur create and maintain her cash flow?

Chic Entrepreneur: You hit the nail on the head. Cash flow is the lifeblood of a company. If it stops flowing, it can be fatal. To create and maintain a positive cash flow, it’s important to be familiar with your cash position at all times. This means slowing down the flow of cash going out and speeding up the flow of cash coming in. Negotiate terms with vendors so that you don’t have to front monies before having the cash that comes from sales, or can at least minimize the time gap in between. Incentivize or force your customers to pay prior to or immediately upon delivery of products or services.

Knowing your cash position also means that you must be completely aware of your projected spending. If you’ve completed the business plan’s financial section, have worked out a budget, included all possible expenditures, and know what you have, what you can spend and what you need for the future.

8. Many business people dislike the sales and marketing aspect of business. How can a Chic Entrepreneur make sales and marketing a positive part of the company?

Chic Entrepreneur: Being a good salesperson is an essential entrepreneurial skill, and it can be learned. So if you have not played this role before or have fear or discomfort in it, you need to confront that head on with education and experience. Building a business will force you to go outside your comfort zone from time to time, but that is a good thing. That’s what personal growth is made of. A Chic Entrepreneur not only looks good on the outside, she is also brave and courageous on the inside. She can overcome anything she sets her mind to.

Some people, especially women, are worried that trying to sell makes them come across as being too pushy or even scamming people. Good sales training in the form of books or workshops will teach you that sales is really helping others to find a solution that will leave them better off. If you believe in the value you provide, you will want to help others by showing them how they can enjoy its benefits. Find enjoyment in satisfying customers.

Trying to delegate the sales function too early in the business building process is dangerous. No one is going to be able to sell with as much passion and knowledge as you, so whether you feel like it or not, you are the best one for this job early on.

Ultimately, once you have gotten the business off the ground, you can delegate. By exciting employees in the sales and marketing aspect of the business, you cause them to be tied to the success of the business and get the best ideas they have to offer. Brainstorming and idea sharing should be a big part of your company culture. There should also be incentives tied to both the sales and marketing that your business does. While this is easier to see on the sales side, you can and should offer your marketing team bonus incentives when certain tangible goals are met.

9. Having good systems in place for operating a company is often recommended. How can a Chic Entrepreneur put effective systems in place that keep the business operating as she envisioned?

Chic Entrepreneur: Processes allow you to create consistency. A Chic Entrepreneur doesn’t stumble around with clumsy execution. She is swift and suave. You and your employees must develop a systematic way of doing things, instead of reinventing the wheel each time you start a new project or get a new client. These processes will enable you to perform consistently and provide a reliable customer experience. Customers want to know they can count on getting the same dependable product and service every time they come to you. Consistency builds trust, and trust breeds loyalty. Effective systems are also one of keys for being able to slowly walk away from operations.

Use process maps to pictorially depict the flow of things, and then use your brain to streamline what you’re doing to make it more efficient.

10. If you had one piece of advice for a Chic Entrepreneur, what would that advice be?

Chic Entrepreneur:Your most important accessory is a confident smile. Wear it always.

************

Thanks to Elizabeth Gordon and Leanna Adams of The Chic Entrepreneur for their great and helpful answers.

My book review of The Chic Entrepreneur: Put Your Business In Higher Heels by Elizabeth Gordon and Leanna Adams.

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The Chic Entrepreneur by Elizabeth W. Gordon (with Leanna Adams) - Book review



The Chic Entrepreneur

Put Your Business in Higher Heels


By: Elizabeth Gordon, Leanna Adams

Published: May 31, 2008
ISBN: 9781934759042
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Robert D. Reed Pub




Any woman can be an entrepreneur. Putting your business in higher heels means making it more successful and making it more attractive to others, write Elizabeth Gordon and Leanna Adams in their powerful women's business guide book to success The Chic Entrepreneur: Put Your Business in Higher Heels. The authors demonstrate that the feminine approach to building and running a business works precisely because the entrepreneurs are women.



Elizabeth Gordon (photo left) and Leanna Adams recognize that entrepreneurship and operating a business is reaching a series of destinations in a longer journey to success. The book provides the road map to help the chic entrepreneur steer her course safely on that often difficult road. The chic entrepreneur understands that business has risk and reward, and he takes both in stride with style and sass.

In each chapter, the authors compare and contrast different business styles, helping the chic entrepreneur stand out from the crowd. Often going against conventional wisdom, the chic entrepreneur does it her own way, by providing her own unique value, while learning from the successes of others. The authors help guide the chic entrepreneur on her personal pathway to business success.



Elizabeth Gordon and Leanna Adams (photo left) share business ideas that leap from every page, with examples of how providing unique value works for the chic entrepreneur, and how chasing after the crowd will only catch her high heels in a sidewalk grate. From setting up her business plan, to attracting the ideal customers and employees, the authors provide the basics for entrepreneurial prosperity. They take the reader through sales and marketing, cash flow, and the development of business systems without missing a beat.

For me, the power of the book was its practical step by step approach to entrepreneurship, combined with real world examples to back up the concepts. Each chapter is well summarized, and has bonus tips sprinkled through each chapter to stimulate more creative thinking and idea development. At the same time, the authors help motivate the chic entrepreneur, to take the steps necessary, to create her own successful business venture. The book combines realism and optimism, in just the right recipe, for entrepreneurial success.

I highly recommend The Chic Entrepreneur: Put Your Business in Higher Heels by Elizabeth Gordon with Leanna Addams, to any women who are serious about starting their own business. The book guides the chic entrepreneur, as she wears higher heels than her competition, and sets herself apart in the market with style and panache.

Read The Chic Entrepreneur: Put Your Business in Higher Heels by Elizabeth Gordon with Leanna Addams, for a guide to being the successful and chic entrepreneur you always dreamed possible. Any woman can be a chic entrepreneur and the sky is the limit to her success and achievement.

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Tuesday, August 5, 2008

Dayna Steele: Rock To The Top - Success Secrets From Rock Stars - Blog Business Success Radio

BlogTalkRadio.com



Entrepreneur, broadcaster, and author of the best selling and highly motivational book Rock To The Top: What I Learned About Success From The World's Greatest Rock Stars, Dayna Steele shares success secrets from legendary rock stars including Van Halen, Aerosmith, and KISS. She shows how you can use their ideas and techniques to become a business rock star.

Dayna Steele is my internet radio show guest on Blog Business Success; hosted live on Blog Talk Radio.

The show airs live on Thursday, August 7, at 8:00 pm Eastern Time; 5:00 pm Pacific Time.

Entrepreneur, broadcaster, and author of the best selling and highly motivational book Rock To The Top: What I Learned About Success From The World's Greatest Rock Stars, Dayna Steele shares success secrets from legendary rock stars. You will learn:

* How show business techniques can be applied to business

* The power of networking and getting help where needed

* How to build and protect your brand and its image

* How to organize a business as if it were a rock stage stage show



Dayna Steele (photo left) is an entertaining and inspiring motivational keynote speaker and the author of the best-selling business book Rock To The Top: What I Learned About Success From The World's Greatest Rock Stars. She reigned for years as Houston's “First Lady of Radio”, building a large army of fans known as ‘Steeleworkers’ at rock radio station KLOL-FM.

Her past awards include Local Radio Personality of the Year by Billboard Magazine and Talkers Magazine's 100 Most Important Radio Talk Show Hosts. Her radio broadcasts took her from the war zone in Bosnia to the opening of The Hard Rock Hotel in Las Vegas to concerts and interviews with countless bands and rock stars around the world.

Steele also created the highly successful e-commerce venture The Space Store. Her latest venture is Smart Girls Rock, an online community to encourage girls to make smart the new cool.' She also created Operation National Anthem, a series of videos from US soldiers serving in Iraq, to be played at events prior to the singing of the national anthem. For that website, Reader's Digest named Dayna one of the "35 People Who Inspire Us" in the May 2008 issue.

My book review of Rock To The Top: What I Learned About Success From The World's Greatest Rock Stars by Dayna Steele.

Listen live on Thursday at 8:00 pm Eastern, 5:00 pm Pacific time.

BlogTalkRadio Listen Live

If you miss this very informative show, it will be available for free download as a podcast for iPod, iTunes, and MP3 players; or play it right on your computer. To download this, or any other of my guest interviews, go to the Blog Business Success host page and click on Archived Segments. Once there, click on the podcast icon at the end of the episode description, to download the show free of charge for your listening enjoyment. You can also subscribe to the show feed.

Add to iTunes

To call in questions for my guest, the number is: (347) 996-5832

Let's talk with entrepreneur, broadcaster, and author of the best selling and highly motivational book Rock To The Top: What I Learned About Success From The World's Greatest Rock Stars, Dayna Steele as she shares success secrets from legendary rock stars including Van Halen, Aerosmith, and KISS. She shows how you can use their ideas and techniques to become a business rock star on Blog Business Success Radio.

BlogTalkRadio.com

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Monday, August 4, 2008

Rock To The Top by Dayna Steele - Book review



Rock To The Top

What I Learned About Success From The World's Greatest Rock Stars


By: Dayna Steele

Foreword by: Gene Simmons of KISS

Publishing Date: March 1, 2008
ISBN-10: 1934812064
ISBN-13: 978-1934812068
Format: Paperback 192 pp
Publisher: Brown Books Pub



When you have passion for a business or a project, it can very contagious to those around you, writes Dayna Steele in her highly motivational book Rock To The Top: What I Learned About Success From The World's Greatest Rock Stars. She goes even further and contends that when passion is combined with hard work, and a little help from your friends, you've found your stairway to business heaven.

Dayna Steele's passion is on every page, as she combines her life story as an award winning radio disc jockey, with anecdotes about famous rock stars. While reaching the pinnacle of her radio career, she learned valuable business lessons from rock music legends including Gene Simmons of KISS, Van Halen, Jon Bon Jovi, Steven Tyler of Aerosmith, and many more rockers and music industry insiders. Their stories provide a powerful backdrop to the multitude of business lessons shared in the book. Dayna Steele recognizes that all business is really show business, and the most successful business people are indeed rock stars in their own right.



Dayna Steele (photo left) saw first hand how powerful personal relationships are in the music industry. Fan bases are built through personal appearances, interviews, tours, give aways, and lots of hard work. For rock bands and for business people, networking, public appearances, and maintaining contacts in the media and in the industry are vital to success.

The innovative techniques used by rock stars, to stay in touch with their fans, can be applied to any business. It's about being the rock star in your industry, and understanding that everything is show business and finding your spot at center stage.

For me, the power of the book is its motivational quality. Dayna Steele is passionate about her career, and that love of life sparkles on every page. Fans of the rock bands, whose stories are included in the book, will enjoy the personal superstar vignettes; each one containing some valuable business lessons.

The book has a crucial practical element demonstrating the use of technology, marketing, and networking to boost a company's success. Dayna Steele also points out the importance of family time, and of thanking those around you for their help in building your success. As an added bonus, I enjoyed how each chapter sub-title was the title of a classic rock song that tied into the chapter's business advice. The songs also help to absorb and remember the business lessons.

I highly recommend Rock To The Top: What I Learned About Success From The World's Greatest Rock Stars by Dayna Steele, to anyone who is passionate about their business and their career success. The advice presented, in an extremely entertaining format, makes the book a delight to read. There's nothing like learning business to the sounds of classic rock songs.

Read Rock To The Top: What I Learned About Success From The World's Greatest Rock Stars by Dayna Steele, and bring out the inner rock star success in your business career. Rock on!

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Sunday, August 3, 2008

Peter Block: Community - The Structure Of Belonging - Blog Business Success Radio

BlogTalkRadio.com



Partner in Designed Living, and author of the landmark book
Community: The Structure of Belonging
, Peter Block shares ideas for community building from fragmented societies into cohesive ones where all citizens can achieve their full potential as people. He shares ideas on how to develop the community based leadership to begin that community transformation.

Peter Block is my internet radio show guest on Blog Business Success; hosted live on Blog Talk Radio.

The show airs live on Tuesday, August 5, at 8:00 pm Eastern Time; 5:00 pm Pacific Time.

Partner in Designed Living, and author of the landmark book
Community: The Structure of Belonging
, Peter Block shares ideas for community building from fragmented societies into cohesive ones. You will learn:

* Why communities are fragmented and how various sectors work against one another

* How to build a community based on inclusion and belonging

* How to develop local leadership and grassroots based ideas

* The steps toward transforming a society to one based on accountability



Peter Block (photo left) is an author, consultant and citizen of Cincinnati, Ohio. His work is about empowerment, stewardship, chosen accountability, and the reconciliation of community.

Peter is the author of several best-selling books. The most widely known are Flawless Consulting: A Guide to Getting Your Expertise Used (1st edition 1980, 2nd edition 1999); Stewardship: Choosing Service Over Self-Interest (1993) and The Empowered Manager: Positive Political Skills at Work (1987).

Peter is the recipient of the first place 2004 Members’ Choice Award by the Organization Development Network, which recognized Flawless Consulting as the most influential book for OD practitioners over the past 40 years.

Peter's latest book,
Community: The Structure of Belonging
, arrived in bookstores May 2008.

The books are about ways to create workplaces and communities that work for all. They offer an alternative to the patriarchal beliefs that dominate our culture. His work is to bring change into the world through consent and connectedness rather than through mandate and force.

He is a partner in Designed Living, a training company that offers workshops designed by Peter to build the skills outlined in his books. He received a Masters Degree in Industrial Administration from Yale University in 1963; he performed his undergraduate work at the University of Kansas.

Peter serves on the Boards of Directors of Cincinnati Classical Public Radio, Elementz and InkTank. He is on the Advisory Board for the Festival in the Workplace Institute, Bahamas. He is the first Distinguished Consultant-in-Residence at Xavier University.

As a citizen of Cincinnati, he is currently involved in projects focusing on people on the margin and supports the Urban Opportunities Alliance, a cooperative group of six efforts to value the possibility of youth and families in Cincinnati. With other volunteers, Peter began A Small Group, whose work is to bring into conversation other groups not in relationship with each other, through the powerful tools of civic engagement.

He has received national awards for outstanding contributions in the field of training and development, including the American Society for Training and Development Award for Distinguished Contributions; the Association for Quality and Participation President’s Award; and Training Magazine HRD Hall of Fame.

Peter's office is in Mystic, Connecticut.

My book review of Community: The Structure of Belonging by Peter Block.

Listen live on Tuesday at 8:00 pm Eastern, 5:00 pm Pacific time.

BlogTalkRadio Listen Live

If you miss this very informative show, it will be available for free download as a podcast for iPod, iTunes, and MP3 players; or play it right on your computer. To download this, or any other of my guest interviews, go to the Blog Business Success host page and click on Archived Segments. Once there, click on the podcast icon at the end of the episode description, to download the show free of charge for your listening enjoyment. You can also subscribe to the show feed.

Add to iTunes

To call in questions for my guest, the number is: (347) 996-5832

Let's talk with Partner in Designed Living, and author of the landmark book
Community: The Structure of Belonging
, Peter Block as he shares ideas for community building from fragmented societies into cohesive ones where all citizens can achieve their full potential as people. He shares ideas on how to develop the community based leadership to begin that community transformation on Blog Business Success Radio.

BlogTalkRadio.com

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Saturday, August 2, 2008

Community: The Structure Of Belonging by Peter Block - Book review



Community

The Structure of Belonging


By: Peter Block

Published: May 1, 2008
ISBN: 9781576754870
Format: Hardcover, 216pp
Publisher: Berrett-Koehler Pub







Community offers the promise of belonging and calls for us to acknowledge our interdependence, writes Peter Block in his landmark book
Community: The Structure of Belonging
. Understanding the sense of isolation that grips many members of a fragmenting community, Peter Block offers a positive and practical grassroots based solution for building on a community's existing strengths, for a stronger tomorrow.

Peter Block challenges the existing paradigms surrounding community building, whether it's the size of a local neighbourhood, an entire city, or even on a national or global scale. Instead of looking at community, and seeing the best of all possible worlds, the author's experienced eye recognizes possibilities for a brighter future. At the same time, Peter Block doesn't accept the status quo and the conventional wisdom surrounding leadership and change. Marginalized members of communities should be recognized and welcomed, for the abundant and unrecognized gifts and talents they bring to a community, instead of labeled for their alleged deficiencies.



Peter Block (photo left) presents a practical alternative to the current retribution and entitlement based society. He recognizes that the mainstream belief system is limiting in its approach and in its outlook for the future. In its place, Peter Block offers a community based system that places emphasis on empowering citizens to implement change based on inclusiveness and accountability.

No longer is it enough to leave communities stuck in treating the symptoms of community breakdown. In its place, the author proposes a solution that restores the language of healing, belonging, and relatedness to the conversation. In this paradigm, the individual chooses accountability and personal responsibility for the community instead of having only a sense of entitlement.

For me, the power of the book is its positive and practical message for community building, through personal empowerment. Peter Block shares ideas and techniques for building a community based on inclusiveness, and the understanding that every member of that formerly fragmented society possesses unique gifts and talents.

Instead of concentrating on what a person or the community supposedly lacks, Peter Block recognizes that the supposedly apparent problems, are only symptoms of the deeper issue of the breakdown of the community. The book offers ideas for healing and rebuilding the community into a healthy society by getting the right people together in the right way.

I highly recommend the powerful and empowering
Community: The Structure of Belonging
by Peter Block, to anyone who is serious about community redevelopment through personal empowerment and accountability. The book is for anyone who is willing to take the leap of faith beyond dependence on politicians and traditional leaders, and build their own community that recognizes the human value and contribution of all of its residents.

Read
Community: The Structure of Belonging
by Peter Block, and instead of seeing problems and deficiencies, you will recognize potential, and opportunities for transformation to a restorative society of belonging, based on possibilities, generosity, and gifts.

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