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The Seven-Day Weekend: A Better Way to Work in the 21st Century
 
 
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The Seven-Day Weekend: A Better Way to Work in the 21st Century [Paperback]

Ricardo Semler
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Product Description

The Sunday Times

'Ricardo Semler tells how Semco uses a revolutionary way of working to run a profit making company with a work force who love their jobs.’ --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Rocco Forte, Management Today

The Seven-Day Weekend will certainly encourage managers to look very carefully at their management practices.’ --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Guardian

‘Ricardo Semler is our kind of capitalist.’ --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Book Description

The new book from the author of Maverick! which sold 1.1 million copies worldwide.

Product Description

In The Seven-Day Weekend, Semler explains how he transformed a small family business into a highly profitable manufacturing, services and high-tech powerhouse - 40 times larger - while watching his favorite movies or relaxing with his son in the middle of the business day. Praise for The Seven-Day Weekend'Are there real-life lessons to be learned? The answer is yes-Pragmatic, inspirational and intriguing advice' The Times'Ricardo Semler is our kind of capitalist.' Guardian'In this book, Ricardo Semler tells how Semco, Latin America's fastest growing company, uses a revolutionary way of working to run a profit making company with a work force who love their jobs.' The Sunday Times'The Seven-Day Weekend challenges conventional approaches to work. It sparks ideas that can be applied to one's own business [and] will certainly encourage managers to look very carefully at their management practices.' Rocco Forte, Management TodayPraise for Ricardo Semler's Maverick!'Semco takes workplace democracy to previously unimagined frontiers' The Times'His egalitarian approach works like a dream' Today (20030402)

From the Publisher

The new book from the author of Maverick! which sold 1.1 million copies worldwide.

About the Author

Ricardo Semler has won international fame for creating the world's most unusual workplace and lectures all over the world. (20030402)

Excerpted from The Seven-day Weekend by Ricardo Semler. Copyright © 2003. Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

On a leafy side street in São Paulo, Danilo Saicali approached the headquarters of Semco Corporation on the first day of his new job. Toting a briefcase and clad in a dark suit and tie, Danilo was poised to run Semco's New Ventures unit. He'd been a partner and CEO at Arthur Andersen and then at Amway, so he was bringing years of knowledge and seasoned authority to Semco, a 50-year-old company with annual revenues of $160 million. He'd be part of a close-knit team managing Semco's diverse businesses in machinery, real estate, environmental services, and as an investor in high-tech businesses.
But Danilo was joining a company better known around the world for what it doesn't do.
Semco has no official structure. It has no organizational chart. There's no business plan or company strategy - no two-year or five-year plan, no goal or mission statement, no long-term budget. The company often does not have a fixed CEO. There are no vice presidents or chief officers for information technology or operations. There are no standards or practices. There's no human resources department. There are no career plans, no job descriptions or employee contracts. No one approves reports or expense accounts. Supervision or monitoring of workers is rare indeed.
Most importantly, success is not measured only in profit and growth.
Danilo knew all this on his first day because he'd heard it from me, and I am Semco's major shareholder. Just before Danilo accepted the job, we sat down for what I call my 'scare off' meeting. Even people who understand our philosophies may not be prepared for what it really means to work at Semco. I briefed Danilo: He'd have no office, no permanent desk, no secretary, no parking place, no official title, no business cards.
Semco had agreed to pay Danilo a substantial salary for his talents, but we weren't prepared to give him his own desk. Money is one thing. But the rigid structures of the past are another.
Danilo was a little taken aback. But I'd seen that before. Fifteen years earlier, a prominent Brazilian politician, Senator José Macedo, invited me to the far north of Brazil for a conference. This wonderful self-made man had begun his working life as a soap salesman. By the time I met him, he was a billionaire in the flour, biscuit, beer and car dealership businesses.
I spoke to the conference for an hour about Semco and its strange practices, and then Senator Macedo opened the question and answer session. Sitting in the first row, he looked back over his shoulder at the hundreds of people who filled the hot, humid auditorium and asked: 'Mr. Semler, before answering other questions, can you please tell us what planet you're from?' It took several minutes for the room to quiet down - I can still hear the good-natured laughter to this day.
So anyone picking up this book may first ask, what is Semco?
I can't tell you. If you ask me to describe it in conventional business terms, I'd have to admit I have no idea what business Semco is in. For the last 20 years, I have resisted defining Semco for a simple reason: Once you say what business you're in, you create boundaries for your employees, you restrict their thinking and give them a reason to ignore new opportunities. 'We're not in that business,' they'll say.
Instead of dictating Semco's identity, I let our employees shape it with their individual efforts, interests, and initiatives.
But that, together with stories like Danilo's, may make Semco sound like a company with an offbeat management style that wouldn't succeed any place else. Nevertheless hundreds of corporate leaders from around the world have visited São Paulo to find out what makes us tick. Some, like representatives from the Royal Hospitals in Australia, schools in Finland, the Amsterdam police department and a few dozen private or public companies around the globe, have gone home and emulated us. But many more have gone away shaking their heads in bewilderment. At its peak, there was a 17-month waiting list for the bi-weekly tour of Semco (with each tour including 35 outside companies). At that point we cancelled the program because our workers were beginning to feel like animals in a zoo.
The visitors were curious about Semco because they want what we have - huge growth in spite of a fluctuating economy, unique market niches, rising profits, highly motivated employees, low turnover, diverse product and service areas. In short, sustainability.
Our visitors want to understand how we achieve that. How has Semco increased its annual revenue between 1994 and 2001 from $35 million a year to $160 million when I rarely attend meetings and almost never make decisions? When with a show of hands, employees can veto new product ideas or whole business ventures? --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
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