The Drama of Leadership
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Product Description
As a member of the board of directors of several major international financial services corporations, Patricia Pitcher was in a privileged position to observe the inner workings of the corporate world. What she witnessed was a crisis of leadership rooted in a misunderstanding of what leading is all about. Not content to simply offer an opinion-opinions come cheap-she embarked on an eight-year research project to document the reasons for the rapid collapse of a global giant. That collapse, she shows us, began with one critical succession error and was compounded by a chronic failure to understand the importance of personality in the leadership equation. One wrong person at the helm turned a dream into a nightmare.
In The Drama of Leadership, Patricia Pitcher shares her findings and, in the process, explodes a number of popular myths about leadership, including the one that leadership and vision are qualities that can be taught in management seminars. She refutes the common belief that leaders are in short supply and proves that the corporate talent pool abounds with potential leaders whose talents either go unrecognized or are tragically undervalued. And she explains why, at a time when vision, innovation, humanity, and passion are so desperately needed, so many companies cast in leadership roles people who possess none of these qualities, and who distrust anyone who does.
But who are the good and bad leaders, and how do you identify them? In answer to this question, Patricia Pitcher identifies three types of leaders: Artists, who are people-oriented, open-minded, intuitive, and visionary; Craftsmen, to whom the adjectives "humane," "dedicated," and "wise" best apply; and Technocrats - brilliant and well-schooled in the latest theory, they are detail-oriented, rigid, methodical, self-centered, and, when left in control, pose a serious threat to corporate competitiveness. The power struggles between these types are dramas being played out in companies everywhere. Whether the story has a happy or an unhappy ending depends entirely upon which type gets top billing.
The author also offers her wise recommendations on what companies can do to protect themselves against a technocratic hegemony and how to cultivate the talents of Artists and Craftsmen. She also tells you how to determine what type of leader you are and how to interact with other types to achieve both personal and corporate success.
The Drama of Leadership is an articulate, insightful, passionate appeal to develop the kind of leaders and organizations that can take us into the twenty-first century.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #70523 in Books
- Published on: 1996-12-31
- Original language: English
- Dimensions: 1.20" h x 6.36" w x 9.33" l, 1.29 pounds
- Binding: Hardcover
- 268 pages
Editorial Reviews
From Amazon.com
Devising a feasible plan that fosters the practice of leadership over the process of management is one of the great dilemmas of the modern commercial era. Following an eight-year study, business school dean Patricia Pitcher has developed a method of recognizing three common types of authority figures: the creative "artist," sensible "craftsman" and hardheaded "technocrat." In The Drama of Leadership, she explains how such awareness can identify leaders who will guide an organization into the future.
From Library Journal
Pitcher's work is an extension of her dissertation, in which she researched one company's rise and fall over a ten-year period, focusing on the personalities of its leaders. We find within each of several companies, whose name and leaders' names have been changed here, three distinct types of leaders: artists, craftsmen, and technocrats, whose personality traits have all been plotted on charts. The artists are the visionaries, the smooth operators who know everyone's name; the craftsmen are the preservers, the mentors, and the nurturers; the technocrats are the intense, cerebral, uncompromising leader wannabes. Short of subjecting one's managers to a battery of psychological tests, identifying those with technocrat tendencies would be difficult. However, if one accepts the validity of the author's research, it just might be worth it. This novel approach is recommended for all public libraries.?Randy L. Abbott, Univ. of Evansville Libs., Ind.
Copyright 1997 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Ingram
Based on the author's study of why a giant corporation failed, a guide to effective leadership profiles three types of leaders while challenging current beliefs about what makes a good manager. 25,000 first printing. $40,000 ad/promo.
