From Conflict to Courage

Home / Books / From Conflict to Courage
Hands holding a book

From Conflict to Courage

How to Stop Avoiding and Start Leading

Unresolved workplace conflict wastes time, increases stress, and negatively affects business outcomes. But conflict isn’t the problem: Mismanagement is.

Leaders unintentionally mismanage conflict when they fall into dysfunctional patterns of aggression, avoidance, and appeasing.

The three reasons leaders mismanage conflict is due to the fear of emotions, the lack of skills development or the culture itself.

Resolving conflict requires the ability to initiate, engage in and stay with difficult conversations.

This book offers techniques to increase leadership clarity, identify obstacles, and reduce resistance. In chapter seven leaders get a blueprint to facilitate conversations that uncover the hidden barriers to performance, improves performance and increases accountability.

Discuss Guide Cover Mockup

Get The Discussion Guide

From Conflict To Courage

Facilitate an intellectually stimulating book club or conversation with this downloadable discussion guide.

From Conflict to Courage is one of the most effective business books I've ever read. It's written by a real person in a real business environment with real life experience versus an academic report. It's perfect for new managers, as well as any change agent dealing with internal resistance.


Lori McCarty Headshot
Lori McCarty
Manager of consumer experience White River Energy
Your LinkedIn training course was incredible! I'm halfway through From Conflict to Courage and am getting serious about designing my leadership identity and focusing on the value I bring to the world as a leader. Your guidance is exactly what I've been looking for. I see so many ways I can grow because of your work.
Crystal Poenisch
Crystal Poenisch
Uptycs
San Antonio, Texas
I finished reading From Conflict to Courage last night and it is probably THE BEST book on conflict resolution I have ever read. I love practical ideas and your consistent focus on changing ourselves to resolve conflict, instead of changing others. Great work and thanks for for all you do!

Matt Martin Headshot
Matt Martin, Ph.D
Organizational Psychologist and Change Management Practitioner