Meet your next crisis head on and come through it stronger than ever by using the hard-earned strategies and core principles from Marc Polymeropoulos, a highly decorated, 26-year operations officer with the CIA.
Marc Polymeropoulos has had to live with the consequences of decisions made under the most high-stress circumstances you can imagine as a senior intelligence officer in the CIA, retiring from his 26 years of service as one of the CIA’s most decorated field officers.
Though your crisis situations may not entail international counter terrorism as Marc’s did, in our age of social media and a 24-hour news cycle, the consequences of mishandling a crisis can escalate quickly, leaving irreparable damage to a company’s reputation and bottom line in its wake.
In Clarity in Crisis, Marc shares how true leaders need to lead in and through times of crisis and thrive under conditions of ambiguity, rather than message their way out or duck from hard decisions. Far from mere theory, Marc outlines the unique and specific mindset and strategies he himself practiced and honed throughout his remarkable career.
Clarity in Crisis provides proven strategies and core principles that leaders can apply to meet any crisis head on and lead through it,
The critical elements to managing crisis, such as knowing who you can always count on to execute under high-stress situations.An understanding of the importance of following and stressing key fundamentals and avoiding shortcuts that often do more harm than good.Implementation guidance from the “Mad Minute” section at the end of each chapter that summarizes key points and action items you can begin applying right away. How to gain confidence that you are ready for the next crisis, wherever it comes from, and embrace less than ideal situations with no fear, using the core principles outlined in these pages to find unshakeable clarity in crisis and lead when others want to flee.
Good leadership principles with interesting examples, but I feel like the reader (or the audiobook) overly annunciated words. I think reading the book itself would be better.
Clarity in Crisis is easily one of the best leadership books I have read in a long time. This is a true crisis leadership book built on the author's experience leading teams in harsh environments under prolonged duress. The strategies described in the book are concrete and logical, and it was refreshing to see humility highlighted as a core leadership principle, especially in extremis. The focus on resiliency after failure, and a leader's responsibility after a team failure, was a welcomed read.
I plan to recommend this book to colleagues in my profession, emergency management, where we too must make decisions and take action in rapidly developing situations based on less-than-ideal situational awareness. A quick read, this is an excellent book for anyone who wants to improve their ability to lead under pressure.
There is a lot to be said about this book. Here are the author's lessons in leadership, the principles he developed while being a CIA leader himself for over 20 years.
While these principles may be found in other books to some degree, the value of this one lies in the harsh environment and stories where they were developed, there is something eye opening, to learn about extraordinary crisis and how they can be escaped and what makes a team overcome them.
Along with this, there is also the very personal account in which all is pictured. A combination of family life, working for the CIA in foreign countries and a great passion for baseball are all intertwined here. Precisely this genuine way, this authenticity makes this a very good read! I also appreciate how the author keeps testing his principles in different environments, at times referring to other industries, but also taking them through the Covid crisis.
Worth mentioning is the inclusive and very attentive way in which this is written and how the principles are shown, emphasizing the need of the leader to always take into account the personality traits he has to deal with, how can one bring back into the game collogues who lost their way a bit and how one can help his colleagues for all to become better.
With its honesty, authenticity, empathy and strength, not sugarcoating anything but keeping a jovial sense, this book is a very good, valuable read.
I received a copy of this in exchange for my honest review.
Page-turning memoir of veteran CIA operations officer Polymeropolous that offers practical lessons on leadership he learned in a hard-knocks and often dangerous career field. Polymeropolous reveals his leadership advise in the form of nine principles, each undergirded by amazing, memorable stories. Most readers of this volume will not face such high-stakes consequences for their leadership decisions, but Polymeropolous' dramatic stories make his lessons easy to remember. Beyond the practical advice this book seeks to offer, it also has a high entertainment value for those interested in the realities of spy life. It may not always be as glamorous as you imagined.
When you see that a book is about leadership from the perspective of a retired CIA operative, you don’t generally think that you’re going to be able to apply what’s written in those pages to your life. You can say you will, but ultimately the author’s experiences are so set outside the realm of your own, that it might as well be fiction. Normally I would nod along, enjoy the perspective for what it was, and carry on with my day.
That was not the case with this book.
I don’t think I’ve ever read a book where I so diligently went to work applying it to my own life right away. It has really made me stop and analyze those around me, especially those in leadership roles. My emotions ran all over the place reading it. Most of what the author said aligned exceptionally well with my management style, and the way I’ve always assumed a leadership role. God. I’ve won so many Oscars. However, I have a leader in my life that falls short of the author’s guidelines, and despite constant pushing from myself and others, they’re unresponsive to the necessary change to lead the team to success. As I sit here now, I’m watching the outcome of that happen around me.
If you want a great read on leadership, the CIA ethos, and you want to find out how baseball fits into the mix, this is a great book to have on your nightstand.
I read this after hearing the author’s interview with Shawn Ryan. The interview was amazing, but the book was disappointing.
Pros: The parts on CIA history and some of his own Ops are interesting. Some of the personal leadership lessons were cool.
Cons: It’s tough to take someone like the author seriously when they are so drunk on the U.S. government worker Kool-aid. Despite his life experience in war zones, he seems quite naive. But the naïveté comes with the ego of someone who ascended the government worker hierarchy. I understand that he basically had to adopt a “trust everything the U.S. government says”-attitude to be good at his job, but I can’t take him all that seriously because of it. Also, the humble bragging bleeds through the “lessons”.
If you are interested in a leadership book, I’d look elsewhere. If you want to hear a few war stories from a CIA officer, it may be worth your time.
It’s a nice leadership book and shows the importance of integrity and understanding the people you may be leading. I skipped over the baseball references and think the author is much more impactful speaking in person. Overall, the book is a good enough base for his platform as a solid leader of good character who has value to add when it comes understanding foreign affairs topics from a lens based in truth.
An effectively-written book; helpful for conceptual considerations, but also was a little more like the CIA/FBI/DOD/DHS "biography/leadership" books I've been reading over the last year; so his introduction about this book is different than the others that are flooding the market currently was incorrect. However, this was a solid book, and would read it again for the end-of-chapter quick practical applications.
Great leadership concepts delivered from a unique perspective. In my opinion, very helpful to hear classic leadership concepts reapplied in different formats. Also a quick and engaging read. I will likely recommend to some of my newer leaders who are struggling with leading their teams through the pandemic! Thank you for putting this out there!
Best book on leadership I’ve read in a very long time. The concepts are easy to digest. Each chapter’s “Mad Minute” gives the reader a thought-provoking framework that personalizes the chapter leadership concept to the reader’s own experience.
Thanks to the author for sharing his professional and family life with us.
clarity in Crisis is an easy read that's interesting, full of insightful pointers you can use. and is written in an easy laid back style that doesn't make the information being discussed feel too heavy.
Was unsure what to expect. Nothing groundbreaking, but the author uses his life experiences to lay out solid leadership principles. This book would prove a positive addition to your leadership collection.
A very nice to read book with interesting stories. Did not regret reading it. Regarding the leadership lessons and “clarity in crisis” topic, i did not find it that insightful rather than general concepts portrayed as learnings.
Solid book. Good principles. But if you’ve already read Extreme Ownership by Willink and Babin you can probably skip this one (EO expresses many of the same principles but in a more concise and structured way.)
There were some great takeaway principles of this book but I found it rather boring. I’m also not in a leadership position at my job so I don’t think this was a good book for me at this time of my life.
Great lessons for leadership. It's clear all the juicy stuff was rightfully blocked out due to the sensitive nature of Marc's job. Still, very good content for the leadership lessons.
Lots of interesting stories from CIA experience. Pleasantly fresh perspective on leadership. There were hints of politics but mostly avoided it. 3 stars because the epilogue was politicized.
Too much about his kid's baseball games. Too much blah blah. I don't want to hear about stupid diversity and inclusion. I do not want to read about the scamdemic.
Beginning was pretty good, then I got bored. Picked it up after listening to a podcast episode with the author (The Leaderist). Enjoyed the podcast episode more.