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This is what makes reading this book so valuable. Reading the attributes and studies about Theory X and Theory Y management styles in McGregor's own words, instead of a one or two line sentence concerning his theories in another book, is well worth the price of this book.
The book was compelling because many of the attributes of today's managers, and organizations in general, can STILL be applied to either Theory X or Theory Y management types! In fact, much of the literature today suggests that companies with a Theory Y mindset are surviving better today than Theory X companies. The supporting information McGregor provides to each theory suggests, again even today, that these two themes will be prevalent in society for years to come.
Having this book in your professional library will provide you with some good insight and historical reference to modern day theories. I highly recommend it!
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Enter Pierrette, an intelligent young girl who sees an apocalyptic vision of the future. She can only save the world by training to become a sorceress, and _The Sacred Pool_ is the story of her education. Pierrette must experiment with long-forgotten spells and newfangled science in order to defeat a demon that plagues her sister, and in the long run, to save magic itself from being destroyed.
This book starts out slow, but gets interesting once Pierrette begins her studies. It is thought-provoking and intelligent, and one of the few novels dealing with paganism and Christianity that says anything more profound than that one is "good" and one is "bad" (take your pick which is which; there are plenty of books taking each side). If you like fantasy that makes you think, check out this tale of magic, belief, science, and philosophy.
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Authors Gary Heil, Deborah Stephens and Warren Bennis assert that the nature of work today makes McGregor's ideas more important and relevant than ever before. This book revisits in a contemporary manner the most important question facing management today: given what we know about human nature, how should work be managed so as to unleash the vast creative potential of human beings? It applies McGregor's thinking to today's business world, proving again that the human aspect of work is crucial to organisational effectiveness. It also suggests how you can change your thinking and implement his ideas in your own business and workplace.
The authors carefully outline how to put McGregor's thinking into practice in your own business so you can devise a better performance management system, form and supervise effective management teams, build cooperation instead of internal competition, cultivate an intrinsically motivating, values-driven workplace and create a cause worthy of employee commitment.
Dr. Michael Beitler
Author of "Strategic Organizational Change"
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John Kotter's Leading Change is very useful as a pragmatic guide to the strategic steps necessary in creating change. Strategy, alone, cannot ensure cultural change. What Phegan does is put strategy in the context of what he calls the "Five Levels of Evolution, Culture, and Leadership." According to Phegan, there are five areas in organizational culture that require balance: physics, life, competition, language, and experience. In most companies the organizational cultures are strong in some areas, weak in others. In order to align a "cultural change" strategy in a way to create meaningful change, there must be leadership to balance out these areas.
5. Experience-feelings, trust, fear, caring, values, involvement, satisfactionThere is always experience, but in most organizations the quality of it is poor. You cannot get to this directly, only through actions at level 4.
4. Language-communications, listening, meaning, understanding, relationships, teamwork, consensus, win-winThis is the thinnest area in most organizational cultures. Communications, understanding, relationships, and teamwork are usually weak. +
3. Competition-economics, authority, control, politics, win-lose, rules, information, productivity, profits, decisionsAlthough not always discussed, openly, this level is overemphasized in most organizational cultures.
2. Life-systems and processes, biology, operational procedures and methods, training, software, efficiencyOperating systems are often poorly developed. There is usually plenty of room for process improvements. *
1. Physics-chemistry, equipment, hardware, engineering, technologyIn most organizations, this level is fine. It is easier to talk about equipment than the more productive areas of processes (2), or communications (4). The table below (page 53 of text) points to the fact that the largest opportunity to develop changes in the work culture lies in language-which has been broken down into communications, listening, meaning, understanding-basically relationship building. The next largest opportunity lies in tackling problems in processes and procedures.
While I am sure that this makes intuitive sense to you, the task becomes how to document and put together a means to actively measure the actions you are taking and how they affect the bottom line or the goals and objectives by which you are to be measured while leading this imitative. Phegan does not offer any solution to that dilemma. What he does, however, is offer a template to improve the areas that need the attention. The most effective strategy that Barry Phegan advocates is the use of an informal interview. He provides a template for an interview format that will allow organizational leaders to get clearer understanding of the framework of the organizations employees. It is from these "non-agenda-conversations"-not "fireside chats" relationships are built, the "true" picture of the existing culture can be drawn, and human beings can feel individual and valuable. This is where he claims you get the biggest return on your cultural change investment.
The book is full of information regarding group dynamics, the art of negotiating, and skillful tips to managers. What is somewhat discouraging is that after several pages of information, guidance, and helpful hints, he ends his book with a section called Reflections where he points out that "work cultures are very stable. Sometimes they would rather die than change." He outlines why managers resist employee involvement in cultural change initiatives. Perhaps the knowledge of why there is resistance is helpful, but he does not offer any solutions to this aspect of human management nature. He even encourages external consultants to work in teams, "culture consultants should always work as a team. Work cultures are simply too seductive."
As you go forward with the task at hand to lead or create cultural change, don't get discouraged. Remember, each positive conversation, change, meeting does have a ripple effect. Phegan encourages you as a cultural leader to look for "pockets of readiness" and to encourage them. Work and gain momentum with those who "get it" and allow the change to evolve over time. It cannot be forced.
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I found it all too similar to L.M. Montgomery's "Anne of Green Gables," in story and characters, except the "Anne" books are so much better!! Anne is the heroine who is unusual, engaging, and truly unique.
There were many things to love about the story. In fact, it has become one of my favorite books of all time. (and I am a voracious reader) The characters were all realistically and richly delineated. Rebecca especially came alive for me. She was such a talented, imaginative, caring girl. She was the kind of person that anyone would love to have as a friend. Actually, I would want to be her. I didn't want to stop reading about her adventures. The events played before my mind's eye like a movie. I traveled back in time, to 100 years ago. This is considered a children's book, but it has truths and insights that people of all ages can learn from. Several of the passages, the literary allusions, and Rebecca's poems were so beautiful that I had to reread them. The language was eloquent. As another reviewer said, the vocabulary wasn't "dumbed down" like the vocabularies of modern children's books, and there was a protagonist one could love.
The only part about the novel that I didn't like was that there isn't a sequel. I would love to find out what Rebecca's career turns out to be. I believe that she marries Mr. Ladd (a.k.a. "Mr. Aladdin"), but I wish we could know for sure.
Overall, I highly reccomend this book to readers of all ages. If you like books with wonderful supporting characters and an unusual, loveable heroine, treat yourself to "Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm".
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Hmmm... I have realized that you may not be aware of the plot of the story. The Protagonist, Yan Bando, is an archaeologist/historian in the distant future, about 3000 AD. He and his colleague/mentor find the wreckage of a spaceship in a bog- a _human_ spaceship. His colleague dies when he is attacked in the early mornig hours, and Yan goes into a berzerker rage, killing the attackers and burning down the house. We find out that this is a family trait of his, and that he has left his family to avoid spreading it. Then some history is introduced, including the fact that Earth has had some non-indigenous visitors in the past millenium, but they have left us to advance further. The world by now has undergone some serious changes, both in it's climate and it's government. There is no more world super-powers, and most lands are part of one kingdom or another. Science is losing ground due to the general ignorance of the population and the lack of near-instantaneous communication we have today. Yand finds himself alone in a world that has lost much of the civilizatoinal advances we takle for granted, pursued by the Church who killed his mentor and would do anything to suppress any evidence of a human-piloted spaceship, and two questions: what happened to the pilots of that spaceship, and where are they now?
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His performance was electric. After the seminar I purchased his book, "How to Master the Art of Selling." I have read it cover to cover, and I have studied the material. I can tell you that it works. Whether you're in sales or just want to improve your interpersonal skills, Tom's book is great. His pointers on how to address rejection, prospecting,etc. are right on the mark. I recommend it highly.
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Soon after, she is reunited with the scientist ibn Saul and his apprentice Lovi, still beautiful, still conflicted about his sexuality. Ibn Saul is also on a mission to find the Fortunate Isles. Pierrette now believes she understands Ma's demand--if ibn Saul finds the Isles, he may rationalize them into something wholly mundane. And so maybe she has to destroy them before ibn Saul can ruin them. Hoping she can find a less extreme solution than the Lady's, Pierrette joins them on their journey.
From here, the story goes fairly slowly for a while, bogged down in travel minutiae. But hints begin to appear that something is terribly wrong somewhere--that the balance of good and evil in the world is messed up yet again, threatening to unleash the terrible Black Time.
The plot picks up when Pierrette actually reaches the Fortunate Isles. What sort of place is this, and what sort of man is Minho? And how is Minho's utopia connected with the Black Time? Once Pierrette is in Minho's kingdom, _The Isle Beyond Time_ becomes quite exciting, recalling both the thoughtfulness of _The Sacred Pool_ and the action of _The Veil of Years_. I won't say anything more, since I don't want to spoil the plot twists for you.
This is an interesting end to the trilogy. I wonder what Pierrette will do with the rest of her life--after all, she is quite young in physical years.
Dr. Michael Beitler
Author of "Strategic Organizational Change"