Dec
29
The Best Leadership Books of 2007
Filed Under Leadership Resources | 4 Comments
The Leading blog has published their selection of the Best Leadership Books of 2007. I’ve looked through various lists of top business and leadership book for 2007 and this was one of the best lists I could find.
"Learning for the successful person, is a lifelong journey. No book or conference is an end in itself. They should encourage you to dig deeper and more often….. These titles do not necessarily represent popularity in terms of numbers of books sold. In a few cases they did not get the recognition they deserved. But all of the titles selected will contain ideas relevant and compelling to leaders at all levels and contexts….. The authors all addressed the question, “How can I create the environment and perform in a way that leads to consistently successful outcomes?” But more than that, they deal with the real success of a leader: the creating of a leadership economy if you will—a place where leaders are developed at all levels and in all areas of life. These books will help you on your journey."
Their choice of the best leadership books of 2007 are:
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True North shows how anyone who follows their internal compass can become an authentic leader. This leadership tour de force is based on research and first-person interviews with 125 of today’s top leaders—with some surprising results. True North presents a concrete and comprehensive program for leadership success and shows how to create your own Personal Leadership Development Plan centered on five key areas:
True North offers an opportunity for anyone to transform their leadership path and become the authentic leader they were born to be. For more on this book, visit www.truenorthleaders.com |
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"The problems we’ll be looking at in this book are not life-threatening diseases (although ignored for too long they can destroy a career). They’re not deep-seated neuroses that require years of therapy or tons of medication to erase. "More often than not, they are simple behavioral tics ‘bad habits that we repeat dozens of times a day in the workplace’ which can be cured by (a) pointing them out, (b) showing the havoc they cause among the people surrounding us, and (c) demonstrating that with a slight behavioral tweak we can achieve a much more appealing effect."
For more on this book, visit www.marshallgoldsmithlibrary.com |
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It’s no longer what you do that sets you apart from others, but how you do what you do. Whats are commodities, easily duplicated or reverse-engineered. Sustainable advantage and enduring success—for both companies and the people who work for them—now lie in the realm of how, the new frontier of conduct. Divided into four comprehensive parts, this insightful guide:
With in-depth insights and practical advice, HOW will help you bring excellence and significance to your business endeavors—and your life—and refocus your efforts in powerful new ways. If you want to stand out, to thrive in our fast changing, hyperconnected, and hypertransparent world, open this book and discover HOW. For more on this book, visit www.HowsMatter.com |
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This book turns conventional leadership wisdom on its head, showing how to focus on the behavior of followers to craft a powerful leadership style. Structuring their message around the indicators of follower behavior that predict a leader’s influence, Aubrey and James Daniels show exactly how to impact the growth of a business, its customers, and the marketplace. Even more important, the authors’ system gives managers the tools to adapt the approach, creating positive behavior that can improve the performance of their people. Managers are transformed into leaders, creating a legacy that perpetually generates greater momentum, commitment, initiative, and reciprocity throughout an organization. |
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“With good judgment, little else matters. Without it, nothing else matters.” Noel Tichy and Warren Bennis have each spent decades studying and teaching leadership and advising top CEOs such as Jack Welch and Howard Schultz. Now, in their first collaboration, they offer a powerful framework for making tough calls when the stakes are high and the right path is far from obvious. They show how to recognize the critical moment before a judgment call, when swift and decisive action is essential, and also how to execute a decision after the call. No organization can afford to neglect this crucial discipline—and no previous book has ever brought it into such clear focus. |
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A leader is: someone people follow. But why do people follow? Books abound on leaders, but much less is known about followers. In The Leaders We Need, Maccoby steps into this yawning gap in the literature. This insightful book shows that followers have their own powerful motivations to follow. Many relate to their leader as to some important person from the past—a parent, a sibling, a close friend. The key for modern-day leaders? Being sensitive to how a group’s collective psychology and social context shape its leadership needs. The author outlines the profound shift from a more bureaucratic society and leadership model to an interactive, collaborative one—and provides crucial advice on how to become a “leader we need.” Offering provocative psychological insight and thoughtful analysis of social and cultural changes, this book examines leadership through an entirely new lens. |
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What fuels long-term business success? Not operational excellence, technology breakthroughs, or new business models, but management innovation—new ways of mobilizing talent, allocating resources, and formulating strategies. Through history, management innovation has enabled companies to cross new performance thresholds and build enduring advantages. In The Future of Management, Gary Hamel argues that organizations need management innovation now more than ever. Why? The management paradigm of the last century—centered on control and efficiency—no longer suffices in a world where adaptability and creativity drive business success. To thrive in the future, companies must reinvent management. For more on this book, visit discussionleader.hbsp.com/hamel |
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Arrogant, self-centered, stubborn, and insecure — words that most people associate with ego. But in this original, eye-opening work, authors David Marcum and Steven Smith argue that the upside of ego is as powerful as the downside and answer questions about ego that have been a mystery to most people. In his landmark book, Good to Great, Jim Collins showed that one of two key traits defined leaders who transformed organizations from good to great: humility. But if humility is so powerful, why don’t more of us have it? Why does ego allow us to reach good results but never great ones, unless balanced by humility? Why do we need ego to personally succeed, while having it often interferes with the success we pursue? The Answers Using five years of exhaustive research, Marcum and Smith provide compelling evidence and matter-of-fact answers on striking the balance between ego and humility to reach the next level of leadership. The authors include case studies to illustrate how ego subtly interferes with success but also how ego sparks the drive to achieve, the nerve to try something new, and the tenacity to conquer adversity. For more on this book, visit www.egonomicslive.com |
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The world of the future will demand capacities that, until now, have been mere options. Have you begun developing those capacities-in yourself and others? In Five Minds for the Future, noted psychologist Howard Gardner defines the cognitive abilities that will command a premium in the years ahead:
Armed with these well-honed capacities, a person will be equipped to deal with what is expected in the future-as well as what cannot be anticipated. Without these "minds", individuals will be at the mercy of forces they can’t understand-overwhelmed by information, unable to succeed in the workplace, and incapable of making judicious decisions about personal and professional manners. For more on this book, visit www.howardgardner.com |
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In Leaders at All Levels, Ram Charan addresses a pressing problem—a shortfall of leaders prepared to face today’s complex business challenges. When so many companies struggle to find successors for their top jobs, and when so many leaders rise to the top only to fail shortly after getting there, you know there’s something wrong with our leadership development practices. In this book, Ram Charan presents a radical and controversial remedy for the crisis in leadership: the Apprenticeship Model. This new approach to succession and to leadership development makes it a hands-on activity for leaders and their bosses. People with the talent for leadership get stiff challenges hand-picked for them. Their bosses play a crucial role in accelerating their development. HR gets a new job, as trustee of the Apprenticeship system. Leaders at all levels develop faster and better, and boards have better choices when it comes time to choose the next CEO. New but not untested, this approach works because it is based on Charan’s keen insights into how great business leaders actually develop. For more on this book, visit www.ram-charan.com |
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"My goal is to help you become a Remarkable Leader by unleashing the leadership potential that is already within you." — Kevin Eikenberry We are all given a unique set of talents when we are born and it is our job to tap into our personal skills and abilities to maximize our potential throughout our lives. Some of our natural talents help us on our journey to become a leader, but other skills need to be nurtured and developed. Remarkable Leadership is a practical handbook written for anyone who wants to hone the skills they need to become an outstanding leader. In this groundbreaking book, Kevin Eikenberry outlines a framework and a mechanism for both learning new things and applying current knowledge in a thoughtful and practical way. Eikenberry provides a guide through the most important leadership competencies, offers a proven method for learning leadership skills, and shows approaches for applying these skills in today’s multitasking and overloaded world of work. The book explores real-world concerns such as focus, limited time, incremental improvement, and how we learn. Remarkable Leadership is an original book that is based on a proven process designed to help people become more proficient in their role as a leader. For more on this book, visit www.remarkable-leadership.com |
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Much of our business thinking is shaped by delusions — errors of logic and flawed judgments that distort our understanding of the real reasons for a company’s performance. In a brilliant and unconventional book, Phil Rosenzweig unmasks the delusions that are commonly found in the corporate world. The most pervasive delusion is the Halo Effect. When a company’s sales and profits are up, people often conclude that it has a brilliant strategy, a visionary leader, capable employees, and a superb corporate culture. When performance falters, they conclude that the strategy was wrong, the leader became arrogant, the people were complacent, and the culture was stagnant. In fact, little may have changed — company performance creates a Halo that shapes the way we perceive strategy, leadership, people, culture, and more. Rosenzweig identifies nine popular business delusions. Among them:
The Halo Effect is a guide for the thinking manager, a way to detect errors in business research and to reach a clearer understanding of what drives business success and failure. For more on this book, visit www.the-halo-effect.com |
I would add the following two books to the above list ….
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Urban legends, conspiracy theories, and bogus public-health scares circulate effortlessly. Meanwhile, people with important ideas–business people, teachers, politicians, journalists, and others–struggle to make their ideas “stick.” Why do some ideas thrive while others die? And how do we improve the chances of worthy ideas? In Made to Stick, accomplished educators and idea collectors Chip and Dan Heath tackle head-on these vexing questions. Inside, the brothers Heath reveal the anatomy of ideas that stick and explain ways to make ideas stickier, such as applying the “human scale principle,” using the “Velcro Theory of Memory,” and creating “curiosity gaps.” Made to Stick is a book that will transform the way you communicate ideas. Provocative, eye-opening, and often surprisingly funny, Made to Stick shows us the vital principles of winning ideas–and tells us how we can apply these rules to making our own messages stick. For more on this book, visit www.madetostick.com |
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The Leadership Challenge has become one of the best-selling leadership books of all time. Now, with the publication of the fourth edition of their landmark book, Jim Kouzes and Barry Posner celebrate twenty-five years of leadership excellence. The Leadership Challenge—the most trusted source on becoming a better leader—has been thoroughly updated and revised for a new generation of leaders living and working in a global environment. Building on the knowledge base of the previous books, the fourth edition is grounded in research and presents extensive interviews with a diverse group of leaders at all levels in a wide variety of organizations from around the world. The authors emphasize that the fundamentals of leadership are not a fad. While the context of leadership has changed dramatically, the content of leadership has endured the test of time. For more on this book, visit www.leadershipchallenge.com |
Technorati Tags: Books,Best,2007,Leadership,Management,Business,Personal Development,Growth,Communication,Execution,Decision-Making
Dec
29
How employee engagement affects your organisation…
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I have previously discussed the importance of employee engagement to leadership (here, here, here and here) and was defined in a post as:
“a heightened emotional connection that an employee feels for his or her organization, that influences him or her to exert greater discretionary effort to his or her work”
Why is employee engagement important? Because is impacts the bottom line, research on employee engagement has found that:
"Fortune 500 companies in the lowest quartile in company profitability had 50% fewer engaged employees compared to those in the top quartile."
More importantly low levels of employee engagement are a sign of poor leadership. If you had to ask me for a measurement to gauge the result of your leadership effort than this is the measure I would recommend you use, the percentage of your workforce that is highly engaged. The Slacker Manager Blog, in a recent post recommended this YouTube video (embedded below), which does a good job of highlighting the importance of leadership in the workplace today.
How engaged are you employees? What does this say about your leadership?
Technorati Tags: Employee Engagement,Engagement,Management,Business,Leadership,Culture,Research,HR
Dec
15
Moving from BHAG to CCAG….
Filed Under Uncategorized | 1 Comment
I am a firm believer that clarity is a necessary ingredient for great leadership. I was first convinced of the importance of clarity to leaders by Marcus Buckingham in his article "The Clear Leader". Recently Tom Peters in his post "From BHAG to CCAG" discusses the importance of clarity….
"The book Built to Last made popular the concept of the "BHAG"—the "Big Hairy Audacious Goal."… You know what the problem is with BHAGs? They’re big and hairy…. I’m all for lofty goals and stretching, but I continually see a problem, in practice, with Built to Last’s BHAG. Instead of being excited and motivated by the BHAG, team members are often confused and disillusioned. BHAGs are often half-baked and poorly communicated.
What I often hear about BHAGs from employees in client companies are things like, "We can’t keep up with the workload now. What will happen if we achieve this growth?" or, "I’m not sure what this means to me. What am I supposed to do to help us reach this goal?" or, "I’m not really sure what the goal is. It sounds visionary, but I don’t get it."
I looked back at the article where Jim Collins and Jerry Porras first mentioned the BHAG ["Building Your Company’s Vision," Harvard Business Review, September-October 1996]. They defined that the BHAG must be ‘clear and compelling.’ Too bad these all-important words have been lost in translation.
I suggest we replace the idea of the Big Hairy Audacious Goal with the CCAG—the Clear and Compelling Audacious Goal.
The CCAG is just as lofty and just as much of a stretch as the BHAG. But it is more likely to be achieved, because more people will understand it and be motivated by it.
How clear and compelling are your organization’s goals to your team members? Are these goals ‘big and hairy’ or ‘clear and compelling’?"
I support Tom’s call to move from BHAGs to CCAGs… Clarity is of crucial importance considering the high volumes of information, media and marketing we’re bombarded with every day.
Technorati Tags: Leadership, Management, Clarity, Vision, Communication, BHAG, CCAG, Strategy
Dec
15
Clarity the key to employee engagement
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Management-Issues published an article, "Clarity the key to employee engagement" reporting on research by HR consultancy Watson Wyatt that found that…
"… a poll of 14,000 employees across Europe has suggested that those companies that provide their employees with a clear ‘line of sight’ when it comes to vision and direction tend to have a much more committed, engaged and productive workforce….. Organisations with superior financial performance measured by total shareholder return, market premium and employee productivity will, more often than not, have a more engaged workforce…. The most important driver for ensuring employee engagement was strategic direction, with other key drivers of engagement being employer communication, the attention given to customer focus within the organisation and performance management….. "Business leaders who articulate the business strategy give employees a clear ‘line of sight’ to how they can best contribute to the performance of their company," said Andrew Cocks, a senior consultant at Watson Wyatt."
This research provide further confirmation of the importance of clarity to successful leadership. How clear and compelling are your goals to your team?
Technorati Tags: Clarity, Leadership, Management, Engagement, Research, Vision, Strategy, HR, Business
Dec
15
Research finds that future-focused leadership brings innovation…
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According to the article "Future-focused CEOs bring innovation" organisations whose leadership speak about future event and external activities are more innovative than those leaders who don’t.
‘By simply counting the number of future-oriented sentences in annual reports we can predict future innovation by the firm,’ said marketing Professor Rajesh Chandy of the University of Minnesota’s Carlson School of Management…. CEOs who focus their attention on future events and external activities lead their firms to early adoption and invention of new technologies and greater and faster development of innovations, said Chandy, whose study appears in the next issue of the Journal of Marketing….. In contrast, firms whose CEOs focus on internal operations are slower to detect, adopt and implement new technologies, Chandy’s study found. Words, not just actions, of the CEO set the tone to inspire, propel and motivate employee innovation, he said…. He and co-authors Manjit Yadav of Texas A&M University and Jaideep Prabhu of London University’s Imperial College reached their conclusion after studying the online banking industry over eight years….. By counting the number of future-oriented words and phrases in letters to shareholders over this period, they were able to predict the level of innovation by the firm up to five years later, the researchers said."
We all know that vision and a future orientation is critical for leadership. This research confirms the vision and a future orientation is key to innovation, which should be on the top of a leaders agenda. How future focused is your leadership? How does this correlate to the levels of innovation in your team and organisation?
Technorati Tags: Leadership, Future, Innovation, Creativity, Strategy, Management
Dec
12
The Three Journeys of Strategic Change
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The Anecdote Blog has an interesting post discussing "The Three Journeys" that organisations take as they seek to transform and implement their strategy.
Leader who are striving to bring about change and who are seeking to implement their strategies would do well to consider structuring their approach as the following three journeys:
- The first journey is designed to help the organisation’s leaders develop a common understanding of what they would like to achieve and defining this end-state in broad terms, while knowing that detailed plans are unlikely to be achieved (the world is too unpredictable for a simple, linear view). We encourage the leadership group to develop a rough mud map of the journey from the current situation to this desired end state while resisting the urge to fill in the details. The staff fill in the details as part of the second journey.
- The second journey involves the rest of the organisation (or a representative subset) planning how they will get to the desired state. This involves understanding the current knowledge environment—who’s connected to whom, where are the important knowledge assets, where are the blockers, what are the enablers—and developing the best possible map based on current information and resources available that can be made to guide the third journey.
- The third journey is when the organisation actually embarks on implementing the ideas developed in the first two imaginary journeys. Most importantly in the third journey, the organisation implements an iterative process they designed in the second journey that embeds new knowledge-related behaviours and provides opportunities for new ideas to be injected in how things are done.
What I like about this approach is that it supports a key principle of collective learning, as discussed by Michael Watkins in his book “The First 90 Days”, that I discussed previously. This is to…
“…focus on setting up a collective learning process….. Rather than mount a frontal assault on the organisation’s defences, you should engage in something akin to guerrilla warfare, slowly chipping at their resistance and raising their awareness of the need for change…. The key, then is to figure out which parts of the change process can be best addressed through planning and which are best dealt with through collective learning.”
The first to journeys are about generating collective learning experiences, first with the organisation’s leadership and then with the broader organisation. The to follow-up on these learning experiences with concrete planning, the creation organisational alignment and focused execution.
Technorati Tags: Change, Leadership, Management, Business,OD, Learning, Transformation, Planning, Transition, Strategy
Dec
10
Internal Vs. External Leadership Succession?
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Leadership development and leadership succession are of the most important concerns of effective leaders. One of the key decision which needs to made is what is an appropriate approach to leadership succession? Should leaders consider primarily internal or external candidates? The article "Internal Versus External Succession May Be Best Long-Term Talent Bet" provides some insight, it discusses research conducted by the global HR consulting firm, Hay Group which found that…
"…it’s more important to promote from within, particularly for senior-level executive roles. According to the numbers, external hires for a senior position, such as CEO, simply don’t last as long, and even when they stay, external hires often run into trouble more frequently than internal ones….. ‘Outside CEOs tend to get the boot quicker,’ said Ron Garonzik, vice president of Hay Group. ‘They’re at a disadvantage, because it’s harder for them to read the people, culture and nuances of working within the organization. Three-quarters of Fortune’s most admired companies hire from internal pools as a matter of preference or policy.’"
I feel that the the selection of a successor requires the careful consideration of an organisation’s competitive challenges, strategy and maturity. Does the organisation need to build on it’s existing strategy? Does the organisation need to re-invent itself? Some additional key questions discussed in the article that need to be answered before deciding our approach to leadership succession include:
- What’s the company’s strategic story going forward?
- What are the operating requirements over a three- to five-year time horizon?
- How is the organization changing?
- How will the top executive roles need to change to fit new business demands?
- Does the organization need the successor to be a visionary?
- Should the person have deep operational credibility and experience?
One of the interesting points highlighted in the article, is the importance of planning for leadership succession whilst considering what will the organisations top business critical positions are over the next 3-5 years and what style of leadership would that operating model require….
"Internal candidates have an edge, because an organization has the opportunity to proactively assess what development and experience candidates are missing, provide these and subsequently mitigate risks well in advance of a proposed transition or succession. This assessment means asking questions to find out exactly what’s needed to groom people for those top 30 or so business critical positions…… ‘You’d be surprised how many organizations, …[are]…. not automatically clear on the positions that will drive their operating model,’ Garonzik said…… Once you’re clear on the positions, then you can ask, ‘What do we need from a leadership standpoint? How can we better prepare people for those different positions?’"
How effectively are you developing your organisation’s or team’s future leaders? How effective is your succession planning?
Technorati Tags: Leadership Development, Leadership, Succession, Talent, Planning, Strategy, Business, Management

















