|
|
|
Help Wanted -New Business Leadership required to jumpstart the American Economy
Help Wanted -New Business Leadership Styles and Practices Needed To Build Confidence and Jump-Start the Economy. By: Denis Orme ______________________________________________________________________________ America's help wanted ad should read,...
I Want To Get A Mortgage Fast - Online
I Want To Get A Mortgage Fast - Online
So you have a plan... you want a mortgage online fast.
"I never met anyone who planned to fail, I sure met plenty who failed to plan."
- Anon -
OK, you're doing great, if you need that mortgage, ...
It's Time To Get All Strategic - Small Business Marketing Stategy
Copyright 2005 J D Moore So what's your small business marketing strategy? I'm willing to bet that close to 85% of the people reading this are scratching their heads now. Many small business owners fail to create a marketing strategy at all,...
Resolve to Focus on Results in 2006--Website Results, That Is!
If you are like most people, you've pledged, whether
enthusiastically or begrudgingly, a few New Years' resolutions
for 2006. One resolution you may not have considered is
improving your website results in the coming year. Think about
it, how...
Strategic Organizational Learning
The cost of training in North American companies exceeds $60 billion per year. Try to visualize that. Picture a stack of 1,000,000 $1 bills. Now try to picture 60,000 of those stacks. Amazed? Then consider this fact: estimates of training costs...
|
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Comparing Corporate and Personal goal attainment programs that have developed over thousands of years with modern day programs.
Comparing Corporate and Personal goal attainment programs that have developed over thousands of years with those of modern day legends such as Covey - “The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People”
By Jason Armstrong, Ph.D. Copyright 2005.
In the 1990s Stephen Covey’s name became famous through the publication of the “The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People”. As many know the “7 habits” are not a group of new concepts but age-old approaches to success represented in a way that can be clearly applied to modern day personal and corporate development. These precepts are taught in a number of ancient development, and achievement arts which have been practiced for thousands of years. Although many of these concepts have been lost and misinterpreted, they exist and can be translated in non-extreme forms, from such arts as: Zen (which is not a religion, but a path for self discovery and growth), the “Art of War” by Sun Tzu (the classic text on strategy which is often regarded as the most definitive text on the topic), and the Tao de Ching (the “book of change”).
Profound lessons for leadership, change, victory and non-conflict have arisen from bodies of work such as the “Art of War”, because the learnings came from life and death scenarios. Obviously today’s corporate world does not induce a mechanism for change, and success, anywhere near as strong as these ancient arts as the consequence of failure is far less. This is why groups such as the Samurai, and post-war Corporate Japan, adopted highly refined lessons from Chinese Zen and the “Art of War”. However, modern Asia is very different from its past. Today such cultures as Japan often see an environment which is one of the most materialistic and rapid success oriented cultures around, quite a contrast to its approaches of the past. Today many Western corporate cultures are now embracing past strategies to avoid conflict and gain success.
The strategy text “The Art of War” by Sun Tzu, is often incorrectly viewed as an aggressive approach to victory. However, it is essentially a master text on “Conflict Management” and “Win-Win” scenarios (“Win-Win”, habit 4 of Stephen Covey).
Associated Websites
It also discusses partnering in detail (“Synergize”, habit 6 of Stephen Covey), project planning (“begin with the end in mind”, habit 2 of Stephen Covey) and has many direct relationships to goal attainment in corporate and personal development contexts.
Partners, Competition and Internal Efficiency: Managing conflict in a modern organization has an amazing number of ties to the central themes of Zen, the “Art of War” and the book of change (Tao de Ching).They are all about understanding yourself, your organization, your strengths, weaknesses and synergizing with others to achieve positive outcomes. Collectively these things have a direct correlation to an annual company S.W.O.T review (strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats). Furthermore, these attributes and approaches mimic an employee’s annual performance review. In Applied Zen workshops we go through approaches to company S.W.O.T. which include: company self analysis, analyzing the competition, and partnering for best case strategic outcomes.
All the above methods (old and new) are about changing base behavior, beliefs and approaches. These are core values, and are far more important than putting band-aids on problems, or approaching things with simply a behavior change. In regard to the ancient philosophies, they of course must be interpreted, and applied, using case studies in a context that matches the modern corporate world – but the lessons are most definitely there!
Continuing to train ones skills and undergo development both in-house and outside your company is essential.
As the ancient samurai saying says: “Continually sharpen the sword or it will go blunt!”
By Jason Armstrong, Ph.D. Copyright 2005.
About the Author
Dr Jason Armstrong has worked at Corporate CEO levels in Japan, the USA and Australia. He has studied Sun Tzu's Art of War for 20+yrs. He was educated to Ph.D. level in the USA and his career has spanned the biotech and software industries. Companies he has worked for include multinationals like AMGEN, Mitsubishi Pharmaceutical, Zymark (Caliper), and CM Capital - a Venture Capital firm. www.AppliedZen.com
|
|
|
|
|
|