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Manager of Choice

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Manager of Choice

Five Competencies for Cultivating Top Talent

Davies-Black Publishing,

15 min read
10 take-aways
Text available

What's inside?

To be the manager everyone wants to work for, instill values that show employees you care.

Editorial Rating

5

Qualities

  • Applicable

Recommendation

This book aggregates a plethora of tips and techniques believed - sometimes on the basis of solid research - to boost employee loyalty and organizational productivity. Managers need to learn tactics that will bind employees to them personally and to their companies. Author Nancy S. Ahlrichs earnestly believes in the thesis that it is important to be a manager whom employees would chose to work for, that is, a manager of choice. Her advice ranges from quite helpful to self-evident to sort of impractical. For the greatest utility, be a choosy reader: adapt her counsel to your situation. getAbstract suggests reading this through and then keeping it handy and dipping into it from time to time, as if it were a book of proverbs.

Summary

The Best Managers

Superior managers are "managers of choice," those rare leaders for whom people really want to work. Such managers hire good people, coach them and help them develop in every way possible. Employees then reciprocate by doing their utmost. When managers of choice have openings in their departments, good candidates get in line, hoping for a chance to join up. Managers of choice attract and keep the best people through good times and bad. In part, this is because managers of choice are more open to diversity – in age, gender, skills, background, abilities and ethnicity – and to non-conventional work arrangements than traditional managers. This openness will become even more important in the years ahead because:

  • The workforce is aging.
  • More women work than in the past; almost half of the workforce is female.
  • Spanish is emerging as a very important second language, with Hispanics expected to be the biggest minority group in the United States by 2005.
  • The religious composition of the U.S. is changing, and although Christians remain the biggest religious group, Islam has replaced Judaism as the second biggest.
  • Employees...

About the Author

Nancy S. Ahlrichs is a columnist, guest speaker and consultant. She is the author of Competing for Talent. This book is co-published with the Society for Human Resource Management.


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