Employees often reserve their best strategic thinking for complex hobbies. By intentionally designing the work environment with clear rules, goals, and compelling narratives—like a well-designed game—leaders can unlock this latent strategic talent and make work more engaging.
Stanford's business school uses an improv game where students rapidly list items in a category, prioritizing speed over accuracy. This exercise demonstrates that generating a high volume of ideas, even imperfect ones, is the most effective path to finding the best idea, as the best concepts often emerge late in the process.
Pandora's founder kept employees working for two years without pay by framing their work not as data entry, but as a magical, culture-shifting mission. Great leaders make everything bigger than it is, transforming jobs into purpose-driven crusades to sustain motivation.
To foster genuine AI adoption, introduce it through play. Instead of starting with a hackathon focused on business problems, the speaker built an AI-powered scavenger hunt for her team's off-site. This "dogfooding through play" approach created a positive first interaction, demystified the technology, and set a culture of experimentation.
When introducing a new skill like user interviews, initially focus on quantity over quality. Creating a competition for the "most interviews" helps people put in the reps needed to build muscle memory. This vanity metric should be temporary and replaced with quality-focused measures once the habit is formed.
To encourage participation from everyone, leaders should focus on the 'why' behind an idea (intention) and ask curious questions rather than judging the final output. This levels the playing field by rewarding effort and thoughtfulness over innate talent, making it safe for people to share imperfect ideas.
Use the GROW model (Goal, Reality, Options, Way Forward) to structure coaching conversations. This simple set of question categories helps leaders guide their team members to find their own solutions, fostering independence and critical thinking without the leader needing to provide the answer directly.
Stop defining a manager's job by tasks like meetings or feedback. Instead, define it by the goal: getting better outcomes from a group. Your only tools to achieve this are three levers: getting the right People, defining the right Process, and aligning everyone on a clear Purpose.
We often mistake skills for strengths. A more powerful definition of a strength is any activity that energizes and motivates you. To boost morale and performance, individuals and leaders should focus on aligning work with these energy-giving tasks, rather than just focusing on competency.
Product managers often operate like "poker players," optimizing for short-term wins. In contrast, designers tend to be "chess players," thinking holistically and several moves ahead—a trait they share with C-suite executives. This strategic alignment is a powerful, often overlooked, advantage.
Instead of developing a strategy alone and presenting it as a finished product (the 'cave' method), foster co-creation in a disarming, collaborative environment (the 'campfire'). This makes the resulting document a mechanism for alignment, ensuring stakeholders feel ownership and are motivated to implement the plan.