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Why Great Leaders Don’t Take Yes for an Answer: : Managing for Conflict and Consensus, Second Edition / Roberto, Michael.

O'Reilly Online Learning: Academic/Public Library Edition Available online

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Roberto, Michael, author.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Decision making.
Conflict management.
Leadership.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (304 pages)
Edition:
2nd edition
Place of Publication:
Pearson, 2013.
System Details:
text file
Summary:
Make better decisions! Michael A. Roberto will help you achieve deeper consensus, get past groupthink and "yes men," and achieve superior results in every decision you make -- especially your most complex and highest-stakes decisions! Roberto's Why Great Leaders Don't Take Yes for an Answer, Second Edition gives you a powerful framework for promoting honest, constructive dissent and skepticism; test your assumptions; more thoroughly and fairly considering "best alternatives"; crisply coming to closure; and aligning your entire organization behind the decision you make. In this new edition, Roberto presents new cases from Google, Ford, and Intuit, and expands coverage to more deeply illuminate his decision-making approach. Offering both positive and negative examples, he presents a well rounded view of how to determine when 'yes' means 'yes', when it doesn't, and what to do when it doesn't. Throughout, Roberto demonstrates why "good process entails the astute management of the social, political and emotional aspects of decision making" -- in other words, why effective leaders are well served by carefully "deciding how to decide." You'll learn how to: Test and probe what your team really believes, and get the truth and candor you really need Encourage constructive objections -- and keep them constructive Improve team management, mitigate risk, identify opportunities, and promote integrity Build stronger commitment amongst the people who'll implement your decisions
Contents:
The leadership challenge
Deciding how to decide
An absence of candor
Stimulating the clash of ideas
Keeping conflict constructive
A better devil's advocate
The dynamics of indecision
Fair and legitimate process
Reaching closure
Leading with restraint.
Notes:
Previous ed.: 2005.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Online resource; Title from title page (viewed May 9, 2013)
OCLC:
850705696

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