20 Insights from Peter Drucker…

by George Ambler on Sunday, September 9, 2007

The Marketing Headerhunter.com discusses the 20 Reasons to Love Peter Drucker taken from The Daily Drucker, a collection of Peter Drucker’s most insightful management observations.

 

  1. The critical question is not “How can I achieve?” but “What can I contribute?”
  2. There is only one valid definition of business purpose: to create a customer.  He alone gives employment.
  3. It is easier to raise the performance of one leader than it is to raise the performance of a whole mass.
  4. Leadership is not rank.  It is responsibility.
  5. An executive should be a realist; and no one is less realistic than the cynic.
  6. You cannot prevent a major catastrophe, but you can build an organization that is battle-ready, where people trust one another.  In military training, the first rule is to instill soldiers with trust in their officers — because without trust, they won’t fight.
  7. Listening (the first competence of leadership) is not a skill, it is a discipline.  All you have to do is keep your mouth shut.
  8. It is easy to look good in a boom.
  9. Luck never built a business.  Prosperity and growth come only to the business that systematically finds and exploits its potential.
  10. The one person to distrust is the one who never makes a mistake.  Either he is a phony, or he stays with the safe, the tried, and the trivial.
  11. There are keys to success in managing bosses.  First, put down on a piece of paper a “boss list,” everyone to whom you are accountable.  Next, go to each person on the list and ask, “What do I do and what do my people do that helps you do your job?”  And, “What do we do that makes your life more difficult?”
  12. Workmanship is essential:  In fact, an organization demoralizes itself if it does not demand of its members the highest workmanship.
  13. A decision is a commitment to action.  No decision has, in fact, been made until carrying it out has become somebody’s responsibility.
  14. It’s much easier to sell the Brooklyn Bridge than to give it away.  Nobody trusts you if you offer something for free.
  15. The ultimate test of an information system is that there are no surprises.
  16. Until a business returns a profit that is greater than its cost of capital, it does not create wealth — it destroys it.
  17. The question has to be asked — and asked seriously — “If we did not do this already, would we go into it now?”  If the answer is no, the reaction must be “What do we do now?”  Very often, the right answer is abandonment.
  18. Freedom is not fun.  It is a responsible choice.
  19. One can’t manage change.  One can only be ahead of it.
  20. Just go out and make yourself useful.

 

These are great insights from Peter Drucker. The ones I especially agree with are:

  • High performing organisations begin with high performing leaders at the top! -It is easier to raise the performance of one leader than it is to raise the performance of a whole mass.”
  • Leadership is a choice and it requires the acceptance of responsibility.Leadership is not rank.  It is responsibility.
  • Leaders set the their standard high and require that the highest standards be met by themselves and their teams first.Workmanship is essential:  In fact, an organization demoralizes itself if it does not demand of its members the highest workmanship.
  • Leaders focus on what’s important.The question has to be asked — and asked seriously — ‘If we did not do this already, would we go into it now?’  If the answer is no, the reaction must be ‘What do we do now?’  Very often, the right answer is abandonment.
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    { 2 comments… read them below or add one }

    1 Thommy Bommen Sunday, September 9, 2007 at 21:15

    “The ultimate test of an information system is that there are no surprises.”

    I wish I could get to this goal a bit faster.. It really takes time to employ changes and make them stick. I end up doing too much myself instead of delegating the responsibility and often find it difficult to inspire the same feeling of responsibility in others that I have for both the process and the product. I try to be in front as a good example, but it takes time.

    Thanks for the reminder of Drucker’s insights. They are still inspirational!

    Reply

    2 Ivan Friday, September 14, 2007 at 15:46

    Thommy:
    It definitely takes time. But if you are indeed as enthusiastic for the process and the product (which I don’t doubt), and others take notice, then perhaps you ARE inspiring some feeling of responsibility and enthusiasm, even if you aren’t completely aware of it. Perhaps the process of delegation and empowerment that you speak of will be the key to make it work. Trust your people.

    Reply

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