Monday, March 9, 2026

Culture Shock

 

Your Weekly Staff Meeting | John Pearson Associates
Issue No. 562 of Your Weekly Staff Meeting  (June 2, 2023) offers a possible “Top-10” book for 2023 from Gallup. Warning! Employee disengagement impacts customers and cash! And this reminder: click here to download free resources from the 20 management buckets (core competencies).

Leverage your team’s strengths with personalized coffee mugs! Gallup says employee engagement is the lowest in seven years. You can fix this!
 
Splitter or Blender: What’s Your Work Style?

We once thought we were savvy leaders and managers—before COVID.

We once thought that all team members working on-site was best—before COVID.

We once thought that the five-day week was perfect—before COVID.

BAD NEWS: Everything has changed and Bizarre World seems like the new normal. We all have strong opinions on what works in the workplace.

GOOD NEWS: Gallup’s new book, Culture Shock (May 30, 2023), sets aside opinions and leverages their stunning research to propose seven “Recommendations for the New Workplace.” The book’s subtitle immediately teased me into the 30 short, but substantive chapters.

What’s happening in this post-COVID era? The authors warn:
• “Nothing is going back to normal. This is a moment of evolutionary change.”
• “The danger is that a majority of employees will now operate more like independent contractors or gig workers than employees who are loyal and committed to your organization.”
• “Employees are also now less likely to say that their organization delivers on its promises to customers.”
• “Simply put, your employees and customers know each other. Many are best friends. All the good stuff in human nature and customers is at risk.”
• “The real fallout isn’t here yet. The real fallout will come when the storm of declining employee engagement hits the customer.”

There’s more bad news! “According to Gallup, a staggering 90% of U.S. employees with desk and office jobs aren’t longing for the old workplace to return. Only CEOs are.” And this: “…U.S. employee engagement has reached a seven-year low.”

Co-author Jim Clifton is Gallup Chairman and co-author Jim Harter, Ph.D., is Gallup’s Chief Workplace Scientist. Research-based, their workplace insights are so, so important—if CEOs and managers will just stop and listen. Don’t skip this one from two insightful leaders. They’ve teamed up before to write It’s the Manager (read my review). And Clifton’s Born to Build, with Sangeeta Badal, Ph.D. (read my review), is a hopeful look at entrepreneurship.  

TOP-10 BOOK. Culture Shock is already on my list of Top-10 Books of 2023. Someone on your team must read and report on this solution-filled path to our post-COVID dilemmas. Your employees and your customers will thank you.

WHO KNEW? There will never be a return to “normal,” warn the authors. “Who knew that everyone in the whole world with an office or desk job could check into ‘Hotel Zoom International’ at the same time. A spectacular digital advancement for humankind came wrapped inside a global health catastrophe.”

BRILLIANTLY PACKAGED into 30 single-topic chapters (about three pages each), the book runs just 158 pages, plus a robust appendix of another 100 pages, plus a tempting 20-page reference section. You’ll appreciate the deep research that helps you solve these pesky post-COVID issues:
• Chapter 3: “The Business Problem.” The authors’ stunning opening: “You probably haven’t heard this: ‘Our employees and front-line managers control customer outcomes and daily cash flow more than any other single lever we can pull.’”
• Chapter 4: “The Role Human Nature Plays in Business Outcomes.” Using the “Gallup Path®” graphic, the authors admonish: “Customer retention is the most critical metric on a CEO’s dashboard.” They add, “…your engaged employees create your engaged customers.”
• Chapter 5: “The Most Important Habit of a Great Manager.” Why getting this wrong “is the root cause of burnout.” The habit? “One meaningful conversation per week with each team member.”

CONFESSION! We all make mistakes and Gallup confesses this: “Over the years, Gallup missed asking why people who have desk jobs are required to travel miles from their home to sit in what is basically just a different chair. Like many things, we just assumed there was no better way.”

So what’s the best way forward? In-person, work from home, or a hybrid model? Chapter 7 goes deeper on “Why the Commute?” and Chapter 8 delivers the latest surprising research on “Is In-Person Time That Valuable?” But two chapters jumped out at me:

Chapter 10: “Splitters and Blenders: Two Different Relationships to Work.” Oh, my. I’ve built my management model around what I call “The 3 Powerful S’s: StrengthsSocial Styles, and Spiritual Gifts.” Now…I’ll have to add a fourth “S” for “Splitters and Blenders!”

A new question from Gallup: “In your best life imaginable, would you prefer a job that is 9 to 5 where work and life are separated, or one where work and life are more blended throughout the day?” 
• “Splitters might work best at home or in the office but want to maintain a strict schedule of hours in each location.”
• “Blenders might get their work done on weekends, evenings or early in the morning before the office opens.”

But here’s the gut-check:
• “Imagine managing someone and not knowing which type of employee they are.”
• “Now imagine leading a team of people who don’t know who the splitters are and who the blenders are on the team.”

And this is interesting: “Gen Z and young millennials are equally divided between splitters and blenders.” And “45% of working baby boomers prefer a work-life blend.” Plus, another warning! “Overall, blenders are more likely than splitters to be looking for another job (53% vs. 48% respectively). This presents a slightly greater challenge for retaining these employees.”

Chapter 12: “Is the Four-Day Workweek a Good Idea?” Read the full chapter to understand the nuances for your organization, but note this: “Our data suggest that a four-day workweek may be advantageous for those who do not have the option to work remotely.”

“THE REAL PROBLEM is that most employees are poorly managed.” In the U.S., almost seven in 10 employees are not engaged—or worse, disengaged—at work. “These people are spending their workday watching the clock, intentionally working against their employer or planning their escape—a symptom of an unhappy workplace.”

ALERT! “If instead of shortening the workweek, employers focused on improving the quality of the work experience, they could nearly triple the positive influence on their employees’ lives.”

There’s so much more here—so order this must-read book and discover…
• …the six skill sets of great managers. “Managers account for 70% of the variance in team engagement.” (Chapter 27)
• …why “only 21% of employees strongly agree that they trust the leadership of their organization.”
• …what matters more than the number of days an employee is at the office. “…80% of employees who said they received meaningful feedback in the past week were fully engaged—regardless of how many days they worked in the office.”
• …why (gulp!) “only 16% said that the last conversation with their manager was extremely meaningful.” (See Chapter 29, “One Meaningful Conversation With Each Employee per Week.”)
• …the 7 Recommendations for the New Workplace. (See Part 5: “Gallup’s CEO Playbook.”)

WEEKLY CHAT! Chapter 29, based on a study of 2,354 teams, “How to Make Meaningful Conversations a Weekly Habit,” will require that your managers are coached so they’ll become competent coaches. And by the way, does your organization have a certified CliftonStrengths coach? (Note: See my two-page form from the Meetings Bucket, “Weekly Update to My Supervisor,” which outlines how to have a meaningful weekly conversation—and includes reminders about “The 3 Powerful S’s” for both the manager and the direct report.) 

ONE MORE. I gotta add this! On disengaged employees and the coming customer crisis, the authors warn that board members “don’t pay attention to this stuff because they can’t see the connection.” Example: When the chief human resources officer (CHRO) convinces the board that employee engagement is at 80%, then the board claps, “and the CHRO leaves with the board believing 80% of their employees are engaged.” (Rarely true!) Here’s why:

BAMBOOZLED BOARDS! You must read why only 5s on a 1 to 5 scale (5 = strongly agree) should be counted. (Many HR surveys count the 4s also.) Example: How many team members would strongly agree (a 5) with this statement: “There is someone at work who encourages my development.” (See Chapter 3 for more engagement questions.)

In addition to several brilliant examples on how the CliftonStrengths assessment keeps square pegs out of round holes (read about Jenny, Deepak, and Giselle), the authors give this startling stat: Just one in 10 managers have been trained on how to manage in a hybrid environment! And…don’t skip the fascinating short profiles on three strengths pioneers: Peter Drucker, Abraham Maslow, and Don Clifton. 

I know…you have a lot of work ahead.

To order from Amazon, click on the title for Culture Shock: An Unstoppable Force Has Changed How We Work and Live. Gallup's Solution to the Biggest Leadership Issue of Our Time, by Jim Clifton and Jim Harter. And thanks to Gallup Press for sending me a review copy.



YOUR WEEKLY STAFF MEETING QUESTIONS:
1) Does your weekly staff meeting need to change? According to Culture Shock, “Among hybrid employees, 32% indicate that virtual meetings are less effective than in-person meetings, compared with 17% who say virtual meetings are more effective. More than half (51%) say there is no difference.” So…which meeting formats are working for us—and what’s not working? Do we know everyone’s preferred style: Splitters or Blenders?

2) The world is changing! Read this WSJ article by Alexandra Samuel, “How Retailers Should Start Catering to Hybrid-Working Customers. A lot of us no longer work 9 to 5, or commute into the office. Yet retail businesses seem stuck in a different era.” Then ask your team members: “Has our organization made any significant changes in our products, programs, or services—that relate to hybrid-working customers?”  
 

    

Mastering 100 Must-Read Books
Part 5: The Mount Rushmore of Leadership Legends 
(Ken Blanchard)

Book #33 of 100: Leadership Smarts 

For your team meeting this week, inspire a team member to lead your “10 Minutes for Lifelong Learning” session by featuring Book #33 in Mastering 100 Must-Read Books
 
Leadership Smarts: 
Inspiration and Wisdom from the Heart of a Leader

by Ken Blanchard 

Books #22 through #40 spotlight 19 books I named to “The Mount Rushmore of Leadership Legends” group—featuring Patrick Lencioni, Jim Collins, Ken Blanchard, and Peter Drucker. Part 5 features five books by Blanchard, including this tasty smorgasbord of leadership axioms and quotations.
   • Read my review.
   • Order from AmazonLeadership Smarts
   • Download the 100 Must-Read Books list (from John and Jason Pearson)

Blanchard delivers a one-liner (in big type) on each left-hand page and his color commentary (in 100 words or less) on the right-hand page. I counted 75 “leadership smarts” from the mind of the chief spiritual officer of the Ken Blanchard Companies. Here’s some brain food:
• “The key to developing people is to catch them doing something right.” 
• “Things not worth doing are not worth doing well.” 
• “Success is not forever and failure isn’t fatal.” 
• “What motivates people is what motivates people.” 
• “People with humility don’t think less of themselves, they just think of themselves less.” 

This is fresh:
• “Trying is just a noisy way of not doing something.” Blanchard adds, “Many people are interested rather than committed. They talk about trying to do something, rather than actually doing it. They make lots of noise, but fail to follow-up.”

Just open this book to almost any page—and inspire your people:
• “Vision is a lot more than putting a plaque on the wall. A real vision is lived, not framed.”
• “A river without banks is a large puddle.” (Blanchard on boundaries.)
• “All empowerment exists in the present moment.”
• “The cure of too much to do is solitude and silence.”
 

  
            


 

PEARPOD | TELLING YOUR STORY.
 
Whoa! Ken Blanchard writes, “This is the first time in the history of business that you can be great at what you’re doing today and be out of business tomorrow.” Gallup warns about “culture shock” (see above). Are you resting on your laurels—or strategizing on the story you’ll be communicating next week and next month? We can help. Contact Jason Pearson at Pearpod (Design, Digital, Marketing, Social).

Tent Cards & Tools for Leveraging Strengths

Tool #20 in ECFA Tools and Templates for Effective Board Governance: Time-Saving Solutions for Your Board, by Dan Busby and John Pearson, includes suggestions on spotlighting the CliftonStrengths of your team members and board members. Just feature each person’s Top-5 strengths on a tent card (or a personalized coffee mug)—placed in front of each meeting participant. (My tent card reminds everyone that I want to stay FOCUSED!) Download Tool #20 here. Read more here.

IMPORTANT NOTICE! Effective Oct. 1, 2025, all 657 eNews issues, previously archived on Typepad.com are slowly (!) being moved to a new website here. New book reviews will also be archived at John Pearson’s Buckets Blog. Or, click here for John’s recent book reviews on Amazon.


Not Just for Spiritual Giants!

Honest. You don’t have to be a spiritual giant to read this fascinating biography, but—warning—you will ask yourself, “Do I exhibit any signs of spirituality in my comfortable life?” Whew. Read my review of Count Zinzendorf and the Spirit of the Moravians, by Paul Wemmer. 

MORE RESOURCES:

• BLOG: Pails in Comparison
• SUBSCRIBE: Your Weekly Staff Meeting eNews
• JOHN'S BOOK REVIEWS: on Amazon 
• WEBSITE:  
Management Buckets

• BLOG: Governance of Christ-Centered Organizations

Sunday, March 8, 2026

The One Year Book of Hymns

 

Your Weekly Staff Meeting | John Pearson Associates
Issue No. 569 of Your Weekly Staff Meeting (July 19, 2023) spotlights the unique hymn-a-day devotional, The One Year® Book of Hymns—and my short-lived attempt to write another book. (LOL.) And this reminder: click here to download free resources from the 20 management buckets (core competencies), and click here for my review of Finish Line: Dispelling Fear, Finding Peace, and Preparing for the End of Your Life, by Robert Wolgemuth. 

Imagine singing an “awesome” hymn, led by Charles Haddon Spurgeon, with 10,000 others. The One Year® Book of Hymns and YouTube will enrich your mornings.
 
One Day. One Page. One Hymn.

Need a good chuckle today? Beginning late last fall, on most mornings while enjoying a period of quiet reflection with my Bible and other books, I often lingered in my favorite chair until a hymn came to mind. Then with earbuds in, I searched YouTube for a suitable version of the hymn.

I listened to the hymn and then emailed the YouTube link to myself. I would often sing or hum that hymn throughout the day. Most mornings, though sleepy-eyed, my first thought would be, “I wonder what my hymn of the day will be?” Sometimes, I’d visit Hymnary to learn more about the hymn writer. Often fascinating!

(And speaking of “lingering in my favorite chair,” here’s a poignant follow-up from Robert Wolgemuth and my review of Finish Line. Read or listen to his thoughts on how “A red wingback chair became a holy place for me to find God after my wife's death.”)

I’m loving this new daily practice and wanted to share it with you. Maybe it was the nostalgia and good memories of singing bass in school and church choirs. My hymn repertoire grew exponentially through required church attendance Sunday mornings, Sunday nights, and Wednesday nights. During college, I was our church’s choir director. 

So…what made me chuckle? After collecting several months’ worth of YouTube hymns, I thought: “Hymmmn. Maybe there’s a market for a book of hymns—just the stanzas of old hymns (without the music). I could research hymns in the public domain (no copyright issues), plus a bit of history about the hymn writer. What a great book idea!” 

As I was planning this new book—a cavalcade of worship—I was reminded of Bob Hisrich’s marketing principle #1: “If you have $10,000 to spend, invest $5,000 in researching and understanding your audience.” (See the book we co-authored.)

Oops! Good idea, John—but Tyndale published this book in 2017! LOL! I may be six years late and a dollar short (the royalties would have been nice), but I do know when to throw in the towel. Besides, Tyndale’s book is wonderful:
So now, most mornings, I turn to the hymn for the day’s date and enjoy reading:
• All four verses of the daily hymn
• A brief bio/inside story of the hymn writer (sometimes a devotional thought)
• A related Scripture verse

ONE DAY, ONE PAGE, ONE HYMN—and then I find a suitable hymn version on YouTube. For example, today is July 19 and today’s hymn is “Rock of Ages,” written by Augustus Toplady (1740-1778), and the Scripture is Psalm 62:5-7. (This morning, I listened to The Oak Ridge Boys.)
 
Augustus Toplady was converted under a Methodist evangelist during his university years, but “Though impressed with the spirit of Methodism, he strongly disagreed with the Wesleys’ Arminian theology and waged a running battle with them through tracts, sermons, and even hymns.” 

We read further that Toplady “…died of tuberculosis and overwork at the age of thirty-eight, two years after he published his own hymnal, in which ‘Rock of Ages’ and Charles Wesley’s ‘Jesus, Lover of My Soul’ (July 17) were placed side by side.” (Listen to The Choir of Trinity College, Melbourne.)

Browse the hymns and the short devotional readings and you’ll deeply appreciate those hymn writers who have already crossed the finish line—and enriched our journeys.
• “Day by Day and with Each Passing Moment” (Feb. 26) profiles Carolina Sandell Berg (1832-1903), who at age 26, watched her father, a parish pastor, drown at sea. (Listen to Fountainview Academy.)
• “According to Thy Gracious Word” (March 3) notes that James Montgomery (1771-1854), a fearless London newspaper editor, “was imprisoned twice for his strong editorials” on the abolition of slavery. (Listen to New Scottish Hymns Band.)
• “Before Jehovah’s Awful [aka Awesome] Throne” (March 5), by Isaac Watts (1674-1748), includes a British Christian’s awesome experience in singing this hymn with nearly 10,000 others, while led in worship by Charles Haddon Spurgeon. (Listen to The Symphonials, Ghana.)

“TURN YOUR EYES UPON JESUS” (March 15), written by Helen Howarth Lemmel (1864-1961), sent me down a holy rabbit hole! In 1918, this noted Christian singer who lived her final days in Seattle, was given a tract written by a missionary, Lilias Trotter, who served in Algeria. The tract, “Focussed,” stopped Lemmel in her tracks (no pun intended). View the movie trailer to learn why Lilias Trotter gave up a promising art career in Britain to minister in Algeria for 40 years. For more, visit the Lilias Trotter Legacy website. (Listen to Selah's version of the song.)
 View this 11-minute “story behind the story.”
• View the movie trailer.
• View the "Many Beautiful Things" documentary (70 min.) on Amazon Prime.


Learn more about Lilias Trotter, who inspired Helen Howarth Lemmel to write the hymn, “Turn Your Eyes Upon Jesus.”  View Many Beautiful Things: The Life and Vision of Lilias Trotter (movie trailer).

 “Amazing Grace” (March 17) notes John Newton’s response to suggestions that because of poor health and fading memory, he should retire at age 82! He said, “My memory is nearly gone, but I remember two things: that I am a great sinner, and that Christ is a great savior.” This former slave trader was born in 1725 and died in 1807 at age 82. (Listen to Andrea Bocelli and Alison Krauss.)
• “Jesus Paid It All” (March 19), was written by Elvina Mabel Hall (1820-1889) in the choir loft of her Baltimore church—due to “the pastor rambling on too long!” With no paper to write on, she penned the verses in the flyleaf of her hymnal! (Listen to Hymns of Grace.)
 Stunning! The background on the hymn, “Stand Up, Stand Up for Jesus” (June 9), by George Duffield, Jr. (1818-1888), describes the 1858 Philadelphia citywide evangelistic morning and evening services. A 29-year-old Episcopalian preacher spoke to 5,000 men reaping 1,000 conversions, but four days later, Dudley Tyng died in an accident. His final words were “Tell them to stand up for Jesus,” so Duffield wrote the hymn. (Listen to the story and the hymn at Worship House Media.)

“JUST AS I AM” (June 22), was written by Charlotte Elliott (1789-1871), who wanted to clean up her act before becoming a Christ-follower. A minister, however, invited Elliott to “Come just as you are.” You’ll recognize this hymn, sung at hundreds of Billy Graham Crusades—except one. Listen to Cliff Barrow’s stunning story about the London crusade in 1967:


Sing along to “Just As I Am” with Cliff Barrows and others as Barrows describes an unusual absence of a hymn at the 1967 Billy Graham Crusade in London.

ENVELOPES & INK POTS:
• Charles Wesley (1707-1788) “wrote an average of two hymns a week for fifty years,” composing between 5,000 and 6,000 hymns in his lifetime.
• William R. Newell (1868-1956), enroute to teach his class at Moody Bible Institute in Chicago, envisioned the words to a hymn. He “scribbled the words on the back of any envelope” and gave them to Daniel B. Towner, MBI’s director of music. Within an hour, Towner returned with the hymn, “At Calvary” (March 25). (Listen to The Collinsworth Family.)
• Fanny Crosby (1820-1915), at age 30 and blind, heard a revival choir sing “Alas! And Did My Savior Bleed?”(April 14), written by Isaac Watts. She responded to her Savior’s call and went on to write more than 8,000 hymns, including “Blessed Assurance” (May 1). (Listen to Alan Jackson.)
• Martin Luther (1483-1546) “…once felt Satan’s oppressive presence so keenly that he threw an inkpot at him.” Some believe that an ink spot still decorates the wall of his room in Wartburg Castle!” He wrote “A Mighty Fortress Is Our God” (Oct. 31). (Listen to the hymn led by Tommy Bailey at the Grand Ole Opry House as part of the Sing! Global Conference 2020.)

Hymmmn. I wonder what my hymn-of-the-day for tomorrow will be? I can hardly wait!

To order from Amazon, click on the title for The One Year® Book of Hymns: 365 Devotions Based on Popular Hymns, compiled and edited by Robert K. Brown and Mark R. Norton; devotions written by William J. Petersen and Randy Petersen.

 

YOUR WEEKLY STAFF MEETING QUESTIONS:
1) What’s your favorite hymn? Why?
2) Have you ever written, or thought about writing, a hymn? You’ll need your Bible and a dictionary, or maybe ask AI: “Alexa! What rhymes with heaven?” For the background on the hymn, “Immortal, Invisible, God Only Wise” (July 2), by Walter Chalmers Smith (1824-1908), the great British hymnologist, Erik Routley, describes this hymn as “full of plump polysyllables!” (Listen to St. Paul's Cathedral Platinum Jubilee Service.)
 

    
Mastering 100 Must-Read Books
Part 6: The Mount Rushmore of Leadership Legends 
(Peter Drucker)

Book #40 of 100: The Practical Drucker

For your team meeting this week, inspire a team member to lead your “10 Minutes for Lifelong Learning” session by featuring Book #40 in Mastering 100 Must-Read Books
The Practical Drucker: 
Applying the Wisdom of the World’s Greatest Management Thinker

by William A. Cohen

Books #22 through #40 spotlight 19 books I named to “The Mount Rushmore of Leadership Legends” group—featuring Patrick Lencioni, Jim Collins, Ken Blanchard, and Peter Drucker (1909-2005). Part 6 features five books by/about Drucker, including this book with the revelation that Drucker skipped his weekly staff meetings!
   • Read my review.
   • Order from AmazonThe Practical Drucker
   • Listen on Libro (8 hours, 17 minutes)
   • Visit the blog: Drucker Mondays [will be reposted in 2026] 
   • Download the 100 Must-Read Books list (from John and Jason Pearson).

In my review, I listed 10 reasons why The Practical Drucker is must-read:
1) Drucker on Office Politics. 
2) Drucker on Why You’re Usually Wrong. When the book arrived, I scanned the 40 chapter titles and circled 15 must-reads, starting with Chapter 9, “What Everyone Knows Is Usually Wrong.”
3) Drucker on Bribery.
4) Drucker on Market Research.
5) Drucker on 3 Rules When Hiring.
 

6) Drucker on Leadership as a “Marketing Job.” This will surprise you—maybe. “Famed marketing Professor Philip Kotler, who is often referred to as the ‘Father of Modern Marketing,’ said, ‘If I am the Father of Modern Marketing, then Drucker is the Grandfather of Modern Marketing.’”
7) Drucker: No Fan of the Peter Principle. 
8) Druckerisms! If the 40 chapter titles don’t rev up your management motors, you may be in the wrong job. Here’s a taste: “The Seven Deadly Sins of Leadership,” “The Most Important Leadership Decision,” “Fear of Job Loss Is Incompatible With Good Management,” and “The Purpose of Your Business Is Not to Make a Profit.”
9) Drucker’s Favorite Leadership Book. (Read my review of the 2014 book-of-the-year.)
10) Drucker’s 7 Action Conclusions on Strengths.
 

  
            


 

PEARPOD | TELLING YOUR STORY. 
Just guessing here…but was your logo designed in the 1980s? Does it still work? View this WSJ video, “What Burger King’s New Logo Says About Its Strategy. The company says the new logo is meant to feel retro and nostalgic.” If, like Peter Drucker, you agree that “What Everyone Knows Is Usually Wrong,” maybe you need an outside opinion? Contact Jason Pearson at 
Pearpod (Design, Digital, Marketing, Social).

Oops! Methodology Over Message!

Mistake #22 in Mastering Mistake-Making chronicles the many mornings I found comfort in the methodology—not the Message. I was disciplined, yes, in meeting with the Lord most mornings, but it was more about checking the box than hearing God’s voice. In 2023, I added a daily hymn to my morning meeting (see above). I love it! For a list of “My 25 Memorable Mistakes—And What I Learned,” click here. (For other books I’ve authored, or co-authored, click here.)



MORE RESOURCES:

• BLOG: Pails in Comparison
• SUBSCRIBE: Your Weekly Staff Meeting eNews
• JOHN'S BOOK REVIEWS: on Amazon 
• WEBSITE:  
Management Buckets

• BLOG: Governance of Christ-Centered Organizations

IMPORTANT NOTICE! Effective Oct. 1, 2025, all 657 eNews issues, previously archived on Typepad.com are slowly (!) being moved to a new website here. New book reviews will also be archived at John Pearson’s Buckets Blog. Or, click here for John’s recent book reviews on Amazon.



Saturday, March 7, 2026

The Four Workarounds

 

Your Weekly Staff Meeting | John Pearson Associates
Issue No. 550 of Your Weekly Staff Meeting required big help! So I recruited David Schmidt and my son, Jason, to help us think about a hot-off-the-press book on four workarounds that scrappy organizations leverage. (View our Zoom Review.) Fascinating, yet troubling! And this reminder: click here to download free resources from the 20 management buckets (core competencies). Plus, listen to Episode 3 of The Discerning Leader Podcast below.
 

Caution! While The Four Workarounds book is jammed with scrappy ideas on solving complex problems—you will likely not affirm some of the outcomes championed by the author. Still—it’s worth the read.
 
Strategies from the World's Scrappiest Organizations and the 3 Little Pigs!

You gotta love an author/professor from Oxford University’s Engineering Sciences Department and the Saïd Business School who spotlights the story of “The Three Little Pigs” to explain the thesis of his new book (just published on March 7, 2023).

If I were still a CEO, I’d buy four copies of The Four Workarounds—and schedule a four-hour team meeting. I’d leverage Paulo Savaget’s hilarious color commentary on “The Three Little Pigs” to explain his four workarounds. Then having previously delegated each of the four big ideas to four team members—I’d give each person 30 minutes to explain the concept of their assigned workaround. 

And then, I’d sit back and look forward to the creativity oozing all over our organization’s most complex problems.

This is a compelling book, but—CAUTION!—it may irritate your worldview and core values, but please read it. I absolutely love the title and the subtitle: 
And speaking of core values, the subtitle reminded me of a brilliant core value at Seattle’s Union Gospel Mission when Jeff Lilley was their president. Of their seven core values, this was my favorite: “INNOVATIVE & SCRAPPY: We are creative and innovative in our efforts to accomplish our mission.”

For this interesting book, I invited my son and co-author, Jason Pearson, and my longtime friend and consultant/mentor, David Schmidt, to join me for a Zoom Review. Click here.

Pearson, Pearson, and Schmidt 
on “The 4 Workarounds”


Click here to view our lively conversation.

As you’ll learn while viewing our Zoom Review, author Paulo Savaget features four types of “workarounds” that both for-profit and nonprofit organizations have leveraged to address their most vexing and complex problems. The four workarounds:

#1. Use a PIGGYBACK—when “there are other people or relationships that you can leverage.”
#2. Use a LOOPHOLE—when “there is a set of formal or informal rules that you dislike.”
#3. Use a ROUNDABOUT—when “there is a self-reinforcing behavior that can be influenced.”
#4. Use a NEXT-BEST—when “there are available resources that can be repurposed.”

Part I of the book (about 150 pages) gives stunning examples of how innovative business leaders, activists, and others have leveraged Piggybacks, Loopholes, Roundabouts, and Next-Best strategies to attack and solve very complex issues. He writes, “Workarounds are clever, unexpected, economical, and effective.”

In Part II, Savaget cleverly suggests how the Big Bad Wolf in “The Three Little Pigs” might use workarounds to satisfy his hunger for bacon! (LOL!) But he also notes how the pigs might respond with their own workarounds. A second example features Hilda, a German computer programmer, with a liberal worldview on immigration—and how she might use workarounds to help Syrian refugees to “become legally entitled to make a living” in spite of the German bureaucracy. (Pretty clever, actually.)

Caution! The author tilts toward fuzzy edges around values, ethics, and rules. In Part II, “Using Workarounds,” he urges us to “critically reflect on the value of deviance, zooming out to think about how workarounds can enable us to deviate effectively and gracefully from all sorts of conventions, from explicit rules to implicit norms.” He adds:

“We’ll explore how a workaround mindset necessitates a willingness to experiment quickly, fail productively, and repeat the process rather than conduct methodical assessments and define contingency plans.” (See also Burn the Boats and why the author suggests you "Throw Plan B Overboard!")

You’ll have to listen to our Zoom Review for more. Even better—read the book with your team members. I would start with some brainstorming on the “case study” of either the three little pigs or Hilda, the German activist.

And note! Savaget complains, “My pet peeve is when people say that you must think outside the box, and then they follow a one-size-fits-all brainstorming approach. Not every creative activity needs Post-its and flip charts!” (Oh! That hurts!!)

You’ll appreciate and learn from:

THE PIGGYBACK. The author documents how ColaLife, a nonprofit that began work in Zambia, piggybacked their life-saving remedy (previously with no distribution channels) by “designing the medicine’s triangular packaging that fit between bottles in Coca-Cola crates.” (See photo.) Coke was widely available everywhere--so they piggybacked on Coke's delivery system. At the time, childhood diarrhea was the second leading cause of death in children under five in Sub-Saharan Africa.



THE LOOPHOLE. Brazil was the location for a creative workaround orchestrated during COVID by the governor of a Northeast Region state with seven million people. Desperate for ventilators from China (but with no direct flights from China to Brazil), Governor Flavio Dino, a former federal judge, fought regulations and budgetary limitations to save his people. At both U.S. and Germany refueling stops, the ventilators were confiscated. Dino’s workaround through Ethiopia involved an ingenious series of loopholes. (Legal? Be sure to read “Confronting the Morality of Loopholes.”)

THE ROUNDABOUT. Paulo Savaget, who holds a PhD from the University of Cambridge, is also a Gates Scholar. He writes, “Roundabout workarounds disturb and redirect positive feedback loops, which lead to self-reinforced behaviors.” I’ll spare you the details here of one nation’s attempt to discourage public urination, but you can enjoy our Zoom Review conversation to get the details—and learn how to tap into people’s belief systems to “spark changes in their behavior.” (Here’s a short video.)

THE NEXT BEST. In 1972, attorney Ruth Bader Ginsburg (1933-2020), argued a sexism case in the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals, with her husband, Marty, a tax specialist. “On the opposing bench was the solicitor general—the Ginsburg’s former Harvard Law School dean.” What to do? “Notorious RBG,” who served on the U.S. Supreme Court from 1993 to 2020, used a “Next Best” strategy to win the case on appeal. A champion of women’s rights, RBG argued Moritz v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue on behalf of a man who was being discriminated against. “By arguing from the position of a man’s diminished rights, RBG…successfully set a historic precedent that unequal treatment on the basis of sex is unconstitutional.” (Tune in to our Zoom Review for more details.)

There’s so much more, such as the bullet-point “prompts” for all four categories. NEXT BEST: “How can resources be reassembled in unconventional ways?” 

DON’T SKIP…the numerous innovations by nonprofits and why Pepsi’s PR backfired when they attempted to piggyback on the BLM movement. You can also learn how the author became a student of his boss (who “answered emails erratically”) and scheduled the perfect time for emails to arrive in his boss’s inbox (see page 245). 

Savaget also urges us to “Be Messy” and suggests that “Coming up with workarounds is more like playing with Legos than completing a puzzle: you have building blocks, and your challenge is to build something.”

WARNING: Your values and worldview may not align with every example (pro-choice, divorce loopholes, immigration, etc.), but as we discuss in the Zoom Review—it’s important to understand your own value system and respond in creative, innovative, and ethical ways when you leverage these four workaround strategies.

PROMOTE YOUR WORKAROUND! In the Zoom Review, you'll hear Jason's suggestion to email your organization's workaround strategy to the author, so he'll have more examples for his students at Oxford and for his next book! Contact Paulo Savaget.

To order from Amazon, click on the title for The Four Workarounds: Strategies from the World's Scrappiest Organizations for Tackling Complex Problems, by Paulo Savaget. Listen on Libro (7 hours, 2 minutes). And thanks to the publisher for sending me a review copy.



YOUR WEEKLY STAFF MEETING QUESTIONS:
1) For more ideas on workarounds, I’ve seen creative leaders use Thinkpak: A Brainstorming Card Deck, by Michael Michalko. (Read my review.) This brainstorming card deck has 56 cards including two instructional cards, with four or five cards for each of the nine key processes, plus seven cards with creative ways to evaluate ideas. It’s a brilliant instant brainstorming system. But one more caution! It could be dangerous to your boring, status quo! The S.C.A.M.P.E.R. process leverages the nine principal ways of changing a subject: Substitute something. Combine it with something else. Adapt something to it. Modify or Magnify it. Put it to some other use. Eliminate something. Reverse or Rearrange it. Should we use this resource on one of our complex problems?
 
2) Is “Innovative and Scrappy” one of our core values? If not, should it be? Read more from Patrick Lencioni and the four categories of values in his insightful Harvard Business Review article, “Make Your Values Mean Something.”


   

Mastering 100 Must-Read Books
Part 2: Books-of-the-Year

Book #21 of 100: Joy at Work

For your team meeting this week, inspire a team member to lead your “10 Minutes for Lifelong Learning” session by featuring Book #21 in Mastering 100 Must-Read Books
 
Joy at Work: 
A Revolutionary Approach to Fun on the Job 

by Dennis Bakke

 
Books #6 through #21 spotlight 16 books that I named the Book-of-the-Year from 2006 to 2020. Joy at Work, a 2006 bestseller, describes Dennis Bakke’s radical approach for bringing joy into the corporate and nonprofit workplace.
• Read my review.
• Order from AmazonJoy at Work
• Listen on Libro (9 hours, 28 minutes): 100% discount!
 • Download the 100 Must-Read Books list (from John and Jason Pearson)

In 2006, I had the privilege of facilitating an all-day workshop at the Drug Enforcement Administration in Washington, D.C. The CFO of the DEA had invited his finance team to read Joy at Work—and then go deep on how the principles and values applied to their important work.

Why was I the facilitator? Dennis Bakke, the author, was not available and recommended me. I came away so impressed with the men and women at the DEA—and their heart for service and lifelong learning. Bakke’s book is a must-read. (Click here to listen to the first three minutes of his book and why his father advised Dennis not to attend Harvard Business School. LOL!)

BONUS! In 2013, Dennis Bakke wrote a follow-up business novel to Joy at Work—further fleshing out his approach to decision-making and delegation. The story, if you’re gutsy enough to read it, will convince you that “decision-making is simply the best way in the world to develop people.”
• Read my review.
• Order from Amazon: The Decision Maker: Unlock the Potential of Everyone in Your Organization, One Decision at a Time, by Dennis Bakke
• Listen on Libro (4 hours, 23 minutes): 100% discount!
 

  
            


 

PEARPOD | TELLING YOUR STORY.
 
Do you need help tackling your most complex problems? As the author of The Four Workarounds notes, sometimes you need an outsider looking in—to give fresh eyes and insights to sticky issues. We can help! Contact Jason Pearson at Pearpod (Design, Digital, Marketing, Social).

 

The Discerning Leader Podcast, Ep. 3 (3/9/2023)

Listen to The Discerning Leader Podcast as Steve Macchia and Matt Scott, from Leadership Transformations, and John Pearson dialogue on the 10 phases of a spiritual discernment process—from Steve’s book, The Discerning Life: An Invitation to Notice God in Everything (John’s 2022 Book-of-the-Year). Click here for Season 25, Episode 3, "The Prayerful Process: Phases 4, 5, 6, and 7." (March 9, 41 minutes)

IMPORTANT NOTICE! Effective Oct. 1, 2025, all 657 eNews issues, previously archived on Typepad.com are slowly (!) being moved to a new website here. New book reviews will also be archived at John Pearson’s Buckets Blog. Or, click here for John’s recent book reviews on Amazon.


JESUS REVOLUTION MOVIE!

My son, Jason, and I recently experienced the Jesus Revolution movie together. Two thoughts: 1) If you are a Christ-follower, definitely go see it. 2) If you are a seeker, definitely go see it. Experience it. 

MORE RESOURCES:

• BLOG: Pails in Comparison
• SUBSCRIBE: Your Weekly Staff Meeting eNews
• JOHN'S BOOK REVIEWS: on Amazon 
•WEBSITE:  Management Buckets
• BLOG: Governance of Christ-Centered Organizations

Friday, March 6, 2026

Grace Ambassador

 

Your Weekly Staff Meeting | John Pearson Associates
Issue No. 548 of Your Weekly Staff Meeting (Feb. 21, 2023) asks, “What’s on your name badge?” and “Is God up to something this month?” And this reminder: click here to download free resources from the 20 management buckets (core competencies), and click here for my review of Hardwiring New Leadership Habits. (Plus, check out The Discerning Leader Podcast below.)
 

John Jackson’s new book, Grace Ambassador, urges churches to flip the script on the 80/20 Rule—with 80% of us deployed “in the community as the Church distributed.”
 
Aircraft Carrier or Cruise Ship?

Imagine—if you really, really, truly believed that you were a Grace Ambassador! Imagine if that moniker was on your name badge:
   • At your workplace!
   • At your school!
   • In your neighborhood!
   • In your home!

Imagine—if the ripple effect of the Asbury Revival (some call it the Asbury Awakening) prompted thousands (millions?) of Christ-followers across the globe to really, really, truly engage with the world as Grace Ambassadors!

Church Gathered vs. Church Distributed! Imagine—if you flipped the script in local churches and just 20 percent of the church family “would be needed for the ministries of the Church gathered and 80 percent could be equipped and released for redemptive presence ministry in the community as the Church distributed.”

Every so often, over the decades, a book comes along and sparks a spiritual awakening. Books like:
• A Taste of New Wine, by Keith Miller
• Body Life, by Ray Stedman
• Discover Your Spiritual Gifts, by C. Peter Wagner
• Experiencing God, by Henry Blackaby
• What book(s) would you add?

Coincidence? Serendipitous? A God-wink? Perhaps as you follow the sparks from the Feb. 8, 2023, Asbury Revival, you too will thirst for next steps. Perhaps this is the book, in God’s timing, for this season:
John Jackson’s short book (just released this week) is profound, powerful, and prophetic. Think heart, mind, and soul—no surprise for a university president. The insights and bold challenges—also no surprise. The humor? A wonderful bonus. Read this:

“I am not sure how many of us would invite a modern-day Jesus to address our church leadership conferences, since His three years of public ministry left only 120 frightened followers in that Upper Room!”

“Full Employment Policy.” Caution! Jackson will disrupt your “lethal misbeliefs” and reorient your theology. What will it take to get people out of the pews and into their God-given kingdom assignments? This former pastor, ministry leader, and prolific author believes the church today needs a “full employment policy”—but it’s not what you’re thinking. He writes:

“Every Christian has received a specific calling of God to ministry. Do you know your place in God’s plan? The vast majority of us are not employed on a pastoral ministry team in a local church setting.
• That means our primary call to ministry—our place—is within a non-church setting.
• Our secondary call to ministry is within a local church family.”

What? The drill isn’t Sunday morning at eleven anymore?

In my old age, the final book I’d like to write will be titled, If You’ve Only Got an Hour-a-Week to Give to God—Come and Hear Me Preach! My opinion: that’s the dominant message of many local churches. Fill the pews on Sunday morning—and we’re all happy. (Don’t get me started.)

Jackson’s 20/80 rule is so, so contrarian. But just imagine when Grace Ambassadors—already equipped for service—deeply understand that their workplaces are “not a curse, but a calling.” Imagine! He asks us to affirm that the mission of the church is more like an aircraft carrier—not a cruise ship!

Note: Larry Peabody, author of God Loves Your Work, quotes a pastor who confesses, “…I had spent the majority of my time equipping my congregation for what they were called to do in the minority of their lives. This majority-minority disparity is rampant across the pulpits of America. It is fundamental that we need to address this Sunday-to-Monday gap.”

Jackson invests two chapters on spiritual giftedness with a memorable metaphor—this 2003 Super Bowl commercial spoofing the Cast Away movie, starring Tom Hanks. (View this 45-second hilarious video!)

 
“What’s in the package?” asks the FedEx executive/desert island survivor when, five years later, he delivers the FedEx box to its rightful owner—unopened, of course. View the 45-second video.

The memorable line: “What’s in the package?” That's what the curious FedEx executive/desert island survivor asks when he delivers the box. The woman at the door opens the box and answers, “Nothing, really, just a satellite phone, GPS locator, fishing rod, water purifier, and some seeds.”

Jackson notes, “This is how some of us live! We possess packages that contain exactly what we need, treasures right in front of our noses, and we do not even open them.” He adds, “Your treasure is your spiritual gift. If you are unaware of it, then it remains an unopened package that contains exactly what you need to find your place in God’s plan.”

I’m so grateful for leaders who helped me discover my spiritual gifts—and deploy them in God’s unique assignments for me. Reading these two chapters reinforced again my wonder and appreciation for God’s plan for the church. (See my Mistake #18 in Mastering Mistake-Making, “Not Understanding My Spiritual Gift Mix,” and Book #53 in Mastering 100 Must-Read Books.)

“Double Listening.” Today, culture is a mess. In summarizing each of the spiritual gifts noted in the Bible, Jackson quotes John R. W. Stott who acknowledged Karl Barth’s wisdom on the spiritual gift of teaching. “…the goal of the communicator, the teacher of God’s Word, is to practice ‘double listening’—taking the newspaper in one hand, the Bible in the other and building a bridge between the two, so the timeless truths of God’s Word connects with the reality of today’s news.” 

(In my seminary days, Dick Ottoson was my very innovative pastor. He would often do just that in Sunday services: read the headlines of the Chicago Tribune—and then pray through the problems on our behalf. Powerful!)

Second Reformation. Jackson is also praying—for a second Reformation. He is “…praying for a corporate revival as the Church of Jesus begins to release His grace and goodness to the world in every sphere of culture.” He challenges readers and leaders to affirm, “What season of life we are in and when it would be best to move into other realms of service.” 

Are you hanging on to your current assignment with clenched fists? Or like Jackson, are you praying that you “will have the spiritual maturity to serve in a different capacity for the sake of the Kingdom of God” when your current assignment is over and you enter a different season of life? (That takes spiritual guts!)

Hmmm. Asbury Revival this month. A new and powerful book this month. A new movie this month, Jesus Revolution (opening Feb. 24) chronicling the Jesus People movement of the 70s. Hmmm. What is God up to? In his book, Jackson also reminds us about the 1857 New York City revival (imagine!) when businessman Jeremiah Lanphier “started a noontime prayer meeting. His church had appointed him as a ‘city missionary,’ and not knowing what to do, he prayed a simple prayer: ‘Lord what wilt Thou have me to do?’” (Listen to the rest of the story here.)

To order from Amazon, click on the title for Grace Ambassador: Bringing Heaven to Earth, by Dr. John Jackson (foreword by Ed Stetzer). Listen on Libro (4 hours, 47 minutes). 



YOUR WEEKLY STAFF MEETING QUESTIONS:
1) John Jackson writes, “The concept and reality of grace is like a sumo wrestler—hard to get your arms around!” (He defines it further.) How would you define grace? If your name badge read “Grace Ambassador,” how might your life change?
2) Are your spiritual gifts deployed or, per Jackson’s metaphor, still in the FedEx box? Visit this website (for individuals and teams) for a discovery tool that provides you with a personalized analysis of your God-given spiritual gifts. What are your spiritual gifts—and do your co-workers and boss know them and encourage you to leverage your gifts in your workplace?
 
  

Mastering 100 Must-Read Books
Part 2: Books-of-the-Year

Book #19 of 100: Peter Drucker’s Five Most Important Questions

For your team meeting this week, inspire a team member to lead your “10 Minutes for Lifelong Learning” session by featuring Book #19 in Mastering 100 Must-Read Books
 
Peter Drucker’s Five Most Important Questions: 
Enduring Wisdom for Today’s Leaders 

by Peter F. Drucker, Frances Hesselbein, and Joan Snyder Kuhl

 
Books #6 through #21 spotlight 16 books that I named the Book-of-the-Year from 2006 to 2020. Peter Drucker writes, “Self-assessment is the first action requirement of leadership: the constant resharpening, constant refocusing, never being really satisfied.”
• Read my review.
• Order from AmazonPeter Drucker’s Five Most Important Questions
• Listen on Libro (2 hours, 55 minutes)  
• Download the 100 Must-Read Books list (from John and Jason Pearson)

Who is your primary customer? Peter Drucker writes that “the primary customer is the person whose life is changed because of your work.” As you think about Grace Ambassador and Drucker’s five questions (especially “Who is our customer?”), download Worksheet 2.1, “Local Church Simplified Segmenting Chart: Who is God calling you to reach and serve?” from the Customer Bucket. Click here.
 

  
            


 

PEARPOD | TELLING YOUR STORY.
 
Do you know the spiritual gifts of each person on your communication and marketing teams? Are you leveraging them? Do they view their story telling roles as a calling or a curse (per Grace Ambassador)? Are you leveraging the spiritual giftedness of your current volunteers? We can help! Contact Jason Pearson at Pearpod (Design, Digital, Marketing, Social).

 

Steve Macchia Invites John to Discern!

Listen to The Discerning Leader Podcast as Steve Macchia and Matt Scott from Leadership Transformations drill down with guest John Pearson on the 10 phases of a spiritual discernment process—from Steve’s book, The Discerning Life: An Invitation to Notice God in Everything (John’s 2022 Book-of-the-Year). Click here for Episode 1, "The Big Question (Phase 1)"  in Season 25, "A Process for Discernment" (Feb. 23) - 37 minutes.

MORE RESOURCES:

• BLOG: Pails in Comparison
• SUBSCRIBE: Your Weekly Staff Meeting eNews
• JOHN'S BOOK REVIEWS: on Amazon 
•WEBSITE:  Management Buckets
• BLOG: Governance of Christ-Centered Organizations


GOD LOVES YOUR WORK!
Pastoral Malpractice Confession! In God Loves Your Work, read Pastor Tom Nelson’s transparent confession. “About ten years into my ministry, I stood before my congregation and confessed to them . . . I’d come to the conviction that as a pastor I needed to confess my pastoral malpractice . . . For the first ten years of my ministry . . . I had failed to help people connect Sunday to Monday..." (Read more book reviews on the Pails in Comparison blog.) 

IMPORTANT NOTICE! Effective Oct. 1, 2025, all 657 eNews issues, previously archived on Typepad.com are slowly (!) being moved to a new website here. New book reviews will also be archived at John Pearson’s Buckets Blog. Or, click here for John’s recent book reviews on Amazon.

Culture Shock

  Issue No. 562 of  Your Weekly Staff Meeting    (June 2, 2023) offers a possible “Top-10” book for 2023 from Gallup. Warning! Employee dise...