Harvard Figured Out Shohei Ohtani's Secret to Success
Briefly

Harvard Figured Out Shohei Ohtani's Secret to Success
"You come up with a multiyear ambition, so really dare to dream. And then, the first step of the chart is, 'What are the set of things that if I concentrated on this year, I'd make meaningful progress on my multiyear ambition?' You have one thing in the center: my multiyear ambition. For him, it was 'be the No. 1 draft pick' four years later."
Shohei Ohtani defies modern baseball's specialization trend by excelling as both a starting pitcher with diverse pitching arsenal and a complete hitter adaptable to any matchup. Unlike typical players developed for specific roles, Ohtani maintains well-rounded excellence. Harvard Business School professor Frances X. Frei traced Ohtani's exceptional development to the Harada Method, a planning system taught in Japanese high schools. This method combines long-term ambitions with annual goal-setting and progress tracking. Ohtani's approach involved establishing a multiyear ambition to become the number one draft pick, then identifying eight specific annual objectives to achieve meaningful progress toward that goal.
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