Practical Genius: The Real Smarts You Need to Get Your Talents and Passions Working for You by Gina Amaro Rudan (Touchstone, $24.99, 203 pages)
Ready, set, GO! Professional development and training coach Gina Rudan can be a bit overwhelming as she enthusiastically offers up her philosophy for success. Summed up it is – Be the best you by mining deeply held inner goals while simultaneously exploiting people who may be able to assist your climb upward. Oh, and always maintain personal integrity by selflessly promoting the ones your are using.
That’s quite a challenge; however, Ms. Rudan offers herself as the poster child for this method. She jumped ship from the Fortune 500 employers of her past to begin a second career as a consultant. Clearly, the field of personal development is a crowded one that spans several decades. M. Scott Peck, Jack Canfield and David Shenk immediately come to mind. Dr. Shenk is listed because he too has written a book specifically focused on the topic of genius, The Genius in All of Us. His view of genius and ways to achieve it are expressed in a calm, well-considered approach. (A review of the book will be posted next on this site.)
Ms. Rudan’s target audience appears to be the 35-40 year old female who is at a point where she is stuck in her professional life. The spin for Rudan’s method is a bit titillating with “the Other G spot” and dating rules for those who can assist with a climb into practical genius status. She stresses the need for personal congruity – a balance of hard and soft assets. It is at the intersection of one’s marketable skills (hard assets) and personal passions, creativity and values (soft assets) where the Other G spot exists. Finding that spot and making it yours is the point of the book.
Each element of the process is thoroughly developed; however, this reviewer found the bouncy enthusiasm and perspective shifts in the early chapters a bit unsettling. Moreover, the rambling in some sentences makes the case for keeping it simple:
Expressing your practical genius is not about expressing the limitedness of our personalities or egos but more about expressing wonder of the depths of the oceans of who we are as complex multi-dimensional creatures.
The later chapters get down to business with boxed hints for the reader and lengthy descriptions or definitions of what Ms. Rudan thinks is the ideal mix of characters that will become the players in the reader’s life changing drama.
Given today’s legions of unemployed and underemployed persons, this book may have an audience in persons seeking more than just putting food on the table and a roof over one’s head. Then again, maybe it does not.
Ruta Arellano