

Buy Harvard Business Review Press The Heart of Leadership Principles for the Next Era of Capitalism by Joly, Hubert, Lambert, Caroline online on desertcart.ae at best prices. ✓ Fast and free shipping ✓ free returns ✓ cash on delivery available on eligible purchase. Review: Critical concepts for leadership were penned with ease and conciseness. - _Five "Be" concepts, grab and hold attention for Leader _My favorite part of the book was The Case For Purposeful Leadership. Review: Excellent - Amazing book, must read for everyone in corporate life




| Best Sellers Rank | #24,156 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #20 in Retailing Industry #74 in Workplace Culture #296 in Business Leadership & Motivation |
| Customer reviews | 4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars (501) |
| Dimensions | 19.99 x 15.56 x 23.5 cm |
| Edition | Standard Edition |
| ISBN-10 | 1647820383 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-1647820381 |
| Item weight | 499 g |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 304 pages |
| Publication date | 4 May 2021 |
| Publisher | Harvard Business Review Press |
M**I
Critical concepts for leadership were penned with ease and conciseness.
_Five "Be" concepts, grab and hold attention for Leader _My favorite part of the book was The Case For Purposeful Leadership.
P**R
Excellent
Amazing book, must read for everyone in corporate life
G**O
Covid has taught us that we need real contact with each other. Joly didn't need Covid to teach him what this means for business as he brings it front and center in every page of his book. Best Buy's (BB) CEO Hubert Joly has written a compelling book which may open the eyes of those focused on a more traditional business approach. When Joly joined BB in July 2012, the company was limping downhill. Its share price languished around $11, company financial indicators were going south, and BB stores had inconsistent and lackluster customer service. A failing company’s board of directors often hires an outsider CEO to make tough decisions and cut staff. An outsider won't have relationships or affection for the staff like long time leaders. When BB hired a French CEO, Hubert Joly, from outside the tech or retail world (he headed travel business Carson), I assumed it was to close stores, cut employees and pump-up profits But instead of closing stores and firing thousands of people, Joly took a different approach - one he describes in “The Heart of Business.” Joly’s personal and business journey transitioned from a philosophy of numbers and ‘only results matter’ to leading via a more human first approach. Or as an industrial psychologist taught me early in my CEO career, “focus on people and results will follow.” In fact, Joly began his BB CEO stint by working at a corporate store, traveling and talking to scores of employees. “The Heart of Business” is not just another business book. It describes a personal journey, the transformation of Joly, BB and even the business community from a shareholder value model to a larger model focusing on empowerment and societal change. It includes research and results bolstering the case of why engaged employees, a diverse workforce and a bigger mission are better than focusing only on revenue and profitability. We learn about strategic changes, from how and why BB shook up retail by dumping sales spiffs and commissions to how suppliers get retail floor space to why its legendary founder Dick Schulze was brought back. But the main message is Joly's thesis that every business needs a noble purpose to inspire employees. He says employees are a "source" not a "resource" and each is an individual with hopes, dreams and aspirations which should be heard. He describes changing corporate policy on how health care benefits were expanded to include transgender needs based on listening to concerns of only one employee. He talks about the importance of creating trust and a team environment necessary for success. And he changed performance evaluations to focus on human metrics first, followed by business metrics like customer satisfaction and lastly, financial performance. Joly describes five key ingredients to shift to an employee focused environment: -Connecting the individual's search for meaning with the company's noble purpose, -Developing authentic human connections, -Fostering autonomy, -Growing mastery, and -Nurturing a growth environment. Each gets a chapter and Joly easily slides in examples, stories, research and results to make his case that motivation comes from purpose and relationships rather than purely from money. Even for Chicago school economic purists focused only on profitability, this book will give practical tips to motivate people, develop teams and deal with real life human challenges. BB stock jumped tenfold since Joly took over as CEO. He not only pushed the frontiers of business leadership, but he did it with a coherent set of ethical principles that go beyond traditional financial measures. This book is a must reads it will make any business leader more effective and any person better.
S**A
Solving the harder problem of meaning of life through work. Great insights and stories, recommend reading.
G**I
In the beginning, one can say to oneself: "another book of a great boss who has known his hour of glory and writes us his clichés as others do. Very quickly, but we already know it when we know what this man has achieved at Best Buy, we understand that we are reading a book on management that will be a milestone. As always, with brilliant people, it is simple, concrete, and full of examples. It is said that what makes the difference between the two CEOs is the personality and the man. What will make the difference in an increasingly automated world is human richness. A book to have the famous 15 minutes of advance on competitors who no longer see the growth gains. Hats Down Mister Hubert Joly
M**S
Livro excelente. Li em menos de 2 semanas…extremamente envolvente. Vale o investimento. Super recomendo.
C**U
Great book for emerging leaders that want to know more about the history and turnaround of different organizations.
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