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Award-Winning Leadership Speaker, Executive Coach & New York Times Best-Selling Author

Author: Don Yaeger

To Build The Organization Your Team Deserves, Diversify

As the Kansas City Royals face off against the New York Mets in the World Series—with both teams featuring an international roster of talent—I am reminded of how diversity can be a powerful tool in building a great team. For Frances Hesselbein, diversity not only allowed her to move from volunteer to CEO of one of the biggest organizations in the world, but helped her literally build the future. I had a unique opportunity...

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Want To Keep Winning? Keep Your Commitments – Here’s How

Bob Ladouceur, former head coach of the most successful high school football dynasty in American history—once dubbed by ESPN as “the greatest prep football coach of all time” and subject of a major Hollywood film—eats, sleeps and breathes leadership. As coach of the seemingly immortal De La Salle Spartans for 34 years—which included 399 wins, 20 perfect seasons and an eye-popping, undefeated streak from 1992 to 2003—“Coach...

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Discovering The Humanity Behind Your Heroes

There’s an old saying in sports writing that you should never meet your hero because they’ll always let you down. And in our current world of sports scandals and tarnished legacies, that assumption seems even more real. But it’s far from the truth. A few years ago I had the incredible opportunity to work on a book with Walter Payton of the Chicago Bears as he was dying from autoimmune liver disease. Though I’d admired...

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Cal Ripken: Building A Legacy One Baseball Diamond At A Time

The 2015 MLB Playoffs are a battle of legacies, and one of the biggest match-ups so far involved the Chicago Cubs—a club seeking to escape a history of post-season disappointment—and the historically successful St. Louis Cardinals. The Cubs won the series against its heated rival and are on to the National League Championship Series. But away from the bright lights and TV cameras, Cal Ripken, Jr., former Baltimore...

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Lessons In Resiliency From The Heart Of A Champion

Simon Keith is, literally, a walking miracle. In 1989, the former soccer standout for at UNLV, made history by becoming the first heart transplant recipient to play professional sports. Keith was the number one pick in that year’s professional indoor soccer draft and, at the time, many celebrated him for the distinction of his role as a heart recipient playing his sport at such a high level. Keith ignored the media...

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How An 18-Year-Old And His ‘Army’ Are Marching To Defeat Cancer

Cancer sucks. These were the words inscribed on wristbands and given away by 18-year-old Adam, who had been diagnosed with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). Adam and his cousin had ordered the bright orange wristbands online because it summed up, in two words, how Adam was feeling after learning what he faced. For many years ALL had been a diagnosis that came without much hope, but thanks to the efforts of St. Jude...

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3 Lessons To Turn Your Team Around From Coach P.J. Fleck

During the opening week of college football, fans are always on the lookout for the perfect upset. And if this Saturday’s game between top-10 ranked Michigan State and little-known Western Michigan University doesn’t go as planned for the Spartans (or the bookies!) there will be a reason…and his name is P.J. Fleck. Fleck, the youngest head coach in the Football Bowl Subdivision, has transformed the WMU Broncos by promoting...

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You Don’t Get Participation Awards For Showing Up At Work

Pittsburgh Steelers linebacker James Harrison is not a guy that I would normally offer as a model for life lessons. Sure he became an NFL starter after going undrafted, proving his desire and work-ethic, but he’s also generated more than his share of controversy through his career. And some of his off-the-field habits are, at the very least, troubling. But his recent comment that he was returning his children’s “participation”...

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Sitting Tight In A Job-Hopping Culture: Tommy Lasorda’s Tips On Greatness

If you look at the most successful franchises and head coaches in sports today, they have one common characteristic: stability. And in our job-hopping society, nobody embodies stability like Tommy Lasorda, legendary manager of the Los Angeles Dodgers. Lasorda has been retired since 1996, but his aura can still be felt throughout Dodger stadium. He has the longest tenure of anyone in his organization, won the National...

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