PewResearch Center asked people to select ten skills they believed were the most important for children to get ahead in the world, the top results were: communication, reading, math, teamwork, writing and logic.
When IBM surveyed over 1,500 CEOs from 60 countries and 33 industries and asked them to name the most crucial factor for success, “creativity” came out on top—beating “rigor,” “management discipline,” “vision,” and “integrity.”It’s understandable—integrity doesn’t appear on your profit and loss statement.
But ignoring this virtue is costly. David Brooks noted in his New York Times column,If you live for external achievement, years pass and the deepest parts of you go unexplored and unstructured.
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