The Loudest Duck, Laura A. Liswood
The Loudest Duck, Laura A. Liswood
List: $12.99 | Sale: $9.10
Club: $6.49

The Loudest Duck
Moving Beyond Diversity while Embracing Differences to Achieve Success at Work

Author: Laura A. Liswood

Narrator: Lisa Rothe

Unabridged: 4 hr 18 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Ascent Audio

Published: 07/20/2020


Synopsis

Written in the accessible style of Seth Godin and Spencer Johnson, The Loudest Duck is a business fable which offers readers an alternate view of diversity through the use of practical stories and cultural anecdotes.  It will explain, for instance, how a culture such as China teaches its children, "The loudest duck gets shot," a viewpoint that gets carried into adulthood, while many Americans are taught the opposite idiomatic lesson: "The squeaky wheel gets the grease."  What you find as a result are two distinct ways of doing business, neither one being necessarily the right way or even the better way.  Yet by understanding the viewpoints from which others see the world, readers can understand how better to work with them.  The Loudest Duck is a book for managers and executives faced with the productivity and leadership challenges of a heterogeneous, multicultural workplace. It's a book for anyone working his or her way up the ladder in this new corporate world order.  It's a book for anyone who belongs to a non-dominant group, be it women, people of color, short people, or employees who don't play golf but whose bosses do.

Reviews

Goodreads review by Romans

I really support the ideas of the book and I was glad to read it. Book was more of an inspiration for thoughts and reinforcement of ideas and goals I already had and knew. I could say it's somewhat similar to a good inspirational conference talk: you knew most of the things, but you want to support......more

Goodreads review by Anthony

This is a fantastic start to thinking about diversity in the workforce. My only complaints are: that Liswood framed most of her examples on gender, rather than an array of identities, that she almost always refers to managers with male pronouns--even though it's statistically accurate, I don't think......more

Goodreads review by Ibiyemi

Great ideas, communicated simply and interestingly. A section I particularly love is 'the silent may have something to say'. I think that on its own is something worth thinking on.......more