It is my great pleasure to share some of my self-composed
management prose collection. The quotes, extracted from my own library, represent my past
experiences and observations in the corporate sector. I hope you will perceive
these as food for serious ponder in relation to your respective work
environment.
# Be observant and alert. You may run your department as the
head. But your second-line subordinates may be controlling it silently,
especially when they collaborate for a common purpose. For all you know, they
are building their little kingdom within the department to take care of their
self-interests.
# Do not tolerate a story teller in your team. He neither
means what he says nor says what he means. Whatever he tells to substantiate
his statements are mere stories, which are never real. If not controlled, he
will bring your entire team through a spinning tale of confusion.
# A leader may not be directly responsible for faults
arising within his team. However, he is still accountable by virtue of his
position.
# Sturdy leadership involves pro-acting, pre-empting and
ironing out issues; not reacting, scrambling and confronting issues.
# Managers should learn to hear with their eyes and listen
with their minds when interfacing with people they are dealing with. Do not
just hear what the other party says aloud but also listen to what is not said
verbally by observing his body language.
# Secure the inputs of the long serving subordinates who
have served the company with full dedication. Not because they are always
right, but because they have tasted more experiences of being wrong.
# Look back in time to learn from
past experiences in your work. Look ahead in time to determine your future.
Look around to recognise reality surrounding you now. Look within you to
realise yourself.
# Many top officers know how to map out and document
improvement plans, few know to translate the plans into immediate action. A
corporation needs top officers profound in both planning and implementation to
materialise successful improvements.
# The easiest way for a young manager to grow in experience
is to surround himself with people who are more experienced than he is.
# Say not, “I’ve done no wrong” but ask, “How much more do I
need to do right?”
# Managers are always concerned about correcting what is wrong
but not pursue ahead what is right.
# There must be a clear objective in whatever you do. Begin
by thinking what result you want to achieve at the end before you decide what
you want to do at the beginning.
# I have known two types of CEO – one type really functions
like a chief executive officer; the other acts like a chief entertainment
officer.
# Face up to work issues by deciding either one of the three
options …… talk about the issues; live with the issues; or act on the issues regardless
whether prudently or otherwise. Which do you prefer?
# When a failure occurs in an organization, more attention
should be given to find out the cause than identifying the culprit. When an
intended misdeed occurs, immediate appropriate action on the culprit must be
taken. Failure may be tolerable.
Intentional misdeeds are not tolerable, for if not weeded immediately,
these are cancers that will kill the organisation.
# A corporate officer is not a discipline master who makes
sure everybody under him obeys rules rigidly and be subjected to tight
scrutiny. Rather, he should remove the barriers to allow talented subordinates
exercise creativity and some form of autonomy via guidance.
# Learning without thinking is as good as learning for
nothing. Thinking without learning is as good as heading for disaster.
# Bosses give directions and say, “You go!” Leaders pave
directions and say, “We go.”
# Generalists like meetings to fill up their daily routine.
Specialists like tasks to act out their daily routine.
# Any innovation initiative inevitably carries with it some
elements of failure risk. Be bold to face up to such possible failure risk than
not innovating at all. Be prepared to learn from a failure for the sake of
future improvement by trying out than remaining stagnant by totally avoiding
failure risk.
# To mitigate any unforeseen failure risk that may arise by
implementing an entirely new creation, it is prudent to run a pilot experiment
or simulation first. If the pilot results turn out positive, then go ahead to
launch a mega innovation drive.
# Knowledge by itself does not translate into value. Only
when acquired knowledge is fully reflected upon holistically can it become your
wisdom.
# A picture tells more than a thousand words. A word can
command actions more than a thousand pictures. So, penetrative communication is
a combination of pictures and words.
# You administer processes, work flow, computers, documents
and machines. You manage people to administer the former. See the vast difference in the practical
definitions for administration and management?
# Why do businesses propound that shareholders come first?
Is it not practical business sense that employees should come first, customers
second, and then finally shareholders? Without satisfied and committed employees
to deliver excellent services, there will not be loyal customers. Without
strong customer loyalty, there will not be vibrant business growth. And without
vibrant business growth, there will not be good returns to shareholders. See
the logical domino effect?
# In order to cater for the overall optimal interest of the
company, its directors must look at the best approach to balance up the
interests of all stakeholder parties which contribute to its business one way or
another.
# The root word for “manage” is “man”. So, management has
more to do with manpower in organisations than anything else.
# Every corporation is primarily in the people business.
Products and services are its secondary business.
# Profound management involves recruiting good and right employees
into the fold. At the same time, it also involves managing out the bad and
wrong ones.
# The highest echelon of management must continually face up
to two inevitable challenges – loss of practical knowledge when experienced
employees leave or retire, and slackening of productivity as employees advance
in age.
# A successful turnaround can never happen if you have
senior officers who give excuses one after another instead of delivering.
# With modern technology, machine power apparently
overshadows human power. But do not forget it is human power that creates
machines and the necessary system logic for putting machines to work. Thus, human power, than machine power, must
earn management’s priority attention.
# Many machines and systems have failed because of the
failure to engage the right people to design the right machines and systems.
# Promotion from within may be the wisest choice only if you
have a steady flow of good candidates coming into your organisation.
# If you are looking for an able assistant from within your
department, will you choose the one who is very good but difficult to control,
or the one who is average but easy to manage? Well, it depends on your own
calibre in managing people under you.
# Common scene: Officers who can express well but not so
talented always have time to recommend management decisions. The really
talented but quiet ones are always busy solving problems emanating from such
wrong decisions.