
Curious Masterminds: This vs That with Jay Williams
Author Jay Williams is the Curiosity Coach for his book Leave Your Mark. Leave Your Mark is a book about influencing as a leader. Come! Be curious! Explore how you can leave your mark in the world and with the people around you.

Curious Masterminds: Traction - Get A Grip On Your Business
In his book Traction - Get A Grip On Your Business, Gino Wickman provides many tools and techniques to gain and maintain momentum for teams, businesses and organizations. These tools are heavily focused on accountability, communication, and organization.
What sets this book apart are ways to practically apply seemingly theoretical best practices and academic thinking into real life.

Cognitive Bias - How do you keep from making listening errors
For those of you who have heard the phrase: “Possession is 9/10 of the law”, you will most likely appreciate this: Perception is 9/10 of reality.
This 90 minute exploration is an open discussion on how you increase your effectiveness as a leader and a communicator by addressing cognitive bias.

Critical Conversations: How Do You Get Better in Tough Conversations?
Critical conversations are often dubbed “difficult” because we tend to fear them. But navigating these conversations is a necessary part of work life, and an essential skill for any manager.

Curious Masterminds: The Future Leader - 9 Skills and Mindsets to Succeed in the Next Decade
Come ready to explore “The Notable Nine”.
Mindsets - Global Citizens, Servant, Chef, Explorer
Skills - Coach, Futurist, Technology Teenager, Translator, Yoda
How does a Curious Masterminds session work?
Well, you gotta read the book first (it is like a book club after all). In this case, we will focus on parts 3 & 4.
Register for the live discussion. (Dates and times are at the top of this page)
Join the exploration. Be ready to ask and answer questions, discuss what you have seen succeed or fail, explore how you might interpret this book and use it in your life.

How Do You Effectively Get A Message Across to an Audience?
Communicating a message so that it is received in the manner it is intended is sometimes a challenge.
Messages are interpreted largely based on the biases and experiences of the receiver. This exploration is focused on how you can use “priming words” to better craft your communications so that your audience is more likely to hear and understand what you are saying. (Communication mojo!!)