I’m never going to be a leader, at least not the kind the “leadership books” teach you to be. And I’m finally OK with that.
When I was still in my “empire-builder” stage of my 20s, I read every business book I could find. I studied the ideas of popular writers such as Peter Drucker, Tom Peters and W. Edwards Deming. There were many more. The books often seemed profound as I read them, but I slowly realized something.
The concepts and management tips in the books turned out to be useless in the small companies I managed. No matter how brilliant the concepts seemed — and no matter how well they worked for the people in the small companies described — my employees looked at me blankly when I tried the ideas.
This left me confused about myself. Was I just a terrible leader? Was I doing something wrong? If so, why did people in organizations naturally turn to me when work needed to be done?

Concerns about digital future leave me mourning analog past
Without meaning, most are blind to rot destroying their own lives
Unmet childhood needs trigger addiction as I try to fill inner hole
‘You cannot love in moderation’; lukewarm love’s worse than none
It’s hard to ‘get over it’ if pain of abuse turns to rage against self
Evil media bias? It depends on which lens you’re looking through that day
Briefly: Scholar wasn’t wrong; technology is destroying human meaning
Briefly: Remember that wounded creatures require long-term patience
Briefly: Broadway actress in ‘Wicked’ is proof that dreams can come true