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Communicating Change: Winning Employee Support for New Business Goals |
List Price: $22.95
Your Price: $15.61 |
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Product Info |
Reviews |
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Rating: Summary: Breath of fresh air Review: After years of being force-fed communications theories that didn't work, it was a real joy to see reality documented. The solutions presented are too simple to be acceptable to anyone more interested in documenting "quality" than running a business. These "rules" help: they work in practice (when was the last time you heard that about a communications theory?): and they will change your world.
Rating: Summary: Breath of fresh air Review: After years of being force-fed communications theories that didn't work, it was a real joy to see reality documented. The solutions presented are too simple to be acceptable to anyone more interested in documenting "quality" than running a business. These "rules" help: they work in practice (when was the last time you heard that about a communications theory?): and they will change your world.
Rating: Summary: A superb book Review: I'm an academic--a professor of corporate communication--and this is one of the few books I recommend to students in this area. Larkin bases every one of his assertions on applied research in organizational communication--very refreshing from the "I did it in my organization, so it must work in your company" perspective of most business authors. Larkin also completely shatters myths around traditional corporate communication practices (e.g. the executive should communicate directly to employees around major change areas), and bases such assertions on research in the area *plus* his own consulting experience (of which he has a great deal). My students also loved this book. If you buy one book on employee/corporate communication, this is the one.
Rating: Summary: A superb book Review: I'm an academic--a professor of corporate communication--and this is one of the few books I recommend to students in this area. Larkin bases every one of his assertions on applied research in organizational communication--very refreshing from the "I did it in my organization, so it must work in your company" perspective of most business authors. Larkin also completely shatters myths around traditional corporate communication practices (e.g. the executive should communicate directly to employees around major change areas), and bases such assertions on research in the area *plus* his own consulting experience (of which he has a great deal). My students also loved this book. If you buy one book on employee/corporate communication, this is the one.
Rating: Summary: Good reference Review: My line of consulting has a lot to do with change management and communicating change so this was a good book to refer to for additional ideas and tools for the toolkit. One of the chapters that sticks out in my mind is the one that talks to how people prefer to hear certain types of messages (e.g. from their direct mananger, through an email, at an all hands meeting etc) The author uses actual data from surveys to back up his ideas which I fpund helpful - not only in helping me recommend certain vehicles for communication but also convincing others. Good resource.
Rating: Summary: Good reference Review: My line of consulting has a lot to do with change management and communicating change so this was a good book to refer to for additional ideas and tools for the toolkit. One of the chapters that sticks out in my mind is the one that talks to how people prefer to hear certain types of messages (e.g. from their direct mananger, through an email, at an all hands meeting etc) The author uses actual data from surveys to back up his ideas which I fpund helpful - not only in helping me recommend certain vehicles for communication but also convincing others. Good resource.
Rating: Summary: Packed with Knowledge ! Review: Nearly every CEO of a large corporation believes that words directly from his or her mouth will inspire front-line employees. Five decades of research show just the opposite, explain consultants and authors T.J. and Sandar Larkin. Their investigations emphasize the importance of communicating change through low-level supervisors, a group that has more credibility with front-line workers. They maintain that CEOs must go beyond simply telling supervisors what to do; they must also listen to these key employees and empower them by taking their suggestions seriously. The authors provide plenty of real-world examples to bolster their case. We recommend this clearly constructed argument to CEOs and to anyone charged with communicating with large numbers of employees. This engaging treatise, a classic, is ready to persuade its next crop of managers.
Rating: Summary: Very useful for focusing organizational communications Review: The authors were very clear on the where to place the primary focus when communicating change in an organization. They helped to dispell some old myths about the effectiveness of newsletters and video presentations. I found their conclusions very sound and very applicable in real work settings.
Rating: Summary: Cuts to essentials in obtaining business performance Review: With anecdotes to back up the prinicples set forth, this book clears the fog from many of the myths and unsuccessful techniques that aim at increasing performance in any size organization. The phrase "myths and unsuccessful techniques" is intended to label systems and approaches that rely on changing employees' value systems or behaviors that are derived from them; winning the hearts and minds of the employees; or putting fires in their bellies. Larkin and Larkin direct attention to what needs to be done for business success; who needs what information in order to achieve success; and how to set about devising measurable systems that make people fundamentally accountable for results. Sounds simplistic, but in the morass of business improvement approaches, this is a breath of fresh air. An easy read for a complex subject, with illustrations of direct applications for immediate use in almost any business.
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