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The economy is global, businesses are increasingly global,
management has gone global and there is an increasing demand (and
reward) for truly skilled global leaders, managers and executives.
Black and Morrison address this change by asking why and when
globalization truly began and explain how businesses can adapt
themselves to remain competitive in increasingly global markets.
Written by authoritative experts and based on extensive, up-to-date
research and interviews with leading global leaders, The Global
Leadership Challenge provides practical tools to develop global
leadership skills, laying down the capabilities that must be
developed and the plans that must be made to meet the globalization
challenge. This will be truly vital reading for middle managers who
have ambition for more senior positions, senior managers that are
already bumping up against the challenges of global leadership, and
top executives who are in the midst of the challenges of global
leadership.
This book first examines the phenomenon of global business and then
analyzes what is different about global business and, therefore,
what is uniquely required to be a successful global leader. It lays
out how companies can develop successful global leaders, and what
individuals can do to develop themselves into successful global
leaders. Readers will walk away with a clear understanding of how
and why globalization of business took place. They will understand
what is unique about global leadership compared to domestic
leadership. With that insight and through examples, they will come
to see what is uniquely required to be a successful global leader.
Finally, readers will walk away with clear insights on how they can
develop global leaders and what they can do to strengthen their own
global leadership capabilities. The book is based on more than 300
interviews with top corporate executives from around the world and
across a wide variety of industries, hundreds of surveys, and over
60 years of combined experience. Top executives will find this book
helpful in determining how they can ensure that their firm has the
right quality and quantity of global leaders it needs to capture
the global growth opportunities before them.
This book first examines the phenomenon of global business and then
analyzes what is different about global business and, therefore,
what is uniquely required to be a successful global leader. It lays
out how companies can develop successful global leaders, and what
individuals can do to develop themselves into successful global
leaders. Readers will walk away with a clear understanding of how
and why globalization of business took place. They will understand
what is unique about global leadership compared to domestic
leadership. With that insight and through examples, they will come
to see what is uniquely required to be a successful global leader.
Finally, readers will walk away with clear insights on how they can
develop global leaders and what they can do to strengthen their own
global leadership capabilities. The book is based on more than 300
interviews with top corporate executives from around the world and
across a wide variety of industries, hundreds of surveys, and over
60 years of combined experience. Top executives will find this book
helpful in determining how they can ensure that their firm has the
right quality and quantity of global leaders it needs to capture
the global growth opportunities before them.
The economy is global, businesses are increasingly global,
management has gone global and there is an increasing demand (and
reward) for truly skilled global leaders, managers and executives.
Black and Morrison address this change by asking why and when
globalization truly began and explain how businesses can adapt
themselves to remain competitive in increasingly global markets.
Written by authoritative experts and based on extensive, up-to-date
research and interviews with leading global leaders, The Global
Leadership Challenge provides practical tools to develop global
leadership skills, laying down the capabilities that must be
developed and the plans that must be made to meet the globalization
challenge. This will be truly vital reading for middle managers who
have ambition for more senior positions, senior managers that are
already bumping up against the challenges of global leadership, and
top executives who are in the midst of the challenges of global
leadership.
Although firms have been sending employees on international
assignments for decades, systematic understanding is sorely
lacking. This volume looks at such critical aspects of the
assignment process as the selection process, the training required,
factors that affect adjustment, performance and commitment, and how
to retain and capitalize on the international experience once
employees return home.
This book is written for human resource managers and executives
whose focus includes the global economy and the strategic role of
people in achieving international competitiveness. It can be used
as a textbook for courses in International Human Resource
Management.
Although firms have been sending employees on international
assignments for decades, systematic understanding is sorely
lacking. This volume looks at such critical aspects of the
assignment process as the selection process, the training required,
factors that affect adjustment, performance and commitment, and how
to retain and capitalize on the international experience once
employees return home.
This book is written for human resource managers and executives
whose focus includes the global economy and the strategic role of
people in achieving international competitiveness. It can be used
as a textbook for courses in International Human Resource
Management.
Global Explorers guides the global manager from the periphery to the centre stage of international business leadership. Many companies indicate there is a severe shortage of global leaders. The demand for competent global leaders far outstrips the supply. Using extensive research, real-life examples, and 130 in-depth interviews with senior executives representing 50 global companies, including IBM, Disney, Exxon and Sony, Global Explorers suggests the reasons for the global leadership shortage, and identifies the necessary skills to compete in the international marketplace. For managers who want to safeguard their corporate future in these changing times, Global Explorers will help them develop a personal program for developing and balancing the skills they need to become successful global leaders.
Executives say that people are their most important asset, but most
don't walk the talk. They don't have systematic strategies for how
to get the people they want to want them. They don't have measures
and metrics for how they are doing to be the employer of choice.
They don't hold leaders accountable regarding those ambitions. In
many cases, this is because top leaders don't have concrete tools
to help them do what they know they should. This book fills that
gap in three major sections. The first section supports with clear
and compelling data what executives intuitively but somewhat
superficially believe-that people are their most important asset.
The second section provides a systematic process and set of tools
to help leaders get the people they want to want them; it shows
executives how to win the competition for human capital. The third
section then helps leaders position people appropriately so that
they can create a sustainable competitive advantage; its shows
executives how to compete with human capital. When it comes to
human capital, most books get it wrong. Strategy books place human
capital to the side as an enabler of competitive advantage. HR
books treat human capital as a support activity to business
strategy. This book places human capital where it should be-not to
the side and not as an enabler or a support activity, but at the
center and as the source of competitive advantage.
Morrison and Black examine how companies can globalize both their
operations and their people. FAILURE TO GLOBALLY LAUNCH explains
how success at certain stages of globalization can actually get in
the way of success at later stages unless leaders take proactive
steps to avoid this paradox. FAILURE TO GLOBALLY LAUNCH follows the
globalization of a real but disguised company and one of its key
leaders. In the process it highlights the common pitfalls along the
path of globalization. In particular, it examines how the drivers
of success at one stage of globalization actually get in the way of
success at later stages. Morrison and Black take a unique approach
to a complex and, what for some readers might be, a confusing
topic. Most business books are written lecture style and are filled
with charts, frameworks and models. Even if well researched, they
are often difficult to read and consume a large amount of time to
absorb. FAILURE TO GLOBALLY LAUNCH is different. It tells a real
yet fictionalized story of an American company that has great
success globalizing and yet stumbles badly along the way. It is
based on true characters and real issues. It reads like a novel,
but is filled with lessons. "Every business leader interested in
globalizing their company should read this book. It is a thought
provoking, timely and compelling guide that should be closely
studied." - Jan Jenisch, CEO, Sika AG "This is one of the best
books I've read in a long time. It is the right topic at the right
time." - Sam Tan, Chief Operating Officer, TSAM Limited "Morrison
and Black untangle the web that companies get caught in when trying
to go global." - Christine Tricoli, Senior VP, CIT Allen Morrison
is the holder of the Kiristian Gerhard Jebsen Chair for Responsible
Leadership and Director of the IMD Global CEO Center. Stewart Black
is Professor of Global Leadership and Strategy at IMD.
Executives say that people are their most important asset, but most
don't walk the talk. They don't have systematic strategies for how
to get the people they want to want them. They don't have measures
and metrics for how they are doing to be the employer of choice.
They don't hold leaders accountable regarding those ambitions. In
many cases, this is because top leaders don't have concrete tools
to help them do what they know they should. This book fills that
gap in three major sections. The first section supports with clear
and compelling data what executives intuitively but somewhat
superficially believe-that people are their most important asset.
The second section provides a systematic process and set of tools
to help leaders get the people they want to want them; it shows
executives how to win the competition for human capital. The third
section then helps leaders position people appropriately so that
they can create a sustainable competitive advantage; its shows
executives how to compete with human capital. When it comes to
human capital, most books get it wrong. Strategy books place human
capital to the side as an enabler of competitive advantage. HR
books treat human capital as a support activity to business
strategy. This book places human capital where it should be-not to
the side and not as an enabler or a support activity, but at the
center and as the source of competitive advantage.
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