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Chess Not Checkers: Elevate Your Leadership Game

As organizations grow in volume and complexity, the demands on leadership change. The same old moves won’t cut it any more. In Chess Not Checkers, Mark Miller tells the story of Blake Brown, newly appointed CEO of a company troubled by poor performance and low morale. Nothing Blake learned from his previous roles seems to help him deal with the issues he now faces. The problem, his new mentor points out, is Blake is playing the wrong game.

The early days of an organization are like checkers: a quickly played game with mostly interchangeable pieces. Everybody, the leader included, does a little bit of everything; the pace is frenetic. But as the organization expands, you can’t just keep jumping from activity to activity. You have to think strategically, plan ahead, and leverage every employee’s specific talents—that’s chess. Leaders who continue to play checkers when the name of the game is chess lose.

On his journey, Blake learns four essential strategies from the game of chess that transform his leadership and his organization. The result: unprecedented performance!

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The Daily Nugget: Motivations for Basketball Coaches and Everyone Who Loves the Game

“The Daily Nugget is a treasure trove of inspiration for any coach, teacher, parent or player.”- Jay Bilas, ESPN
“The Daily Nugget gives coaches a positive approach to uplift players and themselves. A nugget a day will help you build your team in a powerful way.” – Jon Gordon, best-selling author of The Energy Bus, Training Camp and The Carpenter
“Nugget after nugget is filled with priceless wisdom and advice. We as readers become the recipients of the Burson teachings.”- George Raveling, Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame; Director of International Basketball, Nike
“Invaluable in developing communication techniques of coaches and leaders in all walks of life. I urge you to get your copy today.”- Glenn Wilkes, Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame
“Every coach has an offensive and defensive system. Good coaches have a rebound and fast break system as well. But great coaches have a motivation and relationship system in place. The Daily Nugget is your daily guide.”- Jim Seward, Owner of School of Hoops
The Daily Nugget is written by a coach for coaches. When you engage this book, you get powerful connections with everyone in your program, from players to parents and officials. Let your players have their own copies and you’ll see a chain reaction, as they begin to motivate themselves and each other.
Designed for busy coaches, the book is organized by the five key seasons of basketball–preseason, early season, mid-season, post-season and summer season. Each section opens with season-specific tips for how to use the nuggets and closes with a summary of how things went. 
You’ll learn how to:Bring out the best in yourself, your players and everyone around youMotivate and inspire your players through good times and tough timesCommunicate with your players year roundBuild the strong relationships that create long-term success
Whether you’re a veteran coach or just starting out, there’s no better way to lift and motivate your players–and yourself–than by engaging The Daily Nugget every day. 
Shout-out to players: Your coach needs you on board now! Get your own copy of this book so you are always ready for the Nugget Huddle.

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Strong and Sexy: Exercise, Food, and Motivation for a Healthy, Beach-Ready Body

Who said a healthy lifestyle has to be boring? Join Swedish TV and fashion personalities Sofi Fahrman and Julia Fors on a journey toward a stronger, healthier, more beach-ready body. They’ve got easy tips and fun facts on nutrition and training, and they ready to share their favorite insider tips from Hollywood’s most successful fitness coaches.

Sofi’s step-by-step photographs demonstrate the best exercises for women for each muscle group. Her program is designed for strength and toning, because strong equals sexy. Then, Julia shows how to avoid all the common pitfalls when choosing good food and healthy eating. Believe it or not, no foods are off-limits—it’s all about smart, clean choices.

It all wraps up in “Bikini Boot Camp.” This three-week training program is a focused effort for when you have a special goal in sight or need a kick start to get on your way to becoming the best version of yourself. This is not another diet book. This is about achieving your dream body while getting stronger, feeling healthier, and having a fun time doing it!

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The Motivation Manifesto for the Life-Claiming People: Achieve the things you want right now

Do you suffer from procrastination? Do you put off the things you should be doing to do things you shouldn’t be doing? Are you constantly rushing to meet deadlines, even though you had plenty of time to complete your project? Do you know you could do better, if only you had the motivation?

The secret is here in Melanie Hutchinson’s The Motivation Manifesto. Everyone can benefit from this work, because Hutchinson identifies what procrastination is, why people do it, and how to change this destructive habit. The Motivation Manifesto identifies the two types of goals we all at some point have as the “doing” goals (we we want to do) and the “being” goals (what we would like to be). Procrastination erodes both types of goals, but there’s hope in the pages of this book. Hutchinson kicks this off with how we should identify our personal goals of every type. She advises setting large, major goals and then breaking them into smaller and smaller goals that correspond to smaller and smaller increments of time. The Motivation Manifesto includes an important concept: the concept of positive visualization. It encourages us to envision, in detail, what life is like for us with our goals met. For example, if my goal is to run a 5K, I would envision myself crossing the finish line, proud and happy with my accomplishment. Hutchinson also suggests in interesting technique called “goal pictures” to help our visualization efforts. Hutchinson then delves into achieving our smaller goals with strategization. If previous methods haven’t been successful in our particular business, then we should brainstorm new methods to achieve our objective. Another key to addressing procrastination and gaining momentum is to prepare for obstacles and have a plan for addressing them if they arise. For example, if I’m writing an article for a newsletter, I should save it to a cloud-based service in case of power outage that affects my laptop. The Motivation Manifesto also reminds us of the well-known 80/20 principle: that there are methods that are much more efficient than many others. This helps out procrastination by helping us to isolate the most effective way to get things done. Hutchinson also endorses drawing on resources already at hand, you environment and overwhelming important projects with all available sources of energy in order to work most efficiently. The Motivation Manifesto doesn’t shy away from the concept of time management. Hutchinson advocates a calendar-based system for completing projects that she details explicitly in this book. She also lists many tips for increasing personal discipline during work sessions so you get the most results out of each work day. Along with positive visualization, Hutchinson also suggests positive affirmations to stay mentally fresh and focused. She quickly but thoroughly explains how to practice affirmations and weave them into our lives as a part of healthy daily practice. Finally, Hutchinson uses the method of rewarding ourselves when we have met daily, weekly, monthly and yearly goals. She outlines what make good rewards and how to incorporate rewards into our system of work to keep us engaged with our most important projects. ***Limited Edition***

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The Motivation to Succeed

Spoken in the tone of a motivational speaker, the Motivation to Succeed, addresses both men and women on the key essentials to achieving success in life. This serves as an encouraging testament of how to overcome life’s struggles and obstacles by first looking inside of yourself to determine your path and destiny. The author communicates in a manner that is honest and in tune with a generation seeking to develop an understanding in life and overcome adversity. The Motivation to Succeed, exhibits a connection with the heart, mind, body and soul and is sincere with conviction.

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Getting It: Building Motivation From Relapse

A workbook for those who never want to suffer the pain and humiliation of addictive relapse again. With counselor or sponsor and/or peers, we look systematically at relapse decisions, our own and others, in order to “get” the realizations already found among those who work successfully to maintain recovery.

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  • Used Book in Good Condition
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Work Motivation: Past, Present and Future (SIOP Organizational Frontiers Series)

This edited volume in SIOP’s Organizational Frontiers Series presents the current thinking and research on the important area of motivation.Work Motivation is a central issue in Industrial organizational psychology, human resource management and organizational behavior. In this volume the editors and authors show that motivation must be seen as a multi-level phenomenon where individual, group, organizational and cultural variables must be considered to truly understand it. The book adopts an overall framework that encompasses “internal” – from the person – forces and “external” – from the immediate and more distant environment – forces. It is destined to challenge scholars of organizations to give renewed emphasis and attention to advancing our understanding of motivation in work situations.

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  • Used Book in Good Condition
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To Flourish or Destruct: A Personalist Theory of Human Goods, Motivations, Failure, and Evil


In his 2010 book What Is a Person?, Christian Smith argued that sociology had for too long neglected this fundamental question. Prevailing social theories, he wrote, do not adequately “capture our deep subjective experience as persons, crucial dimensions of the richness of our own lived lives, what thinkers in previous ages might have called our ‘souls’ or ‘hearts.’” Building on Smith’s previous work, To Flourish or Destruct examines the motivations intrinsic to this subjective experience: Why do people do what they do? How can we explain the activity that gives rise to all human social life and social structures?
 
Smith argues that our actions stem from a motivation to realize what he calls natural human goods: ends that are, by nature, constitutionally good for all human beings. He goes on to explore the ways we can and do fail to realize these ends—a failure that can result in varying gradations of evil. Rooted in critical realism and informed by work in philosophy, psychology, and other fields, Smith’s ambitious book situates the idea of personhood at the center of our attempts to understand how we might shape good human lives and societies.