Review: Leading Minds–An Anatomy Of Leadership

5 Star, Leadership

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5.0 out of 5 stars Brilliant Look at Need to Link Direct and Indirect Leaders,

April 8, 2000
Howard E. Gardner
I bought this book sometime after concluding that national intelligence leadership needed to inspire and appeal to the citizens of the USA at large, rather than being so narrowly focused on staying out of trouble with Congress while collecting secrets. This book reviews leadership of both domains and nations, with case studies on Margaret Mead (Culture), J. Robert Oppenheimer (Physics), Robert Maynard Hutchins (Education), Alfred P. Sloan, Jr. (Business), George C. Marshall (Military), Pope John XXII (Religion), Eleanor Roosevelt (Ordinariness and Extraordinariness), Martin Luther King (Minority) and Margaret Thatcher (National). The best leaders that emerge are those who are willing to confront authority and take risk, while also creating networks of contacts that number in the hundreds or thousands rather than tens. Most tellingly, aleader in a discipline (e.g. intelligence) only emerges as a long-term leader if he finally realizes that “he is more likely to achieve his personal goals or to satisfy his community if he addresses a wider audience than if he remains completely within a specific domain.” The six constants of leadership are the story, the audience (beginning with a message for the unschooled mind), the organization, the embodiment, a choice between direct (more practical) and indirect (more reflective and often more enduring) leadership, and a paradox-the direct leaders often lack knowledge while the indirect leaders often have greater knowledge, and transferring knowledge from the indirect leader to the direct leader may be one of the central challenges and opportunities of the 21st Century.
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Review: Innovation and Entrepreneurship

5 Star, Best Practices in Management, Change & Innovation

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5.0 out of 5 stars Deflates Knowledge-Based Innovation, Very Practical,

April 8, 2000
Peter F. Drucker
Drucker has a remarkable ability to deflate any self-styled entrepreneur and “innovator.” His book discusses the sources of innovation, concluding rather significantly that knowledge-based innovation is rarely successful-that innovation generally works best when all the factors are known and put into new combinations that work exceedingly well-and that successful innovations start small, focus on the simplest element that can be understood by any half-wit, don't cost a lot, and are never grandiose.
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Review: Unleashing the Killer App–Digital Strategies for Market Dominance

5 Star, Best Practices in Management, Change & Innovation, Information Society, Information Technology

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5.0 out of 5 stars Twelve Steps for the Information Entrepreneur,

April 8, 2000
Larry DownesTwelve principles of killer app design: 1) Outsource to the customer, 2) Cannibalize your markets; 3) Treat each customer as a market segment of one; 4) Create communities of value; 5) Replace rude interfaces with learning interfaces; 6) Ensure continuity for the customer, not yourself; 7) Give away as much information as you can; 8) Structure every transaction as a joint venture; 9) Treat your assets as liabilities; 10) Destroy your value chain; 11) Manage innovation as a portfolio of options; 12) Hire the children.

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Review: Post-Capitalist Society

5 Star, Best Practices in Management, Change & Innovation, Future

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5.0 out of 5 stars Knowledge Policy As Root of Economic Stability & Prosperity,

April 8, 2000
Peter F. Drucker
Drucker and Toffler agree on one important idea: fiscal and monetary policy is no longer the real driver for national prosperity. At best it is a place-holder, a means of keeping the economy stable. There is a strong element of accountability throughout the book, first with respect to the managers of governments and corporations, and finally with the managers of schools that must ultimately be held accountable for producing students who are competent at both learning and sharing knowledge. For Drucker, the organization of the post-capitalist society must commit itself to being a destabilizer able to change constantly. “It must be organized for systematic abandonment of the established, the customary, the familiar, the comfortable-whether products, services, processes, human and social relationships, skills, or organizations themselves. It is the very nature of knowledge that it changes fast and that today's certainties will be tomorrow's absurdities.” So speaketh Drucker of the U.S. Intelligence Community….
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Review: Reengineering the Corporation–A Manifesto for Business Revolution

5 Star, Best Practices in Management, Change & Innovation

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5.0 out of 5 stars Replace It, Don't Fix It,

April 8, 2000
Michael Hammer
Edit of 17 Apr 08 to add comment and links.

This was the original “reengineering” book and rather than summarize the components of his process I will just name the one big “no no” that the current leadership of the U.S. Intelligence Community is passively pursuing…the most frequently committed error: “Try to fix a process instead of changing it.”

New comment: Buckminster Fuller had it right: create new systems that displace the old ones. The emerging literature is full of examples. Below are ten links I consider relevant to displacing flawed industrial era organizations. See the literatures on social entrepreurship and on civilization building as well as green, sustainable design, etcetera.

The Manufacture of Evil: Ethics, Evolution and the Industrial System
Voltaire's Bastards: The Dictatorship of Reason in the West
Human Scale
Small Is Beautiful, 25th Anniversary Edition: Economics As If People Mattered: 25 Years Later . . . With Commentaries
Society's Breakthrough!: Releasing Essential Wisdom and Virtue in All the People
Teaching to Transgress: Education as the Practice of Freedom
A Power Governments Cannot Suppress
Natural Capitalism: Creating the Next Industrial Revolution
Collective Intelligence: Mankind's Emerging World in Cyberspace
Collective Intelligence: Creating a Prosperous World at Peace

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Review: Change Masters

4 Star, Change & Innovation

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4.0 out of 5 stars Brings several important themes together,

April 8, 2000
Rosabeth Moss Kanter
his book was meaningful to me because it documents the relationship between an open organizational environment, individual employee productivity, and innovation.
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Review: World Class–Thriving Locally in the Global Economy

5 Star, Best Practices in Management, Capitalism (Good & Bad)

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5.0 out of 5 stars Community and Commerce in the New Era,

April 8, 2000
Rosabeth Moss Kanter
This book sparked my understanding of “community intelligence” and the need for an integrated network of civic leaders, corporate leaders, academic leaders, and social or non-profit leaders all sharing the same “intelligence” on what the threat to the local community is in terms of losing jobs and remaining attractive as an investment. The author boils it down to each community deciding if it is a thinker, a maker, or a trader community, and then setting out to ensure that everything about the community supports that specific kind of business at a “world-class” level.
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