內容簡介
內容簡介 You were the youngest promoted. The first to achieve. The one everyone called a prodigy, gifted, or most likely to succeed. And then, somewhere along the way, the very strengths that propelled you forward began to hold you back. Your decisiveness creates friction. Your speed isolates. Your standards trigger resistance. You're still capable, yet the path forward feels harder, not easier. The Curse of Early Success reveals a paradox rarely discussed in leadership circles: the qualities that fuel early achievement can quietly sabotage long-term influence if left unbalanced. Through vulnerable storytelling and hard-won insight, Eric Jessen shows how overused strengths can create invisible barriers to trust, collaboration, and sustained success. This isn't a book about failure. It's a guide for leaders who've reached early heights-and now find themselves wondering why the same playbook no longer works. Inside, you'll discover: Why your strengths sometimes trigger resistance instead of loyalty How to lead with both authority and connection The invisible skills of sustained success early achievers often miss Practical tools for slowing down without losing momentum How to turn rivals into allies and build a legacy beyond achievement If you've ever felt misunderstood despite good intentions, isolated despite competence, or stalled despite talent, this book is for you. Early success doesn't have to be a curse. With awareness and practice, it can become the foundation for something deeper-a leadership style that doesn't just win but wins with others. Your story isn't over. It's entering its most important chapter yet. Eric Jessen is a marketing and leadership executive who has led growth initiatives across publishing, nonprofit, technology, healthcare, and consumer brands. Known for building momentum and moving organizations forward, he now writes and speaks on leadership and long-term influence. He lives in Colorado with his wife, Lori, and still believes most problems can be solved with decisive action-though experience has taught him to occasionally pause first.