Becky McCray
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Small Town Rules
by
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published
2012
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4 editions
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The Idea Friendly Guide: Practical, Immediate Steps to Break Free from Old-Way Thinking and Transform Your Community’s Future
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| In the years since Rob Hatch's first book Attention!, our world has only accelerated. But we still have the ability to choose what we give our attention to through simple decisions. The reflection questions are direct and useful. Practical tools like ...more | |
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Becky McCray
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Tim Parsons's review
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The Idea Friendly Guide: Practical, Immediate Steps to Break Free from Old-Way Thinking and Transform Your Community’s Future:
"So much common-sense, straightforward language in one place, wrapped around so many actual examples of The Idea Friendly Method in action. It’s a how-to book that has you actually cheering for the smart, creative people who skipped the bureaucracy, w"
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"Failure is the best teacher." Turns out that's not true. Embarrassing failures are too busy knotting up our stomachs to teach us anything except "never trying that again." So what do we learn from? We learn from reflecting on our experiences. Author ...more |
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“Changing key behaviors creates openness The Idea Friendly Method doesn’t mean saying, “We should be more open to new ideas!” Or worse—saying, “You should be open to new ideas!” It means shifting key behaviors toward openness. Gather Your Crowd moves away from a few people deciding for everyone. When you start with an idea that entices others, you’re immediately opening up participation. You’re not asking people to join your committee; you’re asking them to be part of something they care about. Build Connections breaks down the isolation that breeds closed thinking. When people from different groups start talking to each other, we discover possibilities we never knew existed. Connections help us find the resources we need and give us more options. Take Small Steps cuts down the fear of failure that kills new ideas. When the stakes are small, people are more willing to try. When we see small successes, we’re willing to try bigger things. Small steps build confidence and momentum. Together, these three parts create not just openness to new ideas, but a friendly welcome for them. Now, all ideas are good enough to test. It’s that openness to new ideas that makes a town able to cope no matter what happens.”
― The Idea Friendly Guide: Practical, Immediate Steps to Break Free from Old-Way Thinking and Transform Your Community’s Future
― The Idea Friendly Guide: Practical, Immediate Steps to Break Free from Old-Way Thinking and Transform Your Community’s Future
“John Shepard is an expert on rural planning, as in the city planning profession. “Quality of life should be a core planning principle,” John said. “Quality isn’t just ‘pretty.’ It matters because it reflects that we value where we work and live; that we value our friends and family every day.”
― The Idea Friendly Guide: Practical, Immediate Steps to Break Free from Old-Way Thinking and Transform Your Community’s Future
― The Idea Friendly Guide: Practical, Immediate Steps to Break Free from Old-Way Thinking and Transform Your Community’s Future

















