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Resource List - Hot New Books
New, HOT books on driving performance - Strongly recommended by iDashes
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Building
Public Trust: The Future of Corporate Reporting
by Samuel A. DiPiazza, Robert G. Eccles
A new 2002 release which argues companies should expand the relevant information
provided to investors.They propose specific ways to develop three key elements
(a spirit of transparency, a culture of accountability, and people of integrity)
that work together to "create public trust in markets." This involves
a three-tier model: Tier One is GAAP reporting, Tier Two is industry-specific
performance metrics developed by each industry segment, and Tier Three is
company-specific information. |
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Execution:
The Discipline of Getting Things Done
by Larry Bossidy, Ram Charan, Charles Burck
An excellent new (June 2002) book on how to get things done by a business
leader trained by Jack Welch. In our view, a must-read. Amazon: "Execution
is 'the missing link between aspirations and results,' and as such, making
it happen is the business leader's most important job. While failure in
today's business environment is often attributed to other causes, Bossidy
and Charan argue that the biggest obstacle to success is the absence of
execution. " |
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Jack:
Straight from the Gut
by Jack Welch, John A. Byrne
Read it from the horses mouth - or at least through his writer! Jack Welch
is regarded as one of the best business executives in the world. Learn about
the very disciplined processes he put in place at GE to create an innovative
and performance driven culture. Our favorite: Jack writes personal notes
to executives he meets with after every meeting recapping his perceptions
and actions needed. This is then reviewed at their next meeting. Simple
but extraordinarily effective. |
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The
Five Dysfunctions of a Team: A Leadership Fable
by Patrick M. Lencioni
Culture is the biggest barrier in driving performance effectively in most
organizations. Lencioni has refined his theories on this to create a very
crisp, and we believe insightful, summary of cultural attributes that need
to exist to be performance driven, or on the flip side dysfunctions that
typically block organizations from achieving their potential. The dysfunctions
build on each other: absence of trust, fear of conflict, lack of commitment,
avoidance of accountability, and inattention to results. He uses a story-book
approach, which keeps your interest, in the first part of the book, with
more structured analysis in the last section. |
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