Home | WebMail |

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

New BrunswickOpinion

Pierre Battah lists his favourite 2017 holiday book gift ideas

Pierre Battah shares his list of favourite books to enjoy for the holidays.

List includes new books and updated versions as well

The sixth edition of the book, The Leadership Challenge; How to Make Extraordinary Things Happen in Organizations is on the top of Pierre Battah's holiday list. (Submitted)

For the very first time, this year's list is thick with revised and updatedbestsellers.

In two cases they're from the recent past and in another the gold standard in leadership reading from the last century. Outstanding non-fiction that stands the test of time is great but a bit challenging when the examples are dated.

In these recommendations, the research, writing and the stories have been refreshed with great success. This is not to say that 2017 first editions aren't worthy. There are a number of those as well.

In the "Oops we missed a good read from a few years ago"category, a book that has its foundation in the language of love (okaythis is another first for my book column) is among my favourites. The work has been adjusted for the workplace and stands as a great reference for leaders and managers looking to motivate through appreciation and recognition.

Add to the list some deep Canadian content on creative problem solving, lots of female authors as well as a workbook companion to an international bestseller written by the most successful millennial author in the non-fiction world.

Throw in a fun and compelling book on interpersonal communication by everybody's favourite TV doctor from the seventies and we've almost got it. Then add a fable from the world's foremost authority on teamwork and close with great insight on being a "kick-ass boss," and you have a compelling list for gift giving or your own 2018 reading list for professional development.

1.The Leadership Challenge; How to Make Extraordinary Things Happen in Organizations by James M. Kouzes and Barry Z. Posner

Few leadership books will stand the test of time like this 1987 release. It continues to educate and inspire, and the 2017 sixthedition offers current challenges leaders face as well as contemporary stories and examples. In addition, it's a colourful magazine stock edition that every leader or aspiring leader needs on their bookshelf. This is evidence-based, research-rich leadership development at its absolute finest.

2. Leading with Questions; How Leaders Find the Right Solutions by Knowing What to Ask by Michael J. Marquardt

The interviews with 30 leaders are compelling and eight of them are new to this revised and updated edition. If you believe, as I do, that great leaders ask great questions, making them much better listeners, this Jossey Bass volume gets very practical on not only what to ask but how. Chapters on questions to manage people, build teams, and enable change are excellent. If you're not convinced about the power of questions, this book will change your mind.

3. Multipliers:How the Best Leaders Make Everybody Smarter by Liz Wiseman with Greg McKeon

Given my HR background, I have a soft spot for HR wizards who become best selling authors. In this 2017 revised and updated version of this 2010 work, Wiseman translates her insight earned as the global HR development executive at Oracle into viewing leaders as either multipliers or diminishers(spoiler alert: you want to work for and become a multiplier).Wiseman shows you how to adopt five disciplines and then breaks down the five into individual practices. If you help others develop their leadership and managerial chops, read this book!

Radical Candor: Be a Kick-Ass Boss Without Losing Your Humanity by Kim Scott is on Pierre Battah's 2017 holiday list. (Submitted)

4. Radical Candor: Be a Kick-Ass Boss Without Losing Your Humanity by Kim Scott

Great instruction, and wonderful stories, from the former executive at Apple and Google. Her advice is simple: care for the person while challenging them directly all in the service of creating a culture of feedback (she calls it guidance), building cohesive teams and achieving results. This New York Times bestseller is one of the most helpful and useable leadership development books of 2017.

5. Find Your Why: A Practical Guide for Discovering Purpose for You and Your Team by Simon Sinek, David Mead and Peter Docker

Sinek's blockbusterStart With Whyis followed up with this helpful 2017 workbook that individuals and facilitators alike will find useful.

6. The Ideal Team Player, by Patrick Lencioni

The leading authority on workplace teams builds on the global success of hisFive Dysfunctions of a Teamin this 2016 fable of a nephew trying to save a doomed company by building a culture of teamwork grounded in the three virtues of humility, hunger and people smarts. It outlines a great team framework and very practical tools. This is ideal workplace book club reading material. Check out lots of free resources and tools on Lencioni's websitewwwtablegroup.com

7. Creating Great Choices; A Leaders Guide to Integrative Thinkingby Jennifer Riel and Roger L. Martin

Canada's pre-eminent strategic thinkers help the rest of us with a four-step approach to creative problem solving that uses opposing ideas that work in virtually any situation. Lots of practical tips for leaders facing hard choices. Masterfully researched and written 2017 tome.

8. Five Languages of Appreciation in the Workplace: Empowering Organizations by Encouraging Peopleby Gary Chapman and Paul White

Adapting the language of love for the job site. It includes useful online resources to help you help your boss and colleagues appreciate you more. Helps explain why some of our recognition and appreciation efforts miss the mark and how fix it.

9. If I Understood You, Would I Have This Look on My Face? My Adventures in the Art and Science of Relating and Communicating by Alan Alda

He's still Dr Hawkeye Pierce to many of us who grew up on M.A.S.H. on TV (not to mention hundreds of other roles since) but Alda has been working diligently for years helping the rest of us better understand science. He shares his interpersonal communication insights (based in science and improvisation) in this witty and informative 2017 book.