Navigation überspringen
Why Great Leaders Don't Take Yes for an Answer
Book

Why Great Leaders Don't Take Yes for an Answer

Managing for Conflict and Consensus

Wharton School Publishing, 2005 Mehr

Buy the book


Editorial Rating

8

getAbstract Rating

  • Applicable

Recommendation

The two greatest strengths of Michael A. Roberto's book are its honesty and clarity. He admits that most people are uncomfortable with conflict and that many well-intentioned leaders shut down dissent. He's also honest about how likely it is that things will go wrong along the way, at least temporarily. Fortunately, he's also very clear about steps you can take to guide conflict in a productive direction, and why this matters. Roberto analyzes several well-known examples of bad decision making and shows how the absence of dissent or institutional mechanisms that insulated decision makers from essential - though not necessarily positive - information created serious problems. The list is long and chilling: President John F. Kennedy and the Bay of Pigs, President Lyndon B. Johnson and Vietnam, NASA and the Columbia shuttle explosion. His discussions will give you a powerful desire to review your organization's decision-making processes and, more generally, its culture. As Roberto himself readily admits, his techniques are not cure-alls, nor easy, but they will lead to improvements. getAbstract recommends this book to managers with decision-making responsibilities and to anyone who is committed to improving organizational functioning.

Summary

Strategic Decisions, Strategic Choices

If you make the wrong decision, you can cost your business a lot of money. Even worse, you may not realize the results of your judgment right away. To improve your chances of making good decisions, evaluate your decision-making process. Actively direct the process, rather than passively letting it happen.

The explosion of the space shuttle Columbia is a tragic example of one kind of poor decision making. The U.S. National Aeronautic and Space Administration (NASA) employed some of the world's finest scientists. They tried to tell the people in charge information that could have prevented the explosion, but NASA's internal structures enabled the decision makers to hear only what they wanted to hear. To enable yourself to make good decisions as a leader, encourage people to deliver unpleasant information - without fear of retribution.

Myths about making decisions abound:

  • Myth: Making good decisions is difficult - Fact: Implementing good decisions is difficult. Your team must understand the decision and commit to it whole-heartedly. Lack of understanding leads to blind obedience and clumsy implementation...

About the Author

Michael A. Roberto teaches at Harvard Business School and twice won Harvard's Allyn Young Prize for Teaching in Economics. He has consulted with a range of corporations.


Comment on this summary

More on this topic

Related Skills

AI Transformation
Emotionale Intelligenz entwickeln
Wirksam kommunizieren
Innovative Produkte entwickeln
Develop Team Members
Besser denken
Entrepreneurship
Foster Team Culture
Personalwesen
Führung
Leverage AI for Business Strategy
Leverage AI for Leadership
Leverage AI for Management
Leverage AI in Your Daily Tasks
Mitarbeiterbeziehungen managen
Performance managen
Teams und Abteilungen managen
Soziale Kompetenzen entwickeln
Mitarbeiterleistung steigern
Persönliche Entwicklung
Diversity, Equity & Inclusion fördern
Unternehmenskultur beeinflussen
Berufliche Kompetenzen
Meetings wirksam gestalten
Management
Inklusiv führen
Change managen
Experimentieren fördern
Neue Ideen vorantreiben
Gespräche führen
Kommunikation im Team managen
Generationenvielfalt fördern
Funktionsübergreifend zusammenarbeiten
Schwierige Gespräche führen
Konflikte lösen
Teamgrenzen managen
Kommunikation verstehen
Navigate Leadership Challenges
Soft Skills
Andere Perspektiven einnehmen
Transparent kommunizieren
Mitarbeitergespräche durchführen
Durch Krisen führen
Diskussionen moderieren
Ideen entwickeln
Use AI for Decision Support
Inklusive Kultur schaffen
Ideenfindung moderieren
Offene Kommunikation fördern
Psychologische Sicherheit fördern
Zusammenarbeit meistern
Manage People and Talent
Mit schwierigen Menschen umgehen
Innovationskultur fördern
Büropolitik meistern
Strategisch führen
Denken verstehen
Kreativ sein
Strengthen Team Collaboration
Teamdynamik verstehen
Kreativität fördern
Unter Unsicherheit entscheiden
Innovation
Denkfehler vermeiden
Kernwerte definieren
Datenbasierte Entscheidungen treffen
Gruppenentscheidungen treffen
Kreativ zusammenarbeiten
Executive Leadership
Fragen stellen
Annahmen hinterfragen
Divergent denken
Gute Entscheidungen treffen