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You're in Charge, Now What?: The 8 Point Plan [Anglais] [Broché]

Thomas J. Neff , James M. Citrin
3.3 étoiles sur 5  Voir tous les commentaires (3 commentaires client)
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Description de l'ouvrage

27 mars 2007
When you start a new job, you are in a “temporary state of incompetence,” faced with having to do the most when you know the least. Tom Neff and Jim Citrin, two of the world’s experts on leadership and career achievement, know what it takes to succeed in a new position. Through compelling, first-hand stories, from CEOs like Jeffrey Immelt of GE and Bob Eckert of Mattel, You’re in Charge—Now What? offers an eight-point plan to show you how to lay the groundwork for long-term momentum and great performance.

Produits fréquemment achetés ensemble

You're in Charge, Now What?: The 8 Point Plan + The First 90 Days: Proven Strategies For Getting Up to Speed Faster and Smarter + The New Leader's 100-Day Action Plan: How to Take Charge, Build Your Team, and Get Immediate Results
Prix pour les trois: EUR 51,11

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Descriptions du produit

Extrait

Chapter ONE

THE COUNTDOWN

PREPARING FOR THE RACE BEFORE YOU REACH THE STARTING LINE

When does a race begin? At the starting line, when you are taking your last deep breath in anticipation of the starter’s gun? Earlier that day, when you follow the rituals that focus your mind on the race ahead? Or weeks or months in advance, when you construct the training program that will enable you to meet and manage the upcoming trial?

WALK IN WITH A “STRATEGIC PROCESS”

Everyone’s countdown period to a new leadership position is different, depending on whether they come into a new position from inside their organization or were recruited from the outside, whether they are entering a company in crisis or in a stable environment, and whether they are jumping right into a new job from an already demanding one or have the luxury of some free time for additional preparation.

But all countdown periods share a common goal: to learn as much as possible about the new world you’re about to enter so that you can figure out how to best explore and navigate your way through it. To accomplish that, says Dave Peterschmidt, CEO of the Internet security firm Securify and former CEO and COO respectively of Internet pioneers Inktomi and Sybase, “You shouldn’t expect to walk into a new leadership job with an established strategic plan. Rather, you should walk in prepared to lead a strategic process.”

This is a process of multiple dimensions. You’re clearing and focusing your thoughts so that you can diagnose the challenges and opportunities of the new situation. You’re identifying key constituencies and starting to forge alliances and build new relationships. You’re attempting to flush out biases while distilling valuable information from people who have key insights into the company. You’re thinking about all that needs to be done in the context of your own skills and experience. You’re considering the strength of the managers who will soon make up your team, and you’re hypothesizing about where the holes are likely to be. Simultaneously, you’re preparing yourself emotionally for a major life transition and taking steps to get your family and support infrastructure ready to run without you for a period of time.

THE VALUE OF PREPARATION

By now, just about everyone knows that Lance Armstrong is the record- breaking six-consecutive-times winner of the Tour de France, one of the most grueling endurance contests in the world. His success is based not only on his extraordinary athletic ability, supernatural lung capacity, and ferocious competitive drive fired by his heroic conquering of cancer, but also on the intensive time and energy he invests in preparing for the race. In his memoir, It’s Not About the Bike, Armstrong discusses the importance of building the right team, learning the course, and ensuring that he and his support staff have the right training, the proper conditioning, and the best equipment to go for the win. He literally memorizes the entire 2,106-mile course, diligently researching every conceivable permutation of wind, weather, and temperature affecting each curve and straightaway.

No serious athlete walks into a competition without prior preparation. It should be no different when you are approaching a challenging new business assignment. You too are entering a race. If you are not sharp and at the top of your game before the starting gun fires, you will squander a golden opportunity and diminish your chances of achieving your goals.

“The countdown establishes the foundation to maximize your chances for success,” says Dan Schulman, CEO of Virgin Mobile USA. “The days leading up to the point when you actually take the job are some of the most important to being successful. Day one on the job better not be ‘day one’ where you’re working on your action plan; it should be well under way by the time you get there.”

SPEND TIME IN THE RIGHT WAYS

Establishing and maintaining the right priorities is one of the greatest challenges a new leader faces. One of your goals during the countdown period is to try to shape events before they shape you.

Let’s assume you work an average of six days a week and fourteen hours a day. That means that a finite 1,204 hours are at your disposal during the first hundred days. How should you allocate your time and energy to achieve the greatest return on this scarce resource? Which areas should you focus on, and which can you afford to put on the back burner? Effective planning will help you invest your available time wisely.

During our research, we asked leaders which actions they rated as the most important for getting off to the right start. Topping the list were five items:

1.Absorb information.

2.Define the company’s challenges.

3.Establish credibility and win employees’ trust.

4.Assess the senior management team.

5.Prepare yourself emotionally.

While all five of these items are critical—and are addressed in the chapters that follow—the last one is frequently neglected. New leaders are often so anxious to jump into their new role that they jump right in, or they put their personal life on autopilot. Yet a solid emotional foundation is in large measure a precondition for achieving the other objectives, as they can’t be achieved without preparing oneself for the difficult and intense period ahead. Psychologists maintain that you cannot truly open a new chapter in life until you close the previous one. People need a sense of closure before they can possibly be ready to listen, learn, and lead. Simply recognizing this fact and following the intuitive knowledge that you need some type of break or “interstitial” time before moving into a new role will help get you ready.

Based on these five priorities for the countdown period, we have extrapolated ten guidelines to optimize your countdown period. (See Conclusion at the end of this chapter.) They range from sifting through the avalanche of information to hone in on the most critical issues, to developing strategies for building people’s trust, to ensuring that you are in the best possible physical, mental, and emotional shape to meet the challenges ahead.

GET SET TO LEARN

Preparing yourself for a new job requires understanding how the company operates, where it has been, where it is headed, how the management team works, and where your own abilities fit into the mix— all of which require an incredibly steep learning curve. As GE’s Jeff Immelt points out, “You never get a job because of what you know. It’s about how fast you learn and how much you can adapt.”

Bob Nardelli, a former colleague of Immelt’s at GE and now CEO of The Home Depot, adds, “You really have to immerse yourself” to get up to speed. The countdown period offers you the chance to take whatever due diligence process you’ve already started and dig a little deeper.

Jim Kilts, the first outside CEO at Gillette in seventy years, had six weeks between acceptance and his start date in February 2001. The once high-flying maker of Mach3 razors, Duracell batteries, and Oral- B toothbrushes had missed its earnings for fourteen consecutive quarters. Sales and earnings had been flat for five years. Two-thirds of Gillette’s products were losing market share, and Gillette’s value dropped 30 percent between 1997 and 2000. Investor enthusiasm for the formerly hot stock had dwindled.

During his countdown period, Kilts launched an exhaustive investigation with a handpicked team composed of the former heads of strategy and public affairs at Nabisco, where Kilts had most recently been CEO, a financial expert and several financial analysts with whom he had brainstormed with over the years. They scoured the public information—past annual reports, Wall Street research, the business press, and industry reviews. “We tried to evaluate Gillette as we would look at a competitor,” Kilts recalls.

It was important to Kilts to learn the industry’s opinion of Gillette before he was exposed to the company’s own interpretation: “I tried to absorb all the key things that I could about how the outside world looked at the company before I read any of the internal reports.”

Then he went on the road. Before showing up for his day one in the office, he traveled with Gillette salespeople. He visited stores, inspected warehouses, and dropped in at manufacturing plants. He spoke with suppliers, pored over consumer feedback reports, picked the brains of board members, and chatted with retail customers. That is how he discovered Gillette’s dirty little secret.

To hit their numbers each quarter, Gillette’s salespeople habitually resorted to a business practice known as trade loading: offer a cut- rate deal, rearrange product packaging, do anything to make a sale to a retailer to stock inventory. While trade loading isn’t illegal, it is not a sustainable strategy because you are in essence borrowing from the future to pay for the present and devaluing your products in the process. Major retail customers, the chain stores selling Gillette products, knew that the company was desperate to make its numbers and came to learn that all they had to do was wait until the last week of the quarter to order so that they could cut the best possible deal.

Gillette found itself trapped in a downward spiral. In a pamphlet Kilts produced entitled “Escaping the Circle of Doom,” he pointed out that businesses get in trouble by setting overly ambitious objectives, such as increasingly unrealistic sales growth targets; then, in trying to meet those targets, making bad decisions, which lead to further misses, which lead to more bad decisions. Gillette compounded its circle-of-doom problems by allowing its spending and overhead to grow out of control. The com...

Revue de presse

“Take it from someone who’s been there. You’re in Charge—Now What? asks all the right questions and tracks down all the right answers from people who ought to know.”
—Dick Parsons, chairman and CEO, Time Warner Inc.

“The secret road maps of many prominent leaders are revealed for the first time.”
—Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, Yale Chief Executive Leadership Institute

“Leavened by anecdote and enriched by the authors’ deep understanding of American corporate culture, this book isn’t just a navigational chart for the Big Cheese. It is also an entertaining read for the layman.” —Time

Détails sur le produit

  • Broché: 320 pages
  • Editeur : Crown Business; Édition : Reprint (27 mars 2007)
  • Langue : Anglais
  • ISBN-10: 1400048664
  • ISBN-13: 978-1400048663
  • Dimensions du produit: 13,2 x 1,8 x 20,3 cm
  • Moyenne des commentaires client : 3.3 étoiles sur 5  Voir tous les commentaires (3 commentaires client)
  • Classement des meilleures ventes d'Amazon: 241 en Livres anglais et étrangers (Voir les 100 premiers en Livres anglais et étrangers)
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Couverture | Copyright | Table des matières | Extrait | Index
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3.3 étoiles sur 5
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1 internautes sur 1 ont trouvé ce commentaire utile 
5.0 étoiles sur 5 Excellent résumé et agréable à lire 26 mai 2007
Par Ann
Format:Broché
Livre facile et agréable à lire dans un language simple et accessible, illustré avec des examples parlants et intéressants, applicable à une multitude de situations professionnelles et plein de bon sens. A lire par tous ceux qui démarrent une nouvelle fonction - le livre forme une excellente préparation.
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4.0 étoiles sur 5 Not bad 24 novembre 2012
Format:Relié|Achat authentifié par Amazon
Most focussed on big managers situations, with management of change, but the key items can fit most of the managerial situations
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1.0 étoiles sur 5 Un peu simplet 20 février 2009
Format:Broché
L'ouvrage est facile d'accès, parfois un peu simplet.
Il s'adresse particulièrement aux heureux membres de comex.
En tant que manager débutant je n'y ai rien trouver d'utile.
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