Mostrar mensagens com a etiqueta leadership. Mostrar todas as mensagens
Mostrar mensagens com a etiqueta leadership. Mostrar todas as mensagens

The Top 50 Leadership and Management Experts

Ultimately, people are a product of their influences.
Even truly groundbreaking business thinkers use the ideas, the perspectives, and the advice of others as the basis for their own thoughts and actions.
So, who are the most popular leadership and management experts in the world?
That's a great question, one Jurgen Appelo, a creative networker, speaker, and author, set out to answer. His team factored in rankings, ratings, links, search ratios, and Twitter followers in an attempt to quantify popularity. #

A note from the boss

Imagine it’s your first day in a new job. You sit down at your desk for the first time, and waiting for you there is a note from your new boss.
In the note your boss bids you a warm welcome to the company, and then says this:
1: My most important priority is your happiness and productivity at work. If there’s anything I can do to make you happier and more efficient – tell me right away. This isn’t idealism, it’s good business, because happy people are more productive.
2: I will not burden you with endless rules and regulations. You’re an adult – I trust you to use your best judgment.
3: You have my full permission to screw up, as long as you own up to it, apologize to those affected and learn from it.
4: Please tell me when I screw up so I can apologize and learn from it.
5: Please make sure to hunt down people who do great work and praise them for it. I will do this as much as humanly possible, but I can’t do it alone.
6: If I get it right occasionally, I’d love to hear about it from you, too :o)
7: I will always have time for you. My calendar will never be so full that my next free time to talk to you is three weeks from next Friday.
8: I want to know about you as an employee AND as a human being. I DO care about your private life, about your and your family’s health and well-being.
9: Life is more than work. If you’re regularly working overtime, you’re just making yourself less happy and more stressed. Don’t join the cult of overwork – it’s bad for you and the company.
10: I expect you to take responsibility for your own well-being at work. If you can do something today to make yourself, a co-worker or me a little happier at work – do it!
This post was inspired by Michael Wade’s post over at ExecuPundit called Note from boss to employees. I liked his tips but I found the tone of them a little defensive. Michael’s tips had an undercurrent of “business is hard and being a leader is tough but we can slog it out together.”
I disagree – work is great fun (or at least it could and should be). #

The radical company

Sally Hogshead has a great post called How to be an anarchist that opens with these words:
They’re lighting the town square ablaze, running amok through the embassies, yanking down statues and looting the stores.
Who? Your consumers. And if you’re smart, you’ll grab a torch and join them. Sally’s post is mostly about anarchy in media – about:
…the power shift from established forms of information to
consumer-directed content. From encyclopedias to Wikipedia. From
publishing to blogs. From movie theaters to iPod screens. From retail
locations to pop-up stores. And in case you hadn’t noticed, from
traditional paid media to all those new forms of digital media spawning
like bunnies.
But I believe business anarchy has a much wider scope, and that it’s
time for us to break away from the old mental model that defines a
company as a way to control employees.
The time has come for the radical company.
What does that mean? To paraphrase Paolo Freire:
The radical company, committed to human liberation, does
not become the prisoner of a “circle of certainty” within which reality
is also imprisoned. On the contrary, the more radical the company is,
the more fully it enters into reality so that, knowing it better, the
company can better transform it.

This company is not afraid to confront, to listen, to see the world
unveiled. This company is not afraid to meet the people or enter into
dialogue with them. This company does not consider itself the proprietor
of history of all people, or the liberator of the oppressed; but it
does commit … to fight at their side.
Freire was talking about the radical human – I’ve rewritten his quote to talk about the radical business and it still makes perfect sense. To make a company happy you must be willingto be radical, to commit the company to the employees’ freedom.

Also, you must be willing to do this against business tradition and against the advice and recommendations of people who just don’t get it.

My good friends at WorldBlu make a living teaching organizations to be more democratic and they recently published their 2007 list of most democratic companies.
This list shows that companies that are run democratically, with few
remnants of the old, military-style, hierarchical, command and control
structures perform better and more efficiently today.
They’re also happier workplaces because we like freedom. We like
being able to take responsibility, make decisions and grow into
leadership as fits us. On the other hand, we hate being stuck in
bureaucracy, red tape, meaningless rules and endless power struggles.
A horrible case: Alabama A&M University who has this policy in case of a death in an employee’s family:
Staff members shall, upon request, be granted up to three
(3) days annually of bereavement leave for the death of a parent,
spouse, child, brother or sister, grand parents [sic], grand
parents-in-law, grandchild, son or daughter-in-law, mother-in law,
father-in-law, brother-in-law, sister-in-law, step children,
children-in-law, aunts, uncles, nieces, nephews, and first and second
cousins. Other relationships are excluded unless there is a guardian
relationship. Such leave is non-accumulative, and the total amount of
bereavement leave will not exceed three days within any fiscal year. If
additional days of absences are necessary, employees may request sick or
annual leave, after providing an explanation of extenuating
circumstances.
(Via Gruntled Employees, who has some pointed words about this case :o)

A good case: Nordstrom’s, who only give their employees one rule:
Rule #1: In all situations, use your good judgement
In the excellent book The Second Cycle – Winning the War Against Bureaucracy,
Lars Kolind wrote about how easy it is for companies to get stuck in a
bureaucratic, controlling mindset – especially as they grow older,
bigger or more successful. He also outlines his recipe for breaking out
of this mindset, which includes A Collaborative Organization, i.e. one where leadership is distributed as much as possible.

Luckily, more and more companies are starting to realize that command and control style leadership:
  • Is less effective
  • Creates more stress
  • Creates more bureaucracy and red tape
  • Reduces creativity and innovation
  • Makes employees cynical and disengaged
My favorite example of a radical organization is still Semco in Brazil where (just to mention a few examples):
  • Employees set their own working hours
  • Employees choose their own salaries
  • All meetings are voluntary and open to everyone
  • Employees hire their own bosses
  • Employees choose which leader they want to work under
Radical companies give their employees more freedom and find that
people become happy at work, and consequently are more engaged and
productive. This also makes the company more profitable, which Semco has
certainly found.
So making your company radical is not only fun it’s also good business.
And there has never been a better time for it. We’re richer, more
educated and better informed than ever before in the history of mankind.
We have the knowledge, the means, the tools and the drive to finally
change business for good.

Our reward will be companies that are:
  • More robust – because people who can lead themselves respond more effectively to crises
  • More productive – because you don’t get bogged down in red tape
  • More nimble – because the company will be able to change faster when employees have more responsiblity
  • More fun – because this is closer to how we really work as human beings
And to anyone who thinks “yeah, nice idea sure. Too bad it’s impossible” I refer you to this quote. #

Change work location at least once a day


This is something that inevitably has made me more productive and focused on singletasking. We read many times that we have to work on building a comfortable work space to focus. What I found was this: I had to create many of them.
To regain focus after finishing one task and moving on to the next one, just spending 5 minutes as a break, getting a drink or similar didn’t work. Nor did closing the laptop for 5 minutes or standing up
from my desk. I had to physically move from one place to another as part of my daily routine.
Most times I work out of my apartment for the first half of the day.
Then I have a list of coffee shops I can go to, or the lounge area in our apartment building. I know moving around isn’t possible for everyone. There are some very creative workarounds some companies have come up with though, that might help you here. Valve, dubbed “the bossless company”, gives every employee a desk mounted on wheels so they can change location during the day. #