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Seven Lessons for Leading in Crisis
Book

Seven Lessons for Leading in Crisis

Jossey-Bass, 2009 more...


Editorial Rating

8

Recommendation

Business legend Bill George learned about corporate crisis firsthand as a novice manager in his 20s. His timing was impeccable: The day before he began a new job as Litton Industries’ assistant general manager for microwave ovens, the U.S. surgeon general announced that microwave ovens posed a potential health risk. When George arrived at Litton’s Minneapolis office for his first day on the job, the place was in bedlam. If the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) had ordered Litton to take its only product off the market, the company would have gone under – and George would have been out of a job. For nine months, he worked around the clock with Litton’s engineers to make sure its microwave ovens could meet tough new FDA standards. What a welcome to the business big leagues! In his book on corporate crises, George says calamities either make or break executives. Litton’s microwave crisis did not break George. He went on to a storied career as a respected CEO and a professor at Harvard’s School of Business. getAbstract recommends his wise, savvy book to CEOs and other senior executives who will derive valuable lessons from its strategies and its many fascinating case studies.

Take-Aways

  • A crisis will severely test a company’s chief executive officer and its other leaders.
  • Some CEOs are able to weather such storms; others flounder.
  • If you act boldly, a crisis can be your finest hour. Follow seven lessons.

About the Author

Bill George, professor of management practice at Harvard Business School, is the former chairman and CEO of a leading medical technology company. The Academy of Management recognized him as Executive of the Year.