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.

 

Monday, May 11, 2026

Excellence Lives in the Details 🔍✨


Mastery is built in the tiny, disciplined repetitions most people never bother to notice. That’s the essence of attention to detail.

When we opened new casino resorts, I learned quickly that work — like life — is a chain of interlocking actions. Each one must be choreographed, sequenced, and executed with precision if you want the outcome to look effortless. Whether it’s a major project or the work you do every day, the formula is the same: plan carefully, implement cleanly, communicate relentlessly.

Consider just one example.

For The Mirage, our initial orientation sessions were designed for 1,000 new employees at a time. And we made a decision that changed everything: each new employee would be assigned to a team the moment they walked in.

That single choice triggered a cascade of details:

  • Every new employee received a personalized invitation with their date, time, assigned row, and a photo and bio of their supervisor.
  • Greeters were stationed along the route from the parking lot through a building still under construction, each holding a roster cross‑referenced by name, row number, and supervisor.
  • Supervisors waited to greet their new employees at their assigned rows with photo IDs and name badges ready, creating instant familiarity and connection.
  • And behind all of this sat a full training plan, a process map, FAQs, and practice sessions — all so the experience would feel seamless.

This was one process. There were 10,000 more just like it — each with its own choreography, each designed to be invisible to employees.

And that’s the point: The best plans make the impossible look simple.

They’re built on a rigorous attention to detail that most people never see — but everyone feels.

Leaders at every level plan and execute countless things each day. The ones who stand out are those who treat the “small stuff” as the foundation of excellence, not an afterthought.

When leaders honor the details, excellence stops being an aspiration and becomes the standard today.

John Wooden (1910 – 2010): American basketball coach and player who won ten National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) national championships in a 12-year period as head coach for the UCLA Bruins, including a record seven in a row. 

Sunday, May 10, 2026

Excellence Starts Where Excuses End 🚀


Excellence begins the moment you stop negotiating with your own standards.

At work, people generally fall into one of two patterns: they do as little as they can get away with, or as much as they can. The first group isn’t failing — they’re simply responding to the expectations around them. And when supervisors aren’t trained to bring out the best in their people, mediocrity becomes the default setting.

If you want excellence, you can’t hope for it.

You have to build it into the operating system so it becomes habitual.

That means embedding expectations everywhere:

·       Job postings — state the standards upfront

·       Job descriptions — define the results that matter

·       Interviews — ask behavioral questions that reveal patterns

·       Job offers — reinforce why they were chosen

·       Onboarding & training — weave excellence into every task

·       Coaching — show that support and accountability go together

·       Real‑time recognition — catch people doing things right

·       Evaluations — make it clear that you notice what they do

This creates a continuous, unmistakable impression.

It turns productivity into purpose.

It turns repetition into habit.

It turns habit into mindset.

And when people internalize excellence, something powerful happens: they start contributing in ways you didn’t even ask for.

Listen to the employees who consistently overperform. Engage them. Ask for their ideas about policies, processes, and strategy. Operationalize their suggestions.

Because the most creative people in any organization are the ones closest to the work — the ones who see the friction, hear the customer, and understand the product in real time. When empowered, they become the engine of continuous improvement. 

That’s exactly how call center agents at The Mirage transformed scripted greetings into personalized conversations. We didn’t mandate it. We weren’t even sure they could or would. But the culture gave them permission — and they took the lead.

That’s what happens when leaders inspect what they expect, practice engaged supervision, and create an environment where people want to give their best. Excellence becomes a habit the moment leaders make it non‑negotiable.

It’s how excellence becomes a habit — starting today.

Aristotle (384–322 BC): Ancient Greek philosopher and polymath. His writings span the natural sciences, philosophy, linguistics, economics, politics, psychology, and the arts.

Thursday, May 7, 2026

Friendship: The Quiet Power Behind Great Teams 💛



The best teams don’t just hit goals — they build friendships that outlast the work and redefine what belonging feels like. Teamwork may be rooted in the workplace, but the relationships it creates have no boundaries.

Work friendships are different from those formed elsewhere. Both rely on loyalty, trust, honesty, empathy, and respect — but friendships at work carry an added dimension: they influence far more than the individuals involved. They shape morale, performance, culture, and the emotional climate of the entire team. They require intention, openness, and a willingness to show up for each other in ways that strengthen both the work and the people doing it.

Friendships outside of work grow organically. They form through choice, shared interests, and unstructured time. Work friendships, by contrast, grow through proximity, shared responsibilities, and the daily rhythm of solving problems together. That’s why supervisors play such a critical role in the early stages — they set the tone, facilitate introductions, and create the conditions where trust can take root. Icebreakers and team‑building exercises may feel structured, but they serve the same purpose as casual connection outside of work: helping people see each other as human.

And while friendships outside of work can drift or dissolve naturally, workplace relationships require stewardship. Leaders must coach, communicate, and model emotional intelligence so that differences don’t become divisions. When managed well, the time people spend together deepens their connection — and it’s not uncommon for work friendships to evolve into lifelong ones. When that happens, the blending of work and personal circles creates even more opportunities for connection and support.

In the end, good people make good friends — in or out of work. And real friendship, once formed, has no boundaries. Remember this: teamwork is ultimately about people, and people thrive when they feel connected, valued, and supported.

Make friendship — and the conditions that allow it to grow — part of your leadership practice today.

Natalie Katherine Neidhart-Wilson[10] (born 1982): Canadian-American professional wrestler.

Learn more; https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natalya_Neidhart


 

Wednesday, May 6, 2026

Synergy🔥 Starts with Presence, Trust, and Respect 🤝


A team becomes unstoppable the moment its members stop performing for each other — or for themselves — and start being present with each other. Presence creates connection, and connection creates trust.

Today’s workplace makes that both more challenging and more essential. Most teams now include multiple generations, each shaped by different experiences and expectations. Those differences influence how people communicate, collaborate, and interpret the actions of their teammates.

For the first time in history, five generations are working side by side:

·       Traditionalists (1925–1945): disciplined, loyal, process‑driven mentors.

·       Baby Boomers (1946–1964): competitive, committed, and face‑to‑face focused.

·       Generation X (1965–1980): independent, pragmatic, and protective of work‑life balance.

·       Millennials (1981–1996): collaborative, purpose‑driven, and growth‑oriented.

·       Generation Z (1997–2012): tech‑native, authentic, and wellness‑focused.

And soon, Generation Alpha will join them (2013-mid-2020s) — hyper‑connected, AI‑fluent, and likely to follow a different path into the workforce.[1]

Understanding these differences matters. But leaders can take comfort in one universal truth: every generation responds to trust and respect. Start there. Build on that foundation. When employees see each other through that lens, they stop trying to perform and start showing up fully — aware, present, and engaged.

That’s when teamwork becomes synergy: when the collective output, creativity, and problem‑solving ability of the group exceed what any individual could produce alone. Productivity rises. Stress decreases. Innovation accelerates. The team becomes more than the sum of its parts.

Make effective teamwork – anchored in presence, trust, and respect, one of your primary objectives today.

 

The 14th Dalai Lama (born 1935): Tenzin Gyatso is the incumbent Dalai Lama, the highest spiritual leader and head of Tibetan Buddhism. 



[1] As of 2026, the oldest members of Generation Alpha (born 2013–mid 2020s) are entering their early teens, marking the very beginning of their journey into the workforce, often in part-time roles or early-stage "AI-first" roles. This entry will likely be characterized by a "digital native" approach, where they prioritize technology, speed, and flexibility, with 40% expecting AI and virtual reality to be central to their future careers.

The Best Legacies Are Woven, Not Etched 🧵 ✨

T he real measure of excellence is what remains long after you’re no longer in the room. Legacy isn’t built from achievements, titles, or bu...