A batch of the best highlights from what Edwin's read, .
Lyn and Judy had both been caught up in a vogue—enthusiasm for the work of a man named Bernard Weiner. In the late 1960s Weiner, a young social psychologist at the University of California’s Los Angeles campus, had started to wonder why some people are high achievers and other people are not. He concluded that the way people think about the causes of successes and failures was what really mattered. His approach was called attribution theory. (That is, it asked to what factors people attributed their successes and failures.)
Learned Optimism
Martin E.P. Seligman
Once a company achieves initial success, no matter which path taken, it faces a new challenge. People relax and allow bad habits to creep in. They erect bureaucracy, lose focus, and leak talent. Performance suffers and culture degrades, but by the time leaders or investors notice, it’s often too late.
Lessons From the Titans
Scott Davis, Carter Copeland, and Rob Wertheimer
I commit to creating win-for-all solutions (win for me, win for the other person, win for the organization, and win for the whole) for whatever issues, problems, concerns, or opportunities life gives me.