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Just Enough

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Just Enough

Tools for Creating Success in Your Work and Life

Wiley,

15 min read
10 take-aways
Text available

What's inside?

To attain just enough success in a driven world, set sufficient, but not excessive, goals in each area of your life.


Editorial Rating

6

Qualities

  • Innovative

Recommendation

Everyone wants to succeed. But in a world where corporate CEOs carve out multimillion dollar contracts and Britney Spears is front-page news, society’s view of success is entirely skewed. Authors and Harvard faculty members Laura Nash and Howard Stevenson take a hard look at idealized celebrity success and adopt a view that is the opposite of the popular attitude that promotes going for the maximum. Instead, they advocate learning how to be satisfied with "just enough." Through careful self-examination and structured fulfillment exercises, the authors explain how to obtain success in four main areas of your personal and professional life: happiness, achievement, satisfaction and legacy. Ironically, for a book titled Just Enough, it supplies way too much verbiage and analysis. But getAbstract.com finds the topic timely and well researched. Those who are striving for balance and just the right amount of success will find this self-help book extremely useful, although those who deeply want it all may be tougher to dissuade.

Summary

Too Many Choices

Traditional advice on success is failing because people today simply have too many choices. It is not unusual to feel pulled by contradictory but equally attractive possibilities. MBA graduates face a plethora of options and seek multiple goals. They are encouraged to want to run companies, raise families, have beautiful homes and become community leaders while making millions of dollars - all before age 30! Retirees feel pressured to start new businesses, improve their golf skills or develop new hobbies. Even high school kids are torn between investing their time in maintaining high grades or in competing on the varsity soccer team.

As additional choices and obstacles appear in the form of continually shifting and escalating targets, success becomes more elusive and harder to obtain. Success demands growth and emotional engagement. It inevitably involves reaching for moving targets. High achievers function on many levels, anticipating and adapting to instability in a variety of forms.

Enduring Success

Many people reduce their idea of success to "One Big Goal," often money. But reaching that one big goal won’t help you achieve self-esteem...

About the Authors

Laura Nash is a senior lecturer at Harvard Business School’s Executive Education Program. Her previous books include Intentions Aside; Church on Sunday, Work on Monday and Policies and Person. Howard Stevenson is a professor of business administration at the Harvard Business School and senior associate provost for Harvard University Resources and Planning. He has authored or co-authored eight books and dozens of articles on business, entrepreneurship and success.


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