Good to Great – Chapter 4: Key Points

Posted on August 29th, 2008 by Brian Sparks.
Categories: Book Notes, Good to Great, Leadership.

  • All good-to-great companies began the process of finding a path to greatness by confronting the brutal facts of their current reality.
  • When you start with an honest and diligent effort to determine the truth of your situation, the right decisions often become self-evident. It is impossible to make good decisions without infusing the entire process with an honest confrontation of the brutal facts.
  • A primary task in taking a company from good to great is to create a culture wherein people have a tremendous opportunity to be heard and, ultimately, for the truth to be heard.
  • Creating a climate where the truth is heard involves four basic practices:
  1. Lead with questions, not answers.
  2. Engage in dialogue and debate, nt coercion.
  3. Conduct autopsies, without blame.
  4. Build red flag mechanisms that turn information into information that cannot be ignored.
  • The good-to-great companies faced just as much adversity as the comparison companies, but responded to that adversity differently. They hit the realities of their situation head-on. As a result, they emerged from adversity even stronger.
  • A key psychology for leading from good to great is the Stockdale Paradox: Retain absolute faith that you can and will prevail in the end, regardless of the difficulties, AND at the same time confront the most brutal facts of your current reality, whtever they might be.
  • Charisma can beas much a liability as an asset, as the strength of your leadership personality can deter people from bringing you the brutal facts.
  • Leadership does not begin just with vision. It begins with getting people to confront the burtal facts and to act on the implications.
  • Spending time and energy trying to “motivate” people is a waste of effort. The real question is not, “How do we motivate our people?” If you have the rightpeople, they will be self-motivated. The key is to not do-motivate them. One of the primary ways to de-motivate people is to ignore the brutal facts of reality.

0 comments.

Leave a comment

Comments can contain some xhtml. Names and emails are required (emails aren't displayed), url's are optional.