This book was a labor to complete. I'm not sure if I could recommend completing cover to cover but I do recommend it as a reference manual.
User Experience Management is about the pitfalls and situations managers run into in building and leading effective user experience teams. It tackles such subjects as: if you're building from scratch what discipline would be your primary team, what is a good team composition, should UX sit in engineering or marketing or somewhere else?
Lund has some useful insights, on keeping the conversation from ROI, the importance of building a team culture and other management topics with a UX spin. However he steers clear of the process surrounding the actual work, how he organizes and divides activities, how he runs a team in the middle of a project. Instead he focuses on the administrative concepts like- finding a team identity (hint he puts too much emphasis on visions, missions, etc.) and influencing senior management. As opposed to the intricacies of staging interaction design, user research and visual design work on a given project.
What Lund does excel in is telling a well researched narrative about leading a UX team in a large organization. What you won't find is the information as to how to get the most out of your team in performance, what he focuses on is the system and environment in which your team interacts. These topics are sprawling when covered but they do have useful concepts.
Managers who find themselves leading a UX team that is treated more as an outsourced design agency would find this sprawling but informative read valuable in figuring out how to move up the ladder.
A precautionary note: if you can buy this book in ebook form, the physical book does not look very dense but the layout is not conducive to reading at all, block paragraphs, hyphenated line breaks, and tiny font for the sidebars. How odd it is that so many UX books offer a poor UX for the reader.