Kintsugi Leadership: What broken pottery teaches us about resilience, beauty, and the value of the fracture
The Insider's Journal Monika Norvilaite The Insider's Journal Monika Norvilaite

Kintsugi Leadership: What broken pottery teaches us about resilience, beauty, and the value of the fracture

In fifteenth-century Japan, a shogun's cracked tea bowl came back from repair held together with ugly metal staples. His craftsmen found a better answer — filling the fractures with gold. What they created was not just a repair. It was a philosophy. And it may be the most useful framework for leadership that the modern world has never properly adopted.

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