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This book outlines the development of service leadership curricula,
programs and materials designed for university students in Hong
Kong. In addition, it includes evaluation studies and specific
service leadership programs, making it a pioneering book that
integrates service leadership and student wellbeing for Chinese
university students. In view of the transformation of industries
resulting in shifts from manufacturing economies to service
economies, the book takes a holistic approach to leadership
development, focusing on three basic components of effective
service leadership that are closely related to student wellbeing:
leadership competencies such as emotional intelligence and
resilience, moral character, and a caring disposition. This
approach represents a move away from literature that emphasizes the
elite leadership model, assuming that leadership is the privilege
of a talented few. By extension, it argues that the promotion of
service leadership qualities is a good strategy for promoting
student wellness. The individual chapters are extended versions of
papers presented at the "International Conference on Service
Leadership Education for University Students: Experience in Hong
Kong," which was held in May 2014. The book offers a valuable
contribution to Chinese and global academic literature on service
leadership and will benefit researchers and educators alike.
Service Leadership offers students, researchers, and leaders a
leadership model originating in the service economy - but which is
gaining ground in all sectors and industries - explained by experts
that were key actors in that origination at DHL International.
Designed for undergraduates and graduates but also useful for
professionals in leadership positions, Hoshmand and Chung structure
the book around the 3Cs of leadership in the service economy:
Competence, Character, and Care. It shows how the integration of
the 3Cs when applied in combination with each other creates an
environment of trust within and outside the organization. Most
importantly, it allows the reader to understand how a move from the
manufacturing mindset (hierarchical decision making) to a service
mindset (collective, qualitative, culturally sensitive) creates an
ethical habitat and ecosystem that contributes to a firm's
competitiveness and adds value to its brand image. Incorporating
elements of leadership literature, philosophy, psychology,
sociology, economics, and political science, including cases, and
supported by a teaching manual and a full set of slides, this book
is ideal core reading for students of service leadership and
leadership in the service economy, and valuable to those learning
about leadership more broadly.
Service Leadership offers students, researchers, and leaders a
leadership model originating in the service economy - but which is
gaining ground in all sectors and industries - explained by experts
that were key actors in that origination at DHL International.
Designed for undergraduates and graduates but also useful for
professionals in leadership positions, Hoshmand and Chung structure
the book around the 3Cs of leadership in the service economy:
Competence, Character, and Care. It shows how the integration of
the 3Cs when applied in combination with each other creates an
environment of trust within and outside the organization. Most
importantly, it allows the reader to understand how a move from the
manufacturing mindset (hierarchical decision making) to a service
mindset (collective, qualitative, culturally sensitive) creates an
ethical habitat and ecosystem that contributes to a firm's
competitiveness and adds value to its brand image. Incorporating
elements of leadership literature, philosophy, psychology,
sociology, economics, and political science, including cases, and
supported by a teaching manual and a full set of slides, this book
is ideal core reading for students of service leadership and
leadership in the service economy, and valuable to those learning
about leadership more broadly.
This book outlines the development of service leadership curricula,
programs and materials designed for university students in Hong
Kong. In addition, it includes evaluation studies and specific
service leadership programs, making it a pioneering book that
integrates service leadership and student wellbeing for Chinese
university students. In view of the transformation of industries
resulting in shifts from manufacturing economies to service
economies, the book takes a holistic approach to leadership
development, focusing on three basic components of effective
service leadership that are closely related to student wellbeing:
leadership competencies such as emotional intelligence and
resilience, moral character, and a caring disposition. This
approach represents a move away from literature that emphasizes the
elite leadership model, assuming that leadership is the privilege
of a talented few. By extension, it argues that the promotion of
service leadership qualities is a good strategy for promoting
student wellness. The individual chapters are extended versions of
papers presented at the "International Conference on Service
Leadership Education for University Students: Experience in Hong
Kong," which was held in May 2014. The book offers a valuable
contribution to Chinese and global academic literature on service
leadership and will benefit researchers and educators alike.
DHL: From Startup to Global Upstart is the story of a startup that
became the first worldwide logistics service organization, fighting
regulation, trade restrictions, customs, and many other technical
issues to develop processes that have stood the test of time to
become the accepted norm in delivery throughout the world. It is a
story of using "soft powers," persuasion, and ingenuity, working
with, and around, emerging technologies to eliminate barriers to
success. This book provides an extraordinary look into how a little
startup with grit and perseverance succeeded in the face of
overwhelming odds and revolutionized many of what are now accepted
transportation and supply chain practices. Po Chung, DHL
International co-founder, and Roger Bowie, former DHL Worldwide
Services Director, discuss how DHL paved the way for one day
international package delivery and how they have maintained their
global leadership position against powerful American titans.
Captured here are Po Chung's unique, tested, and often
revolutionary ideas on service leadership principles and strategies
focused on Asia but in fact transcending locale and industry
sectors. He simultaneously offers Western business readers a clear
window into Asian business thinking while offering Asian business
people his insights on doing business globally. He was among the
first to recognize the tectonic shift in many regions of global
business from a manufacturing, product-based model to a service,
process-based economy. As Po points out, the GDP of many global
business hubs now stems primarily from service revenue, not
manufacturing income. The heart of Po's message, therefore, has to
do with a true game-changer: understanding the service economy in
all its forms, then redesigning both business and business
education to make the most of that new economy. Around that core
concept Po builds a support structure of associated guidelines and
principles, including his original perspectives on business
habitats, Personal Operating Systems, organizational DNA, dangerous
"viruses" to business processes, and a host of other linked
concerns. Together, these topics rise to the stature of a new
vision for building service businesses, nurturing human capital,
and relating with conscience to one's clientele and society.
While it is good to see that there are many leadership programs in
the market for different parts of the world, there are several
limitations of the existing leadership programs. Primarily, most of
the programs focus on skills (ie: the doing) of leaders without
much consideration for the inner qualities (ie: the being) of
leaders. While skills are important, leaders with skills are just
technicians or technocrats who are driven by their basic motives of
acquiring fame or earning more money. However, true leaders are
motivated by caring, concern and moral values. Eight universities
funded by a private foundation worked together to develop service
leadership education programs. In this book, the authors wish to
document the achievements of different institutions and highlight
their specific projects using specific foci. The authors hope that
through the publication of this book, service leadership education
can flourish in different services and economies.
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