
The Seventh Power
One CEO's Journey into the Business of Shared Leadership
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Narrated by:
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Steve Menasche
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By:
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Kevin Hancock
A corporate executive loses his voice and discovers a new pathway to organizational excellence, built on the premise of dispersed power and shared leadership.
©2020 Kevin Hancock (P)2020 Gildan MediaListeners also enjoyed...



















Keep up the great work.
A refreshing prolific view to corporate leadership
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Hancock provides tangible evidence that treating people with respect as fellow humans increases monetary profits. The mantra of putting people first and profits will follow has confirmation in real life at Hancock Lumber—counterintuitive to the assumptions underpinning private equity practices, employee self actualization is foundational to shareholder value. If only this were universally practiced! It's difficult to imagine Capitalism surviving without this fundamental course correction within businesses—the alternative is a fascist dystopia of oligarchic oppression the world and the US in particular are rapidly hurling toward.
The author describes his experiences with the Lakota people at the Pine Ridge Reservation near Rapid City, SD, the poorest county in the United States. He also chronicles his meetings with survivors of Soviet imposed starvation during the 1930s Holodomor in Ukraine. Among the many lessons from these experiences is that we are all fellow members of the human tribe, and should relate to others accordingly.
Although the Seventh Power is that of the individual, it is there to help other humans, contrary to what is touted as individualism in the libertarian sense. We need Seventh Power individualism—the exact opposite of the self-serving individualism that dominates our culture today. May we all pursue that!
The ethos of the song Imagine
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“The Seventh Power” is incredibly insightful
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not for me
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