ABSTRACT

Looking toward the C-suite? Take heed. Author and serial CEO Dick Cross pulls back the curtain on this top leadership role, explaining in his new book that being a successful leader, running a business, and doing it extraordinarily well isn't a full-time job. In 60-Minute CEO: The Fast Track to Top Leadership, Cross makes the case that the single greatest determinant of business success revolves around the job at the top. Cross suggests that the most important, and often overlooked, duty for a CEO is thinking about how to improve his or her business and how to be a leader. Cross also reveals that a mediocre leader can be transformed into an exemplary one simply by refining two key things: thinking and character. In Cross's trademark conversational style, he conveys why strategy and execution, while important, should take a back seat to authenticity and responsibility, and that the essential elements of the CEO role can be accomplished in several 60-minute sessions every week. Executives may fill their time with other tasks, but leading and running a company requires explicit skills different from those needed for any other corporate position. The good news is that those skills are easy to learn, fun to do, and not time-consuming. In an entertaining style, Cross offers executives the fast track to the top leadership position. And while 60 minutes may seem like a quick fix, as Cross sees it, three 60-minute sessions a week devoted solely to considering your business and your role as leader are crucial to business and leadership success.  In 60-Minute CEO, Dick Cross brings over 25 years of experience of transforming companies in various stages of underperformance into industry powerhouses. Cross combines his knowledge and experience with the stories and lessons of preeminent leaders and thinkers including General George Patton and Seattle Seahawks quarterback Russell Wilson.

part |2 pages

Prepare the Cabin for Takeoff

chapter 1|4 pages

Unmasking the Myth

chapter 2|4 pages

Soening Up the Beachhead

chapter 3|6 pages

The Big Idea

chapter 4|4 pages

60 Minutes . . . Really?

part |2 pages

Climbing Through 10,000 Feet

chapter 5|6 pages

inking . . . About What?

chapter 6|4 pages

Chameleon at the Top

chapter 8|4 pages

What Your Customers Want . . . Right Now!

chapter 9|4 pages

It’s Not Your Products Anymore

chapter 10|4 pages

Mission- Driven Business

chapter 11|4 pages

Establishing Loyalty

chapter 13|6 pages

The Magic of Renewal

chapter 14|4 pages

Kill Your Culture

chapter 16|4 pages

Activity Beats Execution

chapter 17|4 pages

Your Goggles for Greatness

chapter 18|4 pages

Strategy and Execution

chapter 19|4 pages

The Team Trap

chapter 20|4 pages

To Tweet or Not to Tweet

chapter 21|4 pages

Bad Goals

chapter 22|2 pages

Continuous Turnaround

part |2 pages

The Captain Has Turned Off the Seatbelt Sign

chapter 23|6 pages

Accelerant for Your inking

chapter 24|4 pages

Authenticity

chapter 25|2 pages

Leadership Is an “Inside Job”

chapter 26|4 pages

Humility Not Hubris

chapter 27|4 pages

Moments of Truth

chapter 28|4 pages

ermonuclear Inuence

chapter 29|4 pages

Flip the Pyramid

chapter 30|4 pages

The Last to Know

chapter 31|4 pages

Volunteers Versus Employees

chapter 32|2 pages

Duty Versus Responsibility

chapter 33|4 pages

Go for Broke

chapter 34|2 pages

Your Uber Weapon— Emulation!

chapter 35|4 pages

Be the Lore

part |2 pages

Touchdown

chapter 36|2 pages

e “L” Word

chapter 37|4 pages

Trust