Home :: Books :: Professional & Technical  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical

Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
Follow this Path: How the World's Greatest Organizations Drive Growth by Unleashing Human Potential

Follow this Path: How the World's Greatest Organizations Drive Growth by Unleashing Human Potential

List Price: $26.95
Your Price: $17.79
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 2 >>

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Manifesto for a Revolution
Review: Review of "Follow This Path"

The central thesis of this valuable and highly readable work can be summed up in three words: Feelings drive actions.

This book from The Gallup Organization focuses on applying that briefest but most fundamental truth to business success. The authors' conclusion can be simply stated: The feelings of your employees influence the feelings of your customers, and that drives their buying behavior and your profits.

It works like this: Understand your employees so that they are assigned to do work for which they're really best suited at the deepest personal level ('cuz they'll do that work better than any other). And treat your employees in ways that encourage them to be fully engaged in their work ('cuz that gets you more loyalty and productivity at no extra cost). And then, in turn, your employees will treat your customers in a way that makes your customers feel good about your company ('cuz that leads them to spend more with your firm for a longer time). And, voila!, your company makes more money with less effort.

At this point you might feel compelled to release a loud exclamation of, "Well, duh!"

But hold on.

The premise of "Follow This Path" seems deceptively simple for two reasons:
1) It contrasts markedly with the "rational" model that still shapes most interactions with both employees and customers in most organizations; and
2) It stands in direct opposition to the assumptions underlying most business initiatives that are supposed to improve quality, productivity, or even customer satisfaction. Most, if not all, of those projects are aimed at mechanistically tweaking operational processes. And they don't positively affect the people on either side of the transaction: employees or customers. And so they have little to no effect on fundamentally improving the business. (But they sure do suck up a lot of time, create many distractions, and generate healthy fees for consultants.)

MORE THAN A REHASH
While tempting, it is misguided to characterize this book as a mere rehash of its predecessors from the Gallup Organization, "First, Break All the Rules" and "Now, Discover Your Strengths." Candidly, when first flipping through the book, "rehash" was my impression, too.

However, "Follow This Path" is a significant contribution in its own right. It integrates and extends Gallup's two previous works. This book's insights derive from an expanded data set supplied by Gallup's massive survey-based research, and the book also (as is all the rage in business tomes these days) draws on much of the historical and current research into the origins of behavior from both psychological and biological underpinnings. A smattering of readable anecdotes from real people help to bring the principles to life. (The end notes also are worth reading as the text there is written as a narrative and adds worthwhile insights. In addition, this work contains an appendix of what likely will strike most readers as mind-numbing statistical mumbo-jumbo, aimed, no doubt, at quieting critics who question the validity of the data underpinning Gallup's claims and conclusions.)

The effect is to validate sound, albeit somewhat non-traditional, perspectives on what really lies behind the elusive, mercantile holy grail of successfully competing in today's crazy, cut-throat marketplace.

THE UPSHOT
The good news is that these principles are easy to grasp and make intuitive sense (after reconsidering traditional biases).

The bad news is that for organizations to take advantage of these simple truths, they must unlearn much of what their managers "know" about how business works. The challenge is to move managers from the realm of the rational, definable, and controllable --- the hallmark characteristic of virtually every manager in virtually every corporation (perhaps with the exception of those strange and intrepid folks populating the marketing communications department).

The new reality: To compete effectively, managers must migrate to the still largely uncharted domain of the emotional, psychological, and personal in order to affect both employees and customers. In a gross understatement, this imperative represents a frighteningly major shift and no easy undertaking.

Making such a dramatic and fundamental change in both mindset and behaviors implies considerable adaptations at two levels: In the minds and hearts of individual managers, and in the policies and systems of their employing organizations.

All exaggeration aside, we're talking social revolution here. Undoubtedly, it will keep Gallup's consulting organization, and firms such as my own, very busy for many years to come.

But what if your boss or CEO is a Neanderthal and "doesn't get it"? Press on. Start with yourself and your very own work group. As the research from Gallup and many others makes clear, that's the only level at which real change actually occurs anyway.

Get the book and read it with a scientific mind, skeptical but open. Then get busy charting your own course through the new frontier of what Gallup aptly terms The Emotional Economy.

Chances are, you'll feel better...with rising productivity and profits...because customers feel better...because your employees feel better.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Bravo, Curt and Gabriel!
Review: There is a shortage of good managers all over the world. This is possibly the most tragic economic reality, since managers are a company's most valuable treasure. Thanks Curt and Gabriel -and Gallup! for showing us how to unlock our managerial ability and create the conditions that make our employees blossom and our customers to come back because the way our employees make them feel. I cherish the invaluable gift of your discoveries and most definitely your individual talent to show us how our companies can grow by unleashing human potential. Hey! This is the first time I see a blockbuster book co-written by a Hispanic! This is great!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Builds on Prior Works
Review: This book breaks little new ground until the 2nd half of the book but the wait is worth it. "First Break All the Rules" and to a lesser extent, "Now Discover Your Strengths", set the stage for this powerful business approach. I purchased it last week at DIA and finished it before arriving in Chicago. It immediately invoked within me new and more "engaged" sales/marketing dialogue. It was just the tonic I needed to feel aligned again.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Builds on Prior Works
Review: This book breaks little new ground until the 2nd half of the book but the wait is worth it. "First Break All the Rules" and to a lesser extent, "Now Discover Your Strengths", set the stage for this powerful business approach. I purchased it last week at DIA and finished it before arriving in Chicago. It immediately invoked within me new and more "engaged" sales/marketing dialogue. It was just the tonic I needed to feel aligned again.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Required reading for the leaders of this decade!
Review: This book puts it all together in a manner that you can actually put to practice. Many books are very theoretical but difficult to put into practice in your area of business. This book empowers individual managers to drive improved performance of their own unit. While some of it sounds like common sense (& isn't that usually the best!) I found myself anxious to apply the path outlined in the book. I absolutely believe that my business will perform better after reading this!
The authors are the most insightful business people I have ever read.! A must read!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Right on the Money
Review: This is exactly the book I was looking for, and it confirmed all of my suppositions about management: It's the people, stupid! Companies have improved every business process under the sun, and have made incredible progress with technology. But they are still woefully inadequate at dealing with their core problems: how to get the most out of their employees, and how to reach their customers on a gut, personal level. FOLLOW THIS PATH quite literally gives managers a path to success: from hiring the right people, to putting them in the right jobs, all the way on up to driving profitable growth. Most importantly, the book has the credibility of Gallup research to back it up.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Emotionally charged customers -and readers!
Review: This is one of the best books I have ever read. Its message is possibly the most valuable message there is in business today, because it articulates the human related side of a company into a model that produces dollars and cents. The book gave me a fresh start at how I look at my company. After all, growth and profits are as natural as the emotional responses we get from employees and customers, including the jealousy I see in one of the readers' comments posted here!. You must read this book if you want to find real and sustainable ways to grow your business. This books does a wonderful job at showing you how.


<< 1 2 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates