CEO Leadership – Key Points to Understand
By Michelle Malay Carter on November 23, 2008
Elliott Jaques wrote Social Power and the CEO: Leadership and Trust in a Sustainable Free Enterprise System?in 2002.? It’s worth reading.? If you don’t care to read the whole book, an excellent summary was published by Business Book Review. A reprint of the review was published in Organization Design, Levels of Work & Human Capability […]
Filed Under Accountability, Corporate Values, Executive Leadership, Managerial Leadership, Organization Design, Requisite Organization, Work Levels | 2 Comments
Requisite Weekend Transformation? How Are You Framing Your Organizational Issues?
By Michelle Malay Carter on November 12, 2008
Folklore has it that Elliott Jaques, the author of the meta model, Requisite Organization, used to say you could transform an organization over the weekend by restructuring an organization to align with the requisite model. Requisite Organization Design Principles That means, among other things,?re-aligning as necessary to meet the three requisite organization design criteria. Conceptually […]
Filed Under Corporate Values, Employee Engagement, Executive Leadership, Felt Fair Compensation, Requisite Organization, Work Levels | 6 Comments
Requisite Organization Resources – Talent Management, Accountability, and More
By Michelle Malay Carter on November 10, 2008
For those of you interested in Requisite Organization,?Don and Bonnie Fowke, management consultants from the New Management Network, are hosting a weekly internet radio show exploring various management topics and methodologies. Below are summaries of their last two shows.? You can access them here. Talent Management Don Fowke of Toronto explores how a talent management […]
Filed Under Accountability, Executive Leadership, Managerial Leadership, Requisite Organization, Talent Management | 4 Comments
The Employee Contract – Are We Buying Outputs or Renting Capability?
By Michelle Malay Carter on November 4, 2008
Expanding upon my last post on managerial accountability … when you hire an employee, my friend and colleague Herb Koplowitz says, “You are renting employee capability not buying outputs.” Herb helped write the FAQ section for the Global Organization Design Society which has just redesigned its website.? Check it out here.? It has a large,?free […]
Filed Under Accountability, Requisite Organization, Strategy, Talent Management | 2 Comments
Managerial Accountability Is Not Missing; It’s just MISPLACED
By Michelle Malay Carter on October 29, 2008
Last week I pointed you to an article by Samuel A.?Culbert, Get Rid of the Performance Review.? I thought it was well written, but I’m not in 100% agreement with some of his proposed solutions, particularly around accountability. Culbert says, “The alternative to one-side-accountable, boss-administered/subordinate-received performance reviews is two-side, reciprocally accountable, performance previews.” Performance Previews […]
Filed Under Accountability, Corporate Values, Employee Engagement, Executive Leadership, Managerial Leadership, Requisite Organization, Talent Management | 13 Comments
Best Intentions Don’t Equal Best Practices – Ask the Bigger Questions of Your Systems
By Michelle Malay Carter on October 20, 2008
I believe in people.? Their inherent goodness.? Their desire to contribute.? To do well by themselves and others.? But clearly, this does not always translate into best practices.? Sometimes to do right by ourselves, our systems force us to do wrong by others. Whoa!? Where Did?We Go? Many times we start out doing something for […]
Filed Under Accountability, Corporate Values, Executive Leadership, Requisite Organization | 4 Comments
Talent Management – What HR Should Have Done
By Michelle Malay Carter on September 23, 2008
In last week’s post, Performance Evaluations, Rating Scales and Fraud, I discussed a manager who had a performance review returned to him from HR. He was told by HR to lower the ratings he gave his stellar employee because, “You can?t rate every line item a 5 out of 5”.? In other words, he was […]
Filed Under Accountability, Employee Engagement, Executive Leadership, Managerial Leadership, Requisite Organization, Talent Management, Work Levels | Comments Off on Talent Management – What HR Should Have Done
Most Viewed, My Favorites – Mission Minded Management Turns One
By Michelle Malay Carter on September 22, 2008
Mission Minded Management turns one today.?? Thank you for your readership, your support, comments, and link love! I thought I’d do a mini year in review with links to my top five viewed posts and some of my personal favorites. Most Viewed Posts I Didn’t Say You Stole My Money – Why You Should Deliver […]
Filed Under Requisite Organization | 6 Comments
When is Fraud OK? Ask HR
By Michelle Malay Carter on September 17, 2008
I’m picking on HR this week to make a point about the general lack of systems thinking within organizations, most particularly in the area of “people systems”. Executive Ignorance is Costly As I’ve stated before, I think the tarnished reputation of?Human Resources?is a result of a lack of collective consciousness on the part of executive […]
Filed Under Accountability, Corporate Values, Employee Engagement, Executive Leadership, Managerial Leadership, Requisite Organization, Strategy, Talent Management | 1 Comment
Performance Evaluations, Rating Scales, and Fraud
By Michelle Malay Carter on September 15, 2008
Here is yet another real-life example of how performance evaluations can be a sham and?often do more harm than good. The Background My overqualified friend began a new job as a paralegal within a corporate law department several months ago.? Her manager was new to the corporate law environment as well, having come from a […]
Filed Under Accountability, Corporate Values, Employee Engagement, Executive Leadership, Managerial Leadership, Organization Design, Requisite Organization, Talent Management | 3 Comments