Books
The Ride of a Lifetime
A leadership memoir that treats judgment as calm sequencing under pressure rather than grand personal mythology.
Bob Iger writes like a calm operator, which is maybe why his lessons about Disney, trust, and timing land so cleanly. The tone of the book is part of the argument: steady is underrated.
What stayed with me
What stayed was his emphasis on steadiness. There is a confidence in the book, but it is rarely theatrical. It comes through sequencing, relationships, and the ability to move decisively without creating unnecessary noise.
What it changed
It changed how I think about leadership presence. Strong leadership began to look less like charisma and more like calm clarity under pressure, especially when multiple constituencies are watching at once.
Why I still keep it on the shelf
I still think this book matters because it treats leadership as a long game. Trust accumulates slowly, and judgment becomes visible when the stakes are finally high enough to test it.