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RatStre 08-12-168 StrengthsFinder 2.0 Tom Rath Gallup
Press, 2007, 175 pp., ISBN
978-1-59562-015-6 |
Tom Rath
leads Gallup's workplace research and leadership consulting. He is coauthor of How Full is Your Bucket? and author of Vital Friends: The People You Can't Afford to Live Without. This book builds on Now, Discover Your Strengths by Donald O. Clifton. It helps you discover your natural
talents. StrengthsFinder: The Next
Generation Donald
Clifton began studying how people can build on their strengths rather than
fix their weaknesses. His team created
a language of the 34 most common talents and developed an assessment to help
people discover and describe these talents.
Research
shows that people who can focus on their strengths every day will be much
more engaged in their jobs and have a better quality of life in general. This book
helps you understand how each of your top five themes play out in your
life. It provides ten ideas for action
for each theme that can help you build a strengths-based development
plan. Part I: Finding Your Strengths -
An Introduction The
American myth says, "You can be anything you want to be, if you just try
hard enough." The movie, Rudy,
promoted that theme. However, you may
be a whole lot happier and more productive if you become more of who you
already are. When you
are not in the zone of your strengths you are a different person and probably
much lot less engaged and fulfilled in your job. The use
of the StrengthsFinder can help you build a true strength and your talent is
one key part of it. Knowledge, skills,
and practice are also important.
Building your talents into real strengths requires practice and hard
work. We need
to manage our weaknesses and become conscious of our blind spots to be aware
of both our potential and our limitations.
A reader
can complete a StrengthsFinder 2.0 assessment on-line at www.strengthsfinder.com using a
one-time access code in the back of the book.
Your answers are matched with those in the database to produce your
top five themes plus an in-depth analysis of how each one plays out in your
life. The results are customized to
describe your personality. These Strengths Insights are about what makes you
unique. Part II. Applying Your Strengths Each of
the 34 themes is listed with a description of how a person with this strength
operates, one or two illustrative conversations that exhibit this theme, ten
action steps for developing this strength, and some suggestions for working
with people who have this strength if you don't have it. Here are
the first dozen strength areas listed: Activator, Adaptability, Analytical,
Arranger, Belief, Command, Communication, Competition, Connectedness,
Consistency, Context, Deliberative, …. |
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