Vendor | |
---|---|
Mohrbooks Literary Agency
Sebastian Ritscher |
|
Original language | |
English | |
Categories | |
Weblink | |
www.psychedupthebook.com |
PSYCHED UP
How the Moments Before Any Challenge Determine Your Success
Harvard Business Review editor Daniel McGinn explains the science of how the difference between success and failure at life’s big moments can come down to what you do in the last few minutes before you start. As the nature of work has changed, many professionals now succeed or fail based less on repetitive daily tasks, and more on a thin slice of evaluative moments. If you work 2000 hours a year but your overall success rests mostly on your performance during a few dozen crucial hours, the tools in this book should help you pull off your best performances when it counts the most. Daniel McGinn is an editor at the Harvard Business Review.
Harvard Business Review editor Daniel McGinn explains the science of how the difference between success and failure at life’s big moments can come down to what you do in the last few minutes before you start.
The science of effective practice and how to perform at peak levels has long been a popular subject of research. But more recently, scientists have uncovered the underappreciated but important bridge between the two: mental preparation. Chances are, you aren’t mentally preparing effectively, even though you can truly get better results at life’s high-pressure moments with science-backed practices.
PSYCHED UP is a book about what we can do before you have to perform. It examines new ways to deal with a flood of adrenaline, increase focus, and otherwise optimize our emotions before we take the stage. Daniel McGinn investigates:
·How trying to calm down backfires
·What to put into your pre-performance music mix
·What kinds of pep talks work best
·And why he wrote this book on Malcolm Gladwell's old keyboard!
He also introduces readers to high-performing professionals who are putting these techniques to work—superstars like US General Stanley McChrystal, Nascar champion driver Jimmie Johnson, legendary tennis coach Nick Bollettieri, T-Mobile CEO John Legere, and others who, despite years of practice and enviable track records, will ultimately be judged on their ability to deliver a single solid performance when it counts.
As the nature of work has changed, many professionals now succeed or fail based less on repetitive daily tasks, and more on a thin slice of evaluative moments. If you work 2000 hours a year but your overall success rests mostly on your performance during a few dozen crucial hours, the tools in this book should help you pull off your best performances when it counts the most.
Daniel McGinn is an editor at the Harvard Business Review. His writing has appeared in Wired, Inc., the Boston Globe Magazine, and Newsweek.
The science of effective practice and how to perform at peak levels has long been a popular subject of research. But more recently, scientists have uncovered the underappreciated but important bridge between the two: mental preparation. Chances are, you aren’t mentally preparing effectively, even though you can truly get better results at life’s high-pressure moments with science-backed practices.
PSYCHED UP is a book about what we can do before you have to perform. It examines new ways to deal with a flood of adrenaline, increase focus, and otherwise optimize our emotions before we take the stage. Daniel McGinn investigates:
·How trying to calm down backfires
·What to put into your pre-performance music mix
·What kinds of pep talks work best
·And why he wrote this book on Malcolm Gladwell's old keyboard!
He also introduces readers to high-performing professionals who are putting these techniques to work—superstars like US General Stanley McChrystal, Nascar champion driver Jimmie Johnson, legendary tennis coach Nick Bollettieri, T-Mobile CEO John Legere, and others who, despite years of practice and enviable track records, will ultimately be judged on their ability to deliver a single solid performance when it counts.
As the nature of work has changed, many professionals now succeed or fail based less on repetitive daily tasks, and more on a thin slice of evaluative moments. If you work 2000 hours a year but your overall success rests mostly on your performance during a few dozen crucial hours, the tools in this book should help you pull off your best performances when it counts the most.
Daniel McGinn is an editor at the Harvard Business Review. His writing has appeared in Wired, Inc., the Boston Globe Magazine, and Newsweek.
Available products |
---|
Book
Published 2017-06-06 by Portfolio |
Book
Published 2017-06-06 by Portfolio |