I’m not really sure why I read books about management theory. With the thought that forewarned is forearmed, I suppose. Anyway, here’s an interesting quote from Good Strategy / Bad Strategy: The difference and why it matters by Richard Rumelt (pp. 47-8):
The philosophy of the age [early 20th century], most fervently adopted by the French, was that willpower, spirit, morale, élan, and aggressiveness were the keys to success. For three years, generals flung highly motivated men at fortified machine-gun emplacements, only to see tens of thousands, then hundreds of thousands, shredded to mincemeat to gain a mile of useless ground.
[…]
At the Somme and Passchendaele, Haig led an entire generation of British and Dominion youths to their deaths—as Joseph Joffre did for the French at Somme, and Erich von Falkenheyn did for the Germans at Verdun.
In Europe, motivational speakers are not the staple of the management lecture circuit that they are in the United States, where the doctrine of leadership as motivation is alive and well. Here, for example, is H. Ross Perot: “Most people give up when they’re just about to achieve success. They quit on the one-yard line. They give up at the last minute of the game, one foot from the winning touchdown.”
Hearing this, many American nod in agreement. Many Europeans, by contrast, hear the echo of the “one last push” at Passchendaele.
I think the last management book I read was Ben Franklin’s auto biography – yes, I know that sounds odd saying it was the last “management book” but I find gems in those books more often. What auto biographies have left an impression upon you? That reminds me, I so need to find that book and leaf through it again. Have an awesome day – Elaine
I haven’t read that much in the way of autobiography. (For some reason, as a teenager I did read Carl Jung’s “Dreams, Memories, and Reflections” in a single sitting, although I can’t say that I remember anything about it.)
The books that has made the greatest impression on me over the past few years have been ones by the American sociologist Richard Sennett (“The Craftsman”, “Together”) – and I think part of the appeal was the way they combined scholarship with autobiographical/personal elements.