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Walking the Talk
Walking the Talk
Oct 6, 2024 10:25 PM

Author:Carolyn Taylor

Walking the Talk

A new, fully revised edition.

The culture of an organisation can mean the difference between success and failure. Leaders cast long shadows, and if you want to change the culture you have to walk the talk. This book shows you how.

Walking the Talk covers everything from measuring corporate culture to changing people's behaviour (including your own) and describes in detail six archetypes of company culture: Achievement, Customer-Centric, One-Team, Innovative, People-First and Greater-Good. Packed with fascinating examples and case histories, and drawing extensively on Carolyn Taylor's twenty years' experience of building great cultures, it will give you the confidence to build a culture of success in your own organisation.

Reviews

An indispensable handbook

—— Robert Joss, Dean Emeritus, Stanford Graduate School of Business

Carolyn's guidance on culture has served me well over many years, with excellent results, and this book captures the essence of her approach extremely well. I recommend the book to all who want a practical approach to improving their culture. The chapter on Mergers & Acquisitions has been particularly valuable for my executive team.

—— Marc Allera, Chief Commercial Officer, EE

The people and culture of an organisation are truly the most critical assets; they also cannot be easily replicated, if at all. This book provides the guidelines to allow executives to manage their culture more actively, providing practical explanations of how culture works and what can be done to accelerate change.

—— Laura McKeaveney, Global Head of HR, Novartis Pharma

Packed with energy and enthusiasm and a "can-do" attitude, Walking the Talk transforms the dream of change into an everyday reality. A must-read for any manager embarking on the journey of cultural change.

—— Professor Lynda Gratton, London Business School

Seabrook subtly explores not only the insides of a song, but how a song gets inside us

—— Observer

Revealing, frightening, funny and unsettling

—— Roddy Doyle

Seabrook’s book takes the reader into a hidden world behind some of the most high-profile cultural products of the era

—— Guardian

A highly engaging narrative

—— Economist

Weaving its way through two-and-a-half decades, one of The Song Machine’s greatest achievements is to situate the pop song within a shifting matrix of technological evolution, diminishing revenue streams, and warring egos

—— Independent

Seabrook takes us on a lucid and well-researched tour of the places where modern hits are created

—— Peter Clark , Literary Review

Anyone who wants to understand how the clash of cultures has shaped what we listen to should read this important book. John Seabrook has a marvelous ear for language – and perfect pitch when it comes to music journalism.

—— Bob Spitz, author of 'The Beatles: The Biography'

His work is almost as easy to consume as the songs it discusses – and nearly as addictive.

—— Alix Buscovic , Record Collector

Explains in fascinating detail how pop stars are utterly dependent on the beats and hooks provided by a handful of largely Swedish hitmakers.

—— Robert Colvile , Weekly Telegraph

In The Song Machine, John Seabrook tells of a cutthroat and fascinating industry, where readers discover the gifted musical maestros who orchestrate hit after hit but rarely get their name in print. The narrative shows not just how technology has upended the music business but of how - despite prattle about "the long tail" - just one per cent of artists generate 80 per cent of the industry's profits. This is a story with as many surprises as Game of Thrones.

—— Ken Auletta, author of 'Googled: The End of The World as We Know It'

A revelatory ear-opener, as the music business remains in a state of significant flux.

—— Kirkus Reviews

A sobering peak inside Stockholm’s Cheiron Studios.

—— Andy Gill , Independent

Reveals the formula for modern pop.

—— Helen Brown , Daily Telegraph

An amazing story

—— David Hepworth , Week

· Lodge’s short stories are as witty and surprising as his novels.

—— Kate Saunders , The Times

He seems so perfectly suited to the form… [A] well-observed collection that one wishes was twice as long.

—— Carl Wilkinson , Financial Times

This is a superb analysis of modern pop music.

—— i

Seabrook has written an interesting book, smearing away some of the gloss and glamour from the music industry, to reveal details of its inner workings… An interesting book overall on a global industry that has as many secrets as glitterballs.

—— Paul Cheney , Nudge
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