|
| ||||||
|
|
Leadership Improving the Performance of Top Management Teams
Reprint 48313;
Spring 2007,
Vol. 48, No. 3,
pp. 85-90
Part of the Leadership collection.
Even the most seasoned executives may have strongly opposing views about the wisest course of action for an organization, particularly given their diverse personal backgrounds or previous immersion in other corporate cultures. But such differences in approach don't necessarily lead to conflicts that are unproductive and damaging to an organization. To investigate such issues, the authors conducted a study of the organizational values of the top management teams in 31 companies. (As defined by the authors, organizational values are the objectives that an individual or group believes are important in running a business, such as industry leadership, employee welfare, and profit maximization.) Andrew J. Ward is an assistant professor and Melenie J. Lankau and Allen C. Amason are associate professors at the Terry College of Business, University of Georgia. Jeffrey A. Sonnenfeld is senior associate dean for executive programs and The Lester Crown Professor of Management Practice at Yale University’s School of Management and the founder, president and chief executive officer of the Chief Executive Leadership Institute of the Yale School of Management. Bradley R. Agle is director of the David Berg Center for Ethics and Leadership and an associate professor at the Katz Graduate School of Business, University of Pittsburgh. Comment on this article or contact the authors through smrfeedback@mit.edu. Academic pricing and volume discount information
|
|