About The Author

Eric Garma

Born as the oldest of three boys in a household of a single mom, before the single mom was a social norm, we struggled on welfare. Mom proclaimed me to be the head of the house. While mom worked, sometimes holding three jobs at once, I looked after my brothers. I was basically raised as the head of the household. After a short series of teenage jobs, I joined the military. To be exact, it was the United States Army. The Army is a culture steeped in leadership. In the Army, there are formal military classes on leadership. There are less formal weekly classes on leadership. It is very much a culture steeped in leadership.

After the military, I became an overall repairman. However, I was a ‘tank mechanic’ in the Army, which is something that does not translate to civilian life. I needed something that would translate to civilian life. I then went into a trade school to be an HVAC service technician. I have done various versions of that for the last 25 years.

During this transition into civilian life, I noticed there was a culture change.

Many people in leadership positions did not know how to lead! I honestly believed that I could change that just by being who I am, letting others see by the power of observation in the people, in this case, the people around them. However, I found that while some people absolutely loved who I am and how I am, some people actually hated my natural and trained leadership ability. Of those who did like my ability,

There were conversations about how I should write a book on leadership, give leadership classes in the form of public speaking, and tutor people in leadership. Of those who did NOT like my traits, there was, shall we say, discord. Here are some examples….

In truth, people leave jobs for greener pastures. Sometimes, it’s for promotion or better pay. But also, it’s because they’re leaving bad bosses, bad jobs, and/or bad situations.

Companies and corporations are realizing that there is a need for leadership training within their ranks. They put together leadership programs and training. I have attended a few of these. But you can tell they were esoteric at best. vi Talk about communication being the five Cs or the 4Ps. In plain, simple English, effective communication is still the six WH words. The who, what, when, where, how, and why are the six WH words of effective communication. We’ve known this since we have been speaking the language of English. These corporate trainings tended to complicate things it seems. They fail because they don’t keep it simple and plain. But, they would rather complicate it to make it look and sound fancy.

I used my firing after Christmas to write this book. Overall, it took me five days to put together the pre-existing beginnings of this book and have a manuscript in the publishers’ inbox. I was just that motivated to see improvement in the world around me. That is why I wrote this book.

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