<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>This provocative business management book profiles highly successful companies that are experimenting with new strategies and tactics to better engage their employees and customers. The strategies may seem counterintuitive at first, but they are backed by solid, evidence-based behavioral science--and are an integral contributor to these companies' high performance and customer loyalty. The author provides significant and timely research to bolster his contention that many traditional management approaches need to be upgraded.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><b>"Makes a provocative case that you should put customers second, close open offices, and ditch performance appraisals."--Adam Grant, best-selling author of <i>Originals</i> <p/> "<i>Under New Management</i> is a lively, provocative must-read."--Whitney Johnson, author of <i>Disrupt Yourself</i>.</b> <p/><b>Why accepted management practices don't work--and how innovative companies are changing the rules</b> <p/> Should your employees know each other's salaries? Is your vacation policy harming productivity? Does your hiring process undermine your team? David Burkus argues that the traditional management playbook is full of outdated, counterproductive practices, and he reveals how the alternative management revolution has already started at companies like Netflix, Zappos, Google, and others. Burkus investigates behind their office doors to show how these companies are reevaluating and reinventing the most basic management principles, like hiring, firing, vacation policy, and even office floor plan, and enhancing their business's success as a result. <p/><b>"Is your company ready for a radical departure from twentieth-century management standards? David Burkus has collected the stories of dozens of companies that are standing the old rules on their heads. Even better, Burkus shows how you can do it, too."--Daniel H. Pink, best-selling author of <i>Drive</i> and <i>To Sell Is Human <br> </i> <br> "If you are going to read one book on being a better manager in the next year, start here. David Burkus has assembled the most practical research and provocative ideas into an incredibly quick read."--Tom Rath, best-selling author of <i>StrengthsFinder 2.0</i></b><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br>"Is your company ready for a radical departure from twentieth-century management standards and a bold move into a new approach? In <i>Under New Management, </i> David Burkus has collected the stories of dozens of companies that are making this journey. They're standing the old rules on their heads and running their businesses with refreshing amounts of transparency and autonomy. Even better, Burkus shows how you can do it, too." -- <b>Daniel H. Pink</b>, best-selling author of <i>Drive</i> and <i>To Sell Is Human</i> <p/> "I can't stop raving about <i>Under New Management</i> to friends and colleagues. If you are going to read one book on being a better manager in the next year, start here. David Burkus has assembled the most practical research and provocative ideas into an incredibly quick read." --<b> Tom Rath</b>, best-selling author of <i>Strengths Finder 2.0</i> <p/> "In <i>Under New Management</i>, Burkus hauls twentieth-century management ideas to the scrap heap while revealing counterintuitive practices that will drive organizational performance in the back half of the twenty-first century. And like any good manager, he under-promises and over-delivers. <i>Under New Management</i> is a lively, provocative, must read." -- <b>Whitney Johnson, </b>a Thinkers50 World's Most Influential Management Thinker, and author of <i>Disrupt Yourself: </i><i>Putting the Power of Disruptive Innovation to Work</i> <p/> "David Burkus challenges established management principles and reveals the counterintuitive practices that really drive organizational performance. <i>Under New Management</i> makes a provocative case that you should put customers second, close open offices, and ditch performance appraisals." --<b> Adam Grant</b>, Wharton professor and <i>New York Times </i>best-selling author of <i>Give and Take</i> and <i>Originals</i> <p/><i>"</i><i>Under New Management</i> dares us to rethink some of our most closely held assumptions about management--should we fire managers? Pay people to quit? Celebrate departures? Burkus masterfully questions so-called "best practices" and illustrates how today's leading companies are unleashing human talent. If you want to stay ahead in the new game of work, read this book!" --<b> Liz Wiseman</b>, best-selling author of <i>Multipliers </i>and <i>Rookie Smarts</i> <p/> On <i>Seinfeld</i>, perpetual screw-up George Constanza eventually realized that since every impulse he had turned out to be wrong, if he simply did the opposite he would succeed. In David Burkus's brilliant follow-up to the <i>Myths of Creativity, </i> he proves (with data!) just how well that same bit of logic applies to modern management. Get rid of your e-mail, open offices, and performance reviews. Let people take vacation whenever they want, and pay them to quit. If what you're doing isn't working, Burkus will show you what does." -- <b>Heidi Grant Halvorson</b>, best-selling author of <i>No One Understands You and What to Do About It</i><br><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br>DAVID BURKUS is an associate professor of management at Oral Roberts University. He is a regular contributor to the <i>Harvard Business Review, Forbes, </i> <i>Bloomberg BusinessWeek, </i>and the<i> Financial Times. </i>A popular corporate speaker, he has worked with everything from start-ups to <i>Fortune</i> 500 companies.
Cheapest price in the interval: 13.39 on October 28, 2021
Most expensive price in the interval: 13.39 on December 17, 2021
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