Navigation überspringen
Beyond Talent
Book

Beyond Talent

Become Someone Who Gets Extraordinary Results

HarperCollins Leadership, 2011 Mehr

Buy book or audiobook

Read offline


Editorial Rating

7

Qualities

  • Applicable
  • Concrete Examples
  • For Beginners

Recommendation

The world of professional sports is filled with athletes who have extraordinary talent and yet end up with mediocre careers. Why? Talent alone is commonplace. What’s special is “talent plus,” the term prolific leadership author John C. Maxwell uses to describe the achievement level of people who maximize their talents. Maxwell says you must add effort to talent to make it matter. He describes 13 attributes people should build within themselves to make the most of their talent. His message will also matter to those who coach, mentor or encourage others. In any business or activity, Maxwell contends, talent “is only a starting point.” How you develop your talent is what counts, and this book will show you how.

Summary

Many people have talent, but there is nothing special about talent alone.

Everyone has talent of one sort or another. The trick is to develop and enhance your talents and maximize your abilities so you can reach your goals. You will accomplish more if you focus on improving your talents than you will if you worry about your weaknesses. Talent is important, but your life choices are even more vital. Talent-plus people make the right choices to enhance their talents and achieve their full potential.

To become a talent-plus person, develop 13 pivotal personal characteristics.

Consider these traits one by one:

  1. “Belief lifts your talent” To get ahead, you must have faith in yourself. Consider Joe Namath, the New York Jets’ quarterback who took his underdog team to the Super Bowl in 1969. Knowledgeable observers thought the mighty Indianapolis Colts would crush the Jets. But Namath, self-confident and armed with hours of studying his opponents’ game films, was having none of it. “The Jets will win Sunday. I guarantee it,” he said. Namath was right. The Jets won 16 to 7. How did they prevail and shock the...

About the Author

John C. Maxwell is an author and speaker on leadership. His books, which have sold more than 12 million copies, include The Difference Maker, Be All You Can Be and Failing Forward.


More on this topic

Learners who read this summary also read