Full description not available
A**A
He outlines the steps these institutions took to separate them from the good and made them truly great
As someone who is finishing his undergraduate career, I found this monologue not only to be inspiring, but also helpful as I prepare to enter the workforce. I am interested in becoming involved in or starting a nonprofit, and I don’t think I could’ve gotten the concepts offered in this book anywhere else. In short, I felt empowered. In the monograph, Collins wrote that over the years he recognized that many business leaders entered into the social sector only to encounter failure. Seeking to solve this, he researched and compared successful businesses and social sector institutions to see what common elements made them survive—and where they fell. He outlines the steps these institutions took to separate them from the good and made them truly great. This research birthed Good to Great, and the monologue stands as a piece addressed to the hopeful social sector leaders amongst its readers. Its overall message seems to read, “Greatness isn’t what you might think it is, and here is how to achieve it.” Jim Collin’s writing is at once entertaining and clear. Even a junior high schooler could pick up his this piece and follow his logical and fluid wiring. His natural language and purposeful strut drew me in from the first page. Even though this was an accompanying monologue to Good to Great, he quickly ‘caught me up’ to the concepts presented in the book, relating them directly to the plight of the social sector. I was stunned by the clear comparisons in thinking that he drew between successful social sector institutions and businesses. In five very clear sections, Collins addresses separate issues that social sector leaders must address to form a successful social sector institution. They are as follows:1. “Defining “Great,”—Calibrating Success Without Business Metrics,”2. “Level 5 Leadership—Getting Things Done within a Diffuse Power Structure”3. “First Who—Getting The Right People On The Bus, Within Social Sector Constraints.”4. “The Hedgehog Concept—Rethinking the Economic Engine without a Profit Motive”5. “Turning the Flywheel—Building Momentum by Building the Brand”Each section’s issue addresses very important questions. For the social sectors, the first answers how greatness can be defined and pursued, the second helps show what extremely adept and effective leaders look like, the third helps show how to hire the right people, the fourth focuses on both on sustaining longevity and consistency, and the fifth talks about how to build momentum and create a bigger impact within the communities touched by a ‘social sector.’ In each issue, Collins uses real-world examples of great leaders and the decisions they made to steer their organizations towards greatness. From Tom Morris of the Cleveland Orchestra to William Bratton of the NYPD, a variety of examples edify Collins’ concepts. Combined with graphs and empirical data, his narrative walks the reader through the various hurtles faced by social sectors and businesses alike, and shows how a social sector responds to prevail and achieve greatness, from day one. Readers of this book will learn how to lead (and when not to,) how to measure success, how to recruit, how to find corporate purpose, how to rethink resources, and how to overcome crises. I think that calling this book ‘a manual solely for social sector leaders’ would not do its utility or its masterful breadth of coverage justice, even for its 31 page length. Collins eloquently nails ideas usually learned over years of trial-and-error. The monograph is testament to the genius of Collins and Good to Great, and the practical wisdom provided inside is more than worth its time. Jim Collins has provided the missing link for many who seek to venture into nonprofit careers or business. I would recommend this book to students and professionals alike, for the skills presented in this monologue. This book, in short, teaches you how to lead a team of people towards making an impact in a way that ethically utilizes resources and personnel, and sustain performance towards a state of accomplishment aforementioned as ‘great.’ I would highly recommend this book to you if you plan to run or organize a nonprofit.
G**E
innovative thinking
Jim Collin’s may not have all the studies in yet for the social sector but stimulates great thinking about how to apply to hospitals, my passion. LOVE IT!
B**
Refreshing Perspective
Good to Great and the Social Sectors challenges traditional thinking by exploring the applicability of business concepts to social challenges. While insightful and well-written, it falls short of addressing all complexities. Still, it offers practical strategies and empowers social sector leaders to navigate their unique landscape effectively. Recommended for those seeking innovative approaches to driving social change.
H**N
Quick read very useful concept
What a happy mistake to receive this monograph book when I thought I was ordering his original Good to Great book! It is very short and easy read that fits the Social Sector and shows how we are different from the business sector. It gave me hope for the Wellness Weavers paradigm. Jim wrote it in a way that would have still made sense to me without reading the main book first.The only thing that will make this book more effective is finding the Core Team for your pure-in-heart mission. I recommend you get it, apply it and together the social sectors, that are used to stretching our money and leveraging our resources, can transform the world.The application of this book can help families, communities, businesses, the social sectors work together to solve water, food, healthy communication and collaboration so people can actually realize there is enough for everyone and live with peaceful security. By doing so we can tap into wise use of the tax dollars we have already spent and shape a government that is working for all people.
W**E
It's always about the mission.
It's the mission ...the mission ...the mission.What distinguishes a good company from a great company? If you're in the private sector, chances are that your answer is profit, return-on-investment (ROI). In 1972, $10,000 invested in Southwest Airlines would be worth $10 million thirty years later; if you invested in Pan Am.... In the social sector, what makes an organization great is its performance relative to its mission."Good to Great and the Social Sectors" builds on Jim Collins' earlier work and is a standalone monograph for those whose business it is to serve. No doubt, some principles of management transcend sector but some do not. How do you harness the power of individual volunteers to achieve greatness when no one even has to show up? How do you motivate (and retain) a staff that is not working solely for the money? How do you create and maintain an organizational culture that stubbornly, resolutely, persists in the face of uncertainty, when you and the individuals you serve are not valued as much as when times were good?In today's world, budgets for government agencies and funding streams for voluntary providers are in doubt. At the most prosperous moment in human history, we are experiencing class warfare like never before. The American taxpayer is "mad as Hell and not gonna take it anymore" ...as if "it" was cruel exploitation taken while the taxpayer was distracted --presumably watching an episode of The Simpsons. Sadly, many politicians are reacting in kind. For a social sector organization to navigate in hostile waters, it had better be thinking about its mission."Good to Great and the Social Sectors" is a guide for leaders of organizations that care about people, but it is also realistic about what it takes to become GREAT. After all, that's the point. It will help you focus, organize, and value those in your organization who have a desire to give meaning to one's life. It will help you assess the turf and build your brand; "anyone seeking to cut funding must contend with the brand".Jim Collins says, "If we only have great companies, we will merely have a prosperous society, not a great one. Economic growth and power are the means, not the definition, of a great nation." Bravo!
O**O
Excellent Framework
After reading the book Good to Great, I had to take a year to understand some of its concepts and apply it to my personal life and work life. It has worked well so far. Now, I read this to be able to apply it to my consulting business for nonprofit, and it has given me an amazing framework to build upon. 'I have a clear idea of what a great organization should look like. Thank you for your work Jim Collins.
D**N
Great book!
Writing with excellence as always, Collins brings a superb contextualization of his book Good to Great to Social Sectors. Must read for all social leaders.
N**Y
Highly recommended for Social Sector Practitioners
Hedgehog Concept is the hilightMoney is the input but the output in the social sector5 steps to be a great social sector organisationsL5 leadership in social sectors
H**D
Good to great in the social sector
Interesting approach and diagnosis of what it takes to understand a truly successful social sector organization, and ghe drivers that it needs.
D**N
Great leadership advice, easy access.
Terrific summary of this great leadership book.
Trustpilot
3 weeks ago
1 week ago