Wednesday, May 20, 2026

Innovation Isn’t Magic — It’s Management. 🎩✨➡️📋🛠️


Every bold idea eventually demands the discipline, stamina, and leadership to push through the hard parts.

In a world where everyone is marketing their brilliance online, you’d think innovation was effortless. What’s easy is the hype. What’s hard is turning a dream into something that actually works.

I learned that on my first day at The Mirage. I saw the renderings, the models, the mocked‑up rooms — the beautiful part. But behind that beauty was the real engine: a project plan that stretched 80 feet across a 10‑foot wall, with nearly 365 days across the top and more than 500 items down the left-hand column. Many of those items had sub‑plans. Somewhere in the Wynn Resorts archives sits a binder with more than 10,000 line items that had to be completed in the final year before opening an integrated resort. Every one tracked. Every one managed. Every one essential.

Keeping a team focused and motivated through that grind was almost as challenging as the work itself. There’s the thrill of building something bigger than yourself — and the very real risk of burnout. Teaching people to pace themselves wasn’t easy. High performers want to sprint. But innovation at scale is a marathon.

So we helped them see the whole jigsaw puzzle, not just their piece. We reminded them to stay connected to family and loved ones. We grounded them in the truth that opening day wasn’t the finish line — it was simply the end of one phase and the beginning of an even more demanding one.

In the middle of all that complexity, the constant was leadership. Thoughtful, caring leaders who kept track of the people, knowing the people would take care of the tasks. That’s how bold ideas stop being dreams and start becoming destinations today.

Guy Kawasaki (born 1954): American marketing specialist (as an Apple Evangelist), author (The Macintosh Way), and venture capitalist in Silicon Valley.

 

Tuesday, May 19, 2026

If your thinking 💡 hasn’t changed ➡️ in years, don’t expect your results 📈 to


If your thinking hasn’t changed in years, don’t expect your results to.

The biggest barrier to changing your mind isn’t intelligence — it’s discomfort. When new information challenges our long‑held beliefs, values, or identity, the instinct is to defend the familiar. Back in the day, we’d simply say it was hard to “think outside the box.”

But with hindsight, I can see how many of my own deeply held beliefs have changed over the years — mostly because my interests and priorities changed. That taught me something important: change introduced from the outside is resisted; change that grows from within is accepted. Willingness matters.

In work groups, change succeeds when people understand the why, have a voice in shaping the how, and experience early wins that prove the effort is worthwhile. Top‑down mandates rarely create commitment. Early involvement does.

This idea became the second big “aha” moment at The Mirage — right behind catching people doing things right. At a senior staff meeting, Mr. Wynn announced that every management decision must include an explanation of why. And if managers couldn’t or wouldn’t explain why, employees were empowered to say “no.”

Managers saw it as planned insubordination. In reality, it forced them to:

·       Research, understand, and plan what they wanted to say

·       Communicate their plans clearly

·       Listen to comments and objections and respond logically

·       Remove obstacles and adjust appropriately

In other words, it required them to do the things effective managers must do.

The results were dramatic: management performance improved, and employee morale and satisfaction soared. A simple shift in mindset — planning plus communication — created a win‑win environment.

Change becomes positive when it’s introduced with clarity and respect. Engaged employees don’t resist change — they help shape it. And collaboration unlocks potential that command‑and‑control leadership never will.

Forget memos, slogans, and mandates. Give people the tools, the context, and the inspiration to change — and watch them go and grow today

George Bernard Shaw (1856 – 1950): Irish playwright, critic, polemicist, and political activist.[1]



[1] His influence on Western theatre, culture and politics extended from the 1880s to his death and beyond. He wrote more than sixty plays, including major works such as Man and Superman (1902), Pygmalion (1913) and Saint Joan (1923). With a range incorporating both contemporary satire and historical allegory, Shaw became the leading dramatist of his generation, and in 1925 was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature.

 

Monday, May 18, 2026

See What’s True 🔍 Not Just What’s Obvious 💡


Innovation means looking at things differently, and critical thinking is the discipline of separating what feels true from what is true.

From experience, I know people often approach problems with the same assumptions and expectations that created those problems in the first place. The results are predictable — and usually disappointing — because the changes don’t feel worth the effort.

The problem isn’t effort; it’s perspective. That’s why teams need to think differently — and think critically.

Teams strengthen critical thinking when they build psychological safety, encourage diverse perspectives, challenge underlying assumptions instead of accepting the status quo, and use open‑ended questioning. This collaborative process prevents groupthink, minimizes cognitive bias, and drives objective decision‑making. And real change.

Not change for its own sake — but the kind that actually improves things.

When I first joined the Golden Nugget, turnover in Housekeeping was higher than I thought appropriate. The general assumption was that the work was simply too hard. Instead of accepting that, we visited more than 100 departed housekeepers and learned the real reason: they felt supervisors focused mainly on what wasn’t done rather than what was. That one insight inspired us to begin catching employees doing things right. Turnover in that department dropped by 75%.

That progress came from asking progressively deeper questions about the work, the way supervision was applied, and the strategies we could test. We piloted the approach with a small group of employees and supervisors. Not everyone was convinced at first — but multiple trial runs proved the concept.

And once the evidence was undeniable, the real leadership work began. Just like yesterday’s lesson, involving line employees, supervisors, and management together created ownership and pride when the new approach worked. Not with slogans or band‑aids, but with hard work and a commitment to real improvement.

Together, we learned that critical thinking isn’t about skepticism — it’s about thoroughness. It replaces assumptions with evidence.

That’s the difference between reacting to what’s obvious and recognizing what’s true. It’s harder work — but far more effective. That extra effort turns information into insight instead of noise.

Apply that discipline to your challenges — and watch what changes when you stop assuming and start understanding today.

Sir Antony Rupert Jay (1930 – 2016): English writer and broadcaster.[1]



[1] With Jonathan Lynn, he co-wrote the British political-satirical comedies Yes Minister and Yes, Prime Minister (1980–88). He also wrote The Householder's Guide to Community Defence Against Bureaucratic Aggression (1972). For his career as a broadcaster and in public relations, Jay received a knighthood in the 1988 New Year Honours.[3] He also wrote the 1969 BBC television documentary Royal Family and a 1992 book about Elizabeth II called Elizabeth R,[2] after which he was appointed a Commander of the Royal Victorian Order for personal services to the Royal Family in the 1993 New Years Honours list.

 

Sunday, May 17, 2026

Curiosity: 🔥 The Spark That Starts Every Innovation 🚀


Innovation begins the moment curiosity refuses to stay quiet. It’s the spark that turns routine work into discovery, and it’s the one trait every high‑performing culture has in common.

Leaders bring that spark to life. They model inquisitiveness, ask open‑ended questions, and create psychologically safe environments where mistakes are treated as learning opportunities rather than failures. When leaders prioritize questions over directives, employees feel empowered to explore solutions, challenge assumptions, and uncover new perspectives that move the organization forward.

Harvard research shows that workplace curiosity directly increases revenues and reduces costs. Curious employees make fewer decision‑making errors, resolve conflicts more effectively, and generate more innovative ideas — all of which translate into measurable organizational and personal financial gains. Your management team needs to understand these benefits and know how to cultivate them.

Curiosity also strengthens engagement. Gallup consistently finds that highly engaged teams experience 41% to 81% less absenteeism than disengaged ones. When people feel mentally stimulated and encouraged to explore, they show up — physically and emotionally. If absenteeism is higher than you’d like, the remedy may be right in front of you.

Curiosity keeps people mentally sharp, resilient, and deeply invested in their work. If you want to energize your employees, shift some of the focus away from rules and compliance and toward building a culture that rewards exploration. Talk about curiosity in meetings and casual conversations. Gamify it with friendly competitions among individuals or teams. Recognize — formally and informally — the ideas, questions, and discoveries that emerge.

Innovation doesn’t start with answers — it starts with leaders brave enough to ask better questions. Make curiosity a priority today.

Sir Kenneth Robinson (1950 – 2020): British author, speaker, and international advisor on education in the arts to government, non-profits, education and arts bodies.

Learn more: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ken_Robinson_(educationalist)

Thursday, May 14, 2026

The Best Legacies Are Woven, Not Etched 🧵 ✨


The real measure of excellence is what remains long after you’re no longer in the room. Legacy isn’t built from achievements, titles, or buildings — it’s built from the impact you leave on people.

A meaningful legacy has a few defining elements:

·       Lasting Impact: Monuments are cold and static; influence is warm, dynamic, and passed from person to person.

·       Relationships: Legacy lives in the memories, lessons, kindness, and trust you leave behind.

·       Actionable Influence: Mentorship, honesty, and trust‑building that continue shaping others long after you’re gone.

·       Everyday Moments: Small, daily interactions with colleagues, friends, and family that quietly accumulate into something enduring.

I’m reminded of the man who first interviewed and recommended me for hire at the Golden Nugget — Charlie Meyerson. A casino host, and by many accounts the best in the business. He mentored young executives with his list of 44 rules for personal and professional conduct — and then lived those rules on the casino floor.

In an era when the casino business was perceived to be influenced by “wise guys,” Charlie’s wisdom was of a different kind:

·       #18: Avoid sarcastic remarks — create trust. Use your wit to amuse, not abuse.

·       #22: Take care of your reputation — it’s your most valuable asset.

·       #28: Don’t be afraid to say “I don’t know,” “I made a mistake,” “I need help,” or “I’m sorry.” Take responsibility.

·       #38: Praise in public, criticize in private. One of the greatest emotional needs is to feel appreciated.

Simple ideas. Plain talk. But they shaped how we managed, how we treated people, and how we carried ourselves.

It wasn’t a training program.

It was a live life-lesson from someone we admired.

That’s what people remember — the advice woven into our work and our lives. And that’s what builds a culture of excellence: leaders who care enough to teach, model, and reinforce the simple behaviors that elevate everyone around them.

Legacy isn’t what you leave behind — it’s who you lift up along the way. That’s the legacy worth leaving — and you can begin shaping it today.

Pericles (495–429 BC): Greek statesman and general during the Golden Age of Athens. 

Learn more: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pericles

Wednesday, May 13, 2026

Great Leaders Grow Great Leaders 🌱✨


Excellence becomes greatness only when it multiplies the people around you.

The pursuit of excellence takes many forms. The Mirage, Bellagio, Wynn Las Vegas, and The Resort at Pelican Hill were properties of extraordinary grandeur — bold, imaginative, and built on cultures of excellence. Working on those teams was a professional dream.

But The Mirage sparked something 37 years ago that became far more meaningful than any building.

Some background:

  • Before opening, we worried about finding enough qualified housekeepers, cooks, dishwashers, servers, and bartenders.
  • In a meeting with Wynn and Union leaders, I suggested we recruit and train people for those jobs — similar to the dealing school we’d helped operate for the Golden Nugget in Atlantic City.
  • They looked at me and said, “Make it happen.”
  • And that was the beginning of The Culinary Academy of Las Vegas.

Fast forward to yesterday — the ribbon cutting for its expanded campus. A full restaurant, kitchen, bar, banquet facility, computer lab, ESL lab, and more. I listened as industry leaders, politicians, union representatives, and graduates described the impact of that simple idea:

  • 65,000 graduates
  • 96% placement rate
  • Careers built, families supported, communities strengthened
  • A public–private partnership that changed lives

I reconnected with old friends and colleagues and was reminded of a truth that becomes clearer with age: the best work is the work that develops others. In that room were former students who are now leaders, educators who’ve dedicated their careers to workforce development, and industry titans who believed in growing people.

This was a pursuit of excellence without spotlights or fanfare — just hard work, shared purpose, and a commitment to building programs, people, and communities. As the founder and initial trustee, I was always proud of what we accomplished. As an invited guest yesterday, I was honored to stand among the many who made it a model for the industry.

One student at a time.

Excellence becomes legacy when leaders commit to growing people, not just organizations. Commit to doing more of that today.

Ralph Nader (born 1934): American lawyer and political activist involved in consumer protection, environmentalism, and government reform causes.[1]


[1] His 1965 book Unsafe at Any Speed, which criticized the automotive industry for its safety record, helped lead to the passage of the National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act in 1966.

Tuesday, May 12, 2026

Reinvention: The Engine of Excellence 🔄✨



You can’t pursue excellence and stay the same — growth demands reinvention.

Over time, even the best jobs can become routine. Familiarity dulls curiosity, and motivation starts to slip. My boss used to talk about the importance of “repotting” yourself — a metaphor we loved because it captured the truth: sometimes you need new soil, new challenges, and new ways to grow.

Repotting didn’t always mean changing roles. More often, it meant reinventing the work itself — finding ways to elevate the job, improve the process, or create new opportunities.

After The Mirage opened, that’s exactly what we did. We looked back at our practices and asked a simple question: What should we improve? That led us to explore technology to increase efficiency and eliminate low‑value work.

·       We were manually entering candidate information from paper applications, filing, and refiling them throughout the recruitment process, and tracking every form by hand.

·       We were managing job offers, onboarding, training, and performance documentation with the same paper‑heavy system.

Fixing these things did more than streamline the work.

It freed employees from repetitive tasks, gave them room to take on higher‑value responsibilities, and created a sense of pride in building a more progressive workplace. It also sparked something bigger: people began looking for ways to improve their own processes.

Reinvention became contagious.

And because these changes came from within — not from a forced “rah‑rah” speech about limitless potential — people embraced them. They could see the growth. They could feel the impact. They were part of the evolution.

Excellence isn’t a slogan or a program.

It’s the act of letting people help build the systems, tools, and ideas that shape something great — something they’ll talk about with their children and grandchildren. Cutting‑edge work builds morale, ownership, and pride. That’s the foundation of a culture of excellence.

Excellence accelerates the moment people are empowered to reinvent the work, not just perform it. Look for ways to make that happen today.

Max De Pree (1924 – 2017): American businessman (CEO and Board member of Herman Miller office furniture company) and writer (Leadership is an Art).[1]



[1] In 1992, De Pree was inducted into the Junior Achievement's U.S. Business Hall of Fame. He was involved with the Max De Pree Center for Leadership at Fuller Theological Seminary (established in 1996 as the De Pree Center) since its establishment.

 

Innovation Isn’t Magic — It’s Management. 🎩✨➡️📋🛠️

E very bold idea eventually demands the discipline, stamina, and leadership to push through the hard parts. In a world where everyone is mar...