Tuesday, February 17, 2009

To Sasha " Managers'r'Me " : La Parisienne.





Change is a tricky business...It's hard to move from a city like New York City to any other city on earth without experiencing major changes and different standards in living, socializing or school system. I had a similar experience, i was born in Morocco, went to school in France for a year. now the French and Moroccan education systems are very similar, the professors are very strick, don't smile and they think they are gods.The way people socialize is the same too, i mean the gathering of friends every day around the same time after work for coffee or cappuccino, watching soccer games...
The big change for me was when i came to New York City. now let's start with education system, in the begginning i thought it was a joke, you get to decide certain classes you like, when you like, day or night, professors actually smile...great i love it.
Anyway, i do agree with you. Change to me is something that makes it hard to go back to the starting point and you just can't be independent of it, so you learn from it and Keep on going.
" Le temps souriant sur l'homme mais les pyramids souriant sur le temps"

Sunday, February 15, 2009

Management and uncertainty

One of the major problems that we face as people, corporations or even as nations is uncertainty. it could be in day to day business activities, long-term palnning and sometimes instinct decisions.
i always think about certainty and uncertainty...how certain am i in getting an A in Management class? let me share this recent experience. Few days ago, i moved to a new apartment, for some reasons the moving process had to be done in 2 days. Now, i have a lot of friends, close friends, so i chose 4 of my friends to help me move plus myself. I only needed 2 of them but i said to myself just in case something happened to one of them or two. At this point, everything is well-planned, the guys are coming tomorrow, maybe we grab couple drinks after...
Next day only one of them showed up and my phone was ringing all day, lot of apologies, some with good excuses...i don't blame them it was such a short notice, last minutes type of move.
anyway, my point here is that and beside this story, i run a lot in to the uncertainty effect and how it could be in some situations dramatic or maybe lucky in others.

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

Interesting article about Leadership from TheEconomist.com Feb 2nd 2009

Leadership
Feb 2nd 2009 From Economist.com
Leadership is “one of the most observed and least understood phenomena on earth”, wrote one man in a position to know. In business, interest has focused on three aspects of the phenomenon:

• the nature and behaviour of leaders;
• the nature and behaviour of those who are led;
• the structure of the organisation in which the leading takes place.

Most is written about the first of these. There is a visceral fascination with leaders and their character, and with the great issue that surrounds them: can they be made or are they only ever born?

There is no general agreement about the qualities of a leader. Field Marshal Montgomery thought that a leader “must have infectious optimism, and the determination to persevere in the face of difficulties. He must also radiate confidence, even when he himself is not too certain of the outcome”. Henri Fayol, an early French writer on management, said that the leader’s task is “thinking out a plan and ensuring its success”. It is, he added, “one of the keenest satisfactions for an intelligent man to experience”.

David Ogilvy, founder of an advertising agency, Ogilvy & Mather, and himself a leader of some quality, said:

Great leaders almost always exude self-confidence. They are never petty. They are never buck-passers. They pick themselves up after defeat … They do not suffer from the crippling need to be universally loved … The great leaders I have known have been curiously complicated men.

This view of the leader as complicated is supported by the personality of some undeniably great leaders, such as Napoleon and Winston Churchill. It may also lie behind the fact that up to 60% of past presidents of the United States and prime ministers of Britain had lost their fathers before they were 14.

The leadership of people like Alfred P. Sloan (see
article), the legendary boss of General Motors, however, owed more to the structure and systems that they put in place in their organisations than it did on the individual’s personality. Henry Ford II’s success in revitalising his family’s firm after the second world war depended largely on his reorganisation of the company. The man himself was a jet-setting playboy who rarely met the David Ogilvy standards of a great leader.

The leading management thinker on leadership in recent years has been Warren Bennis (see
article), a professor at the University of Southern California. He has said that successful leaders follow an almost universal principle of management “as true for orchestra conductors, army generals, football coaches, and school superintendents as for corporate executives”. When they came to head an organisation, successful leaders “paid attention to what was going on, determined what part of the events at hand would be important for the future of the organisation, set a new direction, and concentrated the attention of everyone in the organisation on it”. He also found that the vast majority of successful leaders were white males who remained married to the same person all their lives.

Abraham Zaleznik, in an influential article in Harvard Business Review, argued that “because leaders and managers are basically different, the conditions favourable to one may be inimical to the growth of the other”. In other words, a long career as a manager may not be the best training for a leader. Yet this is the training that most business leaders get.

The nature of leadership has been discussed since time immemorial. In perhaps the most famous book on the subject, “The Prince”, written in Florence in the 1520s, Niccolò Machiavelli set out his ideas about what a prince must do to survive and prosper, surrounded as he inevitably will be by general human malevolence. Dedicated to Lorenzo de Medici, the book draws on examples from history, of Alexander the Great and of the German city states, to teach its readers some eternal lessons. Many a corporate chief has a copy near his bedside.