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Kaizen by Sarah Harvey The Japanese Method for Transforming Habits, One Small Step at a Time

What's it about? Kaizen (2019) is a guide to the improvement philosophy known as kaizen, which encourages taking small steps to complete ambitious goals. Already well established in the world of business and sports, this method can also be applied to personal development. Using practical examples, this guide explains how to take a kaizen approach to setting goals that’ll improve health, relationships, money, and work. Have you ever made a New Year’s resolution, only to find yourself throwing in the towel by the second week of January? If you struggle to make changes to your routine, you’re not alone. Making a leap into the dark can be scary when it comes to changing habits. To conquer this natural fear, the kaizen approach focuses on taking slow and steady steps forward. Originally a Japanese management theory, it’s now a widely-applied philosophy that values continuous improvement toward lasting change. In these lessons, you’ll find out how you can adopt kaizen techniques to ta...

Superhero Leadership by Peter Cuneo & Joe Garner 28 Ways to Lead with Courage, Strength, and Compassion

What's it about? Superhero Leadership (2026) distils decades of frontline executive experience into the core principles that define exceptional leadership. A portrait of one of the world’s top “turnaround” CEOs, it’s also a playbook for leaders and managers navigating crises in their own organizations. Leadership has its perks: authority, status, and ownership are just a few of them. Life on the frontlines of a failing enterprise, though, is anything but glamorous: morale is low, cash is tight, and trust sorely tested. The leader’s lot is to hold steady when everyone else is panicking. In this kind of situation, the right call is rarely the most popular. Most managers know the theory of leadership, but crisis is the true test of their character. As we’ll see in this lesson, what matters most isn’t charisma but clarity, discipline, and emotional control. Our guide as we explore these practical virtues is the world’s top turnaround CEO, Peter Cuneo. Cuneo’s book on superhero le...

Think Like a Stoic by Ken Mogi The Ancient Path to a Life Well Lived

What's it about? Think Like a Stoic (2025) is a guide to Stoicism written for a world crowded with noise, choice, stress, and stimulation. Drawing on ancient wisdom on topics as diverse as death, happiness, and the good life, it helps us reframe the problems we encounter in everyday life. We live in the most complex societies that have ever existed. Never before have humans had to process as much information or make as many decisions as we do today. “Choice overload” has become a defining feature of the digital age, shaping every corner of our lives – from the trivial to the deeply existential. Philosophically, it can feel like we’ve lost our bearings. The retreat of traditional values, while liberating, has left us in a moral landscape with few recognizable landmarks. Liberal societies offer unprecedented freedom, but that very abundance of possible ways of being human can also be disorienting. We are free to choose – but how should we choose? That, argues Ken Mogi, is precisel...

Cheers to Monday by Amy Leneker Lead and Live with Less Stress and More Joy

What's it about? Cheers to Monday (2026) argues that chronic stress isn’t an inevitable part of working life but a systemic problem with a practical solution. It lays out a three-step framework – See, Sort, and Solve – for identifying what’s driving your stress, categorising it, and taking the right action. It also makes the case that reducing stress isn’t just good for your health; it’s what creates the conditions for joy to become a genuine part of your working life. Amy Leneker hit a wall at 40 – panic attacks, medical leave, and a life that had become unrecognizable. The turning point came during a medical appointment, when a form asked what she did for fun and what her hobbies were. She had no answer. Chronic stress had stripped away her sense of self so gradually that she hadn't even noticed – until that question made it impossible to ignore. She spent the next decade in conversation with executives and their colleagues, digging into what drives burnout, what keeps peop...

Flourish by Daniel Coyle The Art of Building Meaning, Joy, and Fulfillment

What's it about? Flourish (2026) investigates why some groups and communities generate extraordinary levels of connection, energy, and purpose. It argues that thriving communities share two core dynamics: a quality of attentive, open engagement with one another, and a collective ability to cocreate and move forward in unison. Drawing on scientific research and real-world examples, it maps out how these principles can be cultivated to build a richer, more meaningful life at any scale. What if you’ve been thinking about the good life all wrong? Most of us move through our days in treasure-hunt mode – chasing goals, checking boxes, perpetually busy and under-reflected. The catch is, the treasure doesn’t exist yet. You make it. Daniel Coyle realized that the hard way in his mid-fifties, reeling from the loss of both parents, flat and restless and full of big questions. Rather than turning to religion or a meditation retreat, he did what journalists do: he investigated. What he found ...

Beyond Belief by Nir Eyal How to Stop Limiting Yourself and Achieve Breakthrough Results

What's it about? Beyond Belief (2026) examines the hidden psychological assumptions that shape what you see, how you feel, and whether you act – and makes the case that most of the limits you accept aren’t fixed realities but beliefs you’ve absorbed without questioning. It introduces three distinct powers of belief – attention, anticipation, and agency – and shows how you can develop them. It’s a practical framework for anyone who has quit too soon, stalled without knowing why, or suspected that the real obstacle was internal. In the 1950s, researcher Curt Richter placed rats into water-filled cylinders and measured how long they swam. The wild ones – stronger and better built for survival – lasted barely 15 minutes. The domesticated ones swam on for hours. The deciding factor was, at least in part, psychological: whether the animals believed that surviving was possible. Richter went further. He scooped a group of wild rats to safety just before they went under, held them briefly...

Flash Teams by Melissa Valentine & Michael Bernstein Leading the Future of AI-Enhanced, On-Demand Work

What's it about? Flash Teams (2025) is a hands-on guide to assembling and running on-demand, computationally powered groups of experts. It explores how to tap online labor markets and artificial intelligence to recruit top talent in minutes and adjust to project changes on the fly. Put these strategies to work, and the way you tackle complex challenges shifts completely, letting you scale operations without the drag of traditional hiring. In today’s rapidly accelerating world, office walls and geographical borders are quickly dissolving, giving way to something far more alive: a fluid, humming network of global talent stretched across every time zone. So the next time a sprawling, complicated project lands in your lap, there’s no reason to flinch. Because somewhere out there, the exact minds you need are already at their desks, coffee in hand, ready the moment you reach out. This lesson walks you through the architecture of the flash team, a bold rethinking of how temporary, high...