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Michael Watkins,Reid Hoffman,Harvard Business Review,Ben Casnocha,Chris Yeh

Leadership Transitions and Team Building: Leadership Collection (2 Books)

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  • Doli Rioniariцитирует6 лет назад
    In a start-up, you are charged with assembling the capabilities (people, funding, and technology) to get a new business, product, project, or relationship off the ground.
  • Doli Rioniariцитирует6 лет назад
    ACCELERATE YOUR LEARNING—CHECKLIST

    How effective are you at learning about new organizations? Do you sometimes fall prey to the action imperative? To coming in with “the” answer? If so, how will you avoid doing this?
    What is your learning agenda? Based on what you know now, compose a list of questions to guide your early inquiries. If you have begun to form hypotheses about what is going on, what are they, and how will you test them?
    Given the questions you want to answer, who is likely to provide you with the most useful insights?
    How might you increase the efficiency of your learning process? What are some structured ways you might extract more insight for your investment of time and energy?
    What support is available to accelerate your learning, and how might you best leverage it?
    Given your answers to the previous questions, start to create your learning plan.
  • Doli Rioniariцитирует6 лет назад
    By the End of the First Month

    Gather your team to feed back to them your preliminary findings. You will elicit confirmation and challenges of your assessments and will learn more about the group and its dynamics.
    Now analyze key interfaces from the outside in. You will learn how people on the outside (suppliers, customers, distributors, and others) perceive your organization and its strengths and weaknesses.
    Analyze a couple of key processes. Convene representatives of the responsible groups to map out and evaluate the processes you selected. You will learn about productivity, quality, and reliability.
    Meet with key integrators. You will learn how things work at interfaces among functional areas. What problems do they perceive that others do not? Seek out the natural historians. They can fill you in on the history, culture, and politics of the organization, and they are also potential allies and influencers.
    Update your questions and hypotheses.
    Meet with your boss again to discuss your observations
  • Doli Rioniariцитирует6 лет назад
    Soon After Entry

    Review detailed operating plans, performance data, and personnel data.
    Meet one-on-one with your direct reports and ask them the questions you compiled. You will learn about convergent and divergent views and about your reports as people.
    Assess how things are going at key interfaces. You will hear how salespeople, purchasing agents, customer service representatives, and others perceive your organization’s dealings with external constituencies. You will also learn about problems they see that others do not.
    Test strategic alignment from the top down. Ask people at the top what the company’s vision and strategy are. Then see how far down into the organizational hierarchy those beliefs penetrate. You will learn how well the previous leader drove vision and strategy down through the organization.
    Test awareness of challenges and opportunities from the bottom up. Start by asking frontline people how they view the company’s challenges and opportunities. Then work your way up. You will learn how well the people at the top check the pulse of the organization.
    Update your questions and hypotheses.
    Meet with your boss to discuss your hypotheses and findings
  • Doli Rioniariцитирует6 лет назад
    Learning Plan Template

    Before Entry

    Find out whatever you can about the organization’s strategy, structure, performance, and people.
    Look for external assessments of the performance of the organization. You will learn how knowledgeable, fairly unbiased people view it. If you are a manager at a lower level, talk to people who deal with your new group as suppliers or customers.
    Find external observers who know the organization well, including former employees, recent retirees, and people who have transacted business with the organization. Ask these people open-ended questions about history, politics, and culture. Talk with your predecessor if possible.
    Talk to your new boss.
    As you begin to learn about the organization, write down your first impressions and eventually some hypotheses.
    Compile an initial set of questions to guide your structured inquiry after you arrive.
  • Doli Rioniariцитирует6 лет назад
    Your learning agenda defines what you want to learn. Your learning plan defines how you will go about learning it. It translates learning goals into specific sets of actions—identifying promising sources of insight and using systematic methods—that accelerate your learning. Your learning plan is a critical part of your overall 90-day plan. In fact, as you will discover later, learning should be a primary focus of your plan for your first 30 days on the job (unless, of course, there is a disaster in progress).
  • Doli Rioniariцитирует6 лет назад
    Illuminating decision-making patterns and sources of power and influence. Select an important recent decision, and look into how it was made. Who exerted influence at each stage? Talk with the people involved, probe their perceptions, and note what is and is not said.

    Most useful for higher-level managers of business units or project groups.
  • Doli Rioniariцитирует6 лет назад
    Learning firsthand from people close to the product. Plant tours let you meet production personnel informally and listen to their concerns. Meetings with sales and production staff help you assess technical capabilities. Market tours can introduce you to customers, whose comments can reveal problems and opportunities.
  • Doli Rioniariцитирует6 лет назад
    Another example of a structured learning method is the use of a framework such as SWOT (strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats) analysis to guide your diagnostic work. These sorts of frameworks also can be powerful tools for communicating with key stakeholders—bosses, peers, and direct reports—to help create shared views of the situation. Other structured learning methods are valuable in particular situations. Some of the methods described in table 2-1 may increase the efficiency of your learning process depending on your level in the organization and the business situation. Effective new leaders employ a combination of methods, tailoring their learning strategy to the demands of the situation.
  • Doli Rioniariцитирует6 лет назад
    What are the biggest challenges the organization is facing (or will face in the near future)?
    Why is the organization facing (or going to face) these challenges?
    What are the most promising unexploited opportunities for growth?
    What would need to happen for the organization to exploit the potential of these opportunities?
    If you were me, what would you focus attention on?
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