Donât you worry about whether we will like this or dislike that. And donât you, above all, concern yourself with the compromises that might be needed to make your recommendations acceptable. There is not one executive in this company who does not know how to make every single conceivable compromise without any help from you. But he canât make the right compromise unless you first tell him what ârightâ is.â The executive thinking through a decision might put this in front of himself in neon lights.
Related Quotes
Effective executivesâ second practiceâfully as important as the firstâis to ask âIs this the right thing for the enterpriseâ They do not ask if it's right for the owners, the stock price, the employees, or the executives. Of course they know that shareholders, employees, and executives are important constituencies who have to support a decision, or at least acquiesce in it, if the choice is to be effectiveâŚ
Asking âWhat is right for the enterprise?â does not guarantee that the right decision will be made. Even the most brilliant executive is human and thus prone to mistakes and prejudices. But failure to ask the question virtually guarantees the wrong decision.
Donât you worry about whether we will like this or dislike that. And donât you, above all, concern yourself with the compromises that might be needed to make your recommendations acceptable. There is not one executive in this company who does not know how to make every single conceivable compromise without any help from you. But he canât make the right compromise unless you first tell him what ârightâ is.â The executive thinking through a decision might put this in front of himself in neon lights.
It is fruitless and a waste of time to worry about what is acceptable and what one had better not say so as not to evoke resistance. The things one worries about never happen. And objections and difficulties no one thought about suddenly turn out to be almost insurmountable obstacles. One gains nothing in other words by starting out with the question: âWhat is acceptable?â And in the process of answering it, one gives away the important things, as a rule, and loses any chance to come up with an effective, let alone with the right, answer.
Effective executivesâ second practiceâfully as important as the firstâis to ask âIs this the right thing for the enterpriseâ They do not ask if it's right for the owners, the stock price, the employees, or the executives. Of course they know that shareholders, employees, and executives are important constituencies who have to support a decision, or at least acquiesce in it, if the choice is to be effectiveâŚ
Asking âWhat is right for the enterprise?â does not guarantee that the right decision will be made. Even the most brilliant executive is human and thus prone to mistakes and prejudices. But failure to ask the question virtually guarantees the wrong decision.
It is fruitless and a waste of time to worry about what is acceptable and what one had better not say so as not to evoke resistance. The things one worries about never happen. And objections and difficulties no one thought about suddenly turn out to be almost insurmountable obstacles. One gains nothing in other words by starting out with the question: âWhat is acceptable?â And in the process of answering it, one gives away the important things, as a rule, and loses any chance to come up with an effective, let alone with the right, answer.