Ratings4
Average rating3.3
* New York Times and Wall Street Journal bestseller multiple years running
* Translated into 20 languages, with more than half a million copies sold worldwide
* A Hudson and Indigo Best Book of the Year
* Recommended by Shona Brown, Rachel Hollis, Jeff Kinney, Daniel Pink, Sheryl Sandberg, and Gretchen Rubin
Radical Candor has been embraced around the world by leaders of every stripe at companies of all sizes. Now a cultural touchstone, the concept has come to be applied to a wide range of human relationships.
The idea is simple: You don't have to choose between being a pushover and a jerk. Using Radical Candor―avoiding the perils of Obnoxious Aggression, Manipulative Insincerity, and Ruinous Empathy―you can be kind and clear at the same time.
Kim Scott was a highly successful leader at Google before decamping to Apple, where she developed and taught a management class. Since the original publication of Radical Candor in 2017, Scott has earned international fame with her vital approach to effective leadership and co-founded the Radical Candor executive education company, which helps companies put the book's philosophy into practice.
Radical Candor is about caring personally and challenging directly, about soliciting criticism to improve your leadership and also providing guidance that helps others grow. It focuses on praise but doesn't shy away from criticism―to help you love your work and the people you work with.
Radically Candid relationships with team members enable bosses to fulfill their three core responsibilities:
1. Create a culture of Compassionate Candor
2. Build a cohesive team
3. Achieve results collaboratively
Required reading for the most successful organizations, Radical Candor has raised the bar for management practices worldwide.
Reviews with the most likes.
This is a useful read if you want to learn to better communicate within a company or startup. Or with people in general I guess. I liked the practical examples from Kim Scott's career.
Startup culture tends to encourage a sugar-coated form of communication. In many cases that doesn't tend to be very useful. In some it can even be frustrating. I can tell from experience.
This book shows another approach that gets the message across, while being fair and not hurting other people's feelings. If you're running a startup, you should definitely read it. Much of it shows examples from well-established companies but everything applies.
What I felt was in some cases was that some pieces of advice were a bit evident to me. Instead of pages and pages of method, it could have been a paragraph describing what's wrong. Could be useful to others, though.
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