Effectiveness is, after all, not a âsubject,â but a self-discipline. But throughout this book, and implicit in its structure and in the way it treats its subject matter, is always the question: âWhat makes for effectiveness in an organization and in any of the major areas of an executiveâs day and work?â Only rarely is the question asked: âWhy should there be effectiveness?â The goal of effectiveness is taken for granted.
Related Quotes
Management books usually deal with managing other people. The subject of this book is managing oneself for effectiveness. That one can truly manage other people is by no means adequately proven. But one can always manage oneself. Indeed, executives who do not manage themselves for effectiveness cannot possibly expect to manage their associates and subordinates. Management is largely by example. Executives who do not know how to make themselves effective in their own job and work set the wrong example.
In forty-five years of work as a consultant with a large number of executives in a wide variety of organizationsâlarge and small; businesses, government agencies, labor unions, hospitals, universities, community services; American, European, Latin American and JapaneseâI have not come across a single ânaturalâ: an executive who was born effective. All the effective ones have had to learn to be effective. And all of them then had to practice effectiveness until it became habit. But all the ones who worked on making themselves effective executives succeeded in doing so. Effectiveness can be learnedâand it also has to be learned.
Effectiveness is, after all, not a âsubject,â but a self-discipline. But throughout this book, and implicit in its structure and in the way it treats its subject matter, is always the question: âWhat makes for effectiveness in an organization and in any of the major areas of an executiveâs day and work?â Only rarely is the question asked: âWhy should there be effectiveness?â The goal of effectiveness is taken for granted.
Management books usually deal with managing other people. The subject of this book is managing oneself for effectiveness. That one can truly manage other people is by no means adequately proven. But one can always manage oneself. Indeed, executives who do not manage themselves for effectiveness cannot possibly expect to manage their associates and subordinates. Management is largely by example. Executives who do not know how to make themselves effective in their own job and work set the wrong example.
In forty-five years of work as a consultant with a large number of executives in a wide variety of organizationsâlarge and small; businesses, government agencies, labor unions, hospitals, universities, community services; American, European, Latin American and JapaneseâI have not come across a single ânaturalâ: an executive who was born effective. All the effective ones have had to learn to be effective. And all of them then had to practice effectiveness until it became habit. But all the ones who worked on making themselves effective executives succeeded in doing so. Effectiveness can be learnedâand it also has to be learned.