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Product details

  • Hardcover: 256 pages
  • Publisher: Harvard Business School Press; illustrated edition edition (1 May 1999)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0875848710
  • ISBN-13: 978-0875848716
  • Product Dimensions: 24.1 x 16.2 x 2.5 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 157,398 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
  • See Complete Table of Contents

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David Ulrich
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Product Description

Amazon.co.uk Review

Results-based Leadership teaches us that it is possible to look like a leader, say all the right things to shareholders, make employees feel good about themselves but still not produce the sorts of results everyone expects and wants from your company. A previous generation might have called this "winning the battle but losing the war".

Directing employees is harder than it looks, since past performance isn't really an indication of how a leader will do in the future. As the authors say, "The half-life of knowledge grows ever shorter in most professions, requiring even high performers to unlearn what they know and do."

The authors--a university professor and two heads of consulting firms--divide leadership priorities into four areas: employees, organisation, customers, and investors. A company head generally has to focus on one responsibility over the other three, but can't get away with ignoring any of them for very long. They explain each of these four priorities in depth--noting, for example, that keeping employees committed and productive means "mass customising" the workplace to fit individual employees' needs while keeping everyone working toward the same goal. This customisation may require adjustments unheard-of a few years ago--allowing an employee to work from home in a different city, for example--but pays off in the retention of valuable human assets that would otherwise take their training, experience, energy, and creativity to other companies, possibly competitors.

People who already have leadership positions in their companies can certainly find a great deal of important information, but the book may be even more valuable to those who wish to move into management roles. It certainly shows what challenges to expect. --Lou Schuler

Product Description

Few would argue that leadership matters. Companies that can attract, develop, and retain the best leaders are likely to flourish. The issue grows hazy when we attempt to define leadership, and hazier still when managers try to match today's dizzying array of leadership practices with the specific needs of their organization. Results-Based Leadership brings refreshing clarity and directness to the leadership discussion, providing a hands-on program that will help executives succeed with their leadership challenges. A landmark book, Results-Based Leadership challenges the conventional wisdom surrounding leadership. The authors-world-renowned experts in human resources and leadership development-argue that it is not enough to gauge leaders by personal traits such as character, knowledge, style, and values. Effective leaders, say the authors, do more than master the attributes of leadership. They know how to connect their attributes with results. Results-Based Leadership shows executives how to deliver results in four specific areas: results for employees, the organization, its customers, and its investors. The authors provide action-oriented guidelines for readers to develop and hone their own results-based leadership skills. They look beyond the quick fixes, buzzwords, and trends that typify many leadership programs, and focus instead on producing results that can be measured and integrated into any business strategy or corporate culture. Here, for the first time, is a guidebook that bridges the gap between leadership theory and leadership skills. Results-Based Leadership fundamentally improves our ability to deliver real leadership results.

Inside This Book (Learn More)
First Sentence
THE QUEST TO BECOME a more effective leader will neither begin nor end with this work. Read the first page
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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Index | Back Cover
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Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
By A Customer
Format:Hardcover
I read and re-read Results-Based Leadership over the fourth of July weekend, along with some additional materials provided by Provant, and I truly believe this book is a major management 'hit'! I took 50 pps of notes, and even bought a copy for a friend of mine (truly a rare event) who is about to start up a major division for a large local firm. I love the way the authors integrated Kaplan's Business Scorecard Process with the Leadership Development process. Truly a marriage of employee development and strategic 'results'. The 'so that' and 'because of' virtuous cycle is especially clever. I've subtitled the book 'The Missing Linkage'. You've solved so many conceptual issues I've had over the years that I felt that I was reading the 'Rosetta' stone.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
By A Customer
Format:Hardcover
Successfully integrates and builds on the best of balanced scorecard objective setting and leadership competency development practices. Recognizes the criticality of aligning organization systems with desired results to establish an environment within which leaders can excel. An innovative conceptual framework combined with practical implementation guidelines. Best current thinking on what it takes to create and strengthen a leadership brand that achieves superior business results.
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By Robert Morris TOP 100 REVIEWER
Format:Hardcover
This book was first published in 1999 and as I recently read it, I was curious to know to what extent its core concepts remain relevant to leadership development and brand management in a global business world that has changed so much since then. My conclusion? If anything, they are even more relevant now than they were almost a decade ago. However, I should note that in the recently published Leadership Brand, co-authored by Dave Ulrich and Norm Smallwood, a few of the core concepts are developed in much greater depth. (FYI, Ulrich and Smallwood are co-authors of Leadership Brand.) For those who have not read the more recently published book, the co-authors of Results-Based Leadership suggest that it describes "the distinct results that leaders deliver to their firm. Both attributes and results go into a complete leadership brand, and this brand offers significant advantages to a firm. In fact, creating a leadership brand for their organization should become a key challenges for all leaders. Without results, leadership brand becomes generic; with results, leadership brands become specific, distinctive, and add value."

In Chapter 1, Ulrich, Jack Zenger, and Smallwood explain how to connect leadership attributes to results. In this context, I am reminded of what Jeffrey Pfeffer and Robert Sutton have to say about what they characterize as a "knowing-doing gap." They assert (and I agree) that many executives know what must be done but, for whatever reasons, are unable to achieve the desired results. Hence the importance of the material in the first chapter. Four key points:

1. Effective leaders produce results.

2. One of the most important results is the development of other leaders.

Note: Jeff Immelt, CEO of General Electric, commits at least 20% of his time to mentoring GE's middle managers.

3. All organizations need a process in place that produces such leaders.

4. Leaders are needed at all levels and within all areas of the given enterprise.

Then in Chapters 2-8, the co-authors respond to questions such as these:

How to define desired results?
How to achieve desired employee results by investing in human capital?
How achieve organization results by creating capabilities?
How to achieve customer results by building firm equity?
How to achieve investor results by building shareholder value?
How to become a results-based leader?
How do results-based leaders build others who are also results-based?

The sequence of "how tos" correctly indicates that after Ulrich, Zenger, and Small identify the "what" of results-based leadership, they devote almost all of their attention to its "how." What they offer is a framework for what can become a comprehensive, cohesive, and cost-effective game plan but it would be a fool's errand to attempt to build into that plan all of the information, suggestions, and recommendations that the co-authors provide. The core principles of results-based leadership should guide and inform the preparation and implementation of a plan that is most appropriate for each reader's own organization but not dictate the specifics of that plan.

I especially appreciate their use of various reader-friendly devices that include hundreds of checklists, graphic figures, bold face, and real-world examples. Obviously, these devices focus the reader's attention on key points but also facilitate, indeed accelerate periodic reviews of those points later. I also commend them on the "Notes" section that includes a number of enlightening annotations that accompany many of the citations.

Just as Edison correctly reminds us that "vision without execution is hallucination," Dave Ulrich, Jack Zenger, and Norm Small remind us that that one result - if not THE most important result - of great leadership is that it produces other great leaders. Then and only then can desired results involving associates, customers, and investors be achieved and then sustained. Those who read this book learn what they need to know to become a results-driven leader, but it is then up to them to act upon that knowledge, once they decide what the desired results are. Hence the importance of sound judgment to make the right calls. As Peter Drucker expressed it so well in 1963, "There is surely nothing quite so useless as doing with great efficiency what should not be done at all."
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