Best of the Gallup Management Journal 2001-2007
by Brewer, Geoffrey; Sanford, Barb-
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Summary
Since 2001, the Gallup Management Journal has provided leaders with essential insights into managing the human side of their businesses — their employees and customers. This book features the highlights of the first seven years of the GMJ: more than 50 thought-provoking articles with actionable ideas, grounded in decades of Gallup management research.
The Best of the Gallup Management Journal 2001-2007 could not be more relevant today, as executives continue to struggle with the transition into a 21st century global economy. Many leaders have reengineered and reorganized their companies numerous times. But what remains is the biggest business challenge of all: improving and perfecting relationships with customers and with the employees who engage them. More than anything, executives and managers need quantifiable, measurable strategies for making the “intangible” side of their businesses as productive and profitable as it can be.
For years, “hard-headed” business leaders and gurus have said that it’s impossible to measure these intangibles. The GMJ argues that they’re wrong, and this book offers proof. Drawing on interviews with millions of employees and customers worldwide, the articles and interviews in these pages cover topics such as the best way to get meaningful employee feedback, why customer satisfaction is the wrong measure, the 12 elements of great managing, why most advertising doesn’t work, and the impact of positive leadership.
A range of voices from within and outside of Gallup is included in these pages. A Ritz-Carlton executive tells how his company is reinventing its world-class brand, while a leader at Ann Taylor describes how the retailer invests in talent. Nobel Prize winner Daniel Kahneman probes how customers think, while one of the inventors of the Internet, Vinton Cerf, speculates on the future of his creation.
With its lively writing and penetrating, research-driven insights, The Best of the Gallup Management Journal 2001-2007 is essential reading for leaders who want to engage employees and customers in a hyper-competitive and ever-changing global economy.
Author Biography
Geoffrey Brewer is the Editorial Director of Gallup Press, which publishes books and the Gallup Management Journal. He is the editor of The New York Times bestsellers 12: The Elements of Great Managing and How Full Is Your Bucket?, which reached #1 on the business list. He also edited the #1 Wall Street Journal and #1 BusinessWeek bestseller StrengthsFinder 2.0. Brewer was previously editor-in-chief of Sales & Marketing Management, a strategy publication for senior executives, and a contributing writer on management for The New York Times. He is a seven-time recipient of the Jesse H. Neal Editorial Achievement Award from American Business Media. Brewer lives in Brooklyn, New York, with his wife, Regan Solmo, and their son, Henry.
Barb Sanford is the managing editor of the Gallup Management Journal. Sanford also contributes her writing and editorial expertise to the book publisher Gallup Press. She was an editor for Discover Your Sales Strengths and Married to the Brand and for the bestsellers 12: The Elements of Great Managing and How Full Is Your Bucket? In addition to her work with the Gallup Management Journal and Gallup Press, Sanford writes and edits for Gallup’s corporate marketing team. She is actively involved in the International Association of Business Communicators and has served in leadership roles at the chapter and regional levels. She lives in Lincoln, Nebraska, with her husband, Howard, and daughter, Elizabeth.
Table of Contents
| Introduction | p. 1 |
| Employee | |
| Feedback for Real | p. 7 |
| Taking Feedback to the Bottom Line | p. 16 |
| The Manager's Duty | p. 21 |
| To Leverage Diversity, Think Inclusively | p. 25 |
| Upend the Trend | p. 29 |
| Creating an Employee-Centric Call Center | p. 32 |
| At Work, Feeling Good Matters | p. 36 |
| Your Job May Be Killing You: A GMJ Q&A with James K. Harter | p. 40 |
| Can Managers Engage Union Employees? | p. 47 |
| Discovering the Elements of Great Managing: A GMJ Q&A with Rodd Wagner and James K. Harter | p. 52 |
| Customer | |
| The Constant Customer | p. 61 |
| Who's Answering the Phone? | p. 70 |
| Why Spy? | p. 77 |
| Marketing to the Mass Affluent | p. 80 |
| What Were They Thinking? A GMJ Q&A with Daniel Kahneman | p. 84 |
| Are You Happy Now? A GMJ Q&A with Daniel Kahneman | p. 90 |
| Customer Satisfaction Is the Wrong Measure | p. 96 |
| Fixing a Major Banking Problem | p. 100 |
| Why You Should Welcome Problems | p. 104 |
| James Bond Comes to the Boardroom | p. 108 |
| How The Ritz-Carlton Is Reinventing Itself: A GMJ Q&A with Simon Cooper | p. 115 |
| Brand | |
| Building Brand Differentiation | p. 125 |
| Outsourcing the Brand | p. 130 |
| Making Market Segmentation Meaningful | p. 133 |
| Can Advertising Still Contribute? | p. 139 |
| Getting Emotional About Brands | p. 143 |
| What's Your Company's Purpose? A GMJ Q&A with Roy Spence | p. 148 |
| Unleash Your Brand Ambassadors | p. 155 |
| Managing the Value of Your Brand | p. 158 |
| Stretching the Brand Until it Breaks? | p. 163 |
| Did Advertisers Lose the Super Bowl? | p. 167 |
| Leadership | |
| Managing During a Crisis | p. 173 |
| Leadership Is a Process, Not a Role: A GMJ Q&A with Bruce Avolio | p. 177 |
| The Seven Demands of Leadership | p. 183 |
| The Impact of Positive Leadership | p. 188 |
| Coaching: No More Mr. Nice Guy | p. 192 |
| Good to Great? Or Lousy to Good? | p. 197 |
| Discovering How Your Future Leaders Think | p. 207 |
| Start Finding Tomorrow's Leaders Now | p. 212 |
| How Ann Taylor Invests in Talent | p. 220 |
| Performance | |
| Optimize | p. 229 |
| The Source of Future Growth | p. 234 |
| Hiring and Developing Talent: Key Differences | p. 238 |
| Good Competencies, Bad Competencies | p. 242 |
| Driving Organic Growth in Retail | p. 246 |
| When to Say, "You're Fired!" | p. 251 |
| The Future of the Internet: A GMJ Q&A with Vinton Cerf | p. 255 |
| Getting Six Billion People Online: A GMJ Q&A with Vinton Cerf | p. 261 |
| Are You Failing to Engage? | p. 268 |
| Why You're Failing to Engage Customers | p. 274 |
| The Four Drivers of Innovation | p. 284 |
| Probing the Dark Side of Employees' Strengths | p. 291 |
| Contributing Authors: Biographical Notes | p. 295 |
| Acknowledgements | p. 299 |
| Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved. |
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