Monday, July 13, 2026

Values Build Champions — Not Playbooks 🎯


Professionalism isn’t a vibe — it’s an identity you earn through consistent values.

I enjoy studying professional sports coaches, and as a diehard New York Giants fan, I’m always interested in what people say about their newly hired head coach. What stands out is how often others talk about his values before they talk about his record. That’s because the first drives the second.

Business leaders can learn a lot from sports. The best coaches build championship cultures around a core set of values — trust, accountability, relentless effort, team‑first selflessness, and mental resilience. These values unite athletes and fuel long‑term competitive greatness.

Jon Gordon and Mike Smith, in You Win in the Locker Room First, offer a blueprint for high‑performance teams through the 7 Cs of Leadership: Culture, Contagious Energy, Consistency, Communication, Coaching, Character, and Caring. Write those down. Keep them visible. They’re reminders of what professionalism looks like in action.

These are the same themes I talk about in these daily messages. Leadership isn’t rocket science — it’s the disciplined application of simple, powerful principles to how you lead and what you expect from yourself and others. Values are the stabilizers that keep professionals from drifting. They’re the drivers of effectiveness and the backbone of successful teams.

Don’t just take my word for it. Look up the winningest coach in your favorite sport. Dig deeper and you’ll almost always find some variation of these values shaping their approach to leading and winning. You don’t have to reinvent the wheel — study what works and apply it where you work today.

Dan Quinn (born 1970): Head Coach, Washington Commanders, NFL

Talking about:

John Harbaugh (born 1962): Head Coach, New York Giants, NFL

Sunday, July 12, 2026

Professionals Don’t Drift — They Decide 🧭


If you don’t know where you’re going, your effort becomes like the weather—unpredictable and useless. Direction should precede discipline.

At some point, we all grow up and go to work. The key to a happy and successful career is discovering the work that’s best for you. When asked for career advice, I always say, “The best job for you is often the one you have… the key is making it the one you love.”

As you’re deciding, think back on the things you’ve done and rank them. Be honest with yourself: don’t sugar-coat anything, and don’t under‑ or over‑exaggerate what you really felt about each experience. There’s nothing to prove here—these are directions you need to set.

·       For example: In high school I did many things, and the ones I liked most were being a member of Key Club and teaching in a Head Start program. Both had to do with helping people. And even though I loved singing in a band, serving others won out. So, I became a Human Resources professional.

If you’re having trouble coming to some conclusions, try completing a SWOT analysis on yourself—identifying your Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, and Threats. Don’t rush it. Create the four boxes and start writing things in each that you know to be true. These will support your decision‑making process.

Self‑awareness is key to making career choices. It gives you a solid foundation when interviewing and deciding what you really want to do. And don’t be discouraged if you initially find it’s not all you thought or hoped it might be. Give it time. Talk to your supervisor. Keep at it as you continue to learn and grow.

Don’t let boredom sway your thinking—that just means you need to keep looking for opportunities to learn and do more. Stay engaged. Remain curious. Ask questions. Look for mentors. And pat yourself on the back when things feel right.

Get yourself where you want to be—then help others learn how you did that today.

Rick Riordan (born 1962): New York Times bestselling author of over twenty novels for young readers, including the Percy Jackson series.

Thursday, July 9, 2026

Pride Should Build, Not Consume 🔧


Real pride isn’t about taking more — it’s about leaving more behind, about leaving things better than you found them.

Generosity is the readiness to give freely and abundantly. It goes far beyond money; it’s a mindset that includes offering time, talent, attention, and emotional support to strengthen the well‑being of others.

Generosity is doing good for others. Pride is feeling good about what you do.

They go together — like soup and sandwich, peanut butter and jelly, and giving and taking.

In my consulting work, we use an exercise called The Commons, based on the ancient idea of shared village property. Several participants gather around a table with ten paper clips. No talking is allowed. I say “go,” and each person may take as many or as few clips as they wish. After five seconds, we stop and replace whatever was taken. The exercise ends when no clips remain on the table.

It sounds simple. The theory is that people will leave some behind for future rounds. But more often than not, someone grabs as many as possible, and the commons collapses in one or two turns.

That’s when the real conversation begins.

Historic commons were grazing fields, shared gardens, and community resources meant to be preserved for future generations. Workplaces are no different. People and processes must be stewarded, not just supervised. Communication must be clear, awareness must be sharp, and sustainability must be intentional.

People must give freely and take wisely. That’s how you approach each day with an eye on tomorrow — sharing during planning, in meetings, on projects, and in the countless interpersonal moments that shape a workplace.

It’s a mindset. One that must be stated clearly, reinforced continually, and celebrated in real time. Leaders must weave this into their vision and make it a daily reality. Starting today.

KhalÄ«l Gibran (1883 – 1931): Lebanese American writer (The Prophet) , poet and visual artist.

Wednesday, July 8, 2026

Pride Builds Culture — Ego Breaks It … use “We” for credit and “I” for responsibility 🔥 ⚡


Pride can lift you or sink you, and the difference usually shows up in how you react to situations and the people around you. My mother taught me early to never let things go to my head — to avoid conceit and arrogance. Good pride reflects dignity and self‑respect. Bad pride is superiority, ego, and the belief that you’re above others.

Look up quotes about pride and you’ll see the pattern: most warn against the dangers of inflated self‑importance. Bad pride clouds judgment, fractures teams, and damages relationships.

One simple test is language. Review your communications and notice how often you use “I” versus “we.” Good pride uses we — recognizing shared effort, shared responsibility, and shared accomplishment. Bad pride uses I — claiming credit, spotlight, and ownership that rarely belongs to one person alone.

At Wynn, “Wynn Employees” quickly became WE, and that single shift shaped the culture. Training focused on teamwork. Recognition emphasized collective achievement. “We” became the operating philosophy — two heads are better than one, and success is the work of many.

Leaders set this tone. Their words and actions are watched closely, and they model the behaviors others follow. When leaders use “we” to celebrate success and “I” to accept responsibility, they build trust, cohesion, and pride across the organization.

Bottom line: if you want workplace relationships to flourish, use “we” to take credit and “I” to take responsibility. That simple discipline reveals the true culture of your workplace today.

John C. Maxwell (born 1947): American author, speaker, and pastor who has written books primarily focused on leadership.

Tuesday, July 7, 2026

Pride Shows Up in How You Play the Game 🔥 … Do Your Best — Even When No One’s Watching ⚡


One of the hardest lessons in life — and leadership — is accepting that you’re not the center of every outcome. Things may go well without you being the primary reason. Things may fail without it being entirely your fault. Pride in your work requires perspective: understanding your role without exaggerating it.

Last night I watched a game in the Perfect Game Collegiate Baseball League, where college athletes spend their summers sharpening their skills, using wooden bats, and playing in front of scouts. Fewer than a hundred people filled the small‑town stands, but to the players, it was serious business. Precision pitching. Smart hitting. Hustle. Sportsmanship. Enthusiasm. Pride.

What stood out wasn’t the scoreboard — it was the mindset. No grandstanding. No strutting. Just athletes taking strikeouts, double plays, big hits, and tough moments in stride. They bounced back instantly. Everything was about the team. Everything was about doing your personal best every time. Learning, growing, building character, preparing for the future.

That’s the lesson for leaders. Give your people the chance to practice, sharpen their skills, and build confidence. Help them understand that pride comes from effort, improvement, and contribution — not from being the star of every play. When leaders create environments where people can grow, pride becomes a natural outcome.

Let your people be proud of what they accomplish individually and collectively today.

Harold Kushner (1935 – 2023) was an American rabbi, author (When Bad Things Happen to Good People), and lecturer.

Monday, July 6, 2026

Self‑Awareness Is a Leader’s Most Underrated Power 🔥


Don’t underestimate the importance of self‑awareness — the most important relationship in your career is the one you have with yourself.

Your self‑respect and inner character matter more than public opinion. Authenticity means following your own moral compass instead of reshaping yourself to please or impress others. But authenticity isn’t always easy. In the workplace, people often temper their voice, defer to stronger personalities, or try to meet expectations that conflict with what they know is right. Leaders must be attuned to these dynamics and skilled at mitigating them.

That means making sure everyone participates. Ensuring no one is silenced or overshadowed. Asking questions that draw quieter voices into the conversation. Preventing dominant personalities from steering discussions away from balanced, thoughtful dialogue. Effective leaders move people from the sidelines to the center — giving them confidence, competence, and pride in their contributions.

These things don’t happen on their own. Inclusion, teamwork, and effectiveness must be intentionally fostered by leaders who understand their own strengths and their employees’ needs. Leaders who use emotional intelligence, servant leadership, coaching skills, and clear communication to bring out the best in others.

These aren’t “nice to have” skills. They’re foundational to building pride, confidence, and meaningful performance today.

Michel de Montaigne (1533 – 1592): French statesman and author who was one of the most significant writers of the French Renaissance. He is known for popularizing the essay as a literary genre.

Sunday, July 5, 2026

Pride Starts with How You Treat Others ⚡


Humility isn’t a weakness in leadership — it’s the engine that keeps you learning.

Humility is a psychological and moral strength built on modesty, accurate self‑assessment, and the absence of ego. It isn’t thinking less of yourself; it’s thinking of yourself less so you can genuinely see others. Its core dimensions — self‑awareness, openness, and grounded confidence — are the foundation of effective leadership. Research consistently shows that humble leaders build stronger relationships, make better decisions, and accelerate both personal and organizational growth.

In my experience, humble leaders create workplaces where people feel safe, respected, and able to perform at their best. They give and receive feedback without drama. They care more about their employees’ effectiveness than their own titles. They understand that their success is tied directly to the success of the people they lead.

That’s the point I emphasize in consulting: a manager’s primary responsibility is ensuring their employees are effective. That requires emotional intelligence, situational awareness, clear communication, and a coaching mindset. It means knowing what your people do, understanding what they need, and being present enough to help them succeed.

Their pride isn’t about themselves — it’s about what they enable in others. That’s the hallmark of great leadership.

Focus on others today.

Sir James Matthew Barrie, 1st Baronet (1860 – 1937): Scottish novelist and playwright, best remembered as the creator of Peter Pan.

Values Build Champions — Not Playbooks 🎯

P rofessionalism isn’t a vibe — it’s an identity you earn through consistent values. I enjoy studying professional sports coaches, and as a ...