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Management article
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Reference no. SMR4228
Published by: MIT Sloan School of Management
Published in: "MIT Sloan Management Review", 2001
Length: 7 pages

Abstract

Warren Bennis and a panel of experts in leadership development discuss today''s ''legitimization of doubt'', which frees managers to admit they don''t know everything and to begin the serious learning that improves competitiveness. Facilitator: Warren Bennis, founding chairman of the Leadership Institute of the University of Southern California, Los Angeles. Participants: Candy Albertsson, director of Albertsson Consulting in London; Kevin Cashman, CEO of Minneapolis-based LeaderSource; Paul Hogan, vice chairman and chief risk officer at Fleet Boston Corporation in Boston; David B Peterson, senior vice president of Personnel Decisions International in Minneapolis; Rich Rosier, vice president of Lexington, Massachusetts-based Linkage Inc, at whose seventh leadership-development conference this roundtable took place; and Alan Stopko, president of Stopko & Associates of Cornelius, North Carolina. Warren Bennis: I don''t recall a time like today. A time when it''s clear that we don''t have the answers, when younger people may know more than their seniors and the importance of experience is declining, when the foundations of success have morphed from natural resources to human capital, when the economy is changing at warp speed and the life of the proverbial deal-making, world-shaking, tyrannical mogul just doesn''t cut it, when employees really are a company''s most valuable asset. You can see it all reflected in CEO turnover. Forget that within the last year, the CEOs of Procter & Gamble, Xerox, Kodak and Coke have had to resign. That''s small beer when you consider that CEOs appointed after 1985 are three times more likely to be fired than CEOs who were appointed before 1985 and that 34% of Fortune 100 companies have replaced their CEOs since 1995. It has been said of a recently fired CEO, ''He didn''t get small; the world got bigger''. Most managers find it unnerving to be thrown into situations they can''t anticipate. Accustomed to being on top of everything, they are now experiencing doubt. And they should be. As organizational-behavior professor Karl Weick has suggested, our contemporary age should consider the ''legitimization of doubt''. The really great people know they need new tools and new ways of thinking about leadership. They make it a point of learning how to learn. All of you are leadership educators and have witnessed and participated in the current burst of interest in leadership education. What''s your take on it?

About

Abstract

Warren Bennis and a panel of experts in leadership development discuss today''s ''legitimization of doubt'', which frees managers to admit they don''t know everything and to begin the serious learning that improves competitiveness. Facilitator: Warren Bennis, founding chairman of the Leadership Institute of the University of Southern California, Los Angeles. Participants: Candy Albertsson, director of Albertsson Consulting in London; Kevin Cashman, CEO of Minneapolis-based LeaderSource; Paul Hogan, vice chairman and chief risk officer at Fleet Boston Corporation in Boston; David B Peterson, senior vice president of Personnel Decisions International in Minneapolis; Rich Rosier, vice president of Lexington, Massachusetts-based Linkage Inc, at whose seventh leadership-development conference this roundtable took place; and Alan Stopko, president of Stopko & Associates of Cornelius, North Carolina. Warren Bennis: I don''t recall a time like today. A time when it''s clear that we don''t have the answers, when younger people may know more than their seniors and the importance of experience is declining, when the foundations of success have morphed from natural resources to human capital, when the economy is changing at warp speed and the life of the proverbial deal-making, world-shaking, tyrannical mogul just doesn''t cut it, when employees really are a company''s most valuable asset. You can see it all reflected in CEO turnover. Forget that within the last year, the CEOs of Procter & Gamble, Xerox, Kodak and Coke have had to resign. That''s small beer when you consider that CEOs appointed after 1985 are three times more likely to be fired than CEOs who were appointed before 1985 and that 34% of Fortune 100 companies have replaced their CEOs since 1995. It has been said of a recently fired CEO, ''He didn''t get small; the world got bigger''. Most managers find it unnerving to be thrown into situations they can''t anticipate. Accustomed to being on top of everything, they are now experiencing doubt. And they should be. As organizational-behavior professor Karl Weick has suggested, our contemporary age should consider the ''legitimization of doubt''. The really great people know they need new tools and new ways of thinking about leadership. They make it a point of learning how to learn. All of you are leadership educators and have witnessed and participated in the current burst of interest in leadership education. What''s your take on it?

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