Selected Product: | Leading Change Hardcover Edition: 1 Author: John P. Kotter Publisher: Harvard Business School Press Release Date: 1996-01-15 ISBN-10: 0875847471 ISBN-13: 9780875847474 List Price: $26.95 Average Customer Rating: | | Our Iceberg Is Melting: Changing and Succeeding Under Any Conditions ISBN-10: 031236198X ISBN-13: 9780312361983 List Price:$19.95 The Leadership Challenge (The Leadership Practices Inventory) ISBN-10: 0787984922 ISBN-13: 9780787984922 List Price:$21.95 The Heart of Change: Real-Life Stories of How People Change Their Organizations ISBN-10: 1578512549 ISBN-13: 9781578512546 List Price:$27.95 The Heart of Change Field Guide: Tools and Tactics for Leading Change in Your Organization ISBN-10: 1591397758 ISBN-13: 9781591397755 List Price:$24.95 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for Leading Change by John P. Kotter (ISBN-10: 0875847471, ISBN-13: 9780875847474). At this time we have not yet written a review for Leading Change by John P. Kotter (ISBN-10: 0875847471, ISBN-13: 9780875847474). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com In Leading Change, John Kotter examines the efforts of more than 100 companies to remake themselves into better competitors. He identifies the most common mistakes leaders and managers make in attempting to create change and offers an eight-step process to overcome the obstacles and carry out the firm's agenda: establishing a greater sense of urgency, creating the guiding coalition, developing a vision and strategy, communicating the change vision, empowering others to act, creating short-term wins, consolidating gains and producing even more change, and institutionalizing new approaches in the future. This highly personal book reveals what John Kotter has seen, heard, experienced, and concluded in 25 years of working with companies to create lasting transformation. Good leadership advice, but narrow and out-dated | Customer Rating: | John Kotter is a business professor at Harvard University who writes "Leading Change" as a guide to business leaders, helping them to transform their stagnant, ineffective, hierarchical companies into more effective, responsive, team-oriented ones. To help companies and leaders make this transition, he presents eight sequential steps that must be followed in order and done well.
These eight steps are:
1. Establish a sense of urgency (fight complacency)
2. Create a guiding coalition (both influential leaders and effective managers)
3. Develop a widely inspiring vision and strategy for achieving it
4. Communicate the vision, communicate the vision, and communicate the vision even more.
5. Give the employees authority to creatively experiment concerning how to best make the vision a reality
6. Make sure you point out things to celebrate as you make progress toward your goals; it rewards appropriate behavior and, besides, people need to celebrate once in a while.
7. Understand Bowen Family Systems Theory--that when you change one thing, everything else changes with it. Systemic change is difficult work that produces a whole lot of anxiety and unintended consequences.
8. Make sure that, once the changes are made, they become engrained in the new culture of he company; make them "the way we do things around here."
Kotter does get credit for being comprehensive and for being among the first to write a leadership book of this sort (copyright 1996). He appears correct in all of his arguments and this reader has difficulty finding flaws in his eight steps. He appropriately balances task-orientation and relationship-orientation and distinguishes between leading and managing. Furthermore, he is the only author I've come across that understands how Family Systems Theory plays out in an organization undergoing change.
However, the book is outdated. Newer authors like Jim Collins, John Maxwell, and Kouzes & Posner have refined Kotter's ideas and presented them in a more readable, more applicable, and more modern way (again, 1996 copyright).
Kotter limits his ideas and examples to the large, highly structured business world; other authors deliberately address leadership within smaller businesses, schools, non-profits, and other environments. Kotter writes before the internet was widely used; other books keep rapid communication advancements in mind. The obligatory quotes from people I've never heard of who praise the book say over and over again how highly readable Kotter's prose is; I found the prose dry and could cite many examples from this genre which are much more readable.
The ideas Kotter presents are not bad; in fact they're quite good and have blazed the trail for other leadership books. However, "Leading Change" could certainly use an updated edition. Other authors have taken many of Kotter's ideas, refined them, re-worked them, and present them in a manner much more helpful to a wider audience.
I neither recommend this book nor do I contest it. You would do well to read "Leading Change," but you would do better to read some of the authors listed above. | A MUST HAVE for your leadership library | Customer Rating: | | Very well written book and easy to read and follow. Since change is a modern requirement for any business, it simply makes sense to focus in on what it takes to provide the necessary leadership to do so. | Excellent | Customer Rating: | | This book is phenominal! An excellent guide for the leader experiencing change. If I had no other resource, this book would be enough for survival in the business world of change. Definitely worth the investment. | FANTASTIC SERVICE | Customer Rating: | | The book came right on time, and was delivered in the best of conditions. It is always very good doing business with you. I can trust that my books will arrive on time and the shipping is done with the urgency they deserve. Thanks once more. Teresa | Very nice book | Customer Rating: | The book I bought is a new copy. It is in very good condition and also delivered in time, as mentioned. When coming to the content of the book [It is a prescribed book for our course], It is good, worth reading once atleast. |
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