Quiet
Understanding introverted personalities to take advantage of their strengths.
Author(s): Susan Cain
Publisher: Broadway Books
Date of publication: 2012
Manageris opinion
In this work, Susan Cain challenges the tendency of our western societies to favor extraverted personalities. These are associated to valued traits of character, such as a taste for socialization, the ease to talk in public, or the rapidity of action. This bias, the author points out, reflects the current fad of our societies towards collaboration and teamwork. But, in reality, introverts can be as good team members or leaders as the extraverts, she demonstrates in a convincing manner. They simply have different styles and are often complementary. In fact, a balance between the two styles holds strong virtues. The author notably highlights in the third chapter how team work can negatively impact creativity—and lists the assets of an approach that is closer to introverts’ natural style. An interesting and documented hindsight book.
See also
Collaborate… but not too much!
In today’s working environment that favors teamwork, concentrating has become a challenge. It is nonetheless a factor of productivity and well-being. How can you give everyone the possibility to secure periods of real concentration?
Introverts and extraverts: How to cooperate better together
Far from being respectively a virtue and a fault, extraversion and introversion are two personality poles that both have their assets and limits. How can we turn these differences into a key to collective performance?