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Ten Thousand Horses: How Leaders Harness Raw Potential for Extraordinary Results

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This is a special LIFE edition with a forward by Orrin Woodward. In this inspiring leadership fable, Stahl-Wert and Jennings draw on their years of experience as consultants and chief executives, as well as on findings from Gallup's ground-breaking Q-12 survey, to lay out an leadership model that will turn employees from dutiful drones to committed contributors. "Ten Thousand Horses" is the story of Matt James, a top-performing sa lesman who is promoted to head his division, an entirely different job than the one he was good at. His workers don't respond to his efforts to lead them, and soon he's on the brink of being fired. In desperation, he reaches out to his old, unorthodox mentor, David Butler , who now works with wiild mustang horses. More than simply a leadership fable, "Ten Thousand Horses" is a story of personal transformation. Beyond specific practices and techniques, Matt must learn a whole new way of relating to his employees, because, as he discovers, leading an engaged workforce is as much about who you are as what you do.

120 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2007

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About the author

Ken Jennings

5 books13 followers
A recognized expert and trusted advisor in strategy, execution, and leadership with purpose, Ken Jennings draws on experiences across industries and sectors. Ken founded ThirdRiver Partners, a consultancy specializing in helping leaders and their teams by aligning everyone in the organization to their "Greater Goals." Through ThirdRiver, Ken focuses on improving the capability of people to design organizations that achieve critical strategic breakthroughs, and foster a culture of engagement, service, and success.

Ken has a particularly rich background in life sciences, health services, and medical products organizations, and further industry expertise in financial services and aviation. He has served as a global managing partner at Accenture, and was a co-director of the Global Leadership in Healthcare Program at the University of Michigan Business School. He has consulted at many healthcare technology, pharmaceutical, and biotechnology organizations, as well as at over 25 academic medical centers and integrated delivery systems.

Ken's projects have included CEO and top executive coaching, team development, rm-wide goal setting, strategic facilitation, and rm-wide performance and talent management. He has performed confidential assignments at the top of major investment management rms, dealing with sensitive partner performance, communication, board, and teamwork issues.

Ken began his academic and service career at the U.S. Air Force Academy, obtained a graduate degree in Management from the Air Force Institute of Technology, and holds a Ph.D. in Organizational Development from Purdue University. He is also a graduate of the Kellogg Management Institute at Northwestern University, and has returned to academia to teach at top institutions, including Columbia University, The University of Maryland, King's Fund College-London, and the Shanghai University of Finance and Economics, China.

Ken's book Changing Health Care: Creating Tomorrow's Winning Health Enterprise focuses on the key strategies and core competencies of leading health organizations for transforming health care. His best-selling book The Serving Leader, co-authored with Dr. John Stahl-Wert, and published in the Ken Blanchard Leadership Series, centers on leading with character, integrity, and courage. Ten Thousand Horses explores how leaders bring out the very best in their people through building high-performance teams. Ken Jennings is passionate about helping organizations, and the people in them, build on strength and achieve their greater goals. Ken's book, The Greater Goal (2012), gives practical advice on achieving strategic breakthroughs through focusing on Great Purpose and Shared Goal Achievement for teams and individuals.

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Displaying 1 - 16 of 16 reviews
Profile Image for April.
110 reviews3 followers
July 24, 2025
I enjoyed most of it. But it ended up not making sense towards the end, it seemed to rush. It went from a book on leadership skills, and to me, it seemed at the end that it was more so a love story.
Profile Image for Greg.
1,635 reviews96 followers
December 12, 2009
Ten Thousand Horses is another in the growing genre of leadership books that are in the format of a fictional tale with the purpose of illustrating the principles the authors wish to convey. This one appears also to have the intention of making people aware of the government’s program for adopting mustang horses. Although it attempts to highlight some important values-based aspects of leadership, IMHO it does not do so all that well. In fact, it appears more to be an attempt to promote the authors’ own “leadership equation” which is not especially original, nor very well developed.

With books of this sort, I usually read them quickly, the way the average reader would probably do. Then, if the material seems to warrant it, I go back through the book highlighting and writing marginal comments that I might use later, either in my leadership classes or in my consulting and training practice. After reading this book, I think I had a good understanding of what the authors were endorsing, but that wasn’t because of the book, it was because of my own prior knowledge. The book itself is weak in that it doesn’t do a great job of explaining principles of leadership. Others have done so to much better effect elsewhere. It wasn’t that the material was complicated…the clarity and depth of explanation just wasn’t there. While it was fairly enjoyable, and reiterated principles in which I believe quite strongly, there are better treatments of the topic.
Profile Image for Ramon.
50 reviews1 follower
May 13, 2014
I really liked this book. The story was quick, with a complexity that isn't usually found in books of this genre. While the story ended the way most leadership novels do, with our hero implementing the lessons that he has learned and his problems being overcome rather quickly, the predictability wasn't bothersome. Overall, the story was timely and just happened to fit my current situation. I thought the theme poignant and though I don't like the "formula" for success (rather, I don't find the factors measurable) I thought it was better than other leadership novels. I appreciated that I could read it in one day and that I actually wanted to finish it in one sitting.
Profile Image for Drick.
904 reviews25 followers
December 18, 2011
This book is part of growing genre of leadership books that tell a fictitious story to make points about effective leadership. Usually the stories like this one are very contrived and unrealistic. This story deals with Matt a mid level manager in a large company whose division has not been making money because the employees under Matt's charge are unmotivated.So Matt spends 4 days out on a Colorado Ranch to learn about motivation through horses and foster kids. I did not find the story particularly compelling of the insights all that great.
Profile Image for Brian Berrett.
269 reviews1 follower
November 19, 2013
The premise of the book is that engaged employees must first trust their leader. Without the trust, there will be no engagement. I believe that can be true. Beyond that the book contains a formula for engagement as well as a "feel good" story to help get the formula across. Once again, for me the business book comes across as a little too heavy on the believability of the story. It is very predictable. Not a bad read, but not the best either.
691 reviews1 follower
October 15, 2015
This is the type of leadership book that I really enjoy reading. A fictional story that allows the main character (and reader) to learn new principles with feeling like a textbook.

The story will touch your heart in many ways and the "serving leadership" approach is spot-on with other positive leadership books I have read. Highly recommended!
Profile Image for SJ Barakony.
120 reviews4 followers
May 17, 2014
Powerful.
So long as one's head, heart, & spirit are connected ( which does take effort in our very wisdom poor culture ), this book cannot be less than a 5 star read.
It integrates deep thinking, practicality, faith, & far more all together.
Profile Image for Marc Page.
97 reviews21 followers
January 19, 2015
A terrific story that teaches how to get your team engaged. It is a heart-warming story that weaves leadership principles into work, family and causes. My 10-year-old read it before me and thoroughly enjoyed it and took notes on what he wanted to remember.
13 reviews
April 9, 2014
Heartwarming. Worth a read through, but nothing that's a required resource. Good points, well narrated, and a sobering reminder to count our blessings
Profile Image for Kevin Holden.
6 reviews1 follower
March 29, 2014
This book is absolutely amazing! So many principles and not just on leadership! The story touches your heart and motivates your soul! You must read this book! twice! ( or more)
Displaying 1 - 16 of 16 reviews

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