Excerpt 1
Reaching Your Unique Potential
What does it mean to be “successful”? How do you achieve your dreams?
Does it mean creating an impressive list of achievements? Does it mean gaining significant wealth, status, position, and power? Maybe it means pleasing your parents, family, and friends?
I wrote this book to address these questions and to create a road map to help you achieve your aspirations. Following this road map involves taking a series of steps and answering a set of questions, all of which require you to look inward as well as outward. It also involves developing a set of new skills and habits, some of which may be challenging and uncomfortable for you.
Another Path
Having wrestled with these issues over the past thirty years, I have come to believe that the key to achieving your aspirations lies not in “being a success” but rather in working to reach your unique potential. This requires you to create your own definition of success rather than accept a definition created by others.
For many of us, navigating this road is very challenging because it forces us to understand ourselves and screen out many of the external forces that profoundly impact how we think about our careers and our lives. This path may also require you to develop a thick skin that enables you to ward off the polite ambivalence (or active disapproval) of those loved ones, friends, and colleagues who turn up their noses at certain choices you decide to make.
This book describes a different—and, I believe, ultimately more fulfilling—path. It is based on many of my own career and life experiences, as well as lessons I’ve learned in managing and advising a diverse range of people regarding how to reach their unique potential. This approach takes courage and hard work. It does not yield easy answers or get you to a final destination. It is, instead, a multistage, lifelong effort. It involves developing a different mind-set and a new set of work habits.
I first started speaking about this subject when I was running businesses in the financial services industry. Over two decades, I led a number of businesses in a variety of geographic regions of the world. I dealt with a significant number of challenging situations and managed and advised a wide range of people. These experiences helped me develop deeper insight into the role of leadership, individual development, and the nature of human potential.
When I joined the faculty at Harvard in fall 2005, I began thinking more systemically about these issues as well as teaching many of these concepts. I wrote an article on this topic in the July–August 2008 edition of Harvard Business Review. I regularly receive phone calls, e-mails, and visits from people who have read it and want to discuss how it might apply to them.
Over the years, I have advised numerous students and executives, and I have consistently observed that great companies and nonprofit organizations create an environment in which people are coached and encouraged to reach their unique potential.









