the ceo magazine, purpose,
John Izzo & Jeff Vanderwielen, Authors, The Purpose Revolution

In a survey of global CEO’s, Harvard found that over 83% of them said they believed activating purpose within their organization would impact their company’s performance and success, yet only one-third of those same leaders felt they were doing a good job of doing so. In our new book, The Purpose Revolution - How Leaders Create Engagement and Competitive Advantage in an Age of Social Good, we show compelling evidence that these CEO’s are correct on both fronts while showing how to truly activate purpose in your company.

the ceo magazine, business growth,
Amanda Setili, President, Setili & Associates

In the past year, activist investors forced the resignations of the CEOs of General Electric, AIG, Arconic, CSX, Pandora, and Buffalo Wild Wings. Even when the CEO was spared, companies spent millions of dollars and weeks of valuable management time fighting proxy battles.

the ceo magazine, outsourcing,
Sandesh Joshi, President & Co-founder, Indovance Inc.

As CEO, you are charged with maximizing corporate profits. This mandate involves streamlining operations, seizing opportunities, and steering company growth. As markets become increasingly global, companies face the challenges of expanding their product lines and services, changing consumer demands, rapid delivery, and more complicated logistics. Traditionally, there have been two ways to overcome these challenges.

the ceo magazine, innovation,
Mostafa Sayyadi, Author, Transformational Leadership: How To Prosper as a Leader In Today's Hypercompetitive Environment

Leadership has been a focal point of organizations since the corporation was first initiated and will always be an ongoing issue for executives. Executives can use leadership to unlock knowledge for innovation and to motivate employees to solve their current problems in a more innovative manner.

As a leader, you create the culture that either helps your teams thrive––or barely survive. Obviously, no leader intentionally stalls or stymies a team. But even the best leaders occasionally make mistakes that freeze their people rather than free them to excel. Here’s how that happens:

Avoid These 5 Mistakes Leaders Make That Cripple Teams

Mistake #1: Promising Rather Than Asking

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