
Discover why 95% of executives sabotage their potential. "Positive Intelligence" reveals how to silence your mental Saboteurs and boost your PQ in just 21 days - unlocking 30-35% better performance while feeling happier. Stanford's secret weapon for peak achievement.
Shirzad Chamine is the New York Times bestselling author of Positive Intelligence: Why Only 20% of Teams and Individuals Achieve Their True Potential and a leading authority on mental fitness and leadership performance. A Stanford University lecturer and former CEO of CTI, the world’s largest coach-training organization, Chamine combines his background in psychology, neuroscience, and electrical engineering with decades of executive coaching to address the intersection of mindset and achievement.
His groundbreaking Positive Intelligence (PQ) framework, which identifies and defeats self-sabotaging mental patterns, emerged from coaching hundreds of CEOs and their teams.
Chamine’s work is widely taught in top MBA programs and has been adopted by organizations ranging from Fortune 500 companies to Stanford’s athletics department. His book, translated into 20 languages, provides science-backed tools for mastering stress, improving workplace dynamics, and unlocking peak performance.
A sought-after speaker, Chamine has influenced global audiences through platforms like Talks at Google and partnerships with institutions like Yale Business School. Positive Intelligence has become a cornerstone of modern leadership development, with its methodology leveraged by executives to drive 30–35% performance gains.
Positive Intelligence explores how mental "Saboteurs" like self-doubt and negativity hinder success, introducing the Positive Intelligence (PQ) framework to measure how often your mind serves versus sabotages you. The book offers tools to weaken these Saboteurs and strengthen your "Sage"—the calm, insightful voice—to unlock higher performance, resilience, and happiness, with practices achievable in 21 days.
Professionals seeking peak performance, leaders aiming to build resilient teams, and individuals struggling with stress or self-sabotage will benefit. The book’s science-backed strategies apply to sales, leadership, work-life balance, and personal growth, making it ideal for executives, entrepreneurs, and anyone pursuing fulfillment.
Yes—readers praise its actionable insights, with studies showing a 30-35% performance boost for teams using its methods. Chamine combines neuroscience, psychology, and real CEO case studies, offering a structured 21-day program to rewire mental habits. Over 95% of executives in his Stanford courses reported significant benefits.
The 10 Saboteurs are internal enemies like the Judge (hyper-criticism), Avoider (procrastination), Pleaser (over-accommodation), and Controller (micromanagement). Identifying and weakening these patterns helps reduce self-sabotage, freeing mental energy for growth.
By raising PQ, teams communicate better, solve problems creatively, and handle stress effectively. Chamine cites examples where CEOs used PQ tools to resolve conflicts, boost sales, and foster innovation, with reported 30-35% productivity gains.
The Sage represents your inner wisdom, operating through empathy, curiosity, and calm focus. Strengthening it via exercises like "self-command" helps navigate challenges without Saboteur interference, leading to wiser decisions and emotional resilience.
Chamine’s research shows measurable PQ gains in 21 days through daily 15-minute practices, such as mindfulness and reframing negative thoughts. Long-term adherence sustains higher performance and well-being.
While EQ focuses on managing emotions, PQ targets the root cause of mental sabotage. Chamine argues PQ determines how much of your EQ or IQ potential you actually achieve, making it foundational for lasting success.
Some note the 21-day timeline oversimplifies habit change, and the Saboteur framework may feel reductionist. However, most praise its practicality, with case studies validating its impact on leadership and team dynamics.
Yes—by silencing Saboteurs like the "Hyper-Achiever" or "Victim," individuals reduce anxiety and perfectionism. Techniques like "positive reframing" help convert stressors into growth opportunities, fostering calm and clarity.
Chamine combines a Stanford MBA, neuroscience PhD studies, and decades coaching Fortune 500 CEOs. As former CEO of the world’s largest coach-training organization, he refined PQ tools through real-world application, later teaching them at Stanford and Yale.
It provides assessments to identify collective Saboteurs (e.g., a team’s "Stickler" for perfection) and offers exercises to build trust and collaboration. Teams with high PQ report better conflict resolution and innovation.
Senti il libro attraverso la voce dell'autore
Trasforma la conoscenza in spunti coinvolgenti e ricchi di esempi
Cattura le idee chiave in un lampo per un apprendimento veloce
Goditi il libro in modo divertente e coinvolgente
The Judge is everyone's master Saboteur.
The Judge creates a coherent but flawed mental construct.
The most damaging lie is that we aren't worthy of love.
Every challenge can be viewed as either already a gift or an opportunity.
Scomponi le idee chiave di Positive intelligence in punti facili da capire per comprendere come i team innovativi creano, collaborano e crescono.
Distilla Positive intelligence in rapidi promemoria che evidenziano i principi chiave di franchezza, lavoro di squadra e resilienza creativa.

Vivi Positive intelligence attraverso narrazioni vivide che trasformano le lezioni di innovazione in momenti che ricorderai e applicherai.
Chiedi qualsiasi cosa, scegli la voce e co-crea spunti che risuonino davvero con te.

Creato da alumni della Columbia University a San Francisco
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Creato da alumni della Columbia University a San Francisco

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A sales executive once lost her company's biggest client on a Friday afternoon. While her colleagues braced for a weekend meltdown, she calmly sent an email listing three ways this "disaster" could become the best thing that ever happened to the company. Monday morning, her team arrived energized rather than demoralized, and within six months, they'd not only recovered but exceeded previous revenue. What allowed her to transform crisis into opportunity while others would have spiraled into panic? She had discovered something most of us spend our entire lives missing: the mental operating system running our lives is deeply flawed, and we can reprogram it. Most of us believe we think clearly and rationally. We don't. Research across 275,000 people reveals that 80% of us operate below a critical mental threshold where our own minds sabotage us more than they serve us. Imagine your brain as a battlefield where two armies constantly fight for control-one generating wisdom, creativity, and calm action; the other producing anxiety, self-criticism, and reactive behavior. The army that wins most battles determines whether you flourish or languish, regardless of external circumstances. This isn't metaphor-it's measurable neuroscience with a specific tipping point that separates those who reach their potential from those who don't.