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Flex and Firm: The Two Faces of Cultural Values

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  Cross-cultural leadership is not a choice between holding firm and letting go. It’s a dance between the two — between the values that anchor us and the ones that help us move. The graphic Cultural Values: Flex & Firm captures this tension beautifully: two trees, one rooted deep in rock, the other bending toward light, joined by a bridge that asks a deceptively simple question — Adapt or Anchor? The Firm Side: Conforming Values On the right side of the bridge stand the values that define who we are. They are rooted and steadfast , shaped by moral identity, community loyalty, and ethical principles. These are the values that say, “I cannot change this without losing myself.” They give us integrity, continuity, and a sense of belonging — the moral architecture that keeps our leadership recognizable across borders. But they also make us visible. They are the reason we sometimes stand out, even when we wish to blend in. And that visibility, uncomfortable as it can be, is often th...

A Publisher’s Conversation with Authors: Why Backlist Titles Are the Financial Backbone of Publishing

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  Every author dreams of the launch day—the excitement, the buzz, the first reviews, the first sales. Launches matter, of course. But here is the quiet truth publishers wish more authors understood: The real financial strength of a publishing house comes from the backlist. Not the shiny new releases. Not the books with launch parties and press releases. The backlist. The books that have been out for a year, five years, ten years, sometimes twenty. The books that keep selling steadily, month after month, long after the spotlight has moved on. Let’s pull back the curtain on why. What Makes the Backlist So Powerful Backlist titles sell without demanding attention Frontlist books require: Marketing campaigns Launch coordination Media outreach Author events Retail negotiations Backlist books require none of that. They simply exist —and they sell. Backlist sales are predictable A strong backlist title becomes a reliable revenue stream. Publishers can count on: Ste...

🌿 Transformation Tuesday: When the Mind Meets Mystery — C.S. Lewis’s First Encounter with God

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  C.S. Lewis didn’t stumble into faith; he reasoned his way toward it — and then something deeper happened. He began as a convinced atheist, shaped by war and loss, skeptical of anything unseen. But over time, his intellect led him to a crossroads. He realized that his longing for meaning — what he called Joy — pointed to something beyond himself. Logic opened the door; experience walked him through it. Lewis described his conversion not as a sudden revelation but as a surrender: “I gave in, and admitted that God was God.” That moment wasn’t triumph — it was transformation. He moved from resistance to recognition, from argument to awe. And in that shift, his life’s direction changed — his writing, his friendships, his sense of purpose. Transformation often begins where certainty ends. For Lewis, it wasn’t emotion that led him to God, but the realization that reason itself pointed toward the divine. It’s a reminder that faith can begin not in belief, but in the honest search for tr...

🌿Pleased vs. Proud — The Quiet Difference

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  People often use pleased and proud as if they mean the same thing. They don’t. And the difference matters. To be pleased is to feel satisfaction — a gentle, inward acknowledgment that something went well. It’s a momentary warmth, a sense of harmony between effort and outcome. You’re pleased when a plan works, when a child behaves kindly, when a project turns out right. It’s gratitude mixed with relief. To be proud , though, is something larger. Pride carries identity. It says, this achievement reflects who I am. Pride ties the result to the self — to strength, perseverance, or principle. It’s not just “that went well,” but “I did that.” Pride can be noble, when it honors integrity and effort. It can also turn dangerous, when it forgets humility and becomes self‑inflation. The two feelings often overlap, but they point in different directions: Pleased Focuses on the event or outcome Has a gentle, grateful tone Fades naturally once the moment passes Proud Focuses on the self an...