The power of top management is pervasive and profound. It
affects the quality of economic life, but also our personal and
social lives. Equally strong is its impact on the sustainability of
a free enterprise system. Psychoanalyst, teacher, and management
consultant, Elliott Jaques argues that great as this power is, it
is being squandered, not because of what managers do but because of
what they don't know. Serious misconceptions about managerial
leadership--and equally serious misunderstandings of
people--abound. Jaques argues that the problems inherent in the way
management is practiced are attributable to gravely dysfunctional
systems of managerial leadership, systems that have evolved over
the years and are now, despite their ineffectualities, taken for
granted. He shows how the CEO class will determine the future of
free enterprise democracy, but how massive misconceptions about
human behavior have undermined its capability for leadership. It's
the managerial leadership systems that need changing, he maintains,
not the people who implement them. The result of more than a half
century of thought, observation, analysis and experimentation,
Jaques' book offers a totally new and creative system of managerial
leadership and a unique system of managerial organization. In doing
so, it becomes essential reading for academics, students,
consultants, top management, and executives on the way up
throughout the public and private sectors.
Jaques argues that the problem of achieving effective and
sustainable managerial organizations does not lie in poor decision
making, interpersonal stress, lack of innovation, greedy
self-interest, and other ills and defects, although they certainly
play a part. The art of management, somewhat like alchemy, is not
securely grounded in science. This is its most severe weakness, and
the reason why organizations have always been badly managed. He
cites examples to show that management tends to blame its
shortcomings and inefficiencies on other people, yet there is no
research to prove that the source of managerial failure is really
to be found there. People strive to do their best, he has found,
but they are stymied by poor organization and systems that pitch
people into conflict with each other. Jaques looks at these systems
closely, particularly our current systems of compensation, and
itemizes his findings, showing how the the same problems are to be
found throughout industry, public service, health and services
organizations, and less surprisingly perhaps, the military. He then
lays out the ways in which a new system of managing operations and
organizations could work, shows that it is already working in
certain selected places, and provides convincing evidence that his
assertions and recommendations have much to offer, as we continue
to search for better, more efficient, and more productive,
profitable organizations.
General
Imprint: |
Praeger Publishers Inc
|
Country of origin: |
United States |
Release date: |
March 2002 |
First published: |
March 2002 |
Authors: |
Elliott Jaques
|
Dimensions: |
234 x 157 x 21mm (L x W x T) |
Format: |
Hardcover
|
Pages: |
196 |
ISBN-13: |
978-1-56720-551-0 |
Categories: |
Books >
Business & Economics >
General
|
LSN: |
1-56720-551-8 |
Barcode: |
9781567205510 |
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