Latest Posts

Maynard Cooper Gale

Be Sure Your Principles Win Over Technique (updated 2023)

TOM FLICK | March 6, 2012

Principles win over technique – every time! It would be wise to revisit living out your values this [...]

see more

Executing the Basics

TOM FLICK | February 13, 2012

Vince Lombardi, the legendary coach of the Super Bowl Champion Green Bay Packers, would begin each training camp by addressing his players with a football in his hand exclaiming, “Men, this is a football, and this is how we are going to carry our football.”  Sound ridiculous?  It shouldn’t.  Coaching [...]

see more

The Fundamentals of Human Performance

TOM FLICK | February 8, 2012

Just as there are laws that govern entropy, gravity and aero-dynamics, there are laws that govern human performance—the actual practice of which allows us to successfully change and grow.  I’ve witnessed too many organizations and their people caught up more in the terminology and acronyms of change, growth and winning, [...]

see more

The Authoritarian Leader

TOM FLICK | January 4, 2012

Be careful of being an authoritarian leader. It doesn’t work.  An authoritarian leader has an approach that favors domination, manipulation, and intimidation; their strength is a huge ego and imbalanced sense of pride. Their viewpoint sees people below them as commodities. Sadly, in the process these leaders will burn out [...]

see more

Opportunities vs Hazards

TOM FLICK | October 7, 2011

There are two compelling behaviors that dominate high performers, great leaders, cohesive teams and forward moving organizations.  They are constantly and forever trying to avoid big hazards while simultaneously seeking out big opportunities. And when looking for those big opportunities, they do everything they can, each and every day, to [...]

see more

Selective Participants

TOM FLICK | August 24, 2011

I’ve played on teams that were highly talented athletically, but never accomplished much. The reason was we never got along. Or, we didn’t respect each other or we never became friends. We were essentially an organization of selective participants. Individuals concerned about their own thing. It was all about “what’s [...]

see more