Run It on Yourself First
Nine months into her first VP of Operations role, Taylor had developed a specific and useful skill: reading the rhythm […]
Nine months into her first VP of Operations role, Taylor had developed a specific and useful skill: reading the rhythm […]
Why do you see the speck that is in your brother’s eye, but do not notice the log that is
Eight months in. It was the second chief operating officer role of her career. Rachel walked into our session looking
This article is for you if: You’ve sent the frustrated email. Felt the regret. Watched the relationship absorb the residue.
It was Monday morning, April 13. I was working from the Middle East, where my wife Jan and I were
You’ve tried AI. Asked a question. Got frustrated. Gave up. You keep pulling the AI lever, asking follow-up after follow-up,
You’ve tried AI for content. The results were generic, off-voice, maybe even made up facts that never happened. You’ve written
You’ve tried AI for writing. It gave you something generic, off-voice, and maybe even made up facts that never happened.
You’ve avoided AI entirely. Too risky. Too unknown. Too much like opening a door you can’t close. You’ve dabbled cautiously.
In part one, we learned two painful truths about why most training fails: Painful Truth #1: Information does not equal