The Manager's Bookstore

Home | About MO | Contact MO | Tell-a-friend | Make start page | Add to favorites

Search for business and management books, authors, publishers & news
Search for business books, management authors, management book publishers & business books' news
Search for business and management books, authors, publishers & news
Advanced


Featuring
8986 books
7547 authors
222 subjects
1269 publishers

Recommended business and management reading, from top sources
- The Business Owner's Bookshelf
- Excellent reading from a terrible year
- Strategy+Business Best Business Books 2008
- BusinessWeek Best-Seller List - Hardcover, November 26. 2008
- The best business books of 2007 @ Miami Herald


News and reviews about business books, authors and publishers
- Charles Jacobs Goes Inside the Entrepreneur's Brain
- Jim Collins: How to Thrive in 2009
- The Peter Principle Lives On
- Brand Aid: Technology’s the Great Equalizer
- How News Corp. Nabbed MySpace
- The I-Word
- The Influence of the Net Generation
- New Business in the Network of Everything


Get our FREE newsletter on management books
Get our FREE newsletter on business books
Get our FREE newsletter on management books



 




Book details for On Becoming a Leader: The Leadership Classic Buy On Becoming a Leader: The Leadership Classic
On Becoming a Leader: The Leadership Classic
Book author(s) Book subject

Warren Bennis

Leadership

Sales rank 128,920 Customers rating (based on 38 reviews)
On Becoming a Leader: The Leadership Classic

Brief description of On Becoming a Leader: The Leadership Classic

The classic book that captures the essence of leadership like none other--expanded and updated for tomorrow's leaders, with a new introduction by the author.

Warren Bennis's formative years, in the 1930s and '40s, were characterized by severe economic hardship and a world war that showcased the extreme depths and heights to which leaders could drive their followers. Today's environment is similarly chaotic, turbulent, and uncertain. On Becoming a Leader has served for nearly fifteen years as a beacon of insight, delving into the qualities that define leadership, the people who exemplify it, and the strategies that anyone can apply to become an effective leader. This new edition features a provocative introduction on the challenges and opportunities facing leaders today, with additional updates and current references throughout.

Book details
PublisherBasic Books
Release date04/2003
Availability
EditionPaperback
List price$17.5
Our pricen/a
Used pricefrom $0.01
This book is recommended by...

s+b Best Business Books of the Millenium (Leadership)
The Best Business Books Ever

Customers who have bought On Becoming a Leader: The Leadership Classic are also interested in...

Learning to Lead: A Workbook on Becoming a Leader by Bennis Warren
The Leadership Moment: Nine True Stories of Triumph and Disaster and Their Lessons for Us All by Bennis, Warren
ON LEADERSHIP by Gardner, John

Comments by amazon customers about On Becoming a Leader: The Leadership Classic

On Becoming a Leader
The book its alrite not any different than other leaderships books ive read, but it can get intresting. the book arrived early!


Slanted and flawed writing on many bad leaders
Having studied "Organizational Behavior" (remember T-Groups?) back in the hippie days, and never having read this "gem", I thought after many years it would be inspiring. Warren Bennis actually doesn't even consider Steve Jobs or Bill Gates, thinks of Reagan and Bush senior as somehow not up there (actually has no objectivity at all politically), doesn't consider Hillary Clinton really worth mentioning, and holds as idols Roger Smith (yes, the GM "Roger and Me" guy), John Scully (who almost torpedoed Apple), and other very mixed names. The problem with leadership may be that we only have anecdotal and poorly researched material like this available at a popular level. Please consider real information, like "Human Side of Enterprise", "Small Groups" by Hare et al, works by Maslow and Argyris, and the various modern articles on "Wisdom" before wasting time on this book.

On Becoming a Leader
This is a great resource for learning new leadership traits as well as confirming that what you are currently doing is appropriate. I would highly recommend this book for first time leaders as well as those wishing to reach a higher level of leadership style.

veiled socialism
I was intrigued with reading a book by Warren Bennis as I had just finished the book "The Contrarian's Guide to Leadership" by Steve Sample. Sample referred to Bennis in numerous sections of the book and it seemed to be a natural selection to follow those references by reading "On Becoming a Leader." I was very disappointed. The updated prologue was an interesting read. However, from the end of the prologue to the end of the book, Mr. Bennis' politically socialistic leanings obscured and called into question his understanding of leadership. Though there are elements of insight into becoming a leader, those elements are obscured by the veil of pro-socialism revealed in his choosing of leaders to study and from which to learn. Mr. Bennis sites integrity as one of the key elements to being a leader yet chooses liberally from history those who have promoted themselves over integrity, themselves over the good of society, and themselves over the future of this country. This book is a prime example of how we as a people have chosen form over substance.

A new edition of an especially influential business "classic"
Note: The review that follows is of the fourth ("Twentieth Anniversary") edition that was published on March 2, 2009. Where have the 20 years gone since this book was first published? It remains among the most valuable and most influential primary sources on the subject of effective leadership at a time when the need for it has never been greater. However, although the core principles and the development of them that Warren Bennis examines in this book remain essentially the same, the perils and opportunities to which those principles can be applied throughout the global business world have increased in number as well as changed in nature since 1989. That is why Bennis felt the need to revise and update the material while adding an Epilogue. Previously, I read the first and third editions of this book and each time was reminded of a situation years ago when participants were outraged about the playing conditions on the course (perhaps Shinnicock) on which the U.S. Open golf championship was once held. The greens were too fast, the rough was too high and deep, the pin placements were "impossible," etc. After a U.S. Golf Association official was informed of the criticism, he explained that "we're not trying to embarrass the world's greatest golfers, we're trying to identify them." Bennis seems to be making the same point about how great leaders are developed. More specifically, as he and Robert Thomas assert in Geeks & Geezers (2002), there are "crucibles" from which some emerge as leaders but most others do not. They developed a theory that describes, they believe for the first time, how leaders come to be. "We believe that we have identified the process that allows an individual to undergo testing and to emerge, not just stronger, but better equipped with the tools he or she needs both to lead and to learn. It is a model that explains how individuals make meaning out of difficult events -- we call them crucibles [in italics] -- and how that process of 'meaning making' both galvanizes individuals and gives them their distinctive voice." They cite and then discuss a number of individuals who underwent that process and, as a result, eventually became highly-effective leaders. Bennis and Thomas conclude their book with an especially apt quotation from Edith Wharton: "In spite of illness, in spite even of the arch enemy, sorrow, one can remain alive long past the usual state of integration if one is unafraid of change, insatiable in intellectual curiosity, interested in big things, and happy in small ways." These are indeed words to live and grow by for both Geeks and Geezers. Those who aspire to become leaders - or to become more effective leaders - will find much of value in this latest edition even as some readers will question Bennis' selection of at least a few of the exemplary leaders such as Herb Alpert, Norman Lear, and Sydney Pollack. However, my own opinion is that effective leaders can - and should - be developed at all levels and in all areas, not only within an organization but indeed throughout an entire society. I do agree with other reviewers that some of Bennis' social commentary indicates a political bias that is irrelevant to his stated objectives. Granted, Harry Truman once described politics as "the art of getting things done" and great leaders are certainly results-driven pragmatists. In that sense, George Washington, Abraham Lincoln, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Winston Churchill, Mohandas Gandhi, and Nelson Mandela (to name but a few) were master politicians. That said, each demonstrated most (if not all) of the qualities that Bennis admires, notably a compelling ("guiding") vision, a passion for excellence, and impeccable integrity. None of those qualities is political in nature. However, all of the aforementioned leaders considered them essential to achieving political objectives. In the Epilogue, Bennis recalls an incident that occurred in 1945. President Franklin Delano Roosevelt had recently died and "crowded, grieving masses surged along Constitution Avenue in April 1945, waiting for his funeral cortege to pass by. As his hearse neared, a well-dressed, middle-aged man standing in the throng fell to his knees, sobbing desperately until finally regaining his composure. A stranger by his side asked, `Did you know the President?' The man could barely reply. `No . . . but he knew me.'" What's Bennis' point? To become a great leader, you must "know" those whom you ask to follow you. Agreeing with Abigail Adams that "great necessities call forth great leaders," Bennis notes that with the inauguration of a new U.S. president in 2009, "it is easy to forget that we need more than one gifted leader at a time. At the founding of the United States, when our population was less than 4 million, we had six towering leaders: Washington, Jefferson, Hamilton, Madison, Franklin, and Adams. Now that we number more than 304 million people, we are surely capable of yielding at least 600 world-class leaders in this country alone." When concluding the Epilogue with a question, "Will you be one of them?" Warren Bennis offers both an invitation and a challenge, and he does so at a time when the need for more and more effective leaders was never greater.



Buy On Becoming a Leader: The Leadership Classic
 
Home | About MO | Contact MO | Tell-a-friend | Make start page | Add to favorites
© Copyright 2005-2006 - by ManagementOnly.com
Read our Privacy Policy