Successful leadership is maintaining a certain state of mind where you're able to think really deep, complex thoughts. The best strategy for dealing with outside forces that are shrinking your brain is to understand what's happening in your brain specifically. Most work is thinking work, right? Not ire's not that much process work. Its thinking work, and it's often deep thinking work. And so, this is about maintaining the ability to think well and increasing your ability to influence other people's thinking.
What’s going on in our brains when we have breakthroughs? Why do some of our most basic work habits and norms exhaust our minds rather than light them up? If feedback is essential for cognitive development, why can it freak us out and set our teeth on edge?
These are some of the big questions David Rock, CEO and co-founder of the Neuroleadership Institute, ponders all of the time. David believes that if we can increase our ability to think well at work (since, spoiler alert, most work is thinking work) and bake more neuroscience into the workplace, we can be more effective, build better habits, and have better interactions within our teams and organizations.
In this episode of Brave New Work, Aaron Dignan and Rodney Evans ask David all about how brains behave at work.
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