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THIS MONTH'S PAGE-TURNERS ON BUSINESS AND BEYOND
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Crisis can often trigger reactive behavior, and for good reason: when we’re scared, we stick to what we know. In this edition of Readers & Leaders, take a first glance at the upcoming book Deliberate Calm, a guide to navigating an increasingly complex—and sometimes frightening—world. The right solutions require leaders to practice self-awareness and adaptive decision making, say authors Jacqueline Brassey, Aaron De Smet, and Michiel Kruyt. This week, The Titanium Economy, McKinsey’s new book on the burgeoning industrial sector, hit bookshelves. Earlier this month, CNBC’s Julia Boorstin explained why cultural hurdles have made woman leaders inherently exceptional. Catch more conversations from Author Talks, as well as new reads from this month’s bestselling business books, prepared exclusively for McKinsey by NPD BookScan. Itching for more? Visit McKinsey on Books for the latest, and to get Readers & Leaders in your inbox monthly, click here to subscribe. |
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When circumstances get complicated, having a practice of calm and consciousness can help empower leaders to face challenges proactively, not reactively. Combining cognitive science, consciousness exercises, and more than 50 years of collective boardroom experience, McKinsey senior knowledge expert Jacqueline Brassey, senior partner Aaron De Smet, and former partner Michiel Kruyt offer Deliberate Calm: How to Learn and Lead in a Volatile World. In an upcoming edition of Author Talks, the authors explain how people can confront external uncertainty by first connecting with their inner self.
“Whether there is a particular thing that matters to you or you want to change a particular behavior or you want to learn something new or you want to engage in something difficult that you never did before . . . it’s about having a growth mindset, self-compassion, and kindness. I practice those. One of the things that I personally do is watch my sleep. I work on reframing that and on exercise, mindfulness, and meditation, as well. Be kind. You will make mistakes, and that is an important part of deliberate calm, as well. You have to make mistakes to learn.”
—Jacqueline Brassey, McKinsey senior knowledge expert, in an upcoming edition of Author Talks. Preorder Deliberate Calm: How to Learn and Lead in a Volatile World (Harper Collins, November 2022). |
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“When looking at the risks of recession, the fact that we’re facing record inflation, and the uncertainty in the business world right now, I think about the challenges that women have always faced and the way they’ve coped with them: having to do more with less, having to be scrappy, and having to bring in perspectives from across organizations. The approaches that women have either been forced to take or have had the impulse to take are going to be incredibly valuable right now in navigating these uncertain times.”
—Julia Boorstin, CNBC senior media and tech correspondent, creator of the Disruptor 50 franchise, and author of When Women Lead: What They Achieve, Why They Succeed, and How We Can Learn from Them (Simon & Schuster, October 2022), in a recent edition of Author Talks. |
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Industrial-technology companies are leading the American economy into a new era of sustainable, inclusive growth. In The Titanium Economy: How Industrial Technology Can Create a Better, Faster, Stronger America (Public Affairs, October 2022), Asutosh Padhi, managing partner for McKinsey in North America, and coauthors Gaurav Batra and Nick Santhanam reveal how this underrecognized sector—which is responsible for B2B products such as recycled lumber and color enamels—is driving long-term gains in innovation and employment. Order your copy.
“Titanium economy companies have been going about doing what they’re actually good at, which is delivering great returns for their shareholders, taking care of customers, taking care of employees, doing the job around communities, and cleaning the environment—but they have never really found an opportunity to pull it all together and tell the story.” —Asutosh Padhi, managing partner for McKinsey in North America, in a recent edition of Author Talks. |
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—Edited by Molly Liebergall, a digital editor in McKinsey’s New York office
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