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| Lesson 13 |
| “Powell’s Rules for Picking People” |
| Look for intelligence and judgment and, most critically, a
capacity to anticipate, to see around corners. Also look for
loyalty, integrity, a high energy drive, a balanced ego and the
drive to get things done. How often do our recruitment and hiring
processes tap into these attributes? More often than not, we ignore
them in favour of length of resume, degrees, and prior titles.
A
string of job descriptions a recruit held yesterday seem to be more
important than who one is today, what she can contribute tomorrow or
how well his values mesh with those of the organization. You can
train a bright, willing novice in the fundamentals of your business
fairly readily, but it’s a lot harder to train someone to have
integrity, judgment, energy, balance, and the drive to get things
done. Good leaders stack the deck in their favour right in the
recruitment phase. |
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| Lesson 14 |
| “Great leaders are almost always great
simplifiers, who can cut through argument, debate, and doubt to
offer a solution everybody can understand.” |
| Effective leaders understand the KISS principle, or Keep It
Simple, Stupid. They articulate vivid, overarching goals and values,
which they use to drive daily behaviours and choices among competing
alternatives. Their visions and priorities are lean and compelling,
not cluttered and buzzword-laden. Their decisions are crisp and
clear, not tentative and ambiguous. They convey an unwavering
firmness and consistency in their actions, aligned with the picture
of the future they paint. The result? -- clarity of purpose,
credibility of leadership, and integrity in organization. |
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| Lesson 15 |
| Part I “Use the formula P@ 40 to 70, in which P
stands for the probability of success and the numbers indicate the
percentage of information acquired.” |
| Part II “Once the information is in the 40 to 70 range, go with
your gut.” Powell’s advice is don’t take action if you have
only enough information to give you less than a 40 percent chance of
being right, but don’t wait until you have enough facts to be 100
percent sure, because by then it is almost always too late. His
instinct is right. Today, excessive delays in the name of
information-gathering breeds “analysis paralysis.” Procrastination
in the name of reducing risk actually increases risk. |
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