1) Among the quick, incisive thrusts of practical wisdom from Peter Drucker is this: “The best way to predict your future is to create it.”
But before we can create, we must get to know ourselves.
2) Drucker points out that success in the knowledge economy comes to those who know their strengths, their values, and how they best perform.
Only then, armed with such self-knowledge, can we decide where we belong and what our contribution should be.
3) “It's amazing how few people know what they are good at,” Drucker says.
We’re much better at knowing what we’re not good at.
So, he suggests constantly giving yourself feedback on how you’re doing.
4) Once we’ve figured out what we’re good at, we should go to work on acquiring the skills and knowledge we need to fully realize our strengths.
5) See where the gaps are and fill them in.
Find where our intellectual arrogance is causing disabling ignorance and overcome it.
6) Drucker believes one should waste as little effort as possible on improving areas of low competence.
“It takes far more energy and work to improve from incompetence to mediocrity,” he reckons, “than it takes to improve from first-rate performance to excellence.”
7) Working in an organization whose value system is incompatible with our own condemns us to frustration.
For us to be effective in our roles, our values do not need to be the same, but they must be close enough to coexist.
8) “If you believe in yourself, perform solo,” Drucker says.
“Jobs are too risky.” He calls them “dangerous liaisons.”
9) His advice to those taking the plunge: “If you have the emotional fortitude to last three years, you’ll succeed.”
It’s not the money that’s the crucial resource; it’s that ability to survive those first years of hopeful, promising leads that lead nowhere.
10) A midlife crisis is mostly boredom.
Today, most work is knowledge work, and knowledge workers are not “finished” after forty years on the job, they are merely bored.
At 45, most people have reached the peak of their careers—and they know it.
11) After twenty years of doing the same kind of work, they are very good at their jobs.
But they are not learning or contributing or deriving challenge or satisfaction. They’re facing another twenty years of the same thing.
12) At such time, Drucker says, we should develop a second career.
One way is to switch jobs for a new challenge. Another is to develop a parallel career, a side business, or volunteer.
13) It is important to have an area in which we can contribute, make a difference, and be “somebody.”
This does not have to be work-related. It means finding a second area that satisfies our soul. It can be family, faith, or a personal passion.
14) No one can expect to reach professional heights and sustain them indefinitely.
Professional decline starts earlier than almost anyone thinks.
At some point we all experience a setback at work or in life.
15) A second major interest—not just a hobby—may make all the difference. Drucker recommends that we develop it early.
We must manage the second half of our life long before we enter it.
16) Historically, there was no such thing as “success,” Drucker points out.
The vast majority of people did not expect anything but to stay in their “proper station,” as an old English prayer has it.
The only mobility was downward mobility.
17) In a knowledge society, however, we expect everyone to be a success.
“This is clearly an impossibility,” Drucker declares from experience. “For many people, there is at best an absence of failure.”
18) What we should focus on instead is another question he poses: What do you want to be remembered for?
19) The answers should change as one gets older, and adjust with changes in the world.
For Drucker, the one thing worth being remembered for is how you touch people.
1) In a new bull market, you can almost feel the greed tide begin.
Usually it appears a few years after the market bottom, but this time is different.
Let me explain. 🧵
2) The coronavirus pandemic has made death salient, spurring certain psychological tendencies.
Buying stocks is one result.
3) The cognizance of death, and our innate fear of it, drives much of our conscious and subconscious behavior, according to psychologist Sheldon Solomon.
1) The Middle East is undergoing a major transformation.
It is entirely possible to know exactly what will happen in the future.
Maktub. It is written.
2) Within the field of eschatology, concerned with the final events of history, the three Abrahamic religions Judaism, Christianity, and Islam display certain convergences.
3) The Abrahamic covenant of Genesis 12 is among the most determinative revelations of scripture.
God calls upon Abraham to journey to Canaan, a region approximating present-day Israel, where He promises to make of him and his descendants “a great nation.”
In one sense, it has never been easier: we have never had this many tools and information at our fingertips.
But in another sense, it has never been more difficult: our brain is fatigued trying to attain signals from noisy news flows.
2/ As William James wrote, "We see, but we do not see: we use our eyes, but our gaze is glancing.
We see the signs, but not their meanings. We are not blinded, but we have blinders."
3/ Trapped behind our Bloomberg screen, frivolously searching for new patterns, we become isolated from everything, including our own increasingly abstract thoughts.
1) I’ve never understood why people love labeling themselves as contrarian.
What’s with such pride?
Contrarians are often in error but never in doubt.
2) In The Art of Contrary Thinking, written in 1954, Humphrey Neill said being contrarian is not not about simply taking the opposite view of the crowd.
3) Timing is important.
Contrary opinions are frequently wrong primarily because the crowd is right most of the time.