Tuesday, March 10, 2026

Great Leaders Don’t Demand Questions — They Make It Safe to Ask Them 🔥


Innovation thrives where people feel safe enough to ask questions — especially the uncomfortable ones. Beerbohm’s insight reminds us that the best cultures don’t just reward answers; they reward inquiry. That’s the soil where trust, respect, and ultimately innovation take root.

The most innovative organizations understand that psychological safety isn’t a perk. It’s the foundation. When people feel safe, they speak up. They challenge assumptions. They explore possibilities. And leaders who embrace this don’t simply provide answers — they step into the role of coach and mentor, helping others discover what they need and modeling how to practice what they’re learning.

Early in my career, I learned a set of techniques that changed everything:

listen not only to the question, but to the conversation around it; invite the employee to “tell me more”; encourage them to expand their thinking. This deepens their reasoning, strengthens their confidence, and positions the leader as someone genuinely invested in their development. It also creates opportunities for employees to demonstrate what they’ve learned — and what they’re capable of contributing.

When innovative ideas are welcomed and adopted, something powerful happens. You build a growing cadre of upwardly mobile employees, ready for more challenging and rewarding roles. Pride rises. Morale strengthens. Loyalty deepens. Retention improves. And the organization becomes known as a place where people grow.

This is how a culture of excellence is built — one question, one conversation, one developing employee at a time. Staffed by people who believe in your values, carry your objectives, and fuel your future with ideas competitors can’t easily replicate.

That’s how you become an employer of choice.

And it starts with creating a place where people feel safe enough to ask questions today.

Sir Henry Maximilian Beerbohm (1872 – 1956): English essayist, parodist and caricaturist under the signature Max. 

Learn more @ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Max_Beerbohm

Monday, March 9, 2026

Hire Innovators 💡 Not Just Applicants


Innovation requires people who persist, who push, who stay curious when others quit. Moser’s quote reframes hiring away from credentials and toward character — grit, resilience, and the willingness to do the hard, unglamorous work of creating something new. It became the philosophical foundation of our hire for attitude approach.

At The Mirage, we began assessing candidates for the realities of hospitality — constant interruptions, shifting priorities, and the emotional stamina required to serve guests at a high level. Over time, that evolved into a deeper evaluation of optimism, positivity, flexibility, resilience, and grit.

These traits are interconnected psychological strengths that help people navigate challenges, adapt to change, and achieve long‑term goals. They are largely innate — you either have them or you don’t. But organizations must recognize and reinforce them or risk losing those employees or, worse, their commitment.

We looked for people who would embrace elevated service standards, higher expectations, and a culture of continuous improvement. People who cared enough to take the job personally — to own the standards and, when necessary, improve them. You see the same philosophy at places like The Resort at Pelican Hill, Four Seasons Hotels, and Wegmans — companies that hire people who treat the business like it’s their own.

There are many pre‑hire assessments available — and full disclosure, I helped develop one of them. Tools like these help you select people who push rather than quit, who engage rather than withdraw, who innovate rather than accept the status quo.

Grit may not be easily measured, but its impact on your business can be felt today.

Laura Moser (born 1977): American author and journalist.

Sunday, March 8, 2026

Innovation 🚀 Begins with Purpose – Vision and Clarity 🎯 Show the Way


My consulting practice helps companies define their strategy — understanding where they want to go and what they want to be. Without that clarity, organizations drift. Carlyle captured it perfectly: without purpose, you’re a ship without a rudder.

I was fortunate to work with Steve Wynn, whose vision was unmistakably clear: to be the preferred brand in casino gaming. To me, that meant creating the kind of workplace culture that naturally produced innovative thinking and action.

A Culture of Excellence

A true Culture of Excellence is not about perfection. It’s about a shared, organization‑wide commitment to continuous improvement, high‑quality output, and innovation. It rests on integrity, accountability, and leadership that empowers people to take ownership and consistently exceed expectations.

Its core elements include:

·       Continuous Improvement: A mindset of being better today than yesterday — never settling for “good enough.”

·       Empowered People: A supportive environment that values growth, engagement, and collaboration.

·       Customer Focus: An obsession with delivering value and exceeding stakeholder expectations.

·       Shared Values & Clear Standards: Operating with integrity, trust, and defined, high‑quality expectations.

·       Results‑Oriented: A focus on measurable success while fostering a positive, productive, and innovative atmosphere.

That’s the culture Steve allowed me to design and facilitate. And throughout this week, I’ll share how we built it — first at the Golden Nugget, then at The Mirage, and later at Wynn Resorts.

We made sure to:

1.     Hire the right people — those capable of and committed to innovation.

2.     Create a focused, extensive onboarding program that taught people what to do, why it mattered, and how to do it well — while building teamwork and critical thinking.

3.     Train mid‑management leaders to bring out the best in their teams.

4.     Build an atmosphere of psychological safety, trust, and respect — the conditions where innovation thrives.

It was all about effectiveness and excellence, achieved through purposeful structure and strategy. Everyone understood their role’s purpose and how it contributed to the organization’s objectives.

This approach works for companies big and small. Vision, strategy, and clarity can drive excellence for you today.

Thomas Carlyle (1795 – 1881): Scottish essayist, historian and philosopher. 

Learn more @: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Carlyle

Thursday, March 5, 2026

Determined leaders don’t just build great things — they build people who feel great about their work. 🚀


Getting good at anything is hard. Getting great takes a lot more practice. And at Mirage Resorts, we had years of practice — the kind that ultimately led to Bellagio and Beau Rivage.

From our earliest days at the Golden Nugget, Steve Wynn operated with a growth mindset. That mindset created opportunity for everyone. Employees had room to develop, stretch, and advance. Those of us involved in development were constantly experimenting — new strategies, new products, new ways to elevate performance, create WOW moments, and refine the guest experience.

That determination led directly to Bellagio in Las Vegas and Beau Rivage in Biloxi. Both set new standards in their markets. Bellagio’s fountains, its extraordinary atrium, and the Chihuly glass ceiling became instant icons. Beau Rivage brought magnolia trees, marinas, and Gulf‑coast elegance to a new level. Everything we had learned — every improvement, every innovation, every lesson — was poured into those two resorts. Guests responded. Employee promotions surged. Service stars were awarded. Pride was everywhere.

Even now, when I run into people who worked on those projects, they still talk about how professionally fulfilling those years were — how it felt like the pinnacle of their careers. When people remember their work that way, you know the effort was worth it. Determination isn’t just about achieving great things. It’s about helping people feel great about what they contributed. About being undeniable. That’s the foundation of engagement, loyalty, and pride.

Whether your team is big or small, the principle is the same: create opportunities that challenge people, grow their skills, and make their work meaningful. Determination becomes contagious when people feel their contributions matter. Where success can’t be denied.

Give your team work they can be proud of — today.

 

Ralph Duren May (1972 – 2017): American stand-up comedian and actor, known for his extensive touring and comedy specials on multiple media platforms.

Wednesday, March 4, 2026

Great Teams Cross the Line on Purpose ⚡


Boldness isn’t recklessness. It’s the willingness to take well‑considered chances for what you believe in. That’s what we learned from Steve Wynn, and it shaped how we worked, led, and served.

Our Mission Statement — Keep the Promise — demanded bold thinking. Each property had a “volcano‑like” spectacle, but the real challenge was creating design and service elements inside the building that matched that same sense of wonder. Treasure Island had its battling pirate ships. Bellagio had its dancing water. But the true magic came from employees who boldly looked for ways to keep their part of the promise.

·       When Front Desk employees realized their form bins forced them to turn their backs on guests, they redesigned the area immediately to eliminate that service misstep.

·    When welcome scripts proved too long and unnatural, employees at the Front Desk, Room Reservations, PBX, and table games shortened them to something warm, quick, and authentic. Mr. and Mrs. Wynn — who had approved the original scripts — loved the changes because they improved the guest experience.

·       Even HR got bold. When they saw employees hesitating to enter our offices to ask questions, they asked Engineering to cut a service window directly into the back‑of‑house hallway so employees could get help easily and comfortably.

These changes happened within the first 45 days — and they sparked a wave of bold thinking across departments. People saw that when something obviously needed fixing, they didn’t have to wait. They could act.

Boldness is how teams in any company can keep the promise — to their guests, to their company, and to each other. By just doing what needs to be done.

That’s the heart of being bold: seeing a better way and stepping toward it. Not someday. Not after a meeting. Today.

Shonda Rhimes (born 1970): American television producer (Grey’s Anatomy) and screenwriter, and founder of the production company Shondaland, becoming the first African American woman to create three television dramas that have achieved the 100-episode milestone.

Tuesday, March 3, 2026

Being your best isn’t a slogan — it’s a system 🎯


Oprah’s quote defined the first year of The Mirage. The relentless pursuit of excellence carried us through design and construction, but the real test came after opening night: could we be our best every day, for every guest, from day one forward?

We believed the building would impress people who had only seen the volcano and palm trees from the street. But we believed even more strongly that it would be the employees — their skill, confidence, and service — that would make guests return. That meant 6,000 new employees had to be sharp, prepared, and ready to deliver extraordinary experiences immediately.

Training became the foundation.

·       We couldn’t rely on “buddy systems” or experienced employees. There were none. So we selected the best in each job and gave them extensive train‑the‑trainer preparation so they could bring new employees quickly up to standard.

·       We didn’t settle for generic training materials. We created instructional manuals for all 650 positions, outlining the top ten tasks, why they mattered, and how to perform each one to the satisfaction of their trainers.

·       We didn’t throw people into large groups. Employees were divided into teams of twenty, each with a trainer who would become their teacher, coach, mentor, and supervisor.

·       And we didn’t limit training to individual roles. Employees learned the jobs of those they interacted with so they could understand the full guest journey and their part in making it exceptional.

This was how we ensured employees could meet — and exceed — guest expectations from every angle. It was how we gave them the confidence to deliver the best resort experience possible, starting that day and every day thereafter.

Being your best isn’t a slogan. It’s a system. It’s preparation. It’s intention. And it starts with great training — today.

Oprah Winfrey (born 1954): American talk show host, television producer, actress, author, and media proprietor, often ranked as the most influential woman in the world.

Monday, March 2, 2026

Grit Is the Real Competitive Advantage 🚀


Margaret Mead understood – today’s quote is the essence of being relentless — the unyielding, persistent pursuit of excellence. Not aggression. Not burnout. But a clear vision, unwavering focus, and the grit to keep going when others stop.

I learned this firsthand in the jet stream of Steve Wynn’s relentless pursuit of excellence. Long before The Mirage opened, he saw what Mirage Resorts could become — a game‑changing force in design, operations, and service. The design phase alone took four years of obsessive attention to detail. And as the plans took shape, he led us with the kind of determination that pushed past every naysayer and every obstacle.

So many elements had no blueprint. We had to invent our way forward.

  • No one had ever built a working volcano. Water, steam, and fire don’t naturally cooperate — but our engineers persisted until it became an icon.
  • No one had ever turned over 3,000 rooms in a single day. Yet the drive for extraordinary service led to innovations like an airport‑style baggage system and a mesmerizing fish tank behind the front desk.
  • No one had ever relocated and replanted 3,200 palm trees. A horticultural team — led by a former San Diego Wild Animal Park leader — lost fewer than 20.
  • No one had ever hired, trained, and started 6,000 employees on the same day. More than 300 trainers taught simultaneously in 300 temporary classrooms.
  • And then came the Siegfried & Roy theater, the white tiger habitat, the dolphin facility — each a first, each requiring relentless effort.

The list of other firsts could fill a book. But the greatest first was assembling a world‑class team that believed in the vision and worked tirelessly to make it real.

Every day, everywhere, new “firsts” happen — big and small. They look effortless only because someone was relentless behind the scenes. That’s the real value of hard work learned by working hard.

Lead your team with that same relentless spirit today.

Margaret Mead (1901 – 1978): American cultural anthropologist, author, and speaker, who appeared frequently in the mass media during the mid-twentieth century.

Great Leaders Don’t Demand Questions — They Make It Safe to Ask Them 🔥

I nnovation thrives where people feel safe enough to ask questions — especially the uncomfortable ones. Beerbohm’s insight reminds us that t...