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Your Daily Posterous Spaces Update October 19th, 2011 How to find

great talent: 4 questions for Bloomberg View’s Anders |

Pink<http://ptmanagerblog.com/how-to-find-great-talent-4-questions-for-bloo>

Posted about 22 hours ago by [image: _portrait_thumb] Kovacek,

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How to find great talent: 4 questions for Bloomberg View’s

Anders<http://www.danpink.com/archives/2011/10/how-to-find-great-talent-4-questi\

ons-for-bloomberg-views-george-anders>

<http://www.danpink.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/rarefind.jpg>Here’s a

question that bedevils everyone from Fortune 500 boards seeking a

replacement CEO to school principals hiring a new algebra teacher, from

families looking for a great electrician to baseball teams searching for a

better shortstop:

*How do you find extraordinary, game-changing talent?*

Anders <http://www.georgeandersbooks.com/authorbio.html> is a

top-shelf business journalist, a veteran of the *Wall Street Journal*, *Fast

Company*, and now *Bloomberg View*. For the last couple of years, he’s tried

to answer that question by hanging out with the best talent spotters in the

world – the U.S. Army’s Special Forces, a squadron of basketball scouts, the

folks at Facebook, and many more.

The result is *The Rare Find: Spotting Exceptional Talent Before Everyone

Else <http://www.georgeandersbooks.com/books.html>*, which hits stores

today. (Buy it from Indie Bound<http://www.indiebound.org/book/9781591844259>,

BN.com <http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/rare-find-george-anders/1100481739>,

Amazon.com<http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1591844258/ref=as_li_ss_tl?ie=UTF8 & t\

ag=freeagentnati-20 & linkCode=as2 & camp=217145 & creative=399373 & creativeASIN=159184\

4258>

or 8CR <http://800ceoread.com/book/show/9781591844259-Rare_Find>.) I had a

chance to read the galleys several months ago – and I enjoyed it so much I

asked if he’d do a short interview explaining some of the core

concepts for PinkBlog readers.

***

*You looked at talent both widely and deeply. What’s the big insight you had

after completing this book that you didn’t have when you began it?*

Everybody should be searching for resilience, and hardly anyone does. Being

able to bounce back from adversity is crucial in just about every field I

examined. You need resilience to be a great CEO, a great teacher, soldier,

investor, etc., etc. But when we hire, we’re taught to regard setbacks —

regardless of what came next — as flaws in a candidate. So when we prepare

our own resumes, we hide our stumbles. That’s wrong! We should cherish

people who have extricated themselves from trouble in the past.

*I was especially intrigued by your idea of the “jagged resume” in part

because I realized that I myself sorta had one of these way back when. Tell

us what you mean by that term and why it matters.*

Steve Jobs is a perfect example. Both in the 1970s and the 1990s, his life

was a wild blend of great strengths and apparent failures. He had this

awesome imagination, persuasiveness, ambition and design aesthetic. But he

was a college dropout who later got forced out of one company (Apple) and

couldn’t make a success of another (NeXT.) You could come up with lots of

reasons why his resume was too erratic — too jagged — to make him a good

bet. But to appreciate someone like that, you need to see why his strengths

matter so much, and why his apparent flaws aren’t important.

*You also write about “talent that whispers” — and why it’s sometimes

undervalued. Give us an example and explain why we should notice this

expression of ability.*

Look at the amateur baseball draft, where some teams stop picking after 30

rounds because they assume all the good players have already been grabbed.

Every year or two, a future All-Star sits unclaimed. Mike Piazza, the great

catcher, was a 62nd round pick. Weird but true. Especially when you’re

dealing with young, unproven people, some candidates show just a glimmer of

promise. Their talent whispers. Don’t scoff at them. Look to open the door,

just a crack, so that when long shots come of age, they’re more likely to be

working for you than for the competition.

*Let’s say a PinkBlog reader wants to be a “rare find” him or herself. What

are some specific things he or she should be doing to stand out from the

crowd?*

Find the frontier. If you want to be extraordinary, restlessness is a

virtue. It’s also a great traveling companion for resilience; if you can

combine the two of them, your chances of finding society’s greatest

opportunities in any particular decade are huge. Hang out with people just

as driven and passionate as you. The great hotbeds of talent are

self-sustaining because competitive internal friendships guide rapid

progress. When in doubt, come back to autonomy, mastery and purpose. Those

are keepers!

via

danpink.com<http://www.danpink.com/archives/2011/10/how-to-find-great-talent-4-q\

uestions-for-bloomberg-views-george-anders?utm_source=twitterfeed & utm_medium=twi\

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