It Is Not a One-Size-Fits-All

Husain A. Al-Omani Author Interview

Becoming a Certified Six Sigma Master Black Belt is a comprehensive guide for aspiring Master Black Belts that reframes Six Sigma as a leadership discipline and equips readers to align strategy, build culture, and drive enterprise-wide improvement. Is Six Sigma ultimately a technical system—or a human one?

As the saying goes in improvement, “it depends.” The most effective practitioners understand that Six Sigma requires a balance: the emotional intelligence to lead people through change, and the technical capability to guide complex problem-solving. You can have the most elegant analysis in the world, but if people don’t trust it, understand it, or feel part of it, it won’t stick.

In our experience, Six Sigma is not a one-size-fits-all methodology—it’s a leadership discipline. It requires reading the situation, understanding the people, and adapting your approach accordingly. The tools matter, but it’s how you engage people in using those tools that ultimately determines success.

When most people think of Six Sigma, they often gravitate toward the technical aspects—the tools, the data, and the statistical rigor. But in practice, Six Sigma will surely fail if it doesn’t feel human.

You emphasize that improvement must connect to enterprise strategy rather than operate in isolation. Why do organizations struggle with that alignment?

In our experience, organizations don’t struggle with alignment because they lack strategy—they struggle because strategy doesn’t translate easily across the various levels of the organization.

Senior leaders may have a clear vision, but that clarity often breaks down as you move deeper into the organization – from senior leaders, to managers and directors, and eventually to team leads and operators (at the sharp point of the organization, closest to the customer). The major breakdown is that the strategy isn’t translated into meaningful lead measures or actionable tactics at the departmental and frontline level.

As a result, people are asked to “be strategic,” but aren’t given line of sight into how their daily work connects to the organization’s larger aspirations. Without that connection, improvement efforts become fragmented—teams work hard, but not always on what matters most.

That’s where Six Sigma can either add tremendous value—or unintentionally contribute to the problem. Black Belts have the capability to improve processes effectively, but they also have the responsibility to ensure they are improving the right things. When projects are clearly tied to strategic priorities, improvement becomes a driver of enterprise performance—not just isolated success.

The training sections emphasize application over passive learning. What are the most common failures in Six Sigma training programs?

The most common failure in Six Sigma training programs is that they prioritize knowledge transfer over behavior change.

Too often, training is designed as a one-time event—heavy on tools, concepts, and statistical theory—but light on application. Participants leave with binders full of content, but without the structure or support to consistently apply what they’ve learned in their day-to-day work.

In our experience, the goal of training isn’t just to teach people Six Sigma—it’s to change how work gets done. That only happens when learning is embedded into the work itself and supported by effective coaching and mentorship. Without those elements, Six Sigma training becomes an academic exercise. With them, it becomes a capability-building system.

With AI, automation, and data science evolving rapidly, how do you see the role of the Master Black Belt changing?

As AI accelerates access to analytics, modeling, and even advanced problem-solving capabilities, the technical barrier to generating insights continues to drop. What used to require deep statistical expertise is becoming increasingly automated and widely accessible.

Because of that shift, the differentiator for Master Black Belts is no longer “who can run the numbers.” That capability will be broadly available. Instead, the value is moving toward “who can help architect the system that uses the analytics to guide behavioral change and create competitive advantage.”

In this environment, the Master Black Belt evolves from technical expert to system designer. Their role becomes less about producing analysis and more about ensuring that insights are embedded into how work actually gets done—through leadership behaviors, standard work, and decision-making systems that turn data into sustained performance improvement.

Six Sigma is a systematic approach to making significant or breakthrough process improvements. Currently, Six Sigma exists as a team-based problem-solving approach applied by trained project facilitators, which are typically called belts. Depending on the level of expertise in the methodology and improvement tools, belts can be White, Yellow, Green, Black, and Master Black Belts (MBBs). The Master Black Belt is the highest level of expertise in Six Sigma approaches, tools, and techniques.
In companies implementing Six Sigma, the role of Master Black Belt is to train, guide, and coach Black and Green belts to execute their improvement projects efficiently. In addition to this, Master Black Belts are often responsible for overseeing the organization’s entire improvement program with the ultimate responsibility for creating a robust culture of continuous improvement. Thus, the competence of MBBs is critically important for the success and long-term sustainability of Six Sigma in organizations.
This book is ideal for all those who wish to get trained and certified as Master Black Belts and train others to achieve breakthrough results using Six Sigma to shape and execute improvement projects. The book has the right balance between topics such as strategic planning, project selection, stakeholder management, and training design, to advanced statistical techniques such as propagation of errors, destructive measurement systems, general linear models and components of variation, and complex blocking structures in Design of Experiments. This book was written by three expert Master Black Belts certified by the American Society for Quality (ASQ). Moreover, they are from different parts of the world and industry, which brings great diversity to the contents of the book.

What Would A Child Want To Know?

Nurse Florence®, Tell Me About the Skin invites young readers on a friendly, science-packed journey into how their skin works and how to care for it, guided by a compassionate nurse and lively classroom characters. How did you balance scientific accuracy with the need to keep concepts accessible for young readers ages 6–9?

One way I do this is by trying to have a mindset of a child and think about what they would want to learn as well as how they could learn the material.

The book uses analogies, like comparing skin to the ozone layer. How do you develop these kid-friendly explanations?

Keeping an open-mind about new information helps.

What role do themes of compassion, such as the dedication to Florence Nightingale and Dr. Jean Watson, play in shaping the book’s message?

Nursing compassion is an art, and it is something that can be learned and improved upon.  A person doesn’t either have compassion or no compassion.  The amount of compassion a person has can be seen as a spectrum, and they may have more compassion at different times in their lives as well as different amounts for different people.  Let us learn to exercise compassion and alleviate misery when able to our civilization can reach its potential.

How do you collaborate with illustrator Madrid Rosario to ensure the visuals reinforce both the science and the emotional tone of the story?

I give my illustrators vague drawing requests and expect them to use their maximum creativity to produce outstanding results. 

Author Links: GoodReads | Facebook | Website | Essay Contest | YouTube | Dow Creative Enterprises® | Nurse Florence Project | LinkedIn | Amazon

Sometimes it seems only a nurse can bring technical information down to an understanding that an ordinary person can grasp. The Nurse Florence(R) book series provides high quality medical information that even a child can grasp. By introducing young kids to correct terminology and science concepts at an early age, we can help increase our children’s health literacy level as well as help to prepare them for courses and jobs in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math. We need more scientists so I hope that many children will enjoy this book series and consider a job involving science. Introducing Some Medical Words to Kids in Every Book(R) A Movement of Global Health Promotion and Literacy Dow Creative Enterprises(R) Help Civilization Reach Its Potential(R)

T.V. Holiday’s Vendetta: Legend of The Iron Warrior Vol. 3

Vendetta: Legend of the Iron Warrior, Vol. 3 is a melodramatic and unexpectedly tender superhero novel about a man trying to outrun destiny and discovering that duty, grief, and faith won’t let him go so easily. Travis Holiday begins the book trying to leave Carnage Coast behind with Crystal and Ashley, only to be pulled back into its holy war, its conspiracies, and its emotional wreckage. What follows is part urban-fantasy action saga, part spiritual crisis, part intimate family drama. The novel moves from bank sieges and villainous set pieces involving Diversion, Hypnotion, and Candace Loveless to a far more inward struggle, as Travis’s identity is exposed, his moral legitimacy is shredded, and he is forced to reckon with what it means to be chosen at all. The strongest thread, for me, was not the mythology on its own, but the way the book keeps yoking cosmic warfare to personal longing, especially Travis’s ache for his son, his bond with Crystal and Ashley, and the late, quietly moving conversation with Mark in jail that reframes greatness as service rather than glory.

T.V. Holiday writes as someone utterly unafraid of intensity, and that conviction gives the novel an entertaining pulse. I was struck by how often the story pauses amid the violence to make room for vulnerability: Leslie’s fear of motherhood in a war zone, Crystal’s private unraveling when doubt creeps into her trust, Ashley’s simple, devastating declaration of love, the strange sweetness of a family barbecue trying to hold itself together while everything around it frays. Those scenes give the book a lived-in heart. Even when the dialogue leans broad or the sentiment comes in hot, I never doubted the feeling behind it. The novel’s deepest interest isn’t spectacle for its own sake. It’s in wounded people trying, sometimes clumsily and sometimes beautifully, to remain worthy of one another.

The prose is maximalist, earnest, and unapologetically larger than life. At its best, that gives the book a comic-book grandeur that suits Carnage Coast perfectly. The opening image of Travis racing the White Ghost across a desert he can’t quite escape is vivid and genuinely memorable, and the action sequences have a propulsive, pulpy swagger. The novel often prefers excess to restraint. Even those rougher edges became part of the experience for me. The book is never coy, never slick, never interested in cool detachment. It wants redemption, love, faith, corruption, sex, betrayal, and apocalypse all on the same canvas, and there’s something oddly winning about how fully it commits to that ambition. The ideas are most compelling when they move away from simple chosenness and toward the harder question the book keeps circling: whether a flawed man can still become meaningful through sacrifice, service, and endurance.

Vendetta: Legend of the Iron Warrior, Vol. 3 is a novel with a fierce emotional engine, a taste for chaos, and a sincere belief that spiritual struggle and human intimacy belong in the same story. The book has conviction, and conviction carries it a long way. I’d recommend it most to readers who enjoy dark superhero fiction, religiously inflected urban fantasy, and stories where the battles in the soul matter just as much as the battles in the street.

Pages: 400 | ASIN : B0GRSZV3YF

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Aletheia Vol. I In The Shadows

Aletheia Vol. I: In the Shadows is a riveting historical novel with an unusually steady pulse: thoughtful, tense, and alive to the moral unease of its world. Set in the fraught transition from Tiberius to Caligula, it imagines the aftermath of sacred and political upheaval through a story of family, secrecy, vengeance, and survival. At its center are Cassius and Justus, two brothers drawn in opposite directions by temperament and desire, yet bound to the same dangerous inheritance. Around them, author Luigi A. Kohli builds a Rome of uneasy loyalties and concealed motives, where governors, soldiers, mystics, and ambitious outsiders move through a landscape thick with prophecy, memory, and threat.

What impressed me most was the book’s seriousness of atmosphere. He writes as though the texture of Roman life, its rituals, hierarchies, anxieties, and brutal calculations, actually matters. That care gives the novel weight. I felt it especially in the way public power and private grief keep colliding, and in how the story allows consequences to spread outward rather than arrive neatly on cue. Cassius’s hunger for vengeance could easily have been rendered in broad strokes, but here it feels costly and corrosive. Justus, by contrast, is compelling precisely because his wish for obscurity has such a human sadness to it. I found that tension between the brother who lunges toward fate and the one who tries to shrink from it deeply affecting.

I also admired the book’s ideas, even when they pushed the story into darker and more contemplative territory. This is a novel preoccupied with what survives in the shadows of official history, with the lives and motives history flattens or forgets. Its speculative reach, especially around Pontius Pilate and the dangerous secret that drives the plot, gives the book an arresting intellectual charge. Yet what stayed with me wasn’t simply the intrigue. It was the sense that truth in this world is never cleanly redemptive. The presence of figures like Caeso and Hector enriches that feeling, because they carry old loyalties and old scars into a drama that is never merely political. I was especially drawn to the subtle emergence of female power in a setting built to deny it. That thread gives the novel a welcome sharpness and keeps it from settling into familiar masculine patterns of empire and revenge.

What I found especially intriguing is that Aletheia Vol. I doesn’t merely borrow the atmosphere of Ben-Hur, but imagines itself as a continuation of that world through a new literary sensibility. The author isn’t trying to mimic Lew Wallace’s distinctly Victorian voice or the overtly religious cast of his novel. Instead, he seems to ask where that story might lead if revisited by a modern historical novelist more drawn to ambiguity, political tension, and the hidden costs of empire. That gives the book an interesting double life: it stands on its own as a Roman tale of secrecy and survival, while also inviting readers to consider it as a thoughtful and imaginative answer to the question of what might have come next after Ben-Hur.

Aletheia Vol. I: In the Shadows is rich, absorbing, and more emotionally layered than many historical thrillers dare to be. It asks large questions without losing hold of individual lives, and it manages to feel both well-researched and imaginatively alive. Not every passage moves at the same speed, but even the slower stretches carry purpose, and the cumulative effect is strong. I’d recommend it to readers who enjoy historical fiction with real political intelligence, moral complexity, and a touch of philosophical mystery. It’s a book for those who like their ancient worlds not polished into legend, but haunted by doubt, consequence, and the stubborn ache of being human.

Pages: 494 | ASIN : B0F1DL23WZ

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How to Organise Inclusive Conferences and Workshops

I found How to Organise Inclusive Conferences and Workshops to be less a conventional handbook than a serious, humane argument about what professional gatherings reveal about power, access, and belonging. Edited by William E. Donald, the book brings together voices from Canada, Australia, Asia, North America, and the UK to show how conferences shape careers while too often excluding the very people they claim to welcome. Its strongest throughline is simple but unsettling: inclusion is never finished, never clean, and never reducible to a checklist. Across chapters on access friction, hybrid participation, childcare, sensory design, transparent communication, and the politics of rest, the book keeps returning to one insistence: if events are meant to be sites of learning and exchange, then who can actually enter, remain, and contribute in those spaces matters profoundly.

What stayed with me most was the book’s moral clarity. It doesn’t flatter organisers with easy absolution. Donald’s opening claim that no conference can ever be fully inclusive could have become an excuse for resignation, but here it becomes the opposite: a reason to keep listening, adjusting, and refusing complacency. I was especially struck by the way the book exposes the quiet cruelties of “normal” professional practice, the reimbursement model that assumes financial slack, the fetish for in-person attendance, the blandly ableist notion that hybrid access is somehow second-rate, the casual expectation that attendees can absorb noise, travel, fatigue, bureaucracy, and social strain without cost. When the book moves into examples like all-inclusive washrooms, onsite childcare, text-for-service communication, asynchronous engagement, and designing with disabled people rather than merely for them, it doesn’t feel decorative. It feels corrective, almost bracingly so.

I also admired the writing, though not in a simple way. Because this is an edited collection, the prose varies in texture and force, and that variation sometimes makes the reading experience uneven. A few sections lean on frameworks and institutional language. But even there, the book is carried by something rarer than stylistic polish: conviction with substance behind it. At its best, the writing is lucid, grounded, and quietly moving, especially when experience presses against abstraction and wins. I liked that the book doesn’t romanticise inclusion. It acknowledges friction, competing needs, the invisible labour of advocacy, and the fact that “good intentions” often leave structures untouched. The idea of conferences as part of a broader sustainable career ecosystem is, in lesser hands, the sort of phrase that might feel airless. Here, it gives the book real shape. It helps explain why exclusion at an event isn’t a minor inconvenience but a career wound, one that accumulates over time in visibility lost, networks thinned, and confidence eroded.

I came away thinking this is an important book precisely because it refuses the comfort of tidy solutions. It’s practical, but it’s also ethically demanding, and that combination gives it weight. I’d recommend it most to academic organisers, professional associations, university leaders, and anyone who plans events. It would also mean a great deal, I think, to readers who’ve long felt the chill of spaces that were supposedly built for them but never quite made room. This is a thoughtful, candid, forceful book, and it deserves to be read by the people with the power to change how gathering works.

Pages: 156 | ISBN : 1035348497

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Inspiring Others Through Your Work

John Nevel Author Interview

Poetic Mind 2 is a raw and emotionally direct collection of poetry that transforms pain, memory, and inner conflict into language that comforts, challenges, and urges others to keep going. Do you see this book more as self-expression, communication, or a form of support for readers?

All of the above. I believe the biggest purpose of writing to be inspiring others through your work. That’s what is big to me. I do have a lot of fans, but to me, writing is a platform that I can use to inspire. I’m not in this for the money. I do this because I love writing. I can express myself and communicate through it. Take someone who is going through rough times and motivate them by picking up a book and reading about the things that come from my imagination. We all need reminders, at times, to keep pushing forward. Through pain and mistakes…that is how we learn. I love touching the lives of others in a positive way through my poetry.

How do you approach writing about difficult experiences like grief, trauma, or war without losing authenticity?

By being 100% genuine at all times. I only write about what I have lived through and I do not judge others. There is always someone out there in a more difficult situation than us, regardless of what we go through. I write raw and uncut because I am not ashamed of who I was, and nobody else should ever be either. We are all human, and we cannot dwell on the past. 

The collection often feels like it’s reaching directly toward the reader. Do you write with a specific reader in mind who might need these messages?

Absolutely. I want everyone to know that regardless of how you grew up, whether you are white, black, or brown, rich or poor, young or old, gay or straight, and especially those who feel they don’t fit in and have been bullied…we are all somebody. I have posted many poems on social media, and my favorite days are when people comment that they have also been in that situation, and my words helped them. It moves me beyond words and is proof that deep down inside, we are all somewhat alike.

What did you want Poetic Mind 2 to do that your earlier work didn’t, and are there themes you feel you’re still trying to fully capture?

I decided that I wasn’t finished yet. Poetic Mind is going to be a trilogy, with Poetic Mind-Lyrical Storm, the final installment coming in 2027. Poetic Mind 2 is a storm within the mind. Some funny, some serious, some explosive. Like the journey we all go through with our emotions each day. It gets more intense with each book. Poetic Mind 2 has set the stage for a lyric storm, where all of my emotions will hit at once, and that will come to fruition in the final Poetic Mind installment.

Author Links: FacebookWebsite

In Poetic Mind 2, John Nevel offers 50 new poems that search the quiet thresholds between thought and feeling, memory and moment. With a voice both intimate and unflinching, these poems examine the overlooked fragments of everyday life—where time slows, questions deepen, and meaning quietly reveals itself.

At once reflective and piercing, Poetic Mind 2 invites readers into the restless landscape of the mind, where ordinary moments open into something enduring, and where language becomes a way of understanding the world, and ourselves.

The Dance of Open Hearts

A.R. Larson’s The Dance of Open Hearts is a sprawling portal fantasy that mixes science fiction, fairy-tale creatures, political conflict, grief, and longing into one very earnest story. It begins with Elly, a farm girl stuck between duty and desire, and then takes a hard turn into the strange world of Meerland after a talking cat pulls her, Timothy, and Alice into something much bigger than any of them expected. What struck me most is how openly the book reaches for wonder. It wants magic, but it also wants machinery, prophecy, environmental collapse, class tension, and messy human feeling all in the same frame. That’s a lot to carry, and the novel carries it with real conviction.

What makes the book work best is Elly. She has the kind of inner life that gives the whole story weight, especially early on, when her frustration with ordinary life is so sharp you can feel it. One creative line comes when she describes the cows on her family farm and says, “They looked like they were swimming through the grass.” That image gets at something the book understands well: Elly doesn’t just want escape, she already has an imagination that keeps turning the world into something larger and stranger. That quality makes her a strong guide through a novel that gets increasingly wild.

The book is also packed with big emotional swings, and for the most part, that’s a strength. Relationships are intense, sometimes volatile, and often shaped by old hurt, guilt, and unmet longing. Timothy starts off almost hilariously insufferable, but the novel gives him room to become more than a rich boy with a space legacy. Alice brings warmth and motion to the group. Rajaa, Benson, Maria, and the rest help the story grow from an adventure into something more bruised and romantic. Larson clearly likes characters who are carrying damage and still trying to move toward tenderness anyway. That gives the book its pulse.

The writing is at its best when it slows down and lets an image or feeling land. The book has a taste for theatricality, and that fits a story so invested in dance, ritual, costume, and spectacle. Sometimes the scale of the story makes the pacing slow a little, especially as the mythology and politics deepen, but even then, there’s an appealing sincerity to it. The novel never feels detached from its own heart.

The Dance of Open Hearts is an ambitious and emotionally direct fantasy novel that cares deeply about hope, connection, and the choice to keep reaching for beauty when life gets ugly. It’s interesting in openheartedness not as softness, but as a risk people take when they’ve already been hurt. That gives the book a distinctive center. It’s romantic, strange, crowded, sometimes messy, and often surprisingly moving. More than anything, it feels written by someone who really believes stories can hold pain and wonder at the same time, and that belief gives the novel its charm.

Pages: 576 | ASIN : B0GHZHQJ12

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Hop’s Tales: The Kind Bunny

Hop’s Tales: The Kind Bunny is a gentle rhyming picture book about a school-loving bunny named Hop who gets shaken by a cruel comment from a pup named Ruff, then slowly finds his footing again through his mother’s reassurance and his own rediscovered sense of self. What begins as a small hurt, the kind that can loom enormous in a child’s mind, opens into a story about confidence, kindness, and the quiet courage of staying true to what you love. I liked that the book doesn’t make the conflict overly dramatic. Hop’s sadness feels recognizably tender, especially when he stops reading, drawing, and even refuses to go back to school, and the resolution arrives through both comfort and action rather than a scolding moral dropped from above.

I liked the book’s emotional logic. It understands that children can be deeply rattled by a single cutting remark, particularly when it touches something they care about. Hop doesn’t just shrug Ruff off. He folds inward. Then the mother’s advice, that rude words say more about the speaker than the person being targeted, lands with real warmth because it’s framed so simply and lovingly. I also appreciated that Hop’s growing confidence isn’t written as swagger. It’s steadier than that. When he finally says, “No, not today! And school is great!”, the moment feels earned because it comes from self-acceptance.

I also thought the book was strongest when its ideas about kindness became a little more demanding than the usual children’s-book script. It would have been easy to leave Ruff embarrassed on the sidelines and call that justice. Instead, Hop notices Ruff’s hurt, recognizes it because he’s felt something like it himself, and offers his paw. That turn gives the story its real grace. The writing is sweetly musical, with a light, accessible rhyme scheme that suits being read aloud. The book’s softness works in its favor, and the watercolor illustrations deepen that softness beautifully. The meadow palette, the drooping ears, the little scenes of reading, drawing, and playing all create a world that feels calm enough to hold big feelings without ever becoming heavy.

I found this a genuinely tender children’s book with a humane little heart. It isn’t trying to be flashy or clever for its own sake. It wants to tell children that kindness and self-possession are sturdier than cruelty, and it does that with sincerity. I’d especially recommend it for preschool and early elementary readers, and for families or classrooms looking for a conversation starter about teasing, confidence, and empathy. It’s the kind of picture book that knows small moments can shape a child’s inner life, and it treats that truth with care.

Pages: 38 | ASIN: B0GFXWGY5J

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