You know, I’ve seen it time and again: teams thrive when goals, credit, and information are shared. It’s the absolute bedrock of high-performing teams. Forget the fancy frameworks for a second; if you get this right, everything else becomes so much easier.
Share Image Quote:At its heart, this is about dismantling silos and creating a single, unified organism out of a group of individuals. It’s the recipe for moving from a “me” culture to a “we” culture.
Let’s break this down because it’s a three-part harmony, not just one note. Shared goals mean everyone is rowing in the same direction—you’re not fighting against each other’s agendas. Shared credit is the magic dust that makes people *want* to row harder; it builds trust and kills resentment. And shared information? That’s the water you’re all rowing on. Without it, you’re just paddling in the dark, wasting energy. I’ve watched teams transform when a leader finally starts being transparent with data and context. It’s like giving everyone a map instead of just shouting “go that way!”
| Context | Attributes |
|---|---|
| Original Language | English (3669) |
| Category | Business (233) |
| Topics | goals (48), teamwork (31) |
| Literary Style | parallel (10) |
| Emotion / Mood | positive (57) |
| Overall Quote Score | 57 (8) |
This specific phrasing comes from the 1993 book “The Leader In You,” published in the US. It’s important to note it’s from Dale Carnegie & Associates, so while it carries the Carnegie philosophy, it was penned by Stuart Levine and Michael Crom. People often misattribute it directly to Dale Carnegie himself, but he had passed away decades earlier.
| Context | Attributes |
|---|---|
| Author | Dale Carnegie (408) |
| Source Type | Book (4032) |
| Source/Book Name | The Leader In You (86) |
| Origin Timeperiod | Contemporary (1615) |
| Original Language | English (3669) |
| Authenticity | Verified (4032) |
Dale Carnegie(1888), an American writer received worldwide recognition for his influential books on relationship, leadership, and public speaking. His books and courses focus on human relations, and self confidence as the foundation for success. Among his timeless classics, the Dale Carnegie book list includes How to Win Friends and Influence People is the most influential which inspires millions even today for professional growth.
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| Quotation | Teams thrive when goals are shared, credit is shared, and information is shared |
| Book Details | Publication Year/Date: 1993 (first edition) ISBN/Unique Identifier: 9781501181962 (Gallery Books 2017 reprint); also 9780671798093 (early Pocket Books hardcover) Last edition. Number of pages: Common reprints ~256 pages (varies by printing). |
| Where is it? | Chapter 7 Teaming Up for Tomorrow, Unverified – Edition 2017, page range ~83–98 |
In the book, this isn’t presented as some abstract ideal. It’s positioned as a practical, non-negotiable behavior for modern leaders. The context is all about moving away from the old-school, command-and-control model and towards one of empowerment and collaboration. It’s the core of what makes human-centric leadership work.
So how do you actually use this? It’s not about just repeating the quote in a meeting. It’s about action.
| Context | Attributes |
|---|---|
| Theme | Principle (838) |
| Audiences | engineers (36), marketers (166), project managers (18), research teams (1), scrum masters (4) |
| Usage Context/Scenario | cross team updates (1), hackathon rules (1), OKR rollouts (1), retrospectives (10), sprint kickoff (1), team charter creation (1) |
Question: What if one team member doesn’t hold up their end but still expects shared credit?
Answer: Ah, the classic free-rider problem. This is where shared goals and shared information come to the rescue. In a truly transparent team, performance (or lack thereof) is visible to everyone. The peer pressure and collective desire to hit the shared goal often self-corrects this. If it doesn’t, it’s a management issue, not a flaw in the principle.
Question: Isn’t sharing all information a security risk or inefficient?
Answer: Great point. It’s not about sharing *everything* indiscriminately. It’s about defaulting to transparency. Err on the side of sharing, but of course, use common sense with sensitive HR or financial data. The inefficiency isn’t in sharing; it’s in the massive inefficiency of people working with incomplete or wrong information.
Question: How do you start implementing this if your current culture is very siloed?
Answer: Start small. Pick one project, one team. Be the catalyst. Over-communicate the goal, celebrate small wins as a team, and share one piece of information you normally wouldn’t. It’s contagious. Success in one area creates a blueprint others will want to follow.
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