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TAMIL NATION LIBRARY:
Leadership
| "..Leader presumes follower.
Follower presumes choice...A vital question is how to insure that those who lead
are constructive, ethical, open, and honest. The answer is to follow those
who behave in that manner. It comes down to both individual and collective
sense of where and how people choose to be led. In a very real sense,
followers lead by choosing where to be led. Where an organizational
community will be led is inseparable from the shared values and beliefs of
its members..."
Dee
Hock founder & CEO, VISA - Birth of the
Chaordic Age |
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Book Recommendations by Satyendra Chelvendra are flagged...
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Peter
Block -
Stewardship: Choosing Service over Self-interest
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Peter Block -
The Answer to How Is Yes: Acting On What Matters
"Modern
culture’s worship of "how-to" pragmatism has turned us into
instruments of efficiency and commerce—but we’re doing more and more
about things that mean less and less. We constantly ask how? but
rarely why? We use how as a defense—instead of acting on what we
know to be of importance, we wait until we’ve attended one more
workshop, read one more book, gotten one more degree. Asking how
keeps us safe—instead of being led by our hearts into uncharted
territory, we keep our heads down and stick to the map. But we are
gaining the world and losing our souls..."
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Larry Bossidy, et al
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Execution: The Discipline of Getting Things Done |
Ram Charan, Noel M. Tichy -
Every Business is a Growth Business: How Your Company Can Prosper Year After
Year |
Clayton M. Christensen -
The Innovator's Dilemma |
Jim Collins, Jerry I. Porras -
Built to Last : Successful Habits of Visionary Companies
".......Instead of being oppressed by the
'Tyranny of the OR', highly visionary companies (and
organisations) liberate themselves with the 'Genius of the
AND' - the ability to embrace both extremes of a number of
dimensions at the same time. Instead of choosing between A OR B,
they figure out a way to have both A AND B..."
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Jim Collins -
Good to Great: Why Some Companies Make the Leap... and Others Don't
"...A key psychology for leading from good to
great is the Stockdale Paradox. Retain absolute faith that you can
and will prevail in the end regardless of the difficulties, and at the same time confront the most brutal facts of your
current reality, whatever they might be... Create a culture wherein
people have a tremendous opportunity to be heard and, ultimately,
for the truth to be heard. Creating a climate where truth is heard
involves four basic practices: 1 Lead with questions, not answers. 2
Engage in dialogue, not coercion. 3. Conduct autopsies without
blame. and 4. Build red flag mechanisms that turn information into
information that cannot be ignored. Leadership does not begin just
with vision. It begins with getting people to confront the brutal
facts and to act on the implications..."
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| *Stephen
R. Covey - Principle-Centered
Leadership
"...Principle-centered people
are constantly educated by their experiences. They read, they seek training, they take
classes, they listen to others, they learn through both their ears and their eyes. They
are curious, always asking questions. They continually expand their competence, their
ability to do things...Synergy is the state in which the whole is more than the sum of the
parts. Principle-centred people are synergistic. They are change catalysts. They improve
almost any situation they get into..." [**
alternate link
to amazon.co.uk] |
*Gary Hamel - Leading the Revolution, Harvard Business School Press, August 2000
"...Watch a flock of geese turning and swooping in flight, undeterred by
wind, obstacles, and distance. There is no grand vizier goose, no chairman of the gaggle.
They can't call ahead for a weather report. They can't predict what obstacles they will
meet. They don't know which of their number will expire in flight. Yet their course is
true. And they are a flock. Complexity theorists describe this, and the many other
examples of spontaneous harmony in the world around us, as order without careful
crafting or orderforfree. The intricate play of the many markets that make up the global
economy, the vibrant diversity of the Internet, the behavior of a colony of ants, that
winged arrow of geese - these are just a few instances in which order seems to have
emerged in the absence of any central authority. All of them have something to teach us
about how revolutionary strategies should emerge in a chaotic and ever-changing world.
Complexity theorists have demonstrated that by creating the right set of preconditions,
one can provoke the emergence of highly ordered things..." [**
alternate link
to amazon.co.uk]
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*Dee
Hock, founder & CEO, VISA - Birth of the
Chaordic Age
[see also Dee
Hock - The Art of Chaordic Leadership and Chaordic Commons ]
Birth of the Chaordic Age is a compelling manifesto for the future, embedded
within the intriguing story of a personal odyssey. An engaging narrator, Dee Hock is the
man who first conceived of a global system for the electronic exchange of value, becoming
the founder and CEO of VISA International. He looks critically at today's environment of
command-and-control institutions and sees organizations that are falling apart, failing to
achieve their own purposes let alone addressing the diversity and complexity of society as
a whole. The solution, Hock claims, lies in transforming our notion of organization; in
embracing the belief that the chaos of competition and the order of cooperation can and do
coexist, succeed, even thrive; and in welcoming in the chaordic age...
"...When it became necessary to develop a new perception of
things, a new internal model of reality, the problem is never to get new ideas in, the
problem is to get the old ideas out. Every mind is filled with old furniture. It is
familiar. It is comfortable. We hate to throw it out. The old maxim so often applies to
the physical world, "Nature abhors a Vacuum" is much more applicable to the
mental world. Clear any room in your mind of old perspectives, and new perspectives will
rush in. Yet, there is nothing we fear more... Money motivates neither the best people nor
the best in people. It can move the body and influence the mind, but it cannot touch the
heart or move the spirit..."
"Leader presumes follower. Follower presumes
choice. One who is coerced to the purposes, objectives, or preferences of
another is not a follower in any true sense of the word, but an object of
manipulation. Nor is the relationship materially altered if both parties
voluntarily accept the dominance of one by the other. A true leader cannot
be bound to lead. A true follower cannot be bound to follow. The moment
they are bound they are no longer leader or follower. If the behavior of
either is compelled, whether by force, economic necessity, or contractual
arrangement, the relationship is altered to one of superior/subordinate,
manager/employee, master/servant, or owner/slave. All such relationships
are materially different from leader/follower.
Induced behavior is the essence of leader/follower.
Compelled behavior is the essence of all the other relational concepts.
Where behavior is compelled, there you will find tyranny, however benign.
Where behavior is induced, there you will find leadership, however
powerful. Leadership does not necessarily imply constructive, ethical,
open conduct. It is entirely possible to induce destructive, malign,
devious behavior, and to do so by corrupt means. Therefore, a clear,
constructive purpose and compelling ethical principles evoked from and
shared by all participants should be the essence of every relationship in
every institution.
A vital question is how to insure that those who lead
are constructive, ethical, open, and honest. The answer is to follow those
who behave in that manner. It comes down to both individual and collective
sense of where and how people choose to be led. In a very real sense,
followers lead by choosing where to be led. Where an organizational
community will be led is inseparable from the shared values and beliefs of
its members.
True leaders are those who epitomize the general sense
of the community -- who symbolize, legitimize and strengthen behavior in
accordance with the sense of the community -- who enable its shared
purpose, values and beliefs to emerge and be transmitted. A true leader's
behavior is induced by the behavior of every individual choosing where to
be led.
The important thing to remember is that true
leadership and induced behavior have an inherent tendency to the good,
while tyranny (dominator management) and compelled behavior have an
inherent tendency to evil."
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| *Dee Hock,
Peter Renaday (Narrator) - Birth of the
Chaordic Age [Abridged] Audio Cassette |
| Roger Fisher, et al -
Getting to Yes: Negotiating Agreement Without Giving In
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| Gary Hamel, C.K. Prahalad -
Competing for the Future |
| Daniel Goleman -
Emotional Intelligence : Why It Can Matter More Than IQ |
| Robert K. Greenleaf, et al -
Servant Leadership: A Journey into the Nature of Legitimate Power and Greatness
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| Charles Handy -
The Elephant and the Flea |
| Jon R Katzenbach & Douglas K Smith -
Wisdom of Teams |
*Jon R. Katzenbach et al Real Change Leaders,
Paperback / Published 1997
Synopsis:A team at McKinsey & Company set out to discover why some
companies were able to change and go on to higher performance levels while most others got
bogged down. Their research came to the following conclusion: the make-or-break factor is
not
top management, but a new breed in the middle - real change leaders. "...Once
committed, Real Change Leaders have to work at building the ongoing conviction and
credibility they will need as change leaders. Credibility comes from over preparedness on
facts, knowledge about the issues, and personal relationships developed with those whom
they must influence. The harder that Real Change Leaders work at these three things, the
stronger their personal convictions become - and the greater their credibility becomes
with those they must convince and lead. Change leaders know they cannot simply push others
aside and rush forward to proclaim truth, no matter what their levels of personal
conviction and courage may be. Instead, they understand that credibility comes from
walking the talk, understanding the signals their actions give, and trying to learn from
their people as well as helping them understand..." [**alternate link
to Amazon.co.uk bookshop]
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James M. Kouzes,
Barry Z. Posner * The Leadership
Challenge : How to Keep Getting Extraordinary Things Done in Organizations 1996
"Jim Kouzes and I wrote 'The Leadership Challenge' because we
realized that leadership is everyone's business, it's not about being in a leadership
position but about having the courage and spirit to move from whatever place you're in to
make a significant difference.
This book isn't about leaders per se. It's about leadership and
how ordinary people exercise it -- and in the process become
leaders who get extra-ordinary things accomplished. The leaders we've worked with and
learned from have asked and been asked many questions, such as: What are my strengths and
weaknesses as a leader? Where do I need to improve my leadership ability? What's required
to recognize opportunities and put risk in perspective? How can I inspire and motivate
others toward a common purpose? What skills are needed to build a cohesive and spirited
team? What's the source of the self-confidence required to lead others? How can I put more
joy and celebration into our efforts?
This book is designed to help anyone to answer these questions. The principles
and practices described are based solidly on research, and the examples, illustrations,
and applications have been field-tested by real people. ... There are five fundamental
practices of leaders -- Challenging the Process, Inspiring a Shared Vision, Enabling
Others to Act, Modeling the Way, and Encouraging the Heart -- and the book introduces you
to each practice, chapter by chapter, with a motivating example of a person thoroughly
engaged in this leadership behavior.... The Leadership Challenge needn't be read in its
entirety, nor in any particular order, to be useful. Start with any chapter, or topic, or
application that interests you. Remember that
ultimately
leadership development is a process of self-development..."
|
| Stephen C. Lundin -
Fish! |
| Jonas Ridderstrale, et al -
Funky Business: Talent Makes Capital Dance |
| Mark C Scott -
Reinspiring the Corporation : The Seven Seminal Paths to Corporate Greatness
"If the human soul buys into an idea with a passion, with total commitment,
the bounds of what we are collectively capable are quite simply astounding. What
would it be like for a company if fifty thousand souls were as single-mindedly
driven.." |
Peter M Senge -
The Fifth Discipline: The Art and Practice of the Learning Organization
"From a very early age, we are taught to break apart problems, to fragment the
world. This apparently makes complex tasks and subjects more manageable, but we pay a
hidden, enormous price. We can no longer see the consequences of our actions; we lose our
intrinsic sense of connection to a larger whole. When we then try to 'see the bigger
picture', we try to reassemble the fragments in our minds, to list and organise all the
pieces. But as physicist David Bohm says, the task is futile - similar to trying to
reassemble the fragments of a broken mirror to see a true reflection. Thus, after a while
we give up trying to see the whole altogether.
....When we give up this illusion (that the world is created of separate, unrelated
forces) - we can then build 'learning organisations,' organisations where people
continually expand their capacity to create the results they truly desire, where new and
expansive patterns of thinking are nurtured, where collective aspiration is set free, and
where people are continually learning how to learn together."
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| Sam Walton -
Sam Walton: Made in America : My Story |
| Margaret J. Wheatley -
Leadership and the New Science: Discovering Order in a Chaotic World
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| Rosamund Stone Zander & Benjamin Zander
-
The Art of Possibility: Transforming Professional and Personal Life
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*James M. Kouzes,
Barry Z. Posner Achieving
Credibility : The Key to Effective Leadership Audio Cassette, 1995
"...Kouzes explains the six disciplines of
leadership: discovering oneself; appreciating others and their
diversity; affirming shared values; developing capacity; serving a
purpose; and sustaining hope. He also presents his definition of
leadership, which is fundamentally rooted in trustworthiness..."
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*
James M. Kouzes,
Barry Z. Posner
Credibility :
How Leaders Gain and Lose It, Why People Demand It 1995
- Based on surveys of more than 15,000 people, 400 case studies, and 40 in-depth
interviews, Credibility shows why leadership is above all a relationship - with
credibility as the cornerstone -
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*
James M. Kouzes,
Barry Z. Posner
Encouraging the
Heart : A Leader's Guide to Rewarding and Recognizing Others , 1999
"..All too often, simple acts of human kindness are often
overlooked and under utilized by people in leadership roles. Advising mutual
respect and recognition of accomplishments, Encouraging the Heart shows us
how true leaders encourage and motivate those they work with by helping them
find their voice and making them feel like heroes..."
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*
James M. Kouzes,
Barry Z. Posner
The Five
Practices of Exemplary Leadership : When Leaders Are at Their Best, 2000
"How do you get others to follow you to places they've never
been before? How do you get others, by free will and through free choice, to
move forward together on a common purpose? Just how do you get others to
want to do things that matter and make a difference? The Five Practices of
Exemplary Leadership are: Challenging the Process, Inspiring a Shared
Vision, Enabling Others to Act , Modeling the Way, and Encouraging the Heart
"
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*Barbara Minto The Minto
Pyramid Principle : Logic in Writing, Thinking, & Problem Solving
"The myth that businessmen don't read is nonsense. They read a
lot. But what they read is illiterate. For the average business or professional writer,
producing more literate memos or reports does not mean writing shorter sentences or better
words. Rather, it means formally separating the thinking process from the writing process,
so that you can complete your thinking before you begin to write."[**alternate link
to Amazon.co.uk bookshop]
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*Max
De Pree - Leading Without
Power : Finding Hope in Serving Community
"...Trust grows when people see leaders
translate their personal integrity into organisational fidelity. At the heart of
fidelity lies truth telling and promise keeping. In organisations truth is not, as some
like to think, power. Truth sets us free....Without truth, trust becomes overshadowed and
stunted by the undergrowth of partial lies and outright falsehoods..."
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*Max De Pree - Leadership Jazz,
/Paperback/ Published 1993
"...A vision of what an organisation can become has room for all
contributions.... leaders are people large enough to contain multitudes. 'Leader' is not
always a position. Whatever one's position, the amount of ambiguity involved is directly
proportional to the amount of leadership required. Healthy organisations exhibit a degree
of chaos. A leader will make some sense of it. The more comfortable that you can make
yourself with ambiguity, the better a leader you will be. Organisations always delegate
the job of constructively dealing with ambiguity to their leaders..."
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| *Max De Pree, et al - Leadership Is an
Art / Paperback / Published 1990 |
*Jean
Jacques Rousseau - Emile - Everyman
Paperback Classics
"...Domination itself is servile when
beholden to opinion; for you depend upon the prejudices of those you govern, by means of
their prejudices..."
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Peter Senge -
The Fifth
Discipline : The Art and Practice of the Learning Organization
"...The irony is that to do things faster, you
often have to go slower. You have to be more reflective. You have to develop real trust.
You have to develop the abilities of people to think together. Why? Because it requires
you to go through basic redesigns. You need to build a shared understanding of how the
present system works.... People must trust one another through difficult systemic
changes..."
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*Gene Zelazny
- Say It with
Presentations: How to Design and Deliver Successful Business Presentations
"If you have only 2 minutes to spare, turn your attention to the 'Audience
Bill of Rights' that follows. You may also want to review it whenever you have to prepare
a presentation. When you have more time, review the rest of the book to learn how to
safeguard your audience's rights. Study the 3 chapters for how to 'Define the Situation,'
'Design the Presentation' and 'Deliver the Presentation.' [**alternate link
to Amazon.co.uk bookshop]
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