Un libro maravilloso de ciencias empresariales, y en particular sobre liderazgo corporativo y emprendedurismo, publicado en 1999, los autores describen sus hallazgos de la cultura corporativa de su época, desafíos, y estrategias para promover el conocimiento, ideas en acción dentro de las empresas y la mejor de sus organizaciones.
Me gustó descubrir varios ejemplos de la banca de inversión, manufactura, y de empresas de tecnología, recomendable para una lectura de entretenimiento, profesional e inspiradora sobre liderazgo empresarial.
Índice
Preface
1. Knowing “What” to Do is Not Enough
2. When Talk Substitutes for Action
3. When Memory Is a Substitute for Thinking.
4. When Fear Prevents Acting on Knowledge
5. When Measurement Obstructs Good Judgment
6. When Internal Competition Turns Friends into Enemies
7. Firms That Surmount the Knowing-Doing Gap
8. Turning Knowledge into Action
Appendix: The Knowing-Doing Survey
Notes
About the Authors
Algunas frases o trechos del libros que quisiera recordar:
Total Quality Management (TQM)
Toyota Production System (TPS)
“Knowledge management tends to focus on specific practices and ignore the importance of philosophy”
“Several of America’s most forward-thinking companies─including Motorola and General Electric─study it as a source of ideas about leadership and learning. Acquiring knowledge through practice, performance, and even failure is indispensable for organizations of all sizes and types.”
“One learns to be a leader by serving as a leader.”
“Unfortunately for getting anything done in organization, one of the best ways of sounding smart is to be critical of others’ ideas. The devastating intellectual put-down is sometimes part and parcel of the academic game.”
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English
“Simple language and avoiding complexity also have another advantage. simple philosophies, practices, and ideas are, ironically, probably unlikely to be imitated by outsiders and competitors. since most organizations are trapped in their love of complexity, few will believe that a firm’s success is based on such simple premises.”
Español
“El lenguaje simple y evitar la complejidad también tiene otra ventaja. Irónicamente, es poco probable que las filosofías, prácticas e ideas simples sean imitadas por los forasteros y competidores. Dado que la mayoría de las organizaciones están atrapadas en su amor por la complejidad, pocos creerán que el éxito de una empresa se basa en premisas tan simples."
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“It is easier to encourage questioning behaviors, to have people take on new assignments they have never done before, and to create dramatic breaks with the past, including starting new units, in an atmosphere of trust and safety. Conversely, fear is an enemy of the ability to question the past or break free from precedent.”
“Fear helps create knowing-doing gaps because acting on one’s knowledge requires that a person believe he or she will not be punished for doing so─that taking risks based on new information and insight will be rewarded, not punished. When people fear for their jobs, their futures, or even for their self-esteem, it is unlikely that they will feel secure enough to do anything but what they have done in the past. Fear will cause them to repeat past mistakes and recreate past problems, even when they know better ways of doing the work.”
“In today’s environment of corporate downsizing, many workers may consider themselves privileged just to have a job. Only a minority (38%( are very confident of their ability to quickly find new employment.”
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“The traditional leadership model is based on a competitive dynamic that emphasizes winning a contest in which one person’s success requires the failure of others. In school, success is defined in terms of clases rank ─ a zero-sum, competitive outcome. Once on the job, the race to triumph over peers is more intense and the odds of winning are even smaller than in school. In consulting firms and investment banks, only a small fraction of each cohort rises to become partners. Even once partnership is achieved, partners’ compensation frequently depends on doing better than other partners. In companies, promotion up the ladder requires winning a tournament competing against peers. And so it goes. The people in our society who have the greatest influence over how firms are organized, either because they manage them or they give advice to those who manage them, are also people who are the most heavily trained and rewarded to believe that internal competition is the best way to organize human activity. It is little wonder that internal competitive dynamics in firms are so pervasive.”
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Ways of Overcoming Destructive Internal Competition
Hire, reward, and retain people in part based on their ability and willingness to work cooperatively with others for the company’s welfare.
Fire, demote, and punish people who act only in their individual short-term self-interest.
Avoid compensation and performance measurement systems that create internal competition.
Have measure that assess cooperation.
Build a culture that defines individual success partly by the success of the person’s peers.
Promote people to top management positions who have a history of building groups where members cooperate, share information, and provide each other mutual assistance.
Use power and authority to get people and units to share information, to learn from each other, and to work collaboratively to enhance overall performance. “
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“Why before How: Philosophy Is Important”
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There Is No Doing without Mistakes. What Is the Company’s Response?
“In building a culture of action, one of the most critical elements is what happens when things go wrong. Actions, even those that are well planned, inevitably entail the risk of being wrong.”
“A promising junior executive of IBM was involved in a risky venture for the company and managed to lose over $10 million in the gamble. It was a disaster. When Watson called the nervouses executive into his office, the young man blurted out, “I guess you want my resignation?” Watson said, “You can’t be serious. We just spent $10 million dollars educating you!”
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“Putting people first and driving out fear are not just ideas to be implemented when times are good. You can downsize, you can even close a facility, but do it in a way that maintains employee dignity and well-being and, as a consequence, productivity and performance.”