| Average User Rating: Not Yet Rated
Format: Hardcover: 144 pages. Publisher: Free Pr (06/01/2002) ISBN: 0743225929ISBN13: 9780743225922 List price: $22.00 |
|
| Compare Prices from 2 merchants |
| ||||||||
|
| *Prices and availability are subject to change by merchant without notice. Sales taxes and shipping costs are only estimates. Please check the merchant store for details. About this page - Submit your products |
Whoever Makes the Most Mistakes Wins |
Note: Success in today's business economy demands nonstop innovation. But fancy buzzwords, facile lip service, and simplistic formulas are not the answer. Only an entirely new mindset -- a new attitude toward success and failure -- can transform managers' thinking, according to Richard Farson, author of the bestseller "Management of the Absurd," and Ralph Keyes, author of the pathbreaking "Chancing It: Why We Take Risks," in this provocative new work. According to Farson and Keyes, the key to this new attitude lies in taking risks. In a rapidly changing economy, managers will confront at least as much failure as success. Does that mean they'll have failed? Only by their grandfathers' definition of failure. Both success and failure are steps toward achievement, say the authors. After all, Coca-Cola's renaissance grew directly out of its New Coke debacle, and severe financial distress forced IBM to completely reinvent itself. Wise leaders accept their setbacks as necessary footsteps on the path toward success. They also know that the best way to fall behind in a shifting economy is to rely on what's worked in the past -- as when once-innovative companies like Xerox and Polaroid relied too heavily on formulas that had grown obsolete. By contrast, companies such as GE and 3M have remained vibrant by encouraging innovators, even when they suffered setbacks. In their stunning new book, Farson and Keyes call this enlightened approach "productive mistake-making." Rather than reward success and penalize failure, they propose that managers focus on what can be learned from both. Paradoxically, the authors argue, the less we chase success and flee from failure, the more likely we are togenuinely succeed. Best of all, they have written a little jewel of a book, packed with fresh insights, blessedly brief, and to the point.
|
Find, Compare, Read Reviews & Buy Books and Magazines
Want to see your products in Yahoo! Shopping? Build your own online store or Advertise with us. Current Advertisers Sign In
Help improve Yahoo! Shopping by participating in our user studies - View RSS Feed
Make money with Yahoo! Shopping APIs, now powering Yahoo! Tech. Learn more about our paid syndication program.
Content provided by Muze, Inc. ©2008 or Ingram Customer Systems, Inc. ©2008.
Information about prices, products, services and merchants is provided by third parties and is for informational purposes only. Yahoo! does not represent or warrant the accuracy or reliability of the information, and will not be liable for any errors, omissions, or delays in this information or any losses, injuries, or damages arising from its display or use.