The book that turns our understanding of motivation on its head . . .
and shows why most companies get it wrong. There are few people with
more experience and accumulated wisdom about the inner workings of
business and how people can work together more effectively than Jon
Katzenbach. His groundbreaking research has resulted in several
important books, including The Wisdom of Teams and Real Change
Leaders. Over the past several years he has turned his attention to
one of the perennial questions of leaders everywhere: How do I
motivate my employees? Most everyone frets about how to devise schemes
that will keep the troops revved up. Conventional wisdom—or at least
the practice at most companies—often centers on money as the primary
motivating force. Many also rely on intimidation, which like money
generally has a short-term impact. But what Katzenbach has found in
his research at many organizations is that both of these practices do
little to build the long-term sustainability of an organization. For
that you need a powerful force that has been—until this
point—understood by few managers and implemented by fewer still:
pride. From the front lines to the executive suite, most people are
motivated by feelings of accomplishment, approval, and camaraderie.
It’s why the best employees strive well beyond performance levels
that will yield them higher pay and why most true professionals
relentlessly avoid retirement. Why does Southwest Airlines
consistently turn in the highest levels of performance and
profitability of any company in the airline business? What can the
U.S. Marines teach us about individual commitment that can be used in
the for-profit world? How is General Motors overcoming its history of
labor-management enmity through the efforts of “pride-builders”
from both the union and the management side? By drawing on what he has
learned from these and many other organizations, Jon Katzenbach
provides a practical program for understanding the role of pride: •
Money is not the motivator most people think it is: Katzenbach shows
why pay-for-performance programs by themselves result in employees who
focus on self-serving behavior and skin-deep organizational
commitment. • Money tends to be a short-term motivational device and
works best during times of growth, but pride works in bad times as
well as good. • Cultivating pride is an investment that yields high
returns on workforce performance over time and is not nearly as costly
as relying solely on monetary compensation and the turnover risks that
accompany a “show me the money” culture. Katzenbach shares unique
insights and specifics about how the best mid-level pride-builders
take advantage of the world’s greatest motivational force even in
environments as challenging as General Motors and Aetna. He shows how
managers at every level are missing a powerful lever if they are not
instilling pride as a primary force for building their organization.
Also available as an eBook.
Les mer
The Power of the World's Greatest Motivational Force
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781400049851
Publisert
2017
Utgiver
Random House Digital Inc.
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter