About Dr. Jim Taylor

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So far Dr. Jim Taylor has created 1435 blog entries.
15 01, 2013

Business: Build a Positive and High-performing Corporate Culture

By | January 15th, 2013|Categories: Business|Tags: , , , , , |1 Comment

Because business is a “team sport,” considerable attention must be paid to the influence that the team as a whole has on its members and, inversely, the impact of its members on the team at large in terms of relationships, collaboration, and, ultimately, performance and productivity. How important is it to build a positive and high-performing team? Well, have you ever been on a “downer” team? I’m talking about one that is permeated with negativity, unhealthy communication, competition, and conflict? It sure doesn’t feel good and it can definitely interfere with the satisfaction and performance of its individual members. How about a team that isn’t highly motivated? It’s certainly difficult to stay motivated yourself. In my role as a partner at The Trium Group, a boutique corporate consulting firm based in San Francisco, I consult extensively in the corporate world where I help executives and companies to maximize individual and team performance. One of the most important areas I focus on in this work involves helping senior management to create a culture in their company that is positive and high performing, resulting in maximum individual and organizational performance.

15 01, 2013

Ski Racing: Mikaela Shiffrin is a Star On-Snow and a Real Person Off

By | January 15th, 2013|Categories: Ski Racing|Tags: , , , |0 Comments

Great article about the 17-year-old alpine ski racing star Mikaela Shiffrin in the NY Times today. Worth a read to learn about the wonderful attitude and humility she has about ski racing.

15 01, 2013

Is Raising Good Decision Makers Parents’ Greatest Challenge?

By | January 15th, 2013|Categories: Parenting|Tags: , , , , , |1 Comment

Good decision making is one of the most powerful skills your children need to learn to as they progress through childhood and transition into adulthood. But I promise you, it is not a skill that will develop readily on its own, particularly in the digital world in which they are growing up. You should teach your children why popular culture and technology can cause them to make poor decisions and guide them in learning how to make good decisions. Making bad decisions. Whenever I speak to a group of young people, I ask how many of them have ever made a bad decision. With complete unanimity and considerable enthusiasm, they all raise their hands. When I then ask whether they will ever make a poor decision in the future, the response is equally fervent. I also ask children why they make less-than-stellar decisions. Their responses include I didn’t stop to think; It seemed like fun at the time; I was bored; Peer pressure; I didn’t consider the consequences; To get back at my parents. Yet when I ask them if the faulty decision was worth it, most usually say, “Not really.” What this means is that there was glitch in their decision-making “program,” somewhere between input, processing, and output, that caused the bad decision. Because children lack experience and perspective, and, as I noted above in my previous post, their prefrontal cortex isn’t fully developed, they tend to make decisions that are egocentric, rash, and short-sighted. This absence of forethought can cause children to not consider all available information, engage in an incomplete cost-benefit analysis, and ignore long-term consequences.

14 01, 2013

Cycling: Five Keys to Cycling Confidence

By | January 14th, 2013|Categories: Cycling|Tags: , , , , , , , |0 Comments

Confidence is a deep, lasting, and resilient belief in your ability to ride your best and achieve your cycling goals. Confidence keeps you positive, motivated, intense, focused, and emotionally in control when you need it most, whether on a long and grueling climb or when you’re trying to reel in a breakaway with only a [...]

13 01, 2013

Ski Racing: Staying Healthy, Rested, and Motivated All Season Long

By | January 13th, 2013|Categories: Ski Racing|Tags: , , , , , , , , |1 Comment

One of the most important ideas I emphasize in my work with racers is consistency. In fact, it’s consistency that makes the great racers, like Tina Maze and Ted Ligety, so great. Day in and day out, week in and week out, month in and month out, and year in and year out, they are [...]

7 01, 2013

Business: Six Steps of Leadership

By | January 7th, 2013|Categories: Business|Tags: , , , |0 Comments

A nice article in the Corner Office column of the NY Times in which G.J. Hart, the CEO of California Pizza Kitchen, describes his six steps of leadership (plus one): 1) Be the very best you can be; 2) dream big; 3) lead with your heart; 4) trust the people you lead; 5) do the [...]

6 01, 2013

Is Technology Creating a Generation of Bad Decision Makers

By | January 6th, 2013|Categories: Parenting|Tags: , , , , , , , , |4 Comments

Decision making is another aspect of children’s thinking that seems to be suffering as a result of the latest technology. This poor decision making is illustrated by events over the last few years involving young people making egregiously bad decisions that involve technology (not to mention the frequent examples occurring in the adult world!). For example, teenagers whose “sexting” to a friend is released in cyberspace, embarrassing or illegal behavior that’s recorded on mobile phones and uploaded onto the Web, and the tragic consequences of cyberbullying. In looking at decision making among children, let me begin with a brief lesson in brain anatomy and functioning. Children start off at a severe disadvantage when it comes to decision making because the prefrontal cortex doesn’t fully develop until well past adolescence. The prefrontal cortex is instrumental to so-called executive functioning, namely, determining good from bad, planning, recognizing future consequences, predicting outcomes, and the ability to suppress socially inappropriate behavior. This means that children begin their lives “behind the curve” when it comes to decision making; their default is to make poor decisions. So, anything that makes bad decision making easier for children to act on just adds insult to injury.

6 01, 2013

Ski Racing: Four Things That Will Improve Your Training

By | January 6th, 2013|Categories: Ski Racing|Tags: , , , , |0 Comments

Over the past six weeks I’ve worked on- and off-snow with a handful of top juniors individually and four of the leading junior programs in the U.S. As usual, I learned things in my work with the athletes and coaches that always remind me of what I would call the “little big things” in ski [...]

2 01, 2013

Latest News: Dr. Jim Taylor Joins The Trium Group

By | January 2nd, 2013|Categories: Latest News|Tags: , , , , , |0 Comments

I’m pleased to announce that I am now a partner at The Trium Group, a boutique corporate consulting firm based in San Francisco that specializes in strategic, human, and organizational transformation. The firm offers a range of services from traditional strategic consulting  to individual and organizational performance, leadership training, and team building. Trium clients include Cisco, [...]

2 01, 2013

Latest News: Dr. Jim Taylor Joins The Trium Group

By | January 2nd, 2013|Categories: Latest News|Tags: , , , , , |0 Comments

I’m pleased to announce that I am now a partner at The Trium Group, a boutique corporate consulting firm based in San Francisco that specializes in strategic, human, and organizational transformation. The firm offers a range of services from traditional strategic consulting  to individual and organizational performance, leadership training, and team building. Trium clients include Cisco, [...]