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Great Expectations: Why New Year’s Resolutions Fail

Posted by on Dec 2, 2013 in Featured, Individuals, Miscellaneous, Organizations, Women | 0 comments

Great Expectations: Why New Year’s Resolutions Fail

As the year draws to a close, we invariably begin to reflect on what we did in the past eleven or twelve months. We compare our successes with our shortcomings. We think about things that didn’t turn out quite the way we expected; and we start thinking about how much more dedicated we’ll be next year than we were during this one. On a personal level, diets and fitness regimes are at the top of the agendas of most people. At a corporate level, the ambitions are a bit more serious. Profits are seen to be too small, in most cases, and costs too high. These perceptions set the scene for...

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For Executive Women Seeking C-Suite Success

Posted by on Nov 14, 2013 in Featured, Individuals, Miscellaneous, Organizations, Women | 0 comments

For Executive Women Seeking C-Suite Success

  What do these people have in common? Marissa Mayer – Yahoo Meg Whitman – Hewlett-Packard Patricia Woertz – Archer Daniels Midland Indra Nooyi – PepsiCo Pam Nicholson – Enterprise Holdings   They’re all women, of course. And they’re also all CEOs. Beyond that they’re very different, except for one important thing: Once they were in a situation just like the one you’re in now. At some point in their career, each of those successful women had to decide if she wanted to commit herself to the time and effort to rise to the C-Suite. It’s a big...

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Time Management: It’s More Than Avoiding the Urgent

Posted by on Oct 31, 2013 in Featured, Individuals, Miscellaneous, Organizations, Women | 0 comments

Time Management: It’s More Than Avoiding the Urgent

There are probably very good reasons why the time management system that contrasts the important/unimportant and urgent/not urgent is the most popular. For one thing, it can be simple and easily understood. Like so many management models, it can be explained in a simple two-by-two fashion. Another reason the model is popular is that managers have found that it helps them to establish their priorities and, as a result, to get more done. Even when things are ticking over as they should, there never seems to be enough time to do what’s important, never mind anything else. A third reason may...

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Keep Your Eye on the Ball

Posted by on Oct 11, 2013 in Featured, Individuals, Organizations | 0 comments

Keep Your Eye on the Ball

    Over time, many companies lose their way. They reach a point where they no longer know who they are, where they are going, or why. They start out to do one thing, but then they gradually migrate into something else. And most of them do so for all the wrong the reasons. Some organizations do this by deliberately leaving behind their original products. Time’s online magazine has cited companies such as Xerox, Nokia, and Apple as examples. Other companies deliberately pursue a new path, but realizing their mistake, retreat back into familiar territory. Several years ago, The New...

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Why are there so few women in top leadership roles?

Posted by on Sep 27, 2013 in Featured, Miscellaneous, Organizations, Women | 0 comments

Why are there so few women in top leadership roles?

  Why are there so few women in top leadership roles? We’ve been working on this issue for a very long time and we’ve made some progress, but not at the top. Women college graduates outnumber men in the United States. About a third of fulltime MBA students are women. Women hold nearly 40 percent of managerial positions. But when we look at the C-Suite, the situation is very different. Women only hold about nine percent of top leadership positions. Only about four percent of Fortune 500 CEOs are women. People come at this issue in several different ways. You may think of it...

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Organizational Resistance to Organizational Change

Posted by on Sep 4, 2013 in Featured, Individuals, Miscellaneous, Organizations | 0 comments

Organizational Resistance to Organizational Change

As a discipline, the management of organizational change has been in existence for more than 50 years; yet we are no closer now to making it effective than we were then. Nearly three-quarters of all such endeavors fail miserably. Not only do companies fall well short of their financial targets, but untold psychological damage is done, both to those who lose their jobs, and those who don’t. Traditionally, the blame for all this has been laid at the door of employees. The presumption has been that the leaders “did the right things,” but that try as they might, managers couldn’t get the...

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