Joe Tye is a leading authority on values-based life and leadership skills and strategies, and on building a culture of ownership on a foundation of values in the healthcare setting. Joe is also the CEO and Head Coach of a firm which provides consulting, training and coaching on values-based leadership and cultural transformation for hospital, corporate and association clients. Joe is the author or co-author of twelve books on personal and business success. Joe Tye was chief operating officer for a large community teaching hospital prior to founding his values coaching organization in 1994. Joe Tye earned a Master’s degree in Hospital Administration from the University of Iowa and an MBA from the Stanford Graduate School of Business. On the volunteer front, he was founding president of the Association of Air Medical Services and a leading activist fighting against unethical tobacco industry marketing practices. Joe and his wife live on a small farmstead in Iowa, and their second home is a tent in the Grand Canyon.
“The single most powerful predictor of the ability to withstand and rebound from adversity is the perceived support of others. The resilient leader should keep this in mind and strive to build a resilient culture.” George Everly and Douglas Strouse: The Secrets of Resilient Leadership: When Failure is Not an Option
“In grief, one seeks and finds comfort in situations that would otherwise be harrowing, if not unbearable... With every painful step, the Lord provided a new comfort, and with each there was the opportunity to express a continuing faith in a God who makes no mistakes.” C. Everett Koop and Elizabeth Koop: Sometimes Mountains Move
“When you love someone, every moment is shadowed by the fear of loss. Then loss occurs, and you feel more love than ever. The more you loved, the more you feel the loss. Depression, then, may be seen as the strongest expression of love.” Roger Rosenblatt: Kayak Morning
“Perhaps the most impressive and memorable quality of the leaders we studied was the way they responded to failure... [T]hese leaders put all their energies into their task. They simply don’t think about failure, don’t even use the word. Warren Bennis and Burt Nanus: Leaders: The Strategies for Taking Charge
“As far as I’m concerned, people who think they fear failure have got it wrong. They really fear success. If you truly feared failure, you’d be very successful. People who truly fear anything stay as far away from it as possible.” Barbara Sher: I Could Do Anything If I Only Knew What It Was
“A person who’s trying to achieve the pleasure of success without ever experiencing the pain of rejection will never succeed long-term. In fact, this person will sabotage himself before he ever truly succeeds on a major scale.” Anthony Robbins: Awaken the Giant Within
“Why is the prospect of failure so frightening, that we can’t risk failing even when we know that’s the only real path to genuine success? Actually, it isn’t failure itself that scares us most. What really makes our hearts thump and palms sweat is the prospect of being seen as a failure. . . The fear of humiliation is the least understood, but most paralyzing, of all inhibitions” (emphasis in original). Richard Farson and Ralph Keyes: Whoever Makes the Most Mistakes Wins: The Paradox of Innovation
“Fate cannot be changed; otherwise it would not be fate. Man, however, may well change himself, otherwise he would not be man.” Viktor E. Frankl: The Will to Meaning
“Solanus did not worry about those things that lie beyond the power of humans, like healing. Instead he simply urged people to go beyond their limited power to God. They were advised to manifest their thanks to the God who heals by gratefully doing something both before and after the healing.” Michael Crosby: Thank God Ahead of Time
“You connect with your highest goal when you awaken full of enthusiasm for the day and when you know you are making a contribution. It is synonymous with being in the flow, periods in which you are so totally absorbed with what you are doing that time stops and fulfillment comes naturally. It is making your life itself a work of art.” Michael Ray: The Highest Goal: The Secret that Sustains You in Every Moment
“The only natural law I’ve witnessed in three decades of observing successful people’s efforts to become more successful is this: People will do something – including changing their behavior – only if it can be demonstrated that doing so is in their own best interests as defined by their own values.” Marshall Goldsmith: What Got You Here Won’t Get You There
“One of the most important keys to self-motivation is to clearly identify your core values in life. You must decide what matters most. Many people think, ‘I know what’s important, I don’t need a list to remind me.’ What they don’t fully understand, however, is that core values often serve as critical guides for making important decisions.” Mac Anderson: Charging the Human Battery: 50 Ways to Motivate Yourself
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