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47 pages 1 hour read

The Infinite Game

Nonfiction | Book | Adult | Published in 2018

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Index of Terms

Courage to Lead

The courage to lead is the eagerness to sacrifice and take risks for the good of an unknowable future. It can be developed through experiencing life-altering events, finding just causes, identifying a worthy rival who inspires, and committing to helping others. The courage to lead is the fifth and final essential practice of Fostering an Infinite Mindset.

Ethical Fading

Ethical fading occurs when company culture allows unethical behavior for the sake of advancing interests. By sacrificing moral decision-making, a company suffering this condition will often prioritize profits over the safety and well-being of employees, customers, or innocent bystanders. Ethical fading is a symptom of finite thinking.

Existential Flexibility

Existential flexibility is a leader’s ability to disrupt the status quo of their current business model, a strategy to advance the just cause of their organization. It demands sacrifice and entails risk. It is often met with hesitation or opposition by team members and shareholders, but Sinek cites Walt Disney and Steve Jobs as leaders who successfully flexed to advance their just causes.

Just Cause

A just cause is a specific vision of the future that a leader wants to manifest through their organization, as opposed to a past-oriented “why.” Just causes require sacrifice and followers who believe in it. An infinite mindset adheres to the just cause in all decision-making.

Trusting Teams

Developing a trusting team requires leaders to convince their team members that vulnerability will help them succeed. Vulnerability leads to empathy and trust, which allow employees to feel safe, take risks, and help each other overcome challenges. Sinek illustrates this point with Rick Fox, who was hired by Shell to run their URSA oil rig. The dangerous job required Fox’s team members to cultivate trust through open discussions.

Worthy Rival

A worthy rival is another player in the infinite game who challenges us. These rivals are “worthy of comparison”—of learning from—because they do something better than us, whether it be commanding greater loyalty or making a superior product (161). We can strategically choose our worthy rivals by identifying our weaknesses and learning from their strengths, especially when they are the same.

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