Archive for 12 February 2004
I went over to Leeds University Business School last night to see a lecture by Prof Sumantra Ghohsal of London Business School (and Harvard Business School and MIT and so on and so on…) – it was part of the AIM research programme which some of the LUBS faculty are involved in.
If he’s typical of the LBS and Harvard and MIT faculty, I can see why their MBA courses cost so much. The subject of the lecture was ‘Developing a bias for action’, which doesn’t sound like the most wildly exciting of subjects – but in actual fact it was fascinating stuff. Deceptively simple, which made it very easy to find yourself thinking “yup, that’s a bit like me” when given an example of why most managers actually actively avoid making decision and taking action. His style of lecturing was far more energetic than I’d become used to on the MBA, so he managed to keep my attention for the whole 90 minutes.
I made a load of very rough notes during the lecture – there were quite a few diagrams, so I’ll probably end up scanning those. In the meantime, a bullet-point summary:
Eight lessons of purposeful action
* Only 10% of managers take purposeful action
* Business is the central hazard to purposeful action
* Purposeful action requires active management of demands, choices and constraints
* Willpower, not motivation, drives purposeful action
* The foremost task of leaders is to engage their own willpower
* Willpower is not a personality trait
* Organisational energy drives collective action
* To unleash purposeful action in an organisation, leaders need to do some very different things
Living next to the river, getting rid of stale bread has never been a problem.
The resident population of greylag geese that live on the Ouse get fed so often that they’re practically tame – if you don’t mind the risk of a swift peck, they’ll take the bread right out of your hands.
The downside of feeding semi-tame geese is that they’re quite happy to wander up to you and coat your shoes in goose excrement – and nasty, slimy, green, smelly, gunky stuff it is too…
Just amended the template tags, so here goes:
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A footnote[1]
“A shorthand link”:http://www.timzilla.net
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fn1. Here it is
