Author:Keith Murningham
Award-winning business professor Keith Murnighan teaches us how doing less will get you more in Do Nothing!
Would you like to go on holiday without having to check daily that your team is doing its job? Can you turn off your phone and your email, knowing that everything is under control?
For most managers this is just a dream. But Do Nothing! reveals that such a 'hands off' approach is both achievable and highly effective.
In this compelling and imaginative book, award-winning business professor Keith Murnighan shows how really successful leaders create a culture of independence and trust. Identify the team members who you can rely on - then step aside and let them do their jobs.
With a raft of provocative suggestions ('ignore performance goals!', 'de-emphasize profits!'), Do Nothing! proves that behaving naturally can work against you. Doing less will get you more.
'A compelling analysis...Allows leaders to both work less and be better at their craft' Robert Cialdini, author of Influence
'This rare book provides a refreshing perspective and tangible advice on leadership that isn't available anyplace else' Bob Sutton, author of The No Asshole Rule
J. Keith Murnighan is an award-winning professor at the Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University and an active consultant and trainer for a host of companies around the world. His research has been cited in The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, The Economist, and Forbes. He lives in Evanston, Illinois.
This rare book provides a refreshing perspective and tangible advice on leadership that isn't available anyplace else
—— Bob Sutton, author of The No Asshole RuleA compelling analysis ... Allows leaders to both work less and be better at their craft
—— Robert Cialdini, author of InfluenceNo punches pulled
—— IndependentA frank and brutal insight into why football and business don't mix
—— Theo PaphitisI couldn't help laughing... He can't half tell a story
—— Evening StandardBrash, flash and full of bottle-blond ambition
—— Simon Redfern , Independent on SundayOne hell of a read
—— Sport MagazineBad luck and bad decisions make for a page-turning read
—— Shortlist magazineRipe with detail and wincingly beliveable
—— Sunday TelegraphAn important document to have arrived in the world of football
—— Danny Kelly , ObserverA lively offering... A good read and at times highly amusing
—— SunCompelling and revealing
—— Metro