Real world examples | Great Business Teams: Cracking the Code for Standout Performance | Howard M. Guttman
books:
•
Great Business Teams: Cracking the Code for Standout Performance
Howard M. Guttman
Wiley
, 2008 - 256 pages
average customer review:
based on 15 reviews
view larger image
for more information click here
highly recommended
Great Business Teams and Beyond
Reviewing
business
books requires a degree of rigor, to understand the applicable benefits of the content.
Great
Business
Teams
provides enough pragmatic viewpoints and scenarios, allowing a reader to apply the concepts in any team environment. While the book can inundate the reader with numerous lists for sustain a team, coaching a player, and creating a high
performance
team, the concrete examples provide a framework that a reader can quickly digest, and morph for applicable use in their organization.
Worth Reading
This is worth a read for those interested in team
performance
and management. The author uses the case study method of getting his main points across, which I found useful from a practical standpoint, yet distracting as I couldn't really relate to the specific case situations. Overall some good tips that I can use on a daily basis.
for more information click here
Real world examples
Howard Gutman's "
Great
Business
Teams
" cuts through academic theory and shows how companies in the real world are getting the most out of teams. The book focuses on teamwork at the highest levels of the company and how that teamwork then cascades to all parts of the organization. The candid views of profiled executives on what worked best -- and the mistakes they made -- can serve as a great roadmap for anyone undertaking the challenge of building teams, especially in organizations that have been ruled by silo thinking.
As companies downsize and cut costs to weather today's fierce economic conditions, being able to make fast decisions in a team environment is more critical than ever. The experiences of Gutman's clients will serve as a valuable blueprint for making this happen.
for more information click here
for more information click here
Powerful team performance boosters
Howard Guttman gives readers a sophisticated view of all the factors that go into creating high-performing, exceptionally successful
teams
. He doesn't pretend that a single magic bullet can transform your team; instead, he provides a well-organized guide that shows you how leaders contribute, what team members must bring, why management support is needed to transform a good team into a
great
one and how coaching can accelerate a team's transformation. The book provides a great discussion on how top teams make decisions, how they communicate, and how they decide which meetings to hold and how to hold them. The book is full of ideas and illustrative stories from Guttman's consultancy, but you never feel that he is selling his consulting services or holding back any information. getAbstract recommends this sensible and useful book to team managers and members.
for more information click here
How developing high-performance individuals and teams will create and then sustain a high-performance organization
Howard Guttman draws upon several decades of wide and deep experience will thousands of executives within hundreds of companies throughout the world when offering in this volume everything he has learned about how developing high-
performance
individuals and
teams
will create and then sustain a high-performance organization. He asserts that there is a "
code
" to be cracked and cites several dozen examples of executives who have done so. He correctly points out that effective collaboration is essential at all levels and in all areas of an organization, whatever its size and nature may be. Moreover, the focus must be on cross-functional team initiatives.
"
Great
teams make great organizations. Period, Good and mediocre teams make good and mediocre organizations. They meet deadlines; they stay within budget; they maintain the status quo. But they do not push the envelope. They do not typically reach for performance breakthroughs. It is unlikely they will set the world on fire. And over the long haul, they will take you out of the game." According to Guttman, great
business
teams are led by high-performance leaders who create a "burning platform" for change, are visionaries and architects, know they cannot do it alone, build and nourish authentic relationships, model the behaviors they expect from their team members, and in unique and effective ways "redefine" the fundamentals of leadership. I wholly agree with Guttman that members of great teams are "us-directed": they tend to use only first-personal plural pronouns (i.e. we, us, our). Great teams play by protocols such as these ten agree-upon ways of working together at Chico's FAS in areas such as conflict resolution, decision making, meetings, and when determining performance expectations for both individual team members and for their leader:
1. Be candid and straightforward.
2. Be receptive to others' points of view.
3. Be accountable for your results and behavior.
4. Hold others accountable for their results and behavior.
5. Let go of "stories."
6. Resolve it or let it go.
7. Do not triangulate.
8. Do not accuse or allege in absentia.
9. Depersonalize (i.e. focus on issues, not individuals)
10. Structure decision making and follow process.
Guttman asserts that great teams continually raise the performance bar rather than allow complacency. They also have a supportive performance management system that provides whatever resources may be needed. "In order to effect permanent behavior change, a team's performance management system must support the new expectations [perhaps what Jim Collins characterizes as a "BHAG," a Big Hairy Audacious Goal]. Team and individual goals have to be crystal clear; the necessary technical and interpersonal skills have to be provided; performance has to be monitored; and feedback has to be timely and well thought out...Unless there are positive consequences for staying there [in support on the given initiatives] - and negative ones for retreating - most people will quickly revert to old, safe ways of behaving. That is why great teams only flourish when there are positive consequences [e.g. financial incentives and rewards] for embracing team values and negative ones for flouting them."
The Chico's FAS list of protocols is but one example of reader-friendly devices that Guttman skillfully uses through his narrative. Others include self-audit questions to determine how well one is adapted to the player-centric leadership imperative (Pages 39-40), six principles that can guide and inform the development of leadership (Pages 41-43), characteristics of the mindset of a "great player" (Pages 50-60), a graphic illustrating the four stages of team development from hierarchical to horizontal (Pages 82), how great teams make decisions (Pages 131-133), several behavioral protocols that great teams insist on (Page 147), how to mange key issues (Pages 148-149), ten elements of high-performance communication (Pages 156-158), and the five "musts" for building great organizations (Pages 171-1281). Readers will also appreciate Guttman's provision of two appendices, a review of the key components of "Player-Centered Leadership" and then a review of "The Skills of a Great Team Member."
One of Guttman's most important points, reiterated throughout his narrative, is that all great leaders are also great team members, and, that all team members must also provide leadership. What he proposes is high-performance collaboration within the structure of a meritocracy. "
Cracking
that code does not guarantee a perfect outcome every time you engage in competitive play. But, by changing your game, you will acquire a sustained competitive advantage and the ability to excel in a very different marketplace. Make the change and you will likely join the ranks of the great leaders and teams" he discusses in his book. I congratulate Howard Guttman on what I consider to be a brilliant achievement.
Those who share my high regard for this book are urged to check out Jim Collins' How the Mighty Fall, and Why Some Companies Never Give In, Guy Kawasaki's Reality Check: The Irreverent Guide to Outsmarting, Outmanaging, and Outmarketing Your Competition, Rodd Wagner and James K. Harter's 12: The Elements of Great Managing (based on Gallup's ten million workplace interviews), The Practice of Adaptive Leadership: Tools and Tactics for Changing Your Organization and the World co-authored by Ronald Heifetz, Alexander Grashow, and Marty Linsky, Dean R. Spitzer's Transforming Performance Measurement: Rethinking the Way We Measure and Drive Organizational Success, and Enterprise Architecture as Strategy co-authored by Jeanne W. Ross, Peter Weill, and David Robertson.
for more information click here
Understand and de
code
the inner workings of
great
business
teams
with the more than 30 in-depth examples in Great Business Teams:
Cracking
the Code for
Standout
Performance
. Author Howard Guttman examines and dissects teams at top-management, business-unit, and functional levels and isolates five key factors that drive team performance to offer you insight into the ways these teams achieve success. Using this book, go directly to the marketplace to scrutinize teams in a variety of industries, evaluating the challenges they face and the methods they choose to manage these challenges.
for more information click here
reviews
:
page 1
,
2
,
3
hot
or
not?
What's your opinion?
Write a review and share your thoughts!
performance
High Performance Web Sites: Essential Knowledge for Front-End ...
Perfect Phrases for Setting Performance Goals : Hundreds of ...
High Performance MySQL: Optimization, Backups, Replication, and More
Performance Appraisal Phrase Book: The Best Words, Phrases, and ...
Coaching for Performance, 4th Edition: GROWing Human Potential and ...
business
The Toilet Paper Entrepreneur
Oh, the Places You'll Go! (Classic Seuss)
The Compassionate Samurai: Being Extraordinary in an Ordinary World
The Go-Giver: A Little Story About a Powerful Business Idea
Plug Your Book! Online Book Marketing for Authors, Book Publicity ...
cracking
Myth and Meaning: Cracking the Code of Culture
Be: Embracing the Mystery
Cracking Your Congregation's Code: Mapping Your Spiritual DNA to ...
Cracking the AP Biology Exam, 2004-2005 Edition (College Test Prep)
Power Selling: Seven Strategies for Cracking the Sales Code
search for books
great business
,
business
,
code
,
cracking
,
great
,
performance
,
standout
,
teams
books:
Amazon.com Widgets
*
Blueprint for Profitability
randomly chosen
DVD:
The Forbidden Photos of a Lady Above Suspicion
we recommend
The Doppler Effect...
home
impressum - about us