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Transparency
Book

Transparency

How Leaders Create a Culture of Candor (J-B Warren Bennis Series)

Jossey-Bass, 2008 more...


Editorial Rating

8

Qualities

  • Applicable

Recommendation

At 144 pages, you could finish this slim volume in an evening. Its three, smoothly written essays combine to make an engaging book. Authors Warren Bennis, Daniel Goleman and James O’Toole, writing with Patricia Ward Biederman, blend references to well-known events with useful new accounts of transparency and opacity, and their outcomes. The writers focus primarily on concept and character, but they also offer specific suggestions for action. The essays fall between diagnosing what’s wrong with many organizations, and providing a manifesto on how to fix the problems by using transparency. The book is a clarion call for ethical action and openness. That alone is pretty common; who would openly call for dishonesty and secrecy? However, three things make this collection vital: the personal experience of the authors (especially O’Toole), the synthesis of history and current events, and the clarity of its ethical vision. getAbstract recommends this book to all readers who are interested in business ethics, and to leaders who want to know how to make their organizations more transparent.

Take-Aways

  • Business transparency is the wave of the future.
  • Transparency is both desirable and inevitable.
  • A free flow of information enhances corporate performance.

About the Authors

Warren Bennis, author of On Becoming a Leader and co-author of Judgment, teaches at The Leadership Institute at USC. Daniel Goleman wrote Emotional Intelligence and Social Intelligence. James O’Toole wrote The Executive’s Compass. Patricia Ward Biederman co-wrote Organizing Genius and is a former Los Angeles Times writer.


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    J. Y. 4 years ago
    In a rational universe, organizations and individuals would embrace transparency on both ethical and practical grounds, as the state in which it is easiest to accomplish one’s goals