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The topic of leadership has grown in importance, and how and
when managers communicate is critical to their effectiveness. This
book provides insight for managers to understand the feedback and
open communication processes. It suggests guidelines for how and
when managers should engage in negative feedback and open
organizational-level communication with followers, including when
such feedback and information should not be shared. It also adds to
the existing knowledge base pertaining to open communication on the
part of managers. This book will be of value to managers and practitioners involved in the practice of leadership as well as for courses on leadership, organizational behavior, human resource management and organizational communication.
Now learn from two seasoned consultants how to implement the 360 Degrees feedback process effectively--whatever the size and history of your organization. Packed with case studies and the authors' real-life consulting experiences, this book examines the successes and problems of 360 Degrees and upward feedback implementation efforts in more than 15 organizations, including Motorola, AT&T, Federal Express, Raychem, Colgate-Palmolive, and UPS. The book objectively considers such crucial components of 360 Degrees feedback as organizational culture and performance, pros and cons, the impact on the individual employee, and whether the feedback should be used for evaluative or developmental purposes. Models and tables lend a visual dimension to the book's concepts. Sample surveys and feedback reports--including the authors' own TEAM-Q survey and report set--show you what types of questions to ask and how to present feedback most effectively. If your comp any is considering adopting its own 360 Degrees feedback program, don't start before you read this book!
The topic of leadership has grown in importance, and how and
when managers communicate is critical to their effectiveness. This
book provides insight for managers to understand the feedback and
open communication processes. It suggests guidelines for how and
when managers should engage in negative feedback and open
organizational-level communication with followers, including when
such feedback and information should not be shared. It also adds to
the existing knowledge base pertaining to open communication on the
part of managers. This book will be of value to managers and practitioners involved in the practice of leadership as well as for courses on leadership, organizational behavior, human resource management and organizational communication.
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