noellyh's review against another edition

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inspiring reflective medium-paced

3.75

erikars's review

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2.0

I read this books as part of a reading group at work. It is a mediocre book with highly valuable information if you are willing to dig through the business speak and find it. As such, reading it in a group worked well. At our meetings, we were able to weed out the valuable information.

The theme of this book is that people do best when they focus on their strengths. This flies in the face of much popular wisdom which says that you should work to improve in your weakest areas. Instead, the authors of this book are of the opinion that focusing on your weaknesses will, at best, bring you up to mediocre. Focusing on those areas where you have natural talent and passion will bring success. They say that successful teams are balanced, but successful individuals invest in developing their unique talents.

This book contains a six step system for discovering and developing your strengths. Buckingham excels at the art of business babble, which makes this book something of a chore to read. However, the system itself is useful. At a high level, the steps in this system are:

1. Attitude realignment: Stop believing the myth that you should work on improving your weaknesses. (I wouldn't really call this a step, but whatever.)

2. Strength discovery: Spend a week noting which activities you love and loathe and turn those into strengths statements. A strength is a specific activity that makes you feel strong. For example, "I evaluate an already defined set of options against a set of well defined criteria" is a strength. "I make decisions" is not. The first one defines specific preconditions that must be met before the strength can apply: both the options and the criteria must be predefined.

3. Use your strengths: Find more way to apply these strengths in your job.

4. Stop your weaknesses: Find ways to spend less time on the activities you loathe.

5. Talk about it: Talk to your manager about how you can use your strengths to improve the team. Then, once you have demonstrated that you're not just trying to get out of work, talk to your manager about those things which drain you and figure out how to spend less time on them or change them to be more in line with your strengths.

6. Build strong habits: Set up a structure which will encourage you to build up your strengths every week. Also, reevaluate your strengths periodically; they will change as your role and interests change.

Our reading group focused mostly on the second step: strength discovery. I found this to be one of the most useful parts of the whole reading group. Just by spending a week being conscious of what I do and do not like, I gained a lot of insight into my work day. The exercise of turning those very specific statements into strengths statements that were general enough to be applicable from week to week without being so general as to be meaningless helped me to figure out why I enjoyed the activities that I enjoyed.

That said, I have been having a hard time focusing on really putting my strengths into practice. I am pretty good at noticing when I am using one of my strengths, but it takes time to figure out how I can spend more time using my strengths. I have not yet taken the time to sit down and do this.

Like any program, the real value is proportional to the amount of time you are willing to put into it. The answers the books give you are just a start. I found Go Put Your Strengths to Work to be valuable starting points in figuring out how I could really apply my strengths to my job.

lorathelibrarian's review

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1.0

This book was ridiculous. I was very disapointed because I liked the previous book in the series so much better. Buckingham just kept repeating the same thing over and over again and really stretched out information that could have been condensed to one chapter. A lot of the tools he used and gave as examples were not helpful and wouldn't fit into the real world anyway. I would not recommend this book to anyone.

cora273's review against another edition

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2.0

This book was okay. I read it as part of a book club for work - the discussions we ended up having were excellent but the book itself was just okay. It starts off sounding extremely promising and in theory most of it is very promising. It can be very challenging to follow everything the book suggests to do but the least you can do is try and ask. The book itself was a bit boring at times and seems like it could have been condensed. Overall, it's a great thing to think about and consider (doing more of what makes you strong and doing less of what makes you weak) but I'm not so sure I'd recommend this book. Also, it mentions a SET (Strengths Engagement Track) survey but that is no longer available... so all the parts of the book that talk about it are no long applicable.

ckoestner's review against another edition

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2.0

I need to stop thinking that straight white cis men have advice for me.

lintulai's review against another edition

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3.0

3½ stars. A truly practical approach to handling work-life-performance hiccups and larger issues. I learned about Buckingham through Oprah, and it was quite nice to have him read this book himself, as the stresses and highlights were where they were supposed to be. Of course, this kind of book is more practical as a hardcover copy, but the listening experience was not bad either.

kristycreads's review against another edition

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2.0

I just could not finish listening to this book. There was way too much explanation of why strengths matter – come on, if I didn’t agree with that I would not be listening to the book. Also I disagreed with the idea that people do not change but continually become more of who they are. The part about his son freaking out when his sports team loses was the stopping point for me. I do think his child can change and I think the author is a big part of his son’s behavior.
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