Catalyst How Confidence Reacts with Our Strengths to Shape What We Achieve and Who We Become
Everyone wants to know if they are good enough, smart enough, and ambitious enough to achieve great things. Each year millions of people spend intense time and effort discovering their strengths and trying to build those strengths to realize true potential. What most don't know, however, is that strengths are shaped by a hidden catalyst that either makes strengths even stronger, or converts them into weak counterfeits ? traits that feel deceptively identical, but get radically different results. That catalyst is confidence. Because everyone is vulnerable to slight changes in pressure, people, and emotions, the wires of confidence can get tripped and confidence fades when we need it most. Other times confidence surges and we underperform from overconfidence. In either direction, performances loses. Getting the maximum benefit from strengths requires a precise type and level of confidence. Catalyst authors Steven Smith and David Marcum conducted an eight-year study of the interplay between human strengths and confidence. Surveying 8,000 people in over 1,200 organizations, their work reveals a unique set of rules for confidence that set top performers apart from everyone else. As Marcum and Smith uncover the social science that redefines what it means to be truly confident, you will get infinitely more from your strengths in every aspect of your career and life.