books


The Timeless Leader
by John Clemens and Steve Albrecht

What do Herman Melville, Plato and Winston Churchill have in common? They all created works of literature-fiction and nonfiction-that illuminate the roles, responsibilities and issues of leadership. The Timeless Leader presents their lessons to the modern manager.

The 12 case studies included here represent a wide-ranging collection of thinking that is sure to occasionally surprise even the most well-rounded readers. For example, who would expect to find lessons about paradigm-busting in Plato's book, The Republic. In his "Allegory of the Cave," Plato describes a group of people living in a cave who know no other existence. He asks us to consider the natural reaction when one group member is thrust into the real world and then returns to tell of his experience. The results won't surprise any manager who has attempted to implement fundamental changes in an organization.

The value of The Timeless Leader (Adams Publishing, $22.95) is not so much in the originality of the lessons it conveys. They are, after all, already well-known. Rather, it lies in the time-proven value of these ideas about leadership. It also lies in the important realization that business wisdom does not always come packaged with a label that says "Business." Instead, there are valuable lessons for businesspeople in less obvious places.
-Reviewed by Theodore B. Kinni
Circle No. 116

Customers as Partners
by Chip R. Bell

Customers as Partners harkens back to an earlier time in our business history. It evokes an era when the people with whom we did business were usually our neighbors and treated us accordingly. Chip Bell deliberately summons our memories of this time in this thoughtful and sometimes elegant examination of the nature of partnerships.

Bell finds that successful partnerships include a strong emotional content. He finds that partnerships require six essential ingredients: abundance, trust, dreams, truth, balance and grace-each of which receives several chapters of explanation.

These ingredients are purposely labeled with old-fashioned words, according to the author. Half the ingredients are fairly simple: Abundance is defined as "a spirit of giving." Trust represents the leap of faith we must take in any partnership; truth is an obvious requirement. Others are not so straightforward: Dreams-the ingredient that Bell finds toughest for organizations to master-encompass shared goals and common missions. Balance is the respect and equality that must exist between service provider and customer, and grace represents that "easy to do business with" quality that seems so widely lacking these days.

The book is designed for easy reading and may work best as a discussion platform for groups. Bell encourages readers to start anywhere they like, a strategy encouraged by the usually short and mostly self-contained chapters. Small-business readers will be glad for the many examples culled from smaller enterprises.

It is easy to recommend Customers as Partners (Berrett-Koehler, $24.95) to anyone interested in creating meaningful, long-term customer connections. It serves as a fine primer for neophytes, as well as a rich source of food for thought for more advanced partnership architects.
-Reviewed by Theodore B. Kinni
Circle No. 117

Paradigms and Parables
by Brother Louis DeThomasis and Bill Ammentorp

Capitalism has never been admired for its ethical underpinnings; nevertheless, in the last decade, it has emerged as the dominant global business philosophy. To stay on top, warn the authors of Paradigms and Parables, capitalists will have to establish a "new ethical paradigm."

In an effort to illuminate the precepts of this new paradigm, DeThomasis and Ammentorp create a list of business commandments and illustrate each with a parable. The result is a sort of "New Testament of Business," which starts with the admonition to "walk the walk of social justice" and ends with the 10th commandment, "Remember: Peace and prosperity in all the world are created by ethical business practice."

The parables themselves are fun to read. They are written in biblical style but set in modern Wall Street. The authors' 10 commandments and parables are meant to ease the reader into the more serious discussion that makes up the bulk of each chapter. And, although they do accomplish that task, the discussions themselves are complex and conducted at a level that the average manager may find difficult, if not impossible to apply. For the most part, this is an abstract, philosophical text.

Paradigms and Parables (Human Resource Development Press, $12.95) offers an interesting basis for debate regarding an ethical foundation for corporations. Readers charged with creating organizational programs will find plenty of food for thought, but those looking for practical direction might better look elsewhere.
-Reviewed by Theodore B. Kinni
Circle No. 118

Walk the Talk
by Eric Harvey and Alexander Lucia

This package deal contains three books plus a wind-up set of walking and chattering teeth! The books (Performance Publishing) are: Walk the Talk and Get the Results You Want ($18.95), Walking the Talk Together-An Employee Handbook ($5.95) and 144 Ways to Walk the Talk ($6.95).

Walk the Talk and Get the Results You Want seems to be the centerpiece for the training package. An earlier version of this book received an enthusiastic endorsement in the January 1994 issue from another reviewer. This latest update contains a number of refinements and additions that made a good book even better.

What really caught my attention was the foreword by Ken Blanchard. His enthusiastic three-page foreword was the best possible endorsement. Ken Blanchard wasn't the only person to lend his support to these books. Several others, including Stephen R. Covey, also had words of praise for this down-to-earth set of books.

Walk the Talk contains the answers to some of the most pressing business challenges facing us today and tomorrow. Through the application of its principles comes the ability to tackle fierce competition, the aftermath of downsizing and the onslaught of labor and employment legislation.

Walking the Talk Together-An Employee Handbook and 144 Ways to Walk the Talk are important additions to this package. Both are colorfully and creatively presented-nothing dull and stodgy about these publications. And both are loaded with simple but profound truths. The authors seem to be talking directly to the reader.

If you are into establishing meaningful commitment at all levels of your organization, these books are required reading.
Circle No. 119


other new books...


NBS Quality, by David Crosby
(Crosby Co., 57 pages + disk, $48.50)
Readers will either love or hate this looseleaf notebook. Crosby, who labels most quality strategies as "BS" programs, advocates "No BS" quality. NBS Quality focuses on "doing the right thing and doing it right." The notebook includes one disk with four software programs.

Your Boss Is Not Your Mother, by Brian DesRoches
(Morrow, 217 pages, $21)
The dynamics of work groups are much like families, according to DesRoches. Using the basics of family-systems therapy, he shows how to recognize and cure the dysfunctional office. The book includes a six-step plan for mapping and changing group emotions and 13 "power tools" that members can use to develop positive team dynamics.

Best Practices in Reengineering, by David Carr and Henry Johansson
(McGraw-Hill, 235 pages, $29.95)
This volume interprets a survey of 47 companies that successfully completed process reengineering projects. The authors offer up 16 "best practices" confirmed in the survey and eight more "prospective best practices" drawn from their own experience. The practices are organized into chapters that follow the typical reengineering process.

What to Say When . . . You're Dying on the Platform, by Lilly Walters
(McGraw-Hill, 271 pages, $14.95)
Here is a book full of situations that give speakers nightmares . . . and the tips, tools and one-liners they will need to overcome them gracefully. Walters organizes her material into six sections: speech delivery problems, audience problems, room and equipment "afflictions," "miscellaneous maladies," audience participation tips and speech preparation and design information.

The Invisible Assembly Line, by Daniel Stamp
(Amacom, 222 pages, $24.95)
Stamp applies the productivity-increasing techniques of manufacturing operations to white-collar work in this volume. He identifies the key components and connections in knowledge work, as well as process integration tools. The body of the book describes an eight-step "Knowledge Proc-ess" for boosting white-collar productivity. Plenty of self-assessments, worksheets and forms are included.

Mastering Meetings, by The 3M Meeting Management Team, with Jeannine Drew
(McGraw-Hill, 232 pages, $24.95)
This guidebook covers all the basics of planning and conducting meetings. Several chapters are devoted to cutting-edge information on electronic meetings and the preparation of presentations using new technology.

Open-Book Management, by John Case
(Harper Business, 180 pages, $23)
This book makes a good supplement to earlier "open-book" tomes. It includes case studies exploring how open-book management works in a variety of businesses.